Frasera albicaulis is native to western North America. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Frasera albicaulis -- ten of which had previously not been known to occur in nature. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Frasera speciosa, white-stemmed (= albicaulis) Frasera occupies a different habitat. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Frasera albicaulis tends to be a species of dry, open sites (including sagebrush-steppe). From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Frasera speciosa is a species typically found in moist alpine or subalpine meadows, the much shorter (to 75cm/30in). From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
A tonic compound, as advised by the herbalists, is made with the bark of the root of dogwood, colombo (Frasera), poplar, each six ounces; bark of wild cherry, six ounces; leaves of thoroughwort, four ounces; cayenne pepper, four ounces -- sifted and mixed. From Wordnik.com. [Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical, and Agricultural. Being also a Medical Botany of the Confederate States; with Practical Information on the Useful Properties of the Trees, Plants, and Shrubs] Reference
February 3, 2010: Frasera albicaulis. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Frasera walteri. From Wordnik.com. [Standard Supply Table of the Indigenous Remedies for Field Service and the Sick in General Hospitals.] Reference
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