Populus tremuloides, the Latin name for Aspen, is a member of the Salicaceae (Willow). From Wordnik.com. [Brigitte Mars: Aspen Trees in the Breeze] Reference
Populus tremuloides, the Latin name for Aspen, is a member of the Salicaceae (Willow) Family, which includes cottonwood and poplar trees. From Wordnik.com. [Brigitte Mars: Aspen Trees in the Breeze] Reference
A further shift, to Salicaceae, took place in the common ancestor of. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Julkunen-Tiitto R (1986) A chemotaxonomic survey of phenolics in leaves of northern Salicaceae species. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Y. cagnagellus-irrorellus clade, also broadened its host range to include Rosaceae (and further on to Salicaceae). From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Most present-day species maintain this association, but a number of mostly Central and West European taxa feed on Rosaceae and Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
If they form a grade, as shown by the COII data, the shift to Salicaceae either occurred twice, or once in the common ancestor of these two species and. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Yponomeuta (Lepidoptera, Yponomeutidae) contains 76 species that are specialist feeders on hosts from Celastraceae, Rosaceae, Salicaceae, and several other plant families. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
In the Palaearctic, the genus most likely originated in the Far East, feeding on Celastraceae, dispersing to the West concomitant with a shift to Rosaceae and further to Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
The shift to Salicaceae is again reconstructed as having taken place in the ancestor of It is clear that at the genus level no co-evolution but sequential evolution occurred (i.e., the tracking of resources); however, co-evolution between. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
There are 29 other orders, each with 2 genera, and these 58 genera have on an average 15.07 species: this great number being owing to the 10 genera in the Smilaceae, Salicaceae (with 220 species), Begoniaceae, Balsaminaceae, Grossulariaceae, without which the remaining 48 genera have on an average only 5.91 species. From Wordnik.com. [More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 1] Reference
Cel = Celastraceae, Ros = Rosaceae, Sal = Salicaceae, Cras = Crassulaceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Vascular Plants of the Pacific Northwest, Part 2: Salicaceae to Saxifragaceae. From Wordnik.com. [Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]] Reference
(section Nationaal Herbarium Nederland), Leiden, The Netherlands The small ermine moth genus Yponomeuta (Lepidoptera, Yponomeutidae) contains 76 species that are specialist feeders on hosts from Celastraceae, Rosaceae, Salicaceae, and several other plant families. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Y. cagnagellus-irrorellus, which feeds in large part on Rosaceae or Salicaceae (. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [Chapter 7] Reference
Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 2] Reference
Plant Family/Families: Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
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