Pieter Willem Leenhouts

Dutch botanist (1926–2004).

Pieter Willem Leenhouts (1926 – 1 March 2004) was a Dutch botanist. He worked at the Rijksherbarium from 1947 until his official retirement in 1991, and then was an honorary member of staff until 1999. He was editor of Blumea from 1973 to 1999. The standard author abbreviation Leenh. is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.

Abbreviations: Leenh.
Occupations: botanist
Citizenships: Kingdom of the Netherlands
Dates: 1926-01-01T00:00:00Z – 2004-01-01T00:00:00Z
Birth place: Hopkinton
Direct attributions: 169 plants, 0 fungi
Authorship mentions: 176 plants, 0 fungi

169 plants attributed, 7 plants contributed to176 plants:

Nephelium ramboutanake (Pulasan) (Labill.) Leenh. 1986
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Nephelium ramboutan-ake, the pulasan, is a tropical fruit in the soapberry family Sapindaceae. It is closely related to the rambutan and sometimes confused with it. Other related soapberry family fruits include lychee and longan. Usually eaten fresh, it is sweeter than the rambutan and lychee, but very rare outside Southeast Asia.
Lepisanthes rubiginosa (Roxb.) Leenh. 1969
edible and medicinal plant species in the sapindaceae family
Lepisanthes rubiginosa, also known as mertajam, is a plant species in the lychee family found in northern India, Indochina, Malesia and northwest Australia.
Pleiogynium timoriense (Burdekin Plum) (DC.) Leenh. 1952
plant species in the anacardiaceae family
Pleiogynium timoriense, commonly known as the Burdekin plum, sweet plum, tulip plum, or in the Djabugay language guybalum, is a medium-sized fruit-bearing tree in the cashew and mango family Anacardiaceae native to Malesia, Australia and the Pacific Islands.
Lepisanthes senegalensis (Poir.) Leenh. 1969
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Lepisanthes senegalensis is a tree widespread through tropical Africa and tropical Asia to New Guinea and northern Australia.
Lepisanthes alata (Lapisanthes Alata) (Blume) Leenh. 1969
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Lepisanthes alata, also called the Johore tree, blimbing cina, ceri or engkili, is a species of flowering plant, a tropical forest fruit-tree in the lychee family, that is native to Southeast Asia.
Lepisanthes fruticosa (Roxb.) Leenh. 1969
plant species in the sapindaceae family
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Canarium vulgare (Java-almond) Leenh. 1955
plant species in the burseraceae family
Canarium vulgare, known as Java almond, is a species of Canarium native to eastern Java Sea (Bawean and Kangean Islands), Lesser Sunda Islands, Sulawesi and Maluku Islands. C. vulgare is closely related to C. indicum, and they used to be one species under the name Canarium commune L., which has caused much confusion. Their main difference is that the stipule of C. vulgare is entire and caducous, while that of C. indicum is dentate and persistent.
Canarium pseudosumatranum Leenh. 1955
plant species in the burseraceae family
Canarium pseudosumatranum is a species of plant in the Burseraceae family. It is a tree endemic to Peninsular Malaysia. It is threatened by habitat loss.
Canarium australasicum (Brown Cudgerie) (F.M.Bailey) Leenh. 1952
plant species in the burseraceae family
Canarium australasicum, commonly named mango bark, brown cudgerie or parsnip wood, is a species of rainforest trees, of the plant family Burseraceae. They are endemic to Australia, in eastern Queensland and far northeastern New South Wales. These trees earliest formally published species name was Bursera australasica in 1892 by Frederick M. Bailey, Queensland colonial botanist from 1881 to 1915. In 1913 Bailey subsequently recognised them as the genus and species name Canarium australasicum, in his publication Comprehensive Catalogue of Queensland Plants, which recorded a precious selection
Lepisanthes unilocularis Leenh. 1969
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Lepisanthes unilocularis is a species of plant in the family Sapindaceae. It is endemic to China. It was considered extinct until its rediscovery in 2018.
Diploglottis bracteata (Boonjee Tamarind) Leenh. 1978
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Diploglottis bracteata, commonly known as Boonjee tamarind, is a plant in the lychee family Sapindaceae found only in the Wet Tropics bioregion of Queensland, Australia. It is a tree growing to about 25 m (82 ft) in height with a fluted trunk and distinctively large bracts of flowers. It was first described by the Dutch botanist Pieter Willem Leenhouts in 1978, and the common name refers to the area on the Atherton Tableland where the species occurs.
