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Nyctaginaceae de Hidalgo, México (parte A)

open access: yes, 2003
Patricia Hernández Ledesma   +1 more
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Nyctaginaceae Juss.

2022
A key to the genera of Nyctaginaceae present in Sonora follows: 1. Leaves alternate..................................................................................................................................................................................2 - Leaves opposite ..........................................................................
Sandoval-Ortega, Manuel Higinio   +1 more
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Nyctaginaceae Juss., Gen. Pl.

2011
308. Nyctaginaceae Juss., Gen. Pl.: 90. 4 Aug 1789, nom. cons. Allioniaceae Horan., Prim. Lin. Syst. Nat.: 68. 2 Nov 1834 Bougainvilleaceae J.Agardh, Theoria Syst. Pl.: 364. Apr–Sep 1858 Mirabilidaceae W.R.B.Oliv., Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand 66: 294. 1936 Pisoniaceae J.Agardh, Theoria Syst. Pl.: 363.
Reveal, James L.   +3 more
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Nyctaginaceae

1980
Herbs, shrubs or trees with abnormal secondary growth. Leaves often opposite or subopposite to alternate, simple. Stipules absent. Flowers cymosely arranged in panicles or corymbs, rarely in umbels or subcapitate, hermaphrodite or unisexual, commonly 5-merous, subtended by a variable number of bractlets which may be small, mostly, or large and ...
Westra, L.Y.Th., Stoffers, A.L.
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Additional Notes on Commicarpus (Nyctaginaceae)

Kew Bulletin, 1983
Diagnose latine de C. ambiguus sp. nov.; remarques sur C. helenae var.
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Tripterocalyx carneus (Nyctaginaceae) Is Self-Compatible

The Southwestern Naturalist, 2008
Abstract Recent phylogenetic work has demonstrated that the ability of species of the angiosperm family Nyctaginaceae to self-fertilize is evolutionarily labile. However, the potential for further investigation of the evolution of mating systems in the family is limited, because there is no information on reproductive biology for several genera.
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Nyctaginaceae

1960
Trees, shrubs, herbs, or armed climbers; roots not rarely tuberous. Indument consisting of simple hairs. Leaves simple, exstipulate, opposite or rarely in whorls or pseudowhorls, sometimes unequal in one pair. Inflorescence cymose, often thyrsoid, corymbose or umbellate terminal or axillary, sometimes cauliflorous.
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Nyctaginaceae

2017
Zhenghao Xu, Meihua Deng
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