SynonymsBot
Synonyms for lehmannii or Related words with lehmannii
radlk
puberula
dielsii
markgr
plumosa
poepp
hirtella
connata
spruceana
leptophylla
lecidea
preussii
ciliatum
amoenum
laevigatum
calcicola
lilacina
perrieri
sprucei
macbr
humbertii
gracillima
mansf
congesta
schinz
standleyi
dombeya
calycina
dissecta
laxum
papuana
galpinii
schlechteri
cuneifolia
laxiflora
zeyh
hiern
domingensis
vollesen
comptonii
deflexa
oblongum
kraenzl
gracilipes
anomalum
bracteosa
summerh
spathulata
vatke
steyermarkii
Examples of "lehmannii"
"Calothamnus
lehmannii
" was first formally described by Johannes Schauer in 1843 in "Dissertatio phytographica de Regelia, Beaufortia et Calothamno". The specific epithet ("
lehmannii
") honours the German botanist, Johann Lehmann. (In 2014 Craven, Edwards and Cowley proposed that the species be renamed "Melaleuca johannis-
lehmannii
".)
Fuchsia
lehmannii
is a species of plant in the Onagraceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
The specific epithet ("
lehmannii
") honours Johann Georg Christian Lehmann, the editor of Plantae Preissianae.
Zygia
lehmannii
is a species of legume in the Fabaceae family.
Pitcairnia
lehmannii
is a species in the genus "Pitcairnia". This species is native to Ecuador.
Peperomia
lehmannii
is a species of plant in the Piperaceae family. It is endemic to Ecuador.
Mutisia
lehmannii
is a species of flowering plant in the Asteraceae family.
Pappobolus
lehmannii
is a species of flowering plant in the Asteraceae family.
Dasyphyllum
lehmannii
is a species of flowering plant in the Asteraceae family.
"Calothamnus
lehmannii
" grows to a height of about . Its leaves are long and circular in cross section.
"Calothamnus
lehmannii
" is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian government department of parks and wildlife.
Aiouea
lehmannii
is a species of plant in the Lauraceae family. It is found in Brazil and Colombia.
The species was originally in 1844 named by Schauer in "Plantae Preissianae" as "Symphyomyrtus
lehmannii
". In 1867, George Bentham in Flora Australiensis placed it in the "Eucalyptus" genus as "Eucalyptus
lehmannii
" after Johann Georg Christian Lehmann who was Professor of Botany and Director of the Botanic Gardens in Hamburg and editor of "Plantae Preissianae". There is some confusion between the species "E.
lehmannii
" and "E. conferruminata" - some authors place this tree in "E. conferruminata". Others discriminate between these two species on characters such as operculum length - "E. conferruminata" is said to have a relatively short operculum.
In Newlands Forest, there are also 2 types of commercial plantation, Pines ("Pinus radiata", "Pinus pinaster") from Europe and America, and Gums ("Eucalyptus
lehmannii
") from Australia.
Gastrolobium
lehmannii
or Cranbrook Pea is a vulnerable shrub in the family Fabaceae which is endemic to an area of Western Australia.
The type species for this section is "Verticordia insignis" and the other six species are "V. roei", "V. inclusa", "V. apecta", "V. habrantha", "V.
lehmannii
" and "V. pritzelii".
George placed this species in Subgenus "Verticordia", Section "Catocalypta" along with "V. roei", "V. inclusa", "V. insignis", "V. habrantha", "V.
lehmannii
" and "V. pritzelii".
"Eucalyptus
lehmannii
" is a sometimes multi-trunked mallee with smooth bark which is whitish grey to grey-brown and orange-brown and which sheds in strips.
"Eucalyptus
lehmannii
", as well as some others of the genus including "Eucalyptus cladocalyx", "Eucalyptus globulus" and "Eucalyptus grandis" have been described as invasive in southern Africa.
There is only one species of "Thorea" in the British Isles: "Thorea hispida" (Thore) Desvaux (Synonyms: "Thorea anadina" Lagerheim et K.Mobius, "T.
lehmannii
" Horneman and "T. ramosissima" Bory).