Canarium perlisanum Leenh. 1955
vulnerable plant species in the burseraceae family
Canarium perlisanum is a species of plant in the Burseraceae family. It is a tree endemic to Peninsular Malaysia in wet tropical biomes. It is threatened by habitat loss.
Canarium liguliferum Leenh. 1965
plant species in the burseraceae family
Canarium liguliferum is a species of plant in the Burseraceae family. It is endemic to the Solomon Islands.
Nephelium aculeatum Leenh. 1986
critically endangered plant species in the sapindaceae family
Nephelium aculeatum, also known as Rambutan utan, is a tree that is native to Borneo The tree's fruit is edible and is an oval shape. It has groups of 4 stemming jugate leaves and its petioles can be 8–10 cm (3.1–3.9 in) long. Though the leaves and fruits may look similar to Nephelium hypoleucum, they do not have much in common in botanical standards.
Glenniea philippinensis (Radlk.) Leenh. 1975
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Glenniea philippinensis is a species of flowering plant, a tropical forest fruit-tree in the lychee family, that is native to Southeast Asia.
Glenniea penangensis (Ridl.) Leenh. 1975
vulnerable plant species in the sapindaceae family
Glenniea penangensis is a species of plant in the family Sapindaceae. It is a tree endemic to Peninsular Malaysia, but it is threatened by habitat loss.
Dimocarpus fumatus (Blume) Leenh. 1971
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Dimocarpus fumatus is an Asian tree species in the family Sapindaceae.
Dacryodes nervosa (H.J.Lam) Leenh. 1963
plant species in the burseraceae family
Dacryodes nervosa is a species of tree in the family Burseraceae. The specific epithet nervosa means 'with nerves', referring to the leaves.
Nephelium papillatum Leenh. 1986
vulnerable plant species in the sapindaceae family
Nephelium papillatum is a species of flowering plant, a tropical forest fruit-tree in the rambutan family, that is endemic to Borneo.
Nephelium lappaceum var. pallens (Nephelium Chryseum) (Hiern) Leenh. 1986
plant variety in the sapindaceae family
Nephelium chryseum is a species of plant related to the rambutan. The plant produces edible fruit that are covered in hard red shells with spikey spines. It is native to southern China, Borneo, the Philippines, and Vietnam.
Kopsia tenuis Leenh. & Steenis 1960
endangered plant species in the apocynaceae family
Kopsia tenuis is a species of plant in the family Apocynaceae. It is a tree endemic to the Sarawak region of Malaysia, on the island of Borneo.
Harpullia longipetala Leenh. 1982
plant species in the sapindaceae family
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Harpullia carrii Leenh. 1982
plant species in the sapindaceae family
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Glenniea thorelii (Pierre) Leenh. 1974
plant species in the sapindaceae family
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Fagraea salticola Leenh. 1962
plant species in the gentianaceae family
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Dimocarpus gardneri (Thwaites) Leenh. 1971
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Dimocarpus gardneri is a species of plant related to the longan found in Sri Lanka. It is endangered in the wild due to habitat loss. Dimocarpus gardneri is a middle-sized tree. It grows in dry parts of Sri Lanka.
Dimocarpus dentatus Meijer ex Leenh. 1971
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Dimocarpus dentatus is a species of tree related to the Longan. Its distribution ranges from southeast Asia to western New Guinea.
Dimocarpus australianus Leenh. 1973
plant species in the sapindaceae family
Dimocarpus australianus also known as Australian native lychee, is a species of trees, closely related to the longan, constituting part of the plant family Sapindaceae. They are endemic to Cape York Peninsula, Australia. The edible fruit tastes like lychee, sweeter than longan, and occasionally gets described as 'too sweet' in comparison by longan fanciers.
Dacryodes multijuga Leenh. 1976
vulnerable plant species in the burseraceae family
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Canarium parvum Leenh. 1959
medicinal plant species in the burseraceae family
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