Eulalia (plant)
Eulalia is a genus of Asian, African, and Australian plants in the grass family.[1][4][5][6][7]
Eulalia | |
---|---|
Eulalia aurea | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Monocots |
Clade: | Commelinids |
Order: | Poales |
Family: | Poaceae |
Subfamily: | Panicoideae |
Supertribe: | Andropogonodae |
Tribe: | Andropogoneae |
Subtribe: | Saccharinae |
Genus: | Eulalia Kunth |
Type species | |
Eulalia aurea (Bory) Kunth[1] | |
Synonyms[2][3] | |
|
Eulalia was named after the French botanical artist Eulalie Delile.[8]
As a common name, "eulalia" refers to a grass in a different genus, Miscanthus sinensis.[9]
- Eulalia annua – Australia
- Eulalia aurea – silky browntop – Australia, Thailand, Vietnam, Madagascar, Réunion, eastern + southeastern Africa (from Kenya to Mpumalanga)
- Eulalia bicornuta – Thailand, Myanmar
- Eulalia brevifolia – Yunnan
- Eulalia contorta – China, Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia
- Eulalia fastigiata – Indian subcontinent, New Guinea, Vietnam
- Eulalia fimbriata – Indian subcontinent, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Java, Lesser Sunda Islands
- Eulalia hirtifolia – Assam, Bhutan, Myanmar
- Eulalia leptostachys – New Guinea
- Eulalia leschenaultiana – Fujian, Guangdong, Jiangxi, Taiwan, Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia
- Eulalia mackinlayi – Australia
- Eulalia madkotiensis – Uttarakhand[11]
- Eulalia manipurensis – Manipur, Assam, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar
- Eulalia maritima – Philippines
- Eulalia milsumi – Bukit Lompat Bayan in Selangor[12]
- Eulalia mollis – Tibet, Uttarakhand, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam
- Eulalia monostachya – Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam
- Eulalia pallens – Myanmar, Assam, Guangxi, Guizhou, Sichuan, Yunnan
- Eulalia phaeothrix – India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Hainan, Sichuan, Yunnan
- Eulalia polyneura – Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique
- Eulalia pruinosa – Yunnan
- Eulalia ridleyi – Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo
- Eulalia shrirangii – Maharashtra[13]
- Eulalia siamensis – Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Yunnan
- Eulalia smitinandiana – Thailand
- Eulalia splendens – Guangxi, Guizhou, Yunnan
- Eulalia staintonii – Uttarakhand, Nepal
- Eulalia tetraseta – Thailand, Cambodia
- Eulalia thwaitesii – India, Sri Lanka
- Eulalia villosa – golden velvet grass – southern Africa, Madagascar, Thailand, Yunnan, India
- Eulalia yunnanensis – Yunnan
- formerly included[3]
see Andropogon Bothriochloa Microstegium Miscanthus Polytrias Pseudopogonatherum Schizachyrium Spodiopogon
- Eulalia amaura – Polytrias indica
- Eulalia argentea – Pseudopogonatherum trispicatum
- Eulalia bequaertii – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia birmanica – Pseudopogonatherum speciosum
- Eulalia cantonensis – Microstegium vimineum
- Eulalia capensis – Microstegium nudum
- Eulalia ciliata – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia clarkei – Bothriochloa kuntzeana
- Eulalia collina – Pseudopogonatherum contortum
- Eulalia concinna – Pseudopogonatherum contortum
- Eulalia cotulifer – Spodiopogon cotulifer
- Eulalia densa – Miscanthus floridulus
- Eulalia dispar – Microstegium dispar
- Eulalia eucnemis – Microstegium eucnemis
- Eulalia filifolia – Pseudopogonatherum filifolium
- Eulalia glabrata – Microstegium glabratum
- Eulalia gracillima – Microstegium glabratum
- Eulalia grata – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia hydrophila – Andropogon lima
- Eulalia irritans – Pseudopogonatherum irritans
- Eulalia japonica – Miscanthus sinensis
- Eulalia koretrostachys – Pseudopogonatherum contortum
- Eulalia lagopus – Pseudopogonatherum trispicatum
- Eulalia lanipes – Pseudopogonatherum speciosum
- Eulalia mexicana – Bothriochloa barbinodis
- Eulalia monantha – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia nana – Polytrias indica
- Eulalia nepalensis – Miscanthus nepalensis
- Eulalia nuda – Microstegium nudum
- Eulalia paniculata – Andropogon tenuiberbis
- Eulalia parceciliata – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia quadrinervis – Pseudopogonatherum quadrinerve
- Eulalia rufispica – Microstegium rufispicum
- Eulalia setifolia – Pseudopogonatherum contortum
- Eulalia simplex – Schizachyrium fragile
- Eulalia speciosa – Pseudopogonatherum speciosum
- Eulalia spectabilis – Microstegium spectabile
- Eulalia tanakae – Pseudopogonatherum speciosum
- Eulalia tenuis – Microstegium tenue
- Eulalia trispicata – Pseudopogonatherum trispicatum
- Eulalia tristachya – Pseudopogonatherum trispicatum
- Eulalia vagans – Microstegium fasciculatum
- Eulalia velutina – Pseudopogonatherum speciosum
- Eulalia viminea – Microstegium vimineum
- Eulalia zebrina – Miscanthus sinensis
References
- Kunth, Karl Sigismund 1829. Révision des Graminées 1: 160–161 in Latin
- Tropicos, Eulalia Kunth
- "World Checklist of Selected Plant Families: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew".
- Trinius, Carl Bernhard von 1832. Mémoires de l'Académie Impériale des Sciences de Saint-Pétersbourg. Sixième Série. Sciences Mathématiques, Physiques et Naturelles. Seconde Partie: Sciences Naturelles 2(4): 304
- Elliot, Rodger W.; Jones, David L. (1986). "Eu-Go". In Elliot, Rodger W.; Jones, David L. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Australian Plants Suitable for Cultivation. Vol. 4. Lothian Publishing. p. 247. ISBN 0-85091-213-X.
- "Atlas of Living Australia, Eulalia Kunth". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
- Flora of China Vol. 22 Page 585 黄金茅属 huang jin mao shu Eulalia Kunth, Révis. Gramin. 1: 160. 1829.
- Watson, L. and M. J. Dallwitz. (1992 onwards). Eulalia. Archived 15 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Grass Genera of the World. Version: 18 August 1999.
- Miscanthus sinensis. PlantFacts. The Ohio State University.
- The Plant List search for Eulalia
- Kandwal, M. K., et al. (2007). A new species of Eulalia (Poaceae) from India. Kew Bulletin 62(3) 519-21.
- Ridley, Henry Nicholas 1922. Journal of the Federated Malay States Museums 10: 251
- Salunkhe, C. B. and G. G. Potdar. (2004). Eulalia shrirangii, a new species of Poaceae from India. Kew Bulletin 59(4) 625-27.
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