Species Hermannia desertorum
Pictures from Observations
Range:
Location unknown
{"type":"FeatureCollection","features":[]}
Etymology of Hermannia:
For Paul Hermann (1646–1695), German-born Dutch physician and botanist. He graduated in medicine at the universities of Leiden and Padua, became a ship’s medical officer (1672–1677) for the Dutch East India Company and went to Sri Lanka via the Cape, where he made the first known herbarium collection of local plants, now housed in the Sloane Herbarium, British Museum of Natural History and at Oxford. In 1679 he became professor of botany at the University of Leiden and director of the Hortus Botanicus in Leiden, Europe’s finest botanical garden. His 1687 publication Horti Academici Lugduno-Batavi Catalogus includes 34 Cape plants, and his proposed Prodomus Plantaerum Africanarum was to contain 791 items, but untimely death intervened.
Etymology of desertorum:
From the Latin desertorum meaning 'growing in deserts'
Scientific name:
Hermannia desertorum Eckl. & Zeyh.
Localities:
Synonym of:
Unknown
Long etymology:
Protologue:
Enum. Pl. Afric. Austral. 1: 48 (1834 [1835])
Synonym status:
Year published:
1835
Observations of Taxon
Hermannia desertorum
Name of observer:
David Gwynne-Evans (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Collection:
Hermannia desertorum
Name of observer:
David Gwynne-Evans (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Collection:
Hermannia desertorum
Locality:
Name of observer:
Katryn van Heerden (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown