Limonium puberulum explained
Limonium puberulum, the downy sea lavender, is a species of flowering plant in the family Plumbaginaceae, native to subtropical elevations of Lanzarote in the Canary Islands.[1] [2] It is morphologically similar to but genetically distinct from Limonium bourgeaui.[3] [4]
Notes and References
- 686937-1 . Limonium puberulum (Webb ex Lindl.) Kuntze . 14 January 2023 .
- Book: Saunders . Thomas William . 1897 . An Encyclopædia of Gardening: A Dictionary of Cultivated Plants, etc., Giving an Epitome of the Culture of all the Kinds of Generally Grown in this Country, Together with their Common or Popular Names . 2nd . London . W. H. & L. Collingridge . 110 .
- Taxonomy, phylogeny and biogeography of Limonium sect. Pteroclados (Plumbaginaceae), based on morphological data . 2004 . Karis . Per Ola . Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society . 144 . 4 . 461–482 . 10.1111/j.1095-8339.2003.00260.x . free .
- An expanded molecular phylogeny of Plumbaginaceae, with emphasis on Limonium (sea lavenders): Taxonomic implications and biogeographic considerations . 2018 . Koutroumpa . Konstantina . Theodoridis . Spyros . Warren . Ben H. . Jiménez . Ares . Celep . Ferhat . Doğan . Musa . Romeiras . Maria M. . Santos-Guerra . Arnoldo . Fernández-Palacios . Jóse María . Caujapé-Castells . Juli . Moura . Mónica . Menezes De Sequeira . Miguel . Conti . Elena . Ecology and Evolution . 8 . 24 . 12397–12424 . 10.1002/ece3.4553 . 30619554 . 6308857 .