SynonymsBot
Synonyms for domingensis or Related words with domingensis
membranacea
cymosa
laxiflora
ekmanii
forssk
hernandia
gentryi
sessiliflora
hirtella
cuneifolia
bomarea
connata
mucronata
cuatrec
lehmannii
radlk
weinmannia
ellipticum
lepidota
silvatica
ciliatum
jaliscana
macbr
guatemalensis
markgr
dielsii
peduncularis
drypetes
breviflora
cornigera
mansf
calcicola
caffra
jacquinia
caracasana
moldenke
vatke
palicourea
laevigatum
subulata
buxifolia
horrida
ptychosperma
hildebrandtii
colorata
polysperma
sprucei
eggersii
bracteosa
foliosa
Examples of "domingensis"
Cubanola
domingensis
, or campanita, are small showy trees from the Dominican Republic.
Sabal
domingensis
, the Hispaniola palmetto, is a species of palm which is native to Hispaniola and Cuba.
Typha
domingensis
, known commonly as southern cattail or cumbungi, is a perennial herbaceous plant of the genus "Typha".
C.
domingensis
is cultivated as an ornamental. It can be dangerous if ingested because it can be poisonous.
Andrew Henderson and colleagues noted that "Sabal maritima", "S. causiarum" and "S.
domingensis
" form a species complex that may constitute a single species.
Senna
domingensis
is a flowering plant species in the legume family (Fabaceae). It is a threatened species, found in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti.
"Sabal
domingensis
" is known as the "Hispaniola palmetto", "Hispaniola palm", or "Dominican palm" "palma cana" in the Dominican Republic and "latanier-chapeau" in Haiti.
Boletellus
domingensis
is a species of bolete fungus in the Boletaceae family. Found in the Dominican Republic, it was described as new to science in 2007.
Rubus
domingensis
is a Caribbean species of brambles in the rose family. It has been found only in the Dominican Republic.
"Rubus
domingensis
" is a climbing perennial up to 3 meters tall. Leaves are compound with 3 thick, leathery leaflets. Flowers are white. Fruits are black.
Asplundia
domingensis
is a species of plant in the Cyclanthaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.
Andrew Henderson and colleagues noted that "Sabal causiarum", "S.
domingensis
" and "S. maritima" form a species complex that may constitute a single species.
The larvae feed on "Typha angustifolia", "Typha
domingensis
" and "Typha latifolia". They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine has the form of an elongate blotch mine.
In Turkish folk medicine the female inflorescences of this plant and other "Typha" are used externally to treat wounds such as burns. Extracts of "T.
domingensis
" have been demonstrated to have wound healing properties in rat models.
Typha × gezei is a plant of hybrid origin, endemic to France. It apparently originated as a cross between the two very widespread species "T.
domingensis
" and "T. angustifolia." "Typha × gezei "grows in freshwater marshes.
"Sabal
domingensis
" is found from northwest Haiti to the central Dominican Republic, and is also present in Cuba. It is usually found in secondary vegetation between above sea level.
Barbatia
domingensis
, or the white miniature ark clam, is a clam in the family Arcidae. It can be found along the Atlantic coast of North America, ranging from Cape Hatteras to the West Indies and Bermuda.
Buddleja
domingensis
is a species endemic to the uplands of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, growing in rocky, limestone ravines, along forest edges and roadsides; it was first described and named by Ignatz Urban in 1908.
The natural vegetation of the region consists primarily of stands of pino criollo ("Pinus occidentalis"). Pines are mixed with other conifers, including sabina ("Juniperus gracilior") and "Podocarpus aristulatus" (syn. "P. buchii"). Below , pine forests are found on lateritic soils and are interspersed with areas of wet montane forest. Important broad-leaved species are "Garrya fadyenii" and "Vaccinium cubense" near Constanza and the Sierra de Bahoruco, "Rapanea ferruginea" near Jarabacoa and San José de las Matas, and "Buddleja
domingensis
" along the Cordillera Central. Plants of montane steppe () include cara de hombre ("Lyonia" spp.), abey ("Cojoba arborea"), yaya fina ("Oxandra lanceolata"), pajón ("Danthonia
domingensis
"), "Verbena officinalis" var. "officinalis", and "Weinmannia pinnata".
First collect by J.N. Rose in 1913 near Santo Domingo, they were published as "Portlandia
domingensis
" by Nathaniel Lord Britton in 1914. Later, Annette Aiello moved these to a new genera, Cubanola, in her 1979 doctoral thesis "A reexamination of Portlandia (Rubiaceae) and associated taxa".