SynonymsBot
Synonyms for erubescens or Related words with erubescens
cuneifolia
debilis
cornuta
interrupta
plumosa
foveolata
colorata
velutinus
caesia
virgata
hirtella
tetragona
orites
spathulata
costata
tomentosus
delicatula
inconspicuum
hookeri
mucronata
lilacina
membranacea
perrieri
decussata
subulata
complanata
vestita
setigera
pulchellum
tuberculata
gracilipes
calcarata
andicola
ambiguum
sagittata
appendiculata
setacea
atropurpurea
ciliata
papillosa
campanulata
arcuata
obtusata
ventricosa
tenellus
ferruginea
oblongifolia
insulare
rivularis
rubicunda
Examples of "erubescens"
It is sometimes mistaken for the deadly "Inocybe
erubescens
". The rarer "I.
erubescens
", like "I. godeyi", bruises red, though it is lighter in colour to begin with. The most distinguishing feature is that "I.
erubescens
" lacks a bulbous base.
"Arisaema
erubescens
" contains the phenolic compound paeonol.
The specific epithet "
erubescens
" means "blushing".
"Lophospermum scandens" has been confused with "Lophospermum
erubescens
", partly because the earliest illustration of "L.
erubescens
" was labelled as "L. scandens". Among other differences, "L. scandens" has a less climbing habit than "L.
erubescens
", with few twining leaf stalks; also the sepals are narrower and joined at the base for rather than only .
Swedish mycologist Elias Magnus Fries described it as "Agaricus
erubescens
" in his 1821 work "Systema Mycologicum". The species name is derived from the Latin "
erubescens
", meaning "reddening" or "blushing". It became "Hygrophorus
erubescens
" with the raising of "Hygrophorus" to genus rank. Common names include blotched woodwax, and pink waxcap.
"Caladenia
erubescens
" was first formally described in 2001 by Stephen Hopper and Andrew Phillip Brown. Hopper and Brown described two subspecies including "Caladenia applanata" subsp. "
erubescens
" and the description was published in "Nuytsia". The subspecies name ("
erubescens
") is a Latin word meaning "growing red", "redden" or "blush", referring to the pink colour of the flowers of this orchid.
"Lophospermum
erubescens
" has been confused with "Lophospermum scandens", partly because the earliest illustration of "L.
erubescens
" was labelled as "L. scandens". Among other differences, "L.
erubescens
" has a more climbing habit than "L. scandens", with many twining leaf stalks; also the sepals are broader and joined at the base for only rather than .
Hedythrsus thamnoideus and Disa
erubescens
grow on one summit of Mount Kahuzi.
Chiretolpis
erubescens
is a moth of the Arctiidae family. It is found in India (Nilgiris).
Penicillium
erubescens
is an anamorph species of the genus of "Penicillium".
Calliandra
erubescens
is a species of flowering plants of the genus "Calliandra" in the Fabaceae family.
Apatelodes
erubescens
is a moth in the Bombycidae family. It is found in Brazil.
Scopula
erubescens
is a moth of the family Geometridae. It is found in India (Khasia Hills).
The earliest illustration of "Lophospermum
erubescens
" appeared in 1830 in "The British Flower Garden". The plant was at first identified as the already known "Lophospermum scandens" and labelled as such. David Don later realized that it was a new species, and corrected the error in a subsequent note in "The British Flower Garden", describing the illustrated plant as a new species, "L.
erubescens
". Don did not explain the origin of the specific epithet, but "
erubescens
" means reddening or blushing in Latin. Don's correction was not always noticed, with the result that the name "L. scandens" became associated with the illustration of "L.
erubescens
", creating confusion between the two species.
Arisaema
erubescens
is a flowering plant species in the genus "Arisaema", endemic to Nepal.
Dalbergia
erubescens
is a species of legume in the Fabaceae family.
Cataonia
erubescens
is a species of moth in the Crambidae family. It is found in Spain, Greece, Turkey and Turkmenistan.
Jaffrea
erubescens
is a species of plant in the Rhamnaceae family. It is endemic to New Caledonia.
"Caladenia applanata" subsp. "
erubescens
" is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.
Discodoris
erubescens
is a species of sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, shell-less marine gastropod mollusks in the family Discodorididae.