安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Lycopodiaceae - Wikipedia
Members of Lycopodiaceae are not spermatophytes and so do not produce seeds Instead they produce spores, which are oily and flammable, and are the most economically important aspects of these plants
- Lycopodiaceae - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Currently, there are some 1280 species of lycophytes belonging to three major lines: Lycopodiaceae, which is homosporous, Selaginellaceae and Isoetaceae, both of them heterosporous Lycopodiaceae are terrestrial or epiphytic, cosmopolitan and most diverse in tropical and alpine habitats
- Lycopodiaceae (Clubmoss Family) - FSUS
Lycopodiaceae + Huperziaceae, along with Selaginellaceae and Isoetaceae, have now been shown to be only distantly related to other extant pteridophytes and seed plants (Pryer et al 2001)
- Lycopodiaceae in Flora of North America @ efloras. org
The Lycopodiaceae are an extremely diverse, ancient family The family may contain even more than the estimated 400 species because the tropical members and the very large genus Phlegmariurus are still poorly known
- Lycopodiaceae
The Lycopodiaceae are terrestrial or epiphytic homosporous, protostelic vascular plants comprising about half a dozen genera and 300 species
- Lycopodiaceae: Dichotomous Key: Go Botany
Upright shoots branched, with winter bud constrictions, produced from subterranean or superficial horizontal shoots; horizontal shoots with winter bud constrictions (except Dendrolycopodium), these marked by a zone of small, congested trophophylls; plants primarily of mesic to xeric habitats
- Club moss | Description, Taxonomy, Characteristics, Examples, Facts . . .
club moss, (family Lycopodiaceae), any of some 400 species of seedless vascular plants constituting the only family of the lycophyte order Lycopodiales The taxonomy of the family has been contentious, and the number of genera vary depending on the source
- Lycopodiaceae | Flora of Australia
The habit and habitat of Lycopodiaceae is extremely diverse, including a myriad of terrestrial, epilithic and epiphytic forms ranging from colonial terrestrial plants in oligotrophic wetlands to hanging epiphytes in rainforest canopies
|
|
|