SynonymsBot
Synonyms for cymosa or Related words with cymosa
forssk
laxiflora
peduncularis
calycina
sessiliflora
brevifolium
tenuifolium
lepidota
hirtella
bracteata
grewia
domingensis
labill
ehretia
brassii
anomalum
radlk
ciliatum
auriculatum
oblongifolia
breviflora
kosterm
macbr
filipes
foliosa
connata
cuneifolia
buxifolia
wahlenbergia
laxum
dielsii
mussaenda
stricta
caracasana
barbatum
puberula
campanulata
atropurpurea
flexuosum
corymbosa
amoenum
calcicola
congesta
pedicellata
vollesen
desf
markgr
bracteosa
lancifolia
latifolius
Examples of "cymosa"
The larvae feed on "Aganosma
cymosa
" and "Aganosma corymbosa".
The larvae feed on "Grewia occidentalis", "Dombeya
cymosa
", "Scutia commersoni", "Scutia myrtina" and "Rinorea arborea".
"Dudleya
cymosa
" is the larval host plant for the Sonoran blue butterfly, "Philotes sonorensis" (Lycaenidae)
The larvae feed on "Dudleya" species, including "D.
cymosa
", "D. lanceolata" and "D. saxosa". They bore into the leaves of their host plant. Chrysalids hibernate under stones.
Other trees that feed the fruit-eating fish that enter the forest during flood periods are the yellow mombim ("Spondias mombim"), socoró ("Mouriri ulei") and tarumã ("Vitex
cymosa
").
Billardiera
cymosa
, the sweet apple-berry, is a small vine native to woodland and coastal heath of Victoria and South Australia.
Baphia
cymosa
is a plant species native to the République du Gabon in central Africa. The plant grows there in tropical rainforest.
Dudleya
cymosa
is a succulent plant known by the common name canyon live-forever. The plant is found in rocky areas in the low elevations of California and southern Oregon mountains.
Maytenus
cymosa
(also called Caribbean mayten) is a species of plant in the Celastraceae family. It is found in Puerto Rico, the British Virgin Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The larvae feed on "Grewia" species (including "Grewia occidentalis", "Grewia similis" and "Grewia flavescens"), "Dombeya" species (including "Dombeya
cymosa
" and "Dombeya calantha"), "Hibiscus" and "Pavonia" species (including "Pavonia macrophylla" and "Pavonia burchelli").
Bowkeria
cymosa
(Transvaal shellflower bush) is a species of flowering plants in the family Stilbaceae. It is a leafy, bushy shrub, up to 8 feet in height, endemic to South Africa.
Diphylleia
cymosa
(umbrellaleaf) is an ornamental plant of the Berberidaceae family, which is native of United States. It is endemic to the deciduous forests of the southeast United States and blooms in the late spring.
Trees that support fruit-eating fish that enter the forest in the flood period include yellow mombim (Spondias mombim), jauari palm (Astrocaryum jauari), biribá (Rollinia deliciosa), tarumã (Vitex
cymosa
), and apui (Ficus species).
The larvae feed on "Ficus", "Milletia aboensis", "Hibiscus tiliaceus", "Hibiscus micranthus", "Hibiscus panduriformis", "Dombeya rotundifolia", "Dombeya
cymosa
", "Carissa macrocarpa", "Andersonia", "Grewia bicolor" and "Grewia occidentalis". The larvae are entirely different in appearance from the other species of the Sphingidae family in that they possess spines on their body while most larvae are sleek and smooth.
Rosa
cymosa
is a species of climbing rose native to China, where it grows from the east coast in Fujian to western Sichuan at up to 1300 m, in warm areas in scrub and gorges, and in bamboo plantations. It is sometimes called the elderflower rose as its flower formation resembles elderberry ("Sambucus") flowers.
The larvae are known to feed on plants of the species "Aganosma
cymosa
" (Apocynaceae). Another species of Apocynaceae, "Parsonia spiralis" has also been noted as a larval host plant and it is believed that many more species in the family may be discovered.
"Baphia
cymosa
" is a small tree up to 4 m tall. Leaves are simple, broadly elliptical, tapering at the tip, glabrous on the upper side but with a few light hairs on the underside. Flowers are white, borne in small groups.
Ehretia
cymosa
is a small tree belonging to the Boraginaceae or borage family. It occurs over a wide range of habitat throughout of western, central and eastern Africa, including Benin, Côte d'Ivoire, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Kenya, Comoros, Madagascar, Mascarenes, Zimbabwe and Mozambique.
A variety of trees produce fleshy fruit that supports species of fruit eating primate, bats and fish that enter the forest when it is flooded. These include yellow mombim ("Spondias mombim"), buriti palm ("Mauritia flexuosa"), açaí palm ("Euterpe oleracea"), socoró ("Mouriri ulei") and tarumã ("Vitex
cymosa
").
The larvae feed on "Ehretia
cymosa
" var. "abyssinica" and "Ehretia rigida". They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine has the form of an irregular, oblong, moderate, almost purely epidermal blotch-mine on the upperside of the leaf. It is slightly reddish-brown with a whitish margin.