Eugène Pierre Nicolas Fournier

French botanist (1834-1884).

Eugène Pierre Nicolas Fournier (15 February 1834, Paris – 10 June 1884) was a French botanist. He was particularly interested in ferns. He was a member of the Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique. The genus Fourniera (family Cyatheaceae) is named in his honor.

Abbreviations: E.Fourn.
Occupations: botanist
Citizenships: France
Languages: French
Dates: 1834-02-15T00:00:00Z – 1884-06-10T00:00:00Z
Birth place: Paris
Direct attributions: 209 plants, 0 fungi
Authorship mentions: 397 plants, 0 fungi

209 plants attributed, 188 plants contributed to397 plants:

Hyparrhenia (Thatching Grass) Andersson ex E.Fourn. 1886
plant genus in the poaceae family
Hyparrhenia is a genus of grasses. Many species are known commonly as thatching grass. They are mostly native to tropical Africa; some can be found in warmer areas in temperate Eurasia, Australia, and Latin America. These are annual and perennial bunch grasses. The inflorescence branches into twin spikes of paired spikelets. Species Hyparrhenia anamesa - dry Africa from Ethiopia to Cape Province Hyparrhenia andongensis - Angola Hyparrhenia anemopaegma - Zambia Hyparrhenia anthistirioides - dry Africa from Eritrea to Malawi Hyparrhenia arrhenobasis - Ethiopia Hyparrhenia bagirmica - West
Sisymbrium volgense (Russian Mustard) M.Bieb. ex E.Fourn. 1865
perennial plant species in the brassicaceae family
Sisymbrium volgense is a species of flowering plant belonging to the family Brassicaceae. Its native range is Southwestern European Russia to Caucasus. Synonym: Sisymbrium wolgense M. Bieb. ex Fourn. (orthographical variant)
Torenia fournieri (Bluewings) Linden ex E.Fourn. 1876
annual and medicinal plant species in the linderniaceae family
Torenia fournieri, the bluewings or wishbone flower, is an annual plant in the Linderniaceae, with blue, white, or pink flowers that have yellow markings. It is typically grown as a landscape annual, reaching 12–15 in. tall. It has simple opposite or subopposite leaves with serrated edges.
Jouvea E.Fourn. 1876
plant genus in the poaceae family
Jouvea is a Latin American genus of coastal plants in the grass family. It grows on mud flats and coastal sand dunes from northern Mexico to Ecuador. Jouvea's closest relative in the subfamily Chloridoideae is likely Monanthochloe; both share the characteristic of distichously arranged leaves, and both are dioecious. Jouvea was named for the French botanist Joseph Duval-Jouve (1810–1883) Species Jouvea pilosa (J.Presl) Scribn. – Central America (Guatemala to Nicaragua), Mexico (Tamaulipas, Baja California Sur, Sonora, Sinaloa, Jalisco, Nayarit, Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima, Oaxaca, Chiapas,
Peyritschia E.Fourn. 1886
plant genus in the poaceae family
Peyritschia is a genus of Latin American plants in the grass family.
Funastrum E.Fourn. 1882
plant genus in the apocynaceae family
Funastrum is a genus of flowering plant now in the family Apocynaceae. The name is derived from the Latin word funis, meaning "rope", and astrum, alluding to the twining stems. Members of the genus are commonly known as twinevines.
Jobinia E.Fourn. 1885
plant genus in the apocynaceae family
Jobinia is a genus of flowering plants of the family Apocynaceae first described in 1885. It is native to South America and Central America.
Pappophorum bicolor (Pink Pappusgrass) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Pappophorum bicolor is a species of grass known by the common name pink pappusgrass.
Gyrostelma E.Fourn. 1885
plant genus in the apocynaceae family
Gyrostelma is a monotypic genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Apocynaceae. The only species is Gyrostelma oxypetaloides. Its native range is Central Brazil.
Petalostelma E.Fourn. 1885
plant genus in the apocynaceae family
Petalostelma is a genus of flowering plants in the family Apocynaceae, first described as a genus in 1885. They are native to South America. Species
Bromus anomalus (Nodding Brome) Rupr. ex E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Bromus anomalus, commonly known as nodding brome or the Mexican brome, is a species of perennial grass in the family Poaceae. It can be found in US states such as New Mexico and Texas and also in Canadian provinces such as Alberta, British Columbia, and Saskatchewan.
Albizia harveyi (Sickle-leaved Albizia) E.Fourn. 1865
plant species in the fabaceae family
Albizia harveyi is a deciduous tree belonging to the family Fabaceae. It is distributed in eastern and southern Africa and quite similar in appearance to Albizia amara.
Tripsacum lanceolatum (Mexican Gamagrass) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Tripsacum lanceolatum is a species of grass with the common name of Mexican gamagrass, though as with many common names it doesn't accurately describe it fully since it grows far outside Mexico as well. T. lanceolatum is a perennial bunchgrass as most species in its genus are, that grows in a Tropical Dry biome. Considered LC (least concern) by IUCN.
Setaria liebmannii (Liebmann's Bristlegrass) E.Fourn. 1886
annual plant species in the poaceae family
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Panicum ghiesbreghtii (Ghiesbreght's Witchgrass) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Cytisus ardoinoi E.Fourn. 1866
plant species in the fabaceae family
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Chusquea liebmannii E.Fourn. 1885
plant species in the poaceae family
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Austrogramme E.Fourn. 1873
plant genus in the pteridaceae family
Austrogramme is a genus of ferns in the subfamily Pteridoideae of the family Pteridaceae.
Asclepias barjoniifolia E.Fourn. 1882
perennial plant species in the apocynaceae family
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Setaria grisebachii (Grisebach's Bristlegrass) E.Fourn. 1886
annual plant species in the poaceae family
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Paspalum pubiflorum (Hairy Seed Paspalum) Rupr. ex E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Paspalum pubiflorum, the hairyseed paspalum, is a species of flowering plant in the panicgrass subfamily Panicoideae. It is native to warmer, wetter parts of United States east of the Rockies, Mexico, and Cuba. A warm-season grass reaching 4 ft (1.2 m), it is a facultative wetland species.
Paspalum minus (Matted Paspalum) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Paspalum hartwegianum (Hartweg's Paspalum) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Panicum gouinii E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Myriopteris fendleri (Fendler's Lipfern) E.Fourn. 1872
plant species in the pteridaceae family
Myriopteris fendleri, known as Fendler's lip fern, is a small to medium-sized fern of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico. Its leaf is three times divided. One of the cheilanthoid lip ferns, it was usually classified in the genus Cheilanthes as Cheilanthes fendleri until 2013, when the genus Myriopteris was again recognized as separate from Cheilanthes. It grows on rocky ledges and slopes, often in pine forests. The species is presumably named for Augustus Fendler, who collected the type specimen.
Muhlenbergia dubia (Cane Muhly) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Dicksonia baudouinii E.Fourn. 1873
plant species in the dicksoniaceae family
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Chloris andropogonoides (Slimspike Windmill Grass) E.Fourn. 1886
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
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Bommeria E.Fourn. 1877
plant genus in the pteridaceae family
Bommeria is a genus of small pteridaceous rock ferns, native to the New World. Genetic analysis has shown it to be a stem offshoot clade of all the cheilanthoid ferns (in family Pteridaceae), except for Doryopteris, which is an even more basal ("primitive") stem offshoot. for years, it was assumed that this genus was closely allied with Hemionitis, but genetic analysis has shown that genus to be a more advanced genus evolutionarily. The same set of analysis has shown many presumed genera within this family to be paraphyletic, but the small genus Bommeria appears to be monophyletic, or a
Albizia polyphylla E.Fourn. 1860
plant species in the fabaceae family
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