Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber

German naturalist (1739–1810).

Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber (17 January 1739 – 10 December 1810), often styled J.C.D. von Schreber, was a German naturalist.

Abbreviations: Schreb.
Occupations: university teacher, physician, lichenologist, entomologist, botanist, naturalist, botanical collector
Citizenships: Electorate of Saxony
Languages: Latin, German
Dates: 1739-01-17T00:00:00Z – 1810-12-10T00:00:00Z
Birth place: Weißensee
Direct attributions: 76 plants, 2 fungi
Authorship mentions: 111 plants, 18 fungi

76 plants attributed, 35 plants contributed to111 plants:

Hepatica nobilis (Liverleaf) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the ranunculaceae family
Anemone hepatica (syn. Hepatica nobilis), the common hepatica, liverwort, liverleaf, kidneywort, or pennywort, is a species of flowering plant in the buttercup family Ranunculaceae, native to woodland in temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. This herbaceous perennial grows from a rhizome.
Trifolium campestre (Hop Trefoil) Schreb. 1804
annual plant species in the fabaceae family
Trifolium campestre, commonly known as hop trefoil, field clover and low hop clover, is a species of flowering plant native to Europe and western Asia.
Bambusa (Bamboos) Schreb. 1789
plant genus in the poaceae family
Bambusa is a large genus of clumping bamboos. Most species of Bambusa are rather large, with numerous branches emerging from the nodes, and one or two much larger than the rest. The branches can be as long as 11 m (35 ft). They are native to Southeast Asia, South Asia, China, Taiwan, the Himalayas, New Guinea, Melanesia, and the Northern Territory of Australia. They are also reportedly naturalized in other regions, e.g. Africa, Americas, and various oceanic islands.
Vernonia (Ironweeds) Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the asteraceae family
Vernonia is a genus of about 350 species of forbs and shrubs in the family Asteraceae. Some species of this genus are known as ironweeds. Some species are edible and of economic value. They are known for having intense purple flowers. There have been numerous distinct subgenera and subsections named in this genus, and some botanists have divided the genus into several distinct genera. For instance, the Flora of North America recognizes only about twenty species in Vernonia sensu stricto, seventeen of which are in North America north of Mexico, with the others being found in South America.
Vicia tetrasperma (Smooth Tare) (L.) Schreb. 1771
annual and medicinal plant species in the fabaceae family
Vicia tetrasperma (syn. Ervum tetraspermum) the smooth tare, smooth vetch, lentil vetch or sparrow vetch, is a species of flowering plant in the bean family Fabaceae.
Carex flacca (Glaucous Sedge) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the cyperaceae family
Carex flacca, with common names blue sedge, gray carex, glaucous sedge, or carnation-grass, (syn. Carex glauca), is a species of sedge native to parts of Europe and North Africa. It is frequent in a range of habitats, including grasslands, moorlands, exposed and disturbed soil, and the upper edges of salt marshes. It has naturalized in eastern North America.
Uncaria Schreb. 1789
plant genus in the rubiaceae family
Uncaria is a genus of flowering plants in the family Rubiaceae. It has about 40 species. Their distribution is pantropical, with most species native to tropical Asia, three from Africa and the Mediterranean and two from the neotropics. They are known colloquially as gambier, cat's claw or uña de gato. The latter two names are shared with several other plants. The type species for the genus is Uncaria guianensis. Indonesian Gambier (U. gambir) is a large tropical vine with leaves typical of the genus, being opposite and about 10 cm (3.9 in) long. The South American U. tomentosa is called Uña
Epilobium parviflorum (Hoary Willowherb) Schreb. 1771
perennial and medicinal plant species in the onagraceae family
Epilobium parviflorum, commonly known as the hoary willowherb or smallflower hairy willowherb, is a herbaceous perennial plant of the family Onagraceae.
Spartina (Cordgrass) Schreb. 1789
plant genus in the poaceae family
Spartina is a section of the genus Sporobolus, plants in the grass family, frequently found in coastal salt marshes. It was first established as a separate genus in 1789, and reduced to a section in 2014. Species are commonly known as cordgrass or cord-grass, and are native to the coasts of the Atlantic Ocean in western and southern Europe, north-western and southern Africa, the Americas and the islands of the southern Atlantic Ocean; one or two species also occur on the western coast of North America and in freshwater habitats inland in the Americas. The highest species diversity is on the
Ajuga chamaepitys (Ground Pine) (L.) Schreb. 1773
annual plant species in the lamiaceae family
Ajuga chamaepitys is a species of flowering plant of the family Lamiaceae. Popularly known as yellow bugle, Chian bugle or ground-pine, the plant has many of the same characteristics and properties as Ajuga reptans. A. chamaepitys can be found in Europe, the Eastern part of the Mediterranean, and North Africa.
Liatris (Blazingstars) Gaertn. ex Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the asteraceae family
Liatris, commonly known as gayfeather and blazing star is a genus of flowering plants in the tribe Eupatorieae within the family Asteraceae native to North America (Canada, United States, Mexico and the Bahamas). Some species are used as ornamental plants, sometimes in flower bouquets. They are perennials, surviving the winter and resprouting from underground corms. Liatris species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species such as moths of the genus Schinia.
Carex bohemica (Bohemian Sedge) Schreb. 1772
perennial plant species in the cyperaceae family
Carex bohemica is a species of sedge (genus Carex), native to Europe, Siberia, and northern Asia to Japan, and it was introduced to Sweden. It prefers to grow in mud flats. It is called Zypergras-Segge in German.
Avena strigosa (Black Oats) Schreb. 1771
annual plant species in the poaceae family
Avena strigosa (also called lopsided oat, bristle oat or black oat; syn. Avena hispanica Ard.) is a species of grass native to Europe. It has edible seeds and is often cultivated as animal feed in Portugal and Brazil. It is the only 14-chromosome species of the seven in existence that is grown for profit (though on small land areas). It is sometimes reported as a weed.
Carex praecox (Early Sedge) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the cyperaceae family
Carex praecox, the spring sedge, is a species of flowering plant in the genus Carex, native to Europe, western Asia, and Mongolia. Its diploid chromosome number is 2n=58, with some uncertainty.
Muhlenbergia (Muhly) Schreb. 1789
plant genus in the poaceae family
Muhlenbergia is a genus of plants in the grass family. The genus is named in honor of the German-American amateur botanist Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg (1753-1815). Many of the species are known by the common name muhly. The greatest number are native to the southwestern United States and Mexico, but there are also native species in Canada, Central and South America and in Asia.
Agrostis vinealis (Brown Bent) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Agrostis vinealis (Chinese: 芒剪股颖; pinyin: mang jian gu ying) is a species of grass known by the common names brown bentgrass and brown bent, which can be found from Russia to Mongolia, China, Pakistan, India and Alaska. It was introduced to Greenland and South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.
Marshallia (Barbara's-buttons) Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the asteraceae family
Marshallia is a genus of plants in the tribe Helenieae within the family Asteraceae. Marshallia is native to the southeastern and south-central United States. A common name applied to most species in the genus is Barbara's buttons.
Hordeum secalinum (Meadow Barley) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the poaceae family
Hordeum secalinum, false rye barley or meadow barley (a name it shares with Hordeum brachyantherum), is a species of wild barley native to Europe, including the Madeiras, Crimea and the north Caucasus, northwest Africa, and the Levant. It has been introduced to Australia and New Zealand. An allotetraploid, it arose from ancestors with the Xa and I Hordeum genomes.
Epilobium roseum (Pale Willowherb) (Schreb.) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the onagraceae family
The pale willowherb (Epilobium roseum) is a species of flowering plant belonging to the family Onagraceae.
Epilobium obscurum (Short-fruited Willowherb) Schreb. 1771
perennial plant species in the onagraceae family
Epilobium obscurum is a species of flowering plant belonging to the family Onagraceae. Its native range is Macaronesia, Northwestern Africa, Europe to Turkey.
Ajuga iva (Southern Bugle) (L.) Schreb. 1773
annual plant species in the lamiaceae family
Ajuga iva, the southern bugle, is a species of perennial herb in the family Lamiaceae. They have a self-supporting growth form and simple, broad leaves. Individuals can grow to 5 cm. Subspecies include Ajuga iva subsp. iva and Ajuga iva subsp. pseudoiva.
Trifolium badium (Brown Clover) Schreb. 1804
perennial plant species in the fabaceae family
Trifolium badium, the brown clover or brown trefoil, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae, native to most of mainland Europe, the Caucasus, Turkey, Iraq, and Iran. It is a locally important forage in sub-alpine pastures.
Swartzia Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the fabaceae family
Swartzia is a genus of flowering plants in the family Fabaceae. It was named in honor of Swedish botanist Olof Swartz and contains about 200 species. Swartzia is restricted in its geographical distribution to the New World Tropics, where it occurs primarily in lowland rainforests, but also in savannas, pre-montane forests, and tropical dry forests. While it can be found throughout the wet lowlands from Mexico and the Caribbean islands to southern Brazil and Bolivia, Swartzia is most abundant and species-rich in Amazonia, where 10–20 species may co-occur at a single site. The species of
Dipteryx (Ironwood) Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the fabaceae family
Dipteryx is a genus containing a number of species of large trees and possibly shrubs. It belongs to the "papilionoid" subfamily – Faboideae – of the family Fabaceae. This genus is native to South and Central America and the Caribbean. Formerly, the related genus Taralea was included in Dipteryx.
Daphne oleoides (Spurge-olive) Schreb. 1766
plant species in the thymelaeaceae family
Daphne oleoides, known as olive daphne, is a shrub of the family Thymelaeaceae. It is native to southern Europe (Albania, Bulgaria, Corsica, Crete, mainland Greece, Italy, the northwest Balkans, Sardinia, Sicily, and Spain), northern Africa (Algeria), and Western Asia (Turkey and Lebanon-Syria).
Thymus × citriodorus (Lemon Thyme) (Pers.) Schreb. 1811
plant hybrid species in the lamiaceae family
Thymus citriodorus, the lemon thyme or citrus thyme, is a lemon-scented evergreen mat-forming perennial plant in the family Lamiaceae. There has been a great amount of confusion over the plant's correct name and origin. Recent DNA analysis suggests that it is not a hybrid or cross, but a distinct species as it was first described in 1811. An analysis in a different study clustered Thymus citriodorus together with Thymus vulgaris, which is considered as one of its parent species (see below). T. citriodorus is an evergreen sub-shrub, growing to 0.1 metres (3.9 in) in height by 0.3 metres (12
Rubus sanctus (Holy Bramble) Schreb. 1766
plant species in the rosaceae family
Rubus ulmifolius subsp. sanctus, commonly called holy bramble, is a bramble native to parts of Asia and Europe. This plant is very long-lived. An instance of it can be found at the Chapel of the Burning Bush on Mount Sinai, where it is revered as the original burning bush of the Bible. This longevity and location lead to its Latin name.
Pappophorum (Pappusgrass) Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the poaceae family
Pappophorum is a genus of plants in the grass family, native to the Western Hemisphere. Members of the genus are commonly known as pappusgrass. Species Pappophorum bicolor E.Fourn. – pink pappusgrass - Texas, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Guanajuato, D.F., Veracruz, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosí Pappophorum caespitosum R.E.Fr. - Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay Pappophorum hassleri Hack. - Paraguay Pappophorum krapovickasii Roseng. - Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil Pappophorum mucronulatum Nees - Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mexico, Honduras, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Brazil,
Anthephora (Oldfield Grass) Schreb. 1810
plant genus in the poaceae family
Anthephora is a genus of plants in the grass family, native to southwest Asia, Africa, the Americas, and various islands. Species Anthephora ampullacea - Guinea, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola Anthephora argentea - Namibia, Botswana, Cape Province Anthephora cristata - from Guinea to Angola Anthephora elongata - Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Angola, Malawi, Zambia Anthephora hermaphrodita - Mexico, Central America, northern South America, West Indies, Galápagos; naturalized in Florida, Hawaii Anthephora laevis - Eritrea, Sudan, Israel, Palestine, Jordan
Pterospermum Schreb. 1791
plant genus in the malvaceae family
Pterospermum is a genus of flowering plants in the mallow family Malvaceae. Its species are tropical trees that range from southern China across tropical Asia. Traditionally included in the family Sterculiaceae, it is included in the expanded Malvaceae in the APG and most subsequent systematics. Pterospermum is based on two Greek words, "Pteron" and "Sperma," meaning "winged seed." Some species are grown ornamentally while others are valued for their timber.
0
Your shopping cart:
Nothing in your cart yet!Add a device?
ItemCountTotal
$
Log in to load your saved addresses.
< Back to Overview
Loading shipping options...
< Back to Address
Log in to load your saved payment methods.
Pay by Credit Card
or direct bank debit
Purchase Order
Pay by wire or bank transfer
After you confirm your order, we'll email you an invoice and all bank details to complete your purchase.
< Back to Shipping
Processing... Creating order Confirming inventory Processing payment Acquiring shipping Final confirmation (Cleaning up)
Order confirmed!
Summary
Devices$ 0
Plants$ 0
ShippingNot yet calculated
TaxesNot yet calculated
Total$ 0
Address
Shipping
Payment
Start Checkout