Results 181 to 190 of about 161,731 (311)
The new species Barleria kulalensis I.Darbysh. & Q.Luke and Dicliptera huriensis I.Darbysh. & Q.Luke are described and illustrated and their extinction risk is assessed provisionally. The former is based on Barleria sp. G of the Flora of Tropical East Africa (FTEA), with recent field observation and collection of this species from the foothills of ...
Iain Darbyshire, Quentin Luke
wiley +1 more source
Contrasting soil seed bank and vegetation dynamics between protected and disturbed arid rangelands in Southern Tunisia. [PDF]
Tlili A +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Canscora agni (Gentianaceae), a new species from the fire‐prone Indian savannas
We describe Canscora agni from the Indian savannas as a distinct species which differs from its allied species Canscora alata in having fewer and shorter leaves, pedicel‐wings unequal across the length, bracts with glandular hair on the margins, calyx‐wings being four, wider, up to 2.3 mm, with distinct reticulate venation and having ovary length up to
Ashish N. Nerlekar +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Centromere evolution in annual and perennial soybeans and its implication for hybridization in cultivated species. [PDF]
Hou J +14 more
europepmc +1 more source
Sinningia pampeana is a new rupicolous species from the rocky outcrops of the Pampa biome in southern Brazil and Uruguay. Morphological analyses based on herbarium material, field observations, and detailed illustrations support its recognition as a distinct species from Sinningia sellovii.
Gabriel Emiliano Ferreira +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Author Correction: Three de novo assembled wild cacao genomes from the Upper Amazon
Orestis Nousias +9 more
doaj +1 more source
Light intensity effects on leaf chlorophyll fluorescence and thermoluminescence in perennial ryegrass. [PDF]
Zhang B, Zhang H, Liu Y, Yu Y, Sun K.
europepmc +1 more source
Global environmental change and plant invasion are both recognized as key indicators of the Anthropocene. Still, how the number of co‐acting global change factors (GCFs) influence invaded plant communities remains unclear, even though in nature GCFs usually act together rather than alone.
Xiong Shi, Duo Chen, Mark van Kleunen
wiley +1 more source

