-
Hemerocallis fulva, the
orange day-lily,
tawny daylily, corn lily,
tiger daylily,
fulvous daylily,
ditch lily or
Fourth of July lily (also
railroad daylily...
-
Rhagonycha fulva was
first described by
Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in 1763 in
Entomologia Carniolica as
Cantharis fulva.
Rhagonycha fulva measures 8–10...
- The
tawny crazy ant or
Rasberry crazy ant,
Nylanderia fulva, is an ant
originating in
South America. Like the
longhorn crazy ant (Paratrechina longicornis)...
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Hemerocallis fulva 'Europa', H.
fulva 'Kwanso', H.
fulva 'Kwanso Variegata', H.
fulva 'Kwanso Kaempfer', H.
fulva var. maculata, H.
fulva var. angustifolia...
- The
Pacific golden plover (Pluvialis
fulva) is a
migratory s****bird that
breeds during summer in
Alaska and Siberia.
During nonbreeding season, this...
- subspecies.
Tecoma fulva subsp.
fulva Tecoma fulva subsp.
altoandina J. R. I. Wood
Tecoma fulva subsp.
arequipensis (Sprague) J.R.I.Wood
Tecoma fulva subsp. garrocha...
- The
American red fox (Vulpes
vulpes fulva) is a
North American subspecies of the red fox. It is the
largest of the true
foxes and one of the most widely...
- The
tawny mining bee,
Andrena fulva, is a
European species of the sand bee (Andrena) genus. The
males are 10–12 mm (0.4–0.5 in) and the
females 8–10 mm...
- Iris
fulva, also
known as
copper iris, is a
species in the
genus Iris, it is also in the
subgenus Limniris and in the
series Hexagonae. It is a rhizomatous...
-
Amanita fulva,
commonly called the
tawny grisette or the orange-brown
ringless amanita, is a
basidiomycete mushroom of the
genus Amanita. It is found...