Sedum Bibliography - Search results - Wiki Sedum Bibliography
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classified as Sedum are now in the segregate genera Hylotelephium and Rhodiola. Well-known European species of Sedum are Sedum acre, Sedum album, Sedum dasyphyllum... |
Hylotelephium telephium (redirect from Sedum telephium) Hylotelephium telephium (synonym Sedum telephium), known as orpine, livelong, frog's-stomach, harping Johnny, life-everlasting, live-forever, midsummer-men... |
goldmoss sedum, goldmoss stonecrop, biting stonecrop Sedum actinocarpum Yamam. Sedum adolphi Raym.-Hamet – Golden Sedum, Adolph's Sedum, Golden Glow Sedum Sedum... |
Phedimus spurius (redirect from Sedum spurium) the family Crassulaceae. It is still widely listed in the literature as Sedum spurium. Phedimus spurius is a spreading evergreen perennial with alternate... |
Crassulaceae (redirect from Sedum family) species and 34–35 genera, depending on the circumscription of the genus Sedum, and distributed over three subfamilies. Members of the Crassulaceae are... |
Hylotelephium (section Bibliography) America. Species in the genus, formerly included in Sedum, are popular garden plants, known as sedum, stonecrop, live-for-ever, or orpine. Horticulturalists... |
Rhodiola (section Bibliography) resemble Sedum and other members of the family. Like sedums, Rhodiola species are often called stonecrops. Some authors merge Rhodiola into Sedum. Rhodiola... |
Sempervivoideae (section Bibliography) distributed in temperate climates. The largest genus in this subfamily is Sedum, with about 470 species. Succulent leaved plants. Unlike the other two smaller... |
Circumboreal Region (section Bibliography) molissima, Draba ossetica, Primula bayernii, Saxifraga subverticillata, Sedum stevenianum, Geranium renardii, Oxytropis owerinii, Genliana grossheimii... |
These caterpillars feed on stonecrop (Sedum species, mainly Sedum telephium, Sedum album, Sedum rupestre and Sedum ropsea), Hylotelephium caucasicum and... |
Phedimus (section Bibliography) recognized as a separate genus, Aizopsis. Phedimus kamtschaticus (syn. Sedum kamtschaticum) is widely grown as an ornamental ground cover and has gained... |
Crassula (section Bibliography) Beauty' Crassula 'Moonglow' Crassula 'Petite Bicolor,' sometimes sold as Sedum 'Little Missy' or 'Mini Kitty', a cultivar of Crassula pellucida var. marginalis... |
Prometheum (section Bibliography) Hart P. sempervivoides and P. pilosum were historically included in genera Sedum (section Cyprosedum), and later Rosularia, but were elevated to a separate... |
Petrosedum (section Bibliography) was segregated from the very large cosmopolitan and polyphyletic genus, Sedum, where it was variously considered a series (Rupestria). It was originally... |
List of Sempervivoideae genera (section Bibliography) number of these have been at times, embedded within the very large genus Sedum s.s.. Aeonium Aichryson Cremnophila Dudleya Echeveria Graptopetalum Hylotelephium... |
Proto-Celtic paganism (section Bibliography) *sedo- ~ *sīdos 'tumulus (inhabited by supernatural beings), peace' Gaul. sedum, sidum OIr. síd MW hedd, OBret. hed From PIE sēds gen. sedos ('seat'). See... |
Succulent plant (section Bibliography) Phedimus, Pistorinia, Prometheum, Pseudosedum, Rhodiola, Rosularia, Sedella, Sedum, Sempervivum, Sinocrassula, Thompsonella, Tylecodon, Umbilicus, Villadia... |
List of wildflowers in Indiana (section Bibliography) Susan Rudbeckia triloba, brown-eyed susan Sanguinaria canadensis, bloodroot Sedum ternatum, woodland stonecrop Stylophorum diphyllum, woods-poppy Tiarella... |
bridgesii - Bridges' cliffbrake fern Pteridium aquilinum - Bracken Fern Sedum albomarginatum - Feather River Stonecrop (sn-endemic - endangered) Sisyrinchium... |
Rock of Solutré (section Bibliography) peregrina, Œillet (which can refer to several species), sesleria caerulea, sedum and saxifrage. Notable birds of the rock include the ortolan bunting, the... |