Definition of Dryandra. Meaning of Dryandra. Synonyms of Dryandra

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Dryandra. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Dryandra and, of course, Dryandra synonyms and on the right images related to the word Dryandra.

Definition of Dryandra

Dryandra
Dryandra Dry*an"dra, n. [NL. Named after J. Dryander.] (Bot.) A genus of shrubs growing in Australia, having beautiful, hard, dry, evergreen leaves.

Meaning of Dryandra from wikipedia

- Banksia ser. Dryandra is a series of 94 species of shrub to small tree in the plant genus Banksia. It was considered a separate genus named Dryandra until early...
- Dryandra subg. Dryandra is an obsolete clade of plant. It was a series within the former genus Dryandra (now Banksia ser. Dryandra). The name was first...
- Marianthus dryandra is a species of flowering plant in the family Pittosporaceae and is endemic to a restricted area in the southwest of Western Australia...
- ferruginea Dryandra arborea Dryandra arctotidis Dryandra armata Dryandra baxteri Dryandra bipinnatifida Dryandra blechnifolia Dryandra brownii Dryandra calophylla...
- The Dryandra Woodland National Park is a national park in Western Australia within the shires of Cuballing, Williams and Wandering, about 164 kilometres...
- Carl Meissner's taxonomic arrangement of Dryandra, now Banksia ser. Dryandra, was published in 1856 as part of his chapter on the Proteaceae in A. P....
- The dryandra moth (Carthaea saturnioides) is a species of moth that is considered to be the sole member of the family Carthaeidae. Its closest relatives...
- Banksia ser. Dryandra is a large series in the plant genus Banksia. It was treated at genus rank as Dryandra until 2007, when molecular evidence of paraphyly...
- moths) Bombycidae (silk moths) Brahmaeidae (Brahmin moths) Carthaeidae (Dryandra moth) Endromidae (Kentish glory and relatives) Eupterotidae Phiditiidae...
- George Bentham's taxonomic arrangement of Dryandra (now B. ser. Dryandra) was published in 1870, in Volume 5 of Bentham's Flora Australiensis. It replaced...