Grevillea

R. Brown ex Knight

Cult. Prot., xvii, 120. 1809. (as Grevillia), name and orthography conserved

Etymology: For Charles Francis Greville, 1749–1809, Fellow of the Royal Society
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 10.
 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA10 P01 Grevillea robusta.jpgGrevillea robusta
Buxus sempervirens
Pachysandra procumbens

Inflorescences unbranched or 2–4 [–20] -branched. Flowers: nectary solitary, ventral [surrounding pistil], crescent-shaped [to oblong or annular, rarely 4-lobed or absent]; pistil diagonally oriented; ovary stipitate [sessile]; style slightly sinuous [straight to curved, