SynonymsBot
Synonyms for moldenke or Related words with moldenke
kraenzl
cuatrec
poepp
macbr
calcicola
steyerm
griseb
standl
johnst
hiern
mansf
markgr
schum
aegiphila
burret
hemsl
sprucei
gentryi
radlk
zeyh
kunth
bremek
greenm
guatemalensis
summerh
pittieri
oliv
glaziovii
kosterm
klotzsch
puberula
steyermarkii
aubl
vatke
steud
lehmannii
schumach
hintonii
meisn
vollesen
domingensis
dielsii
welw
forssk
bomarea
swallen
chiapensis
congesta
wurdack
pedicellata
Examples of "moldenke"
"Lippia canescens" Kunth, "Lippia incasiomalo" (Small) Tildsoan, "Lippia lickiflora" (L.) Michx., "Lippia nodiflora" var. "canescens" (Kunth) Kuntze, "Lippia nodiflora" var. "reptans" (Kunth) Kuntze, "Lippia nodiflora" var. "rosea" (D. Don) Munz, "Lippia reptans" Kunth, "Polyumn incisa" Small, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "antillana"
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "canescens" (Kunth)
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "incisa" (Small)
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "longifolia"
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "repens" (Spreng.)
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "reptans" (Kunth)
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "rosea" (D. Don)
Moldenke
, "Phyla nodiflora" var. "texensis"
Moldenke
.
Moldenke
is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Vertebrate poisons: mammals (fide Everist; Kingsbury;
Moldenke
; Lampe & McCann)
Harold Norman
Moldenke
, also known as simply
Moldenke
(1909–1996) was an American botanist/taxonomist. His expertise is largely in the study of Verbenaceae, Avicenniaceae, Stilbaceae, Dicrastylidaceae, Symphoremaceae, Nyctanthaceae and Eriocaulaceae.
Synonyms for "Dysphania" R.Br. are "Neobotrydium"
Moldenke
, "Roubieva" Moq. and "Teloxys" Moq..
Charles Edward
Moldenke
(October 10, 1860 – January 18, 1935) was an American Lutheran minister and Egyptologist.
Rev Charles
Moldenke
died during 1935 and was buried at the Lutheran All Faiths Cemetery in Queens County, New York.
Moldenke
was the son of Charles E. and Sophia (Heins)
Moldenke
. His father was a noted Egyptologist whose translation of the hieroglyphics on Cleopatra's Needle he reprinted. Harold was born in Watchung, New Jersey, in 1909, and earned a bachelor's degree from Susquehanna University in 1929.
The 1981 review paper by Harold N.
Moldenke
was the source, additional distribution information came from the Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants information system:
In 1941,
Moldenke
, along with the collaboration of his wife, created the book "Plants of the Bible" after 12 years of research. Later,
Moldenke
took a job in botanical and ecological education as director of the now-named Trailside Nature and Science Center in Mountainside, New Jersey. He was also a professor of botany at the now-named Kean University in Union, New Jersey, and taught enrichment courses at Westfield and Livingston Adult Schools in New Jersey. In 1967,
Moldenke
left Trailside and accepted a professorship at the now-named William Paterson College. In 1984, he sold the most of his herbarium, papers and books to the University of Texas.
Moldenke
died at Corvallis, Oregon on January 7, 1996.
In 1969,
Moldenke
was named an Honorary Life Member of the Torrey Botanical Club. In 1970, he was made Honorary Curator of New York Botanical Garden.
Recent revisions of the genus "Vitex" have placed "V. rotundifolia" in synonymy with "V. trifolia" subsp. "littoralis" Steenis. Previous researchers have placed "V. rotundifolia" within "V. trifolia".
Moldenke
(1958) placed "V. rotundifolia" in synonymy with "V. trifolia" var. "simplicifolia". The placement of
Moldenke
was in disagreement with Corner (1939), which held "V. rotundifolia" as distinct from "V. trifolia". The placement of Corner was subsequently supported by several authors: Fosberg (1962), Munir (1987), and Wagner (1999).
Edward Frederick
Moldenke
[or Moldehnke] (born in Insterburg, Prussia, 10 August 1836; died 25 June 1904) was a Lutheran theologian and missionary who worked in Prussia and the United States.
Abuta candicans (syn. "Abuta limaciifolia" Diels, "Abuta pullei" Diels, "Chondrodendron limaciifolium" (Diels)
Moldenke
, "Chondrodendron candicans" (Rich.) Sandwith, "Curarea candicans" (Rich. ex DC.) Barneby, "Sciadotenia candicans" (Rich.) Diels) is a species in the Menispermaceae family.
Charles Edward
Moldenke
was born in Lyck, Prussia [now located in Poland]. He was the son of Lutheran theologian and missionary Edward Frederick
Moldenke
. He graduated from Columbia in 1879, spent a year at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia, and studied in Halle, Germany, and Strasbourg, Germany (now in France). In 1884, he received the degree of Ph.D. from Strasbourg University. He was ordained to the Lutheran ministry in 1885 and held pastorates successively in Jersey City, New Jersey (1885–90), New York City (1890-96) and Mount Vernon, New York (1897-1900).
Little information on this wallflower species relationship with pollinators exists. Andrew
Moldenke
studied a population of "Erysimum capitatum" var. "perenne" in Subalpine Talus Fell Scree of the Timberland Hall Area ( elevation). He observed 13 species of flower visitors, although over 80% of the visits to the flowers were performed by two ant species, "Formica lasioides" and one from the "Formica fusca" group.
Moldenke's career started at the New York Botanical Garden, a place he maintained a close relationship with (donating many educational materials to its library). There, he worked as a Research Fellow and part-time assistant in 1929. He taught a course in Systematic Botany for gardeners there as well. For 16 years, he worked as the assistant and associate curator under Henry A. Gleason. When
Moldenke
served in the Civilian Public Service, Soil Conservation Service and as a hospital attendant in Warren, Pennsylvania, he wrote a number of papers on Amazonian curare-producing plants with B.A. Krukoff. These were entitled "Plants Strategic to the War Effort". His herbarium is accommodated in the
Moldenke
Room at the Plant Resources Center.
"Tectona grandis" was first formally described by Carl Linnaeus the Younger in his 1782 work "Supplementum Plantarum". In 1975, Harold Norman
Moldenke
published new descriptions of four forms of this species in the journal "Phytologia".
Moldenke
described each form as varying slightly from the type specimen: "T. grandis" f. "canescens" is distinguished from the type material by being densely canescent, or covered in hairs, on the underside of the leaf, "T. grandis" f. "pilosula" is distinct from the type material in the varying morphology of the leaf veins, "T. grandis" f. "punctata" is only hairy on the larger veins on the underside of the leaf, and "T. grandis" f. "tomentella" is noted for its dense yellowish tomentose hairs on the lower surface of the leaf.
While Harbison’s scientific publications are limited in number, the variety of his natural history interests is reflected in the patronyms proposed in his honor, including those of two plants, "Verbena harbisonii"
Moldenke
, 1940 (now "Glandularia lilacina"), and "Astragalus harbisonii" Barneby, 1953; a mouse, "Peromyscus guardia harbisoni" Banks, 1967; a bee, "Centris harbisoni" Snelling, 1974; a butterfly, "Euphyes vestris harbisoni" Brown and McGuire, 1983; a yucca skipper, "Megathymus yuccae harbisoni" J. & T. Emmel, 1998; and a scorpion, "Vaejovis" (now "Serradigitus") "harbisoni" Williams, 1970.
Moldenke
writes that the myrrh of certain parts of Biblical history was actually labdanum. It is believed that many instances in the Bible where it speaks of myrrh it is actually referring to a mixture of myrrh and labdanum. According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary one of the definitions of “myrrh” is “a mixture of myrrh and labdanum.” If what was often referred to as myrrh was actually a mixture of myrrh and labdanum, then the manufacturing of stacte as described by Dioscorides could have reasonably been the product of this myrrh and labdanum mixture.