SynonymsBot
Synonyms for lyonia or Related words with lyonia
tenuifolium
laxiflora
peduncularis
wikstroemia
marsdenia
ehretia
hernandia
lepidota
sessiliflora
caracasana
domingensis
mussaenda
chrysantha
cercidium
auriculata
fouquieria
oblongifolia
coronopifolia
randia
cymosa
cistanthe
connata
breviflora
chamaesyce
acutum
filipes
cuneifolia
palicourea
pectis
obtusifolium
wahlenbergia
inerme
insulare
linifolia
hexandra
anomalum
bracteata
bucida
auriculatum
oleifolius
garrya
ovatum
pilea
glabrescens
weinmannia
brevifolium
themeda
bipinnata
lycioides
parviflorus
Examples of "lyonia"
Lyonia
jamaicensis is a species of plant in the Ericaceae family. It is endemic to Jamaica.
The larvae feed on "Andromeda", "Carya", "
Lyonia
", "Quercus", "Vaccinium angustifolium" and "Vaccinium corymbosum".
Lyonia
maestrensis is a species of plant in the Ericaceae family. It is endemic to Cuba.
Lyonia
truncata is a species of flowering plant in the heath family known as Dominican staggerbush.
Lyonia
octandra is a species of plant in the Ericaceae family. It is endemic to Jamaica.
Southern coastal plain nonriverine basin swamps occur in large, seasonally-flooded depressions away from rivers. Sites are often forested by trees including bald cypress ("Taxodium distichum"), swamp tupelo ("Nyssa biflora"), evergreen shrubs, and hardwoods. Slash pine ("Pinus elliottii") is sometimes found. Characteristic shrubs include buckwheat tree ("Cliftonia monophylla"), swamp cyrilla ("Cyrilla racemiflora"), fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida"), and laurelleaf greenbrier ("Smilax laurifolia").
Trees and shrubs commonly associated with swamp tupelo are red maple ("Acer rubrum"), buttonbush ("Cephalanthus occidentalis"), buckwheat-tree ("Cliftonia monophylla"), dogwood ("Cornus" spp.), swamp cyrilla ("Cyrilla racemiflora"), swamp-privet ("Forestiera acuminata"), Carolina ash ("Fraxinus caroliniana"), loblolly-bay ("Gordonia lasianthus"), dahoon ("Ilex cassine"), inkberry ("I. glabra"), yaupon ("I. vomitoria"), fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida"), and bayberry ("Myrica" spp.).
Pond cypress ("Taxodium ascendens") dominates the canopy, which it shares with swamp tupelo ("Nyssa biflora") and sweetgum ("Liquidambar styraciflua"). Shrubs include myrtle holly ("Ilex myrtifolia"), dog hobble ("Leucothoe racemosa"), southern wax myrtle ("Morella cerifera"), buttonbush ("Cephalanthus occidentalis"), sweet pepperbush ("Clethra alnifolia"), fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida"), and snowbell ("Styrax americanus").
Lyonia
lucida is a species of flowering plant in the heath family known by the common names fetterbush
lyonia
, hurrahbush, and staggerbush. Other plants may be called fetterbush. This broadleaved evergreen plant grows on the coastal plain of the southeastern United States from Virginia to Florida to Louisiana. It also occurs in Cuba.
The plant grows in the Florida scrub of Central Florida. It grows in well-drained white sand, or sometimes yellow sand, among sand pines ("Pinus clausa"). Other trees in the habitat may include slash pine ("Pinus elliottii") and turkey oak ("Quercus laevis"). Shrubs in the understory include the Florida rosemary ("Ceratiola ericoides"), scrub live oak ("Quercus geminata"), and rusty
lyonia
("
Lyonia
ferruginea").
Southern coastal plain nonriverine basin swamps occur in large, seasonally-flooded depressions away from rivers. Sites are often forested in trees such as bald cypress ("Taxodium distichum"), swamp tupelo ("Nyssa biflora"), and sometimes slash pine ("Pinus elliottii"). Characteristic shrubs include buckwheat tree ("Cliftonia monophylla"), swamp cyrilla ("Cyrilla racemiflora"), laurelleaf greenbrier ("Smilax laurifolia"), and fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida").
Typical trees are longleaf pine ("Pinus palustris") or slash pine ("Pinus elliottii"). Understory vegetation can be open and grassy or dense and shrubby, depending on fire history. Shrubs include swamp titi ("Cyrilla racemiflora"), gallberry ("Ilex coriacea"), Appalachia tea ("Ilex glabra"), fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida"), and saw palmetto ("Serenoa repens").
Lyonia
elliptica is a species of plant in the Ericaceae family. It is endemic to Cuba. It is threatened by habitat loss.
Lyonia
was an electronic, peer-reviewed interdisciplinary scientific journal published by the Harold L. Lyon Arboretum and stored in the ScholarSpace digital institutional repository of the University of Hawaii at Manoa library. The journal was dedicated to the distribution of original ecological research and how it may be implemented in environmental protection. Papers published in "
Lyonia
" covered a range of disciplines including ecology, biology, anthropology, economics, law, etc. that pertain to conservation, management, sustainable development, and education in mountain and island settings. The journal was particularly interested in the mountain forests in tropical areas. "
Lyonia
" was first published in March 1974 and continued until December 1989.
Lyonia
is a genus of flowering plants in the family Ericaceae. There are about 35 species native to Asia and North America.
Lyonia
ovalifolia is a species of plant in the Ericaceae family. This plant is Native to Nepal, China, Japan, Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia.
East Gulf coastal plain near-coast pine flatwoods are forests and woodlands on broad, sandy flatlands along the northern Gulf of Mexico. Trees are typically longleaf pine ("Pinus palustris") or slash pine ("Pinus elliottii"). Fires are naturally frequent, occurring every one to four years. Understory vegetation ranges from open and grassy to dense and shrubby, depending on fire history. Shrubs include swamp titi ("Cyrilla racemiflora"), gallberry ("Ilex coriacea"), Appalachia tea ("Ilex glabra"), fetterbush
lyonia
("
Lyonia
lucida"), and saw palmetto ("Serenoa repens").
The larvae feed on "Acer" species, "Carpinus tschonoskii", "Sorbus alnifolia", "
Lyonia
ovalifolia", "Wisteria floribunda", "Kalopanax pictus" and "Castanea crenata". They create an irregular rectangular case and skeletonise the leaves of their host plant.
The understory is thick with shrubs, including black huckleberry ("Gaylussacia baccata") and early lowbush blueberry ("Vaccinium pallidum"). Staggerbrush ("
Lyonia
mariana"), dangleberry ("Gaylussacia frondosa"), mountain laurel ("Kalmia latifolia"), and sheep laurel ("Kalmia angustifolia") also occur. Bracken fern ("Pteridium aquilinum") is abundant.
Acrocercops leucophaea is a moth of the Gracillariidae family, known from Uttarakhand and Assam, India and Nepal. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1919. The hostplants for the species include "
Lyonia
ovalifolia" and "Engelhardia spicata".