Plants named in 2001

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3,919 plants found, including:

Russulales Kreisel ex P.M. Kirk, P.F. Cannon & J.C. David 2001
plant order in the class agaricomycetes
The Russulales are an order of the Agaricomycetes, (which include the agaric genera Russula and Lactarius and their polyporoid and corticioid relatives). Based on 2025 data, the order includes 12 families, 102 genera and approximately 3,400 species. Russuloid agarics represent an independent evolutionary line of agarics, not directly related to the Agaricales. This group also includes a number of russuloid hypogeous fungi, polypores such as Bondarzewia, some tooth fungi (e.g. Auriscalpium vulgare), and club fungi e.g. Artomyces. Basidiospores in this group are typically ornamented with
Polypodiales Link 2001
plant order in the class polypodiopsida
The order Polypodiales encompasses the major lineages of polypod ferns, which account for more than 80% of today's fern species. They are found in many parts of the world including tropical, semitropical and temperate areas.
Calceolariaceae (Slipper-flower Family) Raf. ex Olmstead 2001
plant family in the order lamiales
Calceolariaceae is a family of flowering plants in the order Lamiales that has been recently segregated from Scrophulariaceae. The family includes two genera, Calceolaria and Jovellana. Porodittia is treated as a synonym of Calceolaria. Recent molecular phylogenies that included Calceolaria have shown not only that this genus does not belong in Scrophulariaceae (or any of the numerous families recently segregated from Scrophulariaceae) but also that it is the sister clade to the majority of the other families of the Lamiales. Morphological and chemical characters also support the separation
Berberidopsidales (Tape-vines) Doweld 2001
plant order in the class magnoliopsida
Berberidopsidales is an order of Southern Hemisphere woody flowering plants. The name is newly accepted in the APG III system of plant taxonomy. APG II system, of 2003, mentions the possibility of recognizing the order, as comprising the families Berberidopsidaceae and Aextoxicaceae. However, APG II left the families unplaced as to order, assigning them to the clade core eudicots. The APG III system of 2009 formally recognized the order. The family Aextoxicaceae is a monotypic family native to Chile; Berberidopsidaceae is a family of 2 genera and 3 species native to Chile and eastern
Huerteales (Dipentodon) Doweld 2001
plant order in the class magnoliopsida
Huerteales is an order of flowering plants. It is one of the 17 orders that make up the large eudicot group known as the rosids in the APG III system of plant classification. Within the rosids, it is one of the orders in Malvidae, a group formerly known as eurosids II and now known informally as the malvids. This is true whether Malvidae is circumscribed broadly to include eight orders as in APG III, or more narrowly to include only four orders. Huerteales consists of four small families, Petenaeaceae, Gerrardinaceae, Tapisciaceae, and Dipentodontaceae. Out of its constituent families,
Stemonuraceae (Stemonurus Family) Kårehed 2001
plant family in the order aquifoliales
Stemonuraceae is a eudicot family of flowering plants.
Talinaceae (Flameflower Family) (Fenzl) Doweld 2001
plant family in the order caryophyllales
Talinaceae is a family of two genera and 28 species of flowering plants comprising shrubs, lianas, and herbaceous species native to the Americas, Africa and Madagascar. The family is newly recognized through research by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group III system to deal with long-standing phylogenetic difficulties in placing various genera within the Caryophyllales.
Myodocarpaceae (Myodocarpus Family) Doweld 2001
plant family in the order apiales
Myodocarpaceae is a family of flowering plants which contains 2 genera (Delarbrea, Myodocarpus) and 15 species. The family is accepted under the APG IV system and placed in the order Apiales. In earlier systems the two genera were included among the Araliaceae. The center of diversity of the family is New Caledonia, where 13 of the 15 included species are endemic. Of the remaining two species, Delarbrea paradoxa subsp. paradoxa is found in the Lesser Sunda Islands, Maluku Islands, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands (archipelago) and Vanuatu as well as New Caledonia, while Delarbrea michieana is
Cystopteridaceae (Bladder Fern Family) (Payer) Shmakov 2001
plant family in the order polypodiales
Cystopteridaceae is a family of ferns in the order Polypodiales. In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), the family is placed in the suborder Aspleniineae of the order Polypodiales, and includes three genera. Alternatively, it may be treated as the subfamily Cystopteridoideae of a very broadly defined family Aspleniaceae. Cystopteridaceae are small or medium-sized ferns in forests and crevices. They generally have thin laminae, and small, round, naked sori.
Atocion rupestre (Silene Rupestris) (L.) Oxelman 2001
perennial plant species in the caryophyllaceae family
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Passiflora tarminiana (Banana Poka) Coppens & V.E.Barney 2001
plant species in the passifloraceae family
Passiflora tarminiana (or banana passionfruit) is a species of passionfruit. The yellow fruits are edible and their resemblance to small, straight bananas has given it the name banana passionfruit in some countries. It is native to the uplands of tropical South America and is now cultivated in many countries. In Hawaii and New Zealand it is now considered an invasive species. It was given the name banana passionfruit in New Zealand, where passionfruit are also prevalent. In Hawaii, it is called banana poka. In its Latin American homeland, it is known as curuba, curuba de Castilla, or curuba
Dicranidae Doweld 2001
plant subclass
The Dicranidae are a widespread and diverse subclass of mosses in class Bryopsida, with many species of dry or disturbed areas. They are distinguished by their spores; the peristome teeth are haplolepidous with a 4:2:3 formula, and an exostome is absent.
Aphanopetalaceae (Gum Vine Family) Doweld 2001
plant family in the order saxifragales
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Polytrichopsida (Hair Mosses) Doweld 2001
plant class in the phylum bryophyta
Polytrichaceae is a common family of mosses. Members of this family tend to be larger than other mosses, with the larger species occurring in particularly moist habitats. The leaves have specialized sheaths at the base and a midrib that bears photosynthetic lamellae on the upper surface. These mosses are capable of sustaining high rates of photosynthesis in the presence of ample light and moisture. Unlike all other mosses, the hydroid-based vascular system of these mosses is continuous from stem to leaf and can extract water from the soil through transpiration. Species in this group are
Danthonioideae (Oatgrasses) N.P.Barker 2001
plant subfamily in the poaceae family
Danthonioideae is a mainly Southern Hemisphere subfamily of grasses, containing the single tribe Danthonieae and one unplaced genus, with altogether roughly 300 species. It includes herbaceous to partially woody perennial or annual (less common) grasses that grow in open grasslands, shrublands, and woodlands. It belongs to the PACMAD clade of grasses, but unlike some other lineages in that clade, grasses in the Danthonioideae exclusively use the C3 photosynthetic pathway. Its sister group is the subfamily Chloridoideae. There are 19 genera, 18 of which are placed in tribe Danthonieae, while
Bulbophyllum rosemarianum (Rosemary Bulb-leaf Orchid) C.S.Kumar, P.C.S.Kumar & Saleem 2001
plant species in the orchidaceae family
Bulbophyllum rosemarianum is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.
Boliniales P.F. Cannon 2001
plant order in the class sordariomycetes
The Boliniales are an order of fungi within the class Sordariomycetes.
Alatiliparis Marg. & Szlach. 2001
plant genus in the orchidaceae family
Alatiliparis is a genus of orchids native to Java and Sumatra in Indonesia. It contains 5 currently recognized species (as of May 2014): Alatiliparis angustiflora (J.J.Sm.) Szlach. & Marg. - Sumatra and West Java Alatiliparis filicornes Marg. & Szlach. - Sumatra Alatiliparis lepanthes (Schltr.) Szlach. & Marg. - western Sumatra Alatiliparis otochilus Marg. & Szlach. - Sumatra Alatiliparis speculifera (J.J.Sm.) Szlach. & Marg.- western Java
Nepenthes mindanaoensis (N. Mindanaoensis) Sh.Kurata 2001
plant species in the nepenthaceae family
Nepenthes mindanaoensis (; "from Mindanao") is a tropical pitcher plant native to the Philippine islands of Mindanao and Dinagat. Nepenthes mindanaoensis belongs to the informal "N. alata group", which also includes N. alata, N. ceciliae, N. copelandii, N. extincta, N. graciliflora, N. hamiguitanensis, N. kitanglad, N. kurata, N. leyte, N. negros, N. ramos, N. saranganiensis, and N. ultra. These species are united by a number of morphological characters, including winged petioles, lids with basal ridges on the lower surface (often elaborated into appendages), and upper pitchers that are
Bulbophyllum jaapii (Orchid) Szlach. & Olszewski 2001
critically endangered plant species in the orchidaceae family
Bulbophyllum jaapii is a species of plant in the family Orchidaceae. It is endemic to Cameroon. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests. It was described botanically in 2001. The distribution and range of B. jaapii is extremely limited; confined entirely to the summit forests and scrublands of a singular mountain in Cameroon (Mount Kupe, a dormant volcano on the Western High Plateau), at elevations of approximately 1,800 meters. It was first collected in November (during flowering), 1985 as a new discovery by D.W. Thomas and H.L. MacLeod, whom characterized them
Acianthera bicarinata (Lindl.) Pridgeon & M.W.Chase 2001
plant species in the orchidaceae family
Acianthera bicarinata is a species of orchid.
Acianthera aphthosa (Lindl.) Pridgeon & M.W.Chase 2001
plant species in the orchidaceae family
Acianthera aphthosa is a species of orchid. It was first described by John Lindley in 1838 as Pleurothallis aphthosa, but was assigned to the genus, Acianthera, in 2001 by Pridgeon and Mark W. Chase. It is native to Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, and Peru.
Trichocentrum lanceanum (Mule-ear Orchid) (Lindl.) M.W.Chase & N.H.Williams 2001
plant species in the orchidaceae family
Trichocentrum lanceanum is a species of orchid found from Trinidad to southern tropical America.
Oestlundia W.E.Higgins 2001
plant genus in the orchidaceae family
Oestlundia is a genus of orchids within the subtribe Laeliinae. The species in this genus are distributed from Mexico to Venezuela.
Nepenthes jacquelineae C.Clarke, Troy Davis & Tamin 2001
plant species in the nepenthaceae family
Nepenthes jacquelineae is a tropical pitcher plant endemic to the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Due to its unique pitcher morphology, it is considered to be one of the most spectacular Nepenthes species native to the island.
Heliamphora folliculata (Aparaman Tepui-group Marsh Pitcher) Wistuba, Harbarth & Carow 2001
perennial plant species in the sarraceniaceae family
Heliamphora folliculata (Latin: folliculatus = having follicles) is a species of Marsh Pitcher Plant endemic to the Aparaman group of tepuis in Venezuela. It grows on all four mountains: Aparaman Tepui, Murosipan Tepui, Tereke Tepui and Kamakeiwaran Tepui. The nectar spoon of this species, which bears giant extrafloral nectaries within its internal chamber, may have evolved to prevent rain from washing away the energetically costly nectar produced by the plant.
Drosera hartmeyerorum Schlauer 2001
annual plant species in the droseraceae family
Drosera hartmeyerorum is a summer-growing annual sundew that is native to the north of Western Australia. It was discovered in 1995 by Siegfried and Irmgard Hartmeyer. Drosera hartmeyerorum has long scrambling leaves which readily curl around any unfortunate insect that lands on the leaves. One major thing that separates this sundew from others are the round yellow trichomes at the base of the leaves. The function of the yellow trichomes is uncertain. Like most sundews, it grows in warm wet, sandy, peaty areas with high humidity and low nutrient levels in the soil. Drosera hartmeyerorum was
Diodonopsis Pridgeon & M.W.Chase 2001
plant genus in the orchidaceae family
Diodonopsis is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Orchidaceae. Its native range is Costa Rica to Western South America.
Coelogyne usitana Roeth & O.Gruss 2001
plant species in the orchidaceae family
Coelogyne usitana is a species of orchid discovered in the late 1990s. It was named in honour of the collector Villamor T. Usita, by Jürgen Röth and Olaf Gruss in the German orchid magazine Die Orchidee. It was discovered in central-east Mindanao, Philippines where it grows at elevations of about 800 metres on the horizontal branches of trees. The inflorescence can bear 30 or more flowers over a long period of time, with only one or two blooms open at a time. The flowers are about 6 cm in diameter and face the downward, possibly to shield the bloom from rain. The colour contrast in the
Atocion compactum (Fisch. ex Hornem.) Tzvelev 2001
annual and perennial plant species in the caryophyllaceae family
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