Eloise Wicker Knight
…father, Rassie Everton Wicker, was also very interested in botany and deposited vascular plant specimens in NCU. Louisiana State University Herbarium (LSU) curates specimens collected by Eloise Wicker Knight. Eloise…
…father, Rassie Everton Wicker, was also very interested in botany and deposited vascular plant specimens in NCU. Louisiana State University Herbarium (LSU) curates specimens collected by Eloise Wicker Knight. Eloise…
…http://baptisthistoryhomepage.com/stifler.james.madison.html accessed on 23 October 2020. (this page lists https://www.library.illinois.edu/ihx/inventories/blair-leverett-stifler_family-guide.pdf as the source for its information) 12. “James Madison Stifler” Prabook. https://prabook.com/web/james_madison.stifler/280375 accessed on 23 October 2020. …
…Garden, named Phlox lighthipei in honor of Rev. Lighthipe. This wildflower is found in pinelands of Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. There is a single record of Phlox lighthipei from…
…Standl.) Woodson; Vincetoxicum gentlei Lundell & Standl. Aquifoliaceae: Ilex gentlei Lundell Celastraceae: Crossopetalum gentlei (Lundell) Lundell; Myginda gentlei (Lundell) Lundell; Rhacoma gentlei Lundell Clusiaceae: Clusia gentlei Lundell Commelinaceae: Callisia gentlei…
…of Allomyces arbuscula. Mycologia 43: 635-644. Barksdale, Alma Whiffen. 1960. Interthallic sexual reactions in Achlya, a genus of the aquatic fungi. Amer. J. Bot. 47: 14-23. –. 1962. Effect of…
…largely instrumental in building up the fungus herbarium in his department, until it now numbers some 94,000 accessions and includes an unusually complete collection of the fungi occurring in a…
By Carol Ann McCormick, Curatrix, UNC Chapel Hill Herbarium I have recently become very interested in a place I’ve never visited. It’s not a terribly exotic place, nor is it…
…Martinville in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana in 1887. He died in St. Martinville at age 58 in the summer of 1900. (1) He is interred at St. Martin de Tours…
…people I know simply call it Youngia. As its specific epithet hints, it is a native plant in Japan (and elsewhere in Asia). If you are not already acquainted with…
…shorter and its opening flowers are more rose bud like. It is about 35 feet high, and five inches in diameter at the base. Other trees of the same kind…