Species Serruria inconspicua
Pictures from Observations
There aren’t any identifications of Serruria inconspicua.
Range:
Location unknown
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Etymology of Serruria:
For Joseph (Josephus) Serrurier (1663–1742), Dutch physician, philosopher, mathematician, botanist and physicist. He studied at the University of Utrecht, obtaining an MA degree in 1690 and qualifying as a doctor of medicine on the same day. During his career at Utrecht, he became professor of philosophy and mathematics (1705), professor of botany and medicine (1716), and the university’s rector on three occasions. Among his works, he authored an extensive treatise on experimental physics, Physicae Experimentis Innixae Compendiosa Tractatio (1700), a commemorative volume on Adrianus Reland, orientalist, linguist and physicist; and created a new hortus botanicus, which he modelled on the University of Leiden’s widely acclaimed botanical garden designed by Herman Boerhaave.
Etymology of inconspicua:
From the Latin in- = 'not' and conspicuus = 'readily noticeable', meaning the plant is cryptic and not readily visible
Scientific name:
Unknown
Synonym of:
Unknown
Long etymology:
Synonym status:
Observations of Taxon
There aren’t any identifications of Serruria inconspicua.