Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It can be considered a synonym for Bignonia binata.
The genus is closely related to Bignonia and Anemopaegma.
I received your paper on Bignonia in "Bot.
"Putra" means son, and "pāţali" is a species of rice or the plant Bignonia suaveolens.
'Campsis' is a genus of flowering plants in the bignonia family, Bignoniaceae.
Despite the common name Desert-willow, given because of its willow-like leaves, it is actually a member of the bignonia family, Bignoniaceae.
My friend Mr. Fidelo would have been smart to relax in this manner before taking on the twisted bignonia vine.
Bignonia binata is a flowering plant species in the genus Bignonia.
Vanmikinathar is believed to have arisen from an anthill and from the trumpet flower, Bignonia Chelenoides.
Alternate scientific names have included Tournefort's Bignonia radicans (1700) and Tecoma radicans.
The type genus for this family is Bignonia, which was validated by Linnaeus in Species Plantarum in 1753.
He was apparently unaware that Karl Sigismund Kunth had previously named this species Bignonia viminalis in 1819.
Until April 1865, Bignonia served with the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron as a tug.
Synonyms include Bignonia capensis, Tecomaria capensis and Tecoma petersii.
His protégé, Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, named the genus Bignonia (Virginia jasmine) after him in 1694.
USS Bignonia (1863) was a steamer purchased by the Union Navy during the American Civil War.
Some of these plants were illustrated in a report from Newman to the Colonial Office in 1829, including Bignonia telfairia from Madagascar.
In its synonym, Bignonia suberosa, 'suberosa' derives from 'suberos' which means 'corky' in Latin.
If you want gelsemium, look for its scientific name, which is Gelsemium sempervirens, Gelsemium nitidum, or Bignonia sempervirens.
Several others, including Tecoma, Podranea, Pandorea, Bignonia and Mansoa are frequently grown as ornamentals, at least in certain areas of the tropics.
The larvae feed in pods of Bignonia chrysantha and in flower heads, on berries and also bore in tender twigs of Lantana species.
I have also to thank you for a previous letter of April 3rd, with some interesting facts on the variation of maize, the sterility of Bignonia and on conspicuous seeds.
They were: Rodhara, Usira, Bignonia, Aguru, Musta, Vana, Priyangu, and Pathya.
The larvae feed on Jasminum and Bignonia species and other members of the Verbenaceae, Convolvulaceae and Lamiaceae and Boraginaceae families.
The species was first described by English botanist Henry Charles Andrews in 1800 as Bignonia pandorana, before being given its current binomial name in 1928 by Steenis.