CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1951 - JSTOR
Pelliciera (described separately)." No further statement was m cerning the ultimate disposition of Pelliciera, which he include descriptions of the genera and in his prepared key …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1941 - JSTOR
The genus Cleyera, well known and generally accepted as a distinct genus of the Theaceae by students of the Asiatic flora, has been included under the genus Eurya by workers on the …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1952 - JSTOR
Annesleae and could not foresee the eventual inclusion of Wallich's genus among the nomina conservando. In 1948 Gagnepain described a new genus, Paranneslea, which he …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1937 - JSTOR
Unfortunately this description was based upon two shrubs as a casual examination of the type indicates. Nearly filling the sheet is an ample specimen of Cleyera japónica, while in …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1948 - JSTOR
The genus Bonnetia Martius & Zuccarini ex Nees & Martius (1821) of the Theaceae was named for the Swiss naturalist, Charles Bonnet (1 720-1793). G. Don (1831) refers to him as …
CE Kobuski - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1938 - JSTOR
The genus Eurya was first described by Thunberg1 in 1783 with E. japonica, the type- species. By 1854, over forty species had been added to this genus by various workers …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1942 - JSTOR
Since the type species, Ternstroemia meridionalis Mutis ex Linnaeus f., was first described in 1781, well over a hundred entities from tropical America have been accredited to this …
CE Kobuski - Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 1951 - JSTOR
Tree 20-30 m. high (occasionally a shrub); the trunk straight 0.4-0.5 m. in diam.; branches upright at first, then spreading forming a compact head; bark of mature tree brown, as much …
EA Burt - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1926 - JSTOR
Fructifications waxy, crustaceous or floccose, fleshy, cartila ous, coriaceous or membranaceous, always resupinate, effuse hymenium even, or somewhat tubercular in a …