Calceolaria stricta | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Lamiales |
Family: | Calceolariaceae |
Genus: | Calceolaria |
Species: | C. stricta |
Binomial name | |
Calceolaria stricta | |
Calceolaria stricta is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria, also called lady's purse, slipper flower and pocketbook flower, or slipperwort, is a genus of plants in the family Calceolariaceae, sometimes classified in Scrophulariaceae by some authors. This genus consists of about 388 species of shrubs, lianas and herbs, and the geographical range extends from Patagonia to central Mexico, with its distribution centre in Andean region. Calceolaria species have usually yellow or orange flowers, which can have red or purple spots. The Calceolaria Herbeohybrida group, also called C. herbeohybrida Voss, is a group of ornamental hybrids known only in cultivation, called florists slipperwort.
Banksia strictifolia is a species of bushy shrub that is endemic to Western Australia. It has serrated, linear leaves with sharply-pointed teeth on both sides, creamy yellow flowers in heads of between forty-five and eighty-five, and egg-shaped to more or less spherical follicles.
Opuntia stricta is a large sized species of cactus that is endemic to the subtropical and tropical coastal areas of the Americas and the Caribbean. Common names include erect prickly pear and nopal estricto (Spanish). The first description as Cactus strictus was published in 1803 by Adrian Hardy Haworth. In 1812 he introduced the species in the genus Opuntia.
Christian Ludwig (Luis) Landbeck was a prominent German ornithologist.
Calceolaria commutata is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria frondosa is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria gossypina is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria grandiflora is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria harlingii is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria oxyphylla is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria pedunculata is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria platyzyga is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria rosmarinifolia is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria semiconnata is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria sericea is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Calceolaria serrata is a species of plant in the Calceolariaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Oxalis stricta, called the common yellow woodsorrel, common yellow oxalis, upright yellow-sorrel, lemon clover, or more ambiguously and informally "sourgrass" or "pickle plant", is a herbaceous plant native to North America, parts of Eurasia, and has a rare introduction in Britain. It tends to grow in woodlands, meadows, and in disturbed areas as both a perennial and annual. Erect when young, this plant later becomes decumbent as it lies down, and branches regularly. It is not to be confused with similar plants in the same genus which are also often referred to as "yellow woodsorrel".
Calceolaria Herbeohybrida Group, also called Calceolaria ×herbeohybrida Voss, is a cultivar group of hybrids in the genus Calceolaria, derived from three species from Chile and Argentina, C. crenatiflora, C. corymbosa and C. cana.
Chelydrops is an extinct genus of Chelydridae from Miocene of North America. Only one species is described, Chelydrops stricta.
Nardus is a genus of plants belonging to the grass family, containing the single species Nardus stricta, known as matgrass. It is placed in its own tribe Nardeae within the subfamily Pooideae. The name derives from nardos (νάρδος), the ancient Greek name for this plant. It is not to be confused with spikenard, Nardostachys jatamansi.
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