SynonymsBot
Synonyms for caesia or Related words with caesia
ferruginea
calcarata
ciliata
campanulata
fastigiata
connata
lilacina
setigera
velutinus
atropurpurea
incana
penicillata
pedicellata
subulata
oblongifolia
erubescens
caliginosa
papuana
sinuata
citrina
subsessilis
recurva
virgata
debilis
auriculata
hirtella
violacea
gracilipes
glabrescens
insulare
decussata
lepidota
plumosa
caffra
nitens
rubida
interrupta
robustum
sepiaria
sessiliflora
tetragona
pulchellum
rubiginosa
pulvinata
fimbriatum
pustulata
ambiguum
mucronata
radlk
silvatica
Examples of "caesia"
The larvae feed on "Acacia pennata" and "Acacia
caesia
".
Stenoma
caesia
is a moth of the Depressariidae family. It is found in Guyana.
Eurithia
caesia
is a European species of fly in the family Tachinidae.
The larvae feed on "Saxifraga
caesia
". They live in a spinning (a shelter like the web of a spider).
Clade B - "Emberiza" species: "leucocephalos, citrinella, stewarti, cirlus, hortulana,
caesia
, buchanani, cia, godlewskii, cioides, jankowskii, fucata," with ""Miliaria" calandra".
The larvae feed on the seeds of "Aster shortii" and "Solidago
caesia
". They create a trivalved, tubular silken case.
Cultivated goldenrods include "S. bicolor", "S.
caesia
", "S. canadensis", "S. cutleri", "S. riddellii," "S. rigida", "S. shortii", and "S. virgaurea".
The larvae feed on "Saxifraga
caesia
" and "Saxifraga tombeaensis". They have a dark greenish brown body and black head.
The larvae feed on "Saxifraga oppositifolia" and possibly "Saxifraga
caesia
". They have a dark green body and black head.
Solidago
caesia
, commonly named blue-stemmed goldenrod, wreath goldenrod, or woodland goldenrod, is a flowering plant native to North America.
Leptophobia
caesia
, the bluish white, is a butterfly in the Pieridae family. It is found from Mexico to Ecuador.
Authenticated collections of "E.
caesia
" were later made by A. Morrison in 1885, and in 1923 Charles Gardner collected specimens from a form with considerably larger leaves, buds, flowers and fruits. This was later recognised as subspecies "magna" by Brooker and Hopper (1982), with the original form being designated subspecies "
caesia
".
"Eucalyptus
caesia
" was named in 1867 by George Bentham from specimens collected by James Drummond in 1847. Drummond made his collection too late in the season to gather buds and flowers, and this made later identification difficult. During the Elder Scientific Exploring Expedition of 1891–2, Richard Helms gathered specimens of a "Eucalyptus" that the Indigenous Australians of the area called "Gungurru". This was almost certainly "Eucalyptus woodwardii", but in 1896 it was misidentified by Mueller and Tate as "E.
caesia
". This led to the incorrect application of the common name "Gungurru" to "E.
caesia
", and to confusion about the species' distribution.
Hadena
caesia
, also called the grey, is a species of moth of the family Noctuidae. It has a scattered distribution all over Europe (see subspecies section).
Aechmea
caesia
is a species in the genus "Aechmea". This species is endemic to the State of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.
In May 2006, Hart Dyke managed to get an Australian "Eucalyptus
caesia
" plant (common name Silver Princess) to flower for the first time in the UK.
The unique "
Caesia
" variety of this species - found only around Molteno in the Eastern Cape - has lighter grey-green leaves and bright yellow flowers.
The larvae feed on "Saxifraga
caesia
", "Saxifraga oppositifolia" and possibly "Saxifraga hiflora macropetala". They have a dark greenish brown body and blackish brown head.
The Cretzschmar's bunting ("Emberiza
caesia
") is a passerine bird in the bunting family Emberizidae, a group now separated by most modern authors from the finches, Fringillidae.
Caesia
parviflora, the pale grass lily, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asphodelaceae, subfamily Hemerocallidoideae, native to Australia.