Species Cliffortia lanceolata
Pictures from Observations
Range:
Location unknown
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Etymology of Cliffortia:
For George Clifford (1685–1760), Dutch merchant and banker, amateur botanist and zoologist. He was a director of the Dutch East India Company and owned a magnificent garden at Hartecamp, Netherlands, as well as a private zoo in Amsterdam. George Clifford is best known as a patron of the Swedish naturalist Linnaeus, whom he employed as ‘hortulanus’ and who catalogued the family’s unique collection of plants, herbarium and library. The result was Linnaeus’s 530-page book Hortus Cliffortianus (1738), his first important work, in which he described many species from Clifford’s garden. The publication was paid for by George Clifford as a private edition.
Etymology of lanceolata:
From the Latin term for a spear or lance, and is usually used to indicate a species with narrow leaves that taper to a point at one end
Scientific name:
Unknown
Synonym of:
Unknown
Long etymology:
Protologue:
Bot. Not. 157 (1933)
Synonym status:
Year published:
1933
Observations of Taxon
Cliffortia lanceolata
Locality:
Name of observer:
Nick Helme (David)
Date observed:
23/03/2016 - 12:29pm