SynonymsBot
Synonyms for acutifolia or Related words with acutifolia
auriculata
heliotropium
uniflora
ellipticum
stricta
oblongifolia
wahlenbergia
latifolium
grewia
bracteata
salicifolia
speciosum
caulescens
uliginosa
chrysantha
glabrescens
flexuosum
lancifolia
parviflorus
floribundum
auriculatum
randia
oppositifolia
encelia
pauciflora
cercidium
ehretia
atropurpurea
pedunculata
micrantha
sessiliflora
leptophylla
obtusifolium
laxiflora
laxum
chamaesyce
heterophyllum
cernua
lepidota
breviflora
involucrata
verticillata
corymbosa
macrantha
stenophylla
densiflorum
cleome
filifolia
laevigatum
delavayi
Examples of "acutifolia"
There is one recognised subspecies; "Calytrix
acutifolia
" subsp. "
acutifolia
".
The specific epithet "
acutifolia
" means "sharp-leaved".
'
Acutifolia
', 'Atinia Variegata', 'Folia Aurea', 'Pyramidalis'.
"Melaleuca lateriflora" var. "
acutifolia
" was first described in 1867 by George Bentham in "Flora Australiensis". It was raised to species status as "Melaleuca
acutifolia
" in 2010 by Lyndley Craven and Brendan Lepschi. The specific epithet ("
acutifolia
") is from the Latin words "acutus" meaning "sharpened" and "folium" meaning "a leaf".
The main bog mosses found in the peat of Chat Moss are "Sphagnum cuspidatum", "S. imbricatum", and "S.
acutifolia
". The peat up to about from the surface is mainly humidified "S.
acutifolia
", with fresher "S. imbricatum" peat nearer the surface.
Hymenocallis
acutifolia
is a plant species first described in 1826 with the name "Hymenocallis littoralis" var. "
acutifolia
". It is endemic to Mexico, known from the States of Oaxaca, Michoacán, Jalisco, Veracruz, Puebla, and Nayarit.
The elm cultivar Ulmus '
Acutifolia
' was first described (as "U. campestris
acutifolia
") by Masters in "Hortus Duroverni" 66. 1831, and later by Mottet in Nicholson & Mottet, "Dictionnaire pratique d'horticulture et de jardinage" 5: 383, 1898.
"Eremaea
acutifolia
" was first formally described in 1860 by Ferdinand von Mueller in Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae. The specific epithet ("
acutifolia
") is from the Latin "acutus" meaning "sharpened" and "folium" meaning "a leaf" referring to the pointed leaves of this species.
Ladenbergia
acutifolia
is a species of plant in the Rubiaceae family. It is endemic to Peru.
The larvae feed on "Aristolochia" species including "A. elegans", "A. odoratissima" and "A.
acutifolia
".
The larvae feed on "Salix" species, including "Salix caprea" and "Salix
acutifolia
".
Mimusops
acutifolia
is a species of plant in the Sapotaceae family. It is endemic to Tanzania.
Garcinia
acutifolia
is a species of flowering plant in the Clusiaceae family.
"Cassia
acutifolia
", the pudding-pipe tree, furnishes the cassia pods of commerce.
Helicia
acutifolia
is a species of plant in the family Proteaceae. It is endemic to Papua New Guinea.
Calytrix
acutifolia
is a species of plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceae that is endemic to Western Australia.
"Diocirea
acutifolia
" was first formally described by taxonomist Bob Chinnock in "Eremophila and allied genera: a monograph of the plant family Myoporaceae" in 2007 from a specimen collected near Kambalda, about north of the Lake Cowan Causeway. The specific epithet ("
acutifolia
") is from the Latin words "acutus" meaning "sharpened" and "folium" "a leaf".
Coprosma
acutifolia
, is a shrub that is native to New Zealand, found only on Raoul Island. "C.
acutifolia
" can grow up to 12 metres tall in wet or dry forest, becoming a sub-canopy tree at lower altitudes and a canopy species along ridgelines.
"Melaleuca lateriflora" was first formally described in 1867 by George Bentham in "Flora Australiensis". The specific epithet ("lateriflora") is "in reference to the inflorescences being inserted on the branchlets and branches below the leaves". Until 2010 there were two subspecies - "Melaleuca lateriflora" subsp. "lateriflora" and "Melaleuca lateriflora" subsp. "
acutifolia
" but in 2010 the latter subspecies was raised to species status as "Melaleuca
acutifolia
".
Rhodolaena
acutifolia
is a plant in the family Sarcolaenaceae. It is endemic to Madagascar. The specific epithet "" is from the Latin meaning "sharp-leafed".