Envy is a trademarked brand of the Scilate apple variety. Scilate is the result of a cross between Royal Gala and Braeburn. It was developed in New Zealand by HortResearch […]
List of articles in "Eukaryote" category - Page 76
Albertas Run
Albertas Run (foaled 23 April 2001) was an Irish-bred British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse who competed in National Hunt races. He won two National Hunt Flat races and became a successful hurdler […]
Sideritis hyssopifolia
Sideritis hyssopifolia hyssop-leaved mountain ironwort. A 40 cm high shrublet with narrow pointed leaves. The flowers (1 cm) are borne in dense cylindrical clusters from broad spiny-toothed bracts. The calyx […]
Cephalomanes bauerianum
Cephalomanes bauerianum is a fern in the Hymenophyllaceae family. The specific epithet honours the Austrian botanical artist Frederick Lucas Bauer (1760–1826) who collected plants on Norfolk Island in 1804–1805.
Chamaesipho tasmanica
Chamaesipho tasmanica is an intertidal shoreline barnacle of Australia. It’s principal range centers in New South Wales and Tasmania. Columnar colonies can be found on high intertidal rocks relatively free […]
Grammitis wattsii
Grammitis wattsii is a fern in the Polypodiaceae family. The specific epithet honours the Reverend W. W. Watts (1856–1920) a prominent Australian cryptogamist active in the late 19th and early […]
Grammitis nudicarpa
Grammitis nudicarpa is a fern in the Polypodiaceae family. The specific epithet comes from Latin nudus (“naked”) and the Greek carpos (“fruit”) referring to the lack of hairs on the […]
Sphagnum macrophyllum
Sphagnum macrophyllum is a species of peat moss native to southern and eastern North America. It is known from every state from Texas to New Jersey plus New York Nova […]
Walckenaeria crocea
Walckenaeria crocea is a spider species first described by A.F. Millidge in 1983. The male holotype Millidge used was found 15 miles west of Ciudad Hidalgo in Tepetates Pass Michoacán […]
Grammitis diminuta
Grammitis diminuta is a fern in the Polypodiaceae family. The specific epithet comes from Latin diminutio (to decrease or diminish) with reference to the tapered frond base.