Results 161 to 170 of about 1,555 (191)
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INFLUENCE OF SUCROSE CONCENTRATION ON PHOTOSYNTHETIC PERFORMANCE OF GUZMANIA 'HILDA' IN VITRO
Acta Horticulturae, 2015R. Lembrechts +3 more
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2007
Published as part of Jarvis, Charlie, 2007, Chapter 7: Linnaean Plant Names and their Types (part R), pp. 785-805 in Order out of Chaos. Linnaean Plant Types and their Types, London :Linnaean Society of London in association with the Natural History Museum on page 788, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo ...
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Published as part of Jarvis, Charlie, 2007, Chapter 7: Linnaean Plant Names and their Types (part R), pp. 785-805 in Order out of Chaos. Linnaean Plant Types and their Types, London :Linnaean Society of London in association with the Natural History Museum on page 788, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo ...
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Guzmania densispica Gouda & Manzanares 2017, spec. nov.
2017Guzmania densispica Gouda & Manzanares, spec. nov. (Figs. 1, 2) Diagnosis:—This species is closely related to G. teuscheri, but differs from it by its shorter ovoid or short subcylindric, 9–11 cm wide inflorescence (vs. fusiform to cylindric, ca. 5 cm wide inflorescence), that is more dense with barely visible primary bracts (vs.
Gouda, Eric J. +2 more
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Microsatellites in the bromeliads Tillandsia fasciculata and Guzmania monostachya
Molecular Ecology Notes, 2003AbstractWe developed microsatellites for the bromeliads Tillandsia fasciculata and Guzmania monostachya, epiphytes of Central‐American montane rain forests. Fragments obtained using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) pre‐amplification were enriched by hybridization with biotin‐labelled repeat sequences, and subsequently cloned and sequenced.
Boneh, L. +2 more
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A new species of Guzmania (Bromeliaceae) from Southern Ecuador
Phytotaxa, 2017A new species of Guzmania from Ecuador, Province El Oro, closely related to G. teuscheri Smith (1960: 86), is described and illustrated here. It can easily be confused with this species, especially in herbarium specimen, in which the colour and structure of petals are lost.
ERIC J. GOUDA +2 more
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Guzmania altomayoensis (Bromeliaceae): a New Species from Peru related to Guzmania striata L.B.Sm.
PhytotaxaA new Guzmania species from Peru, G. altomayoenis is described, illustrated and compared to the morphologically closely related species Guzmania striata from Ecuador. This plant is in culture for many years at the nursery of Jeffrey Kent in Vista, California, and recently at Anthura in Bleiswijk, the Netherlands.
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The ‘tubing’ phenomenon in commercial cultivation of Guzmania: morphology, physiology and anatomy
Scientia Horticulturae, 2016Abstract Bromeliad breeders and growers in Belgium and the Netherlands report severe losses due to leaf ‘tubing’ in ornamental bromeliad production. This is a malformation in the leaf development which occurs primarily in young Guzmania and Vriesea plants.
B. Vanhoutte, J. Ceusters, M.P. De Proft
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Brittonia, 1996
Two new speciesGuzmania herrerae andG. scandens, that have been mistakenly identified asG. dissitiflora are described and illustrated. All three taxa belong to a natural complex of species that corresponds to the formerly recognized segregate genusMassangea E. Morren.
Harry E. Luther, W. John Kress
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Two new speciesGuzmania herrerae andG. scandens, that have been mistakenly identified asG. dissitiflora are described and illustrated. All three taxa belong to a natural complex of species that corresponds to the formerly recognized segregate genusMassangea E. Morren.
Harry E. Luther, W. John Kress
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Guzmania inkaterrae Gouda & C. Soto 2012, sp. nov.
2012Published as part of Gouda, Eric J., 2012, Two new species in Tillandsioideae (Bromeliaceae) of Machu Picchu, Peru, pp.
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