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A white-flowered form, V. thapsus f. candicans, is known to occur.
Echium candicans (syn.
Sandwith, Curarea candicans (Rich.
Barneby, Sciadotenia candicans (Rich.)
The White-winged Nightjar (Caprimulgus candicans) is a species of nightjar in the Caprimulgidae family.
Echinopsis candicans (as E. candicans )
The corpus albicans is also known as atretic corpus luteum, corpus candicans, or simply as albicans.
O. candicans (Summer Hyacinth, Cape Hyacinth)
The Mito (Vasconcellea candicans) is a plant species that occurs in the unique mist-fed Lomas ecosystem such as the Lomas de la Lachay.
The species was first described in print by Joseph zu Salm-Reifferscheidt-Dyck in 1834 in his work Hortus Dyckensis, where he attributed the name Cereus candicans to Gillies.
The sea cabbage Senecio candicans was in full bloom along the top of the beach and the white-headed clumps of nassauvia, a plant endemic to the Falklands, were dotted among the sand dunes.
Abuta limaciifolia Diels, Abuta pullei Diels, Chondrodendron limaciifolium (Diels) Moldenke, Chondrodendron candicans (Rich.)
Balm of Gilead, Balsam Poplar Buds, Pappelknospen, Peupliers, Populi Gemma, Populus balsamifera, Populus candicans, Populus tacamahacca.
Here an expert from Kew had been turned loose, and had made a wonderful wild garden, in which patches of red-hot pokers and godetia and Hyacinthus candicans shone against the darker carpet of the heather.
This alkaloid was first isolated from the Argentinian cactus Trichocereus candicans (now reclassified as Echinopsis candicans), from which it derives its name, and from other Trichocereus species.
Ornithogalum candicans, known as the summer hyacinth, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asparagaceae, native to moist grassland in South Africa (Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Free State, Kwazulu/Natal, Eastern Cape).
Balm of Gilead, Populus x jackii, a North American species of poplar tree, or the resin that it and related species produce, sometimes called Populus x candicans or Populus x gileadensis.
Reti, in his 1953 review of naturally-occurring phenethylamines, notes that the richest source of hordenine is the cactus Trichocereus candicans (now reclassified as Echinopsis candicans), which was found to contain 0.5-5% of the alkaloid.
The larvae feed on Populus balsmifera, Populus x canadensis, Populus candicans, Populus deltoides, Populus euphratica, Populus gileadensis, Populus nigra, Populus simonii, Populus suaveolens and Populus trichocarpa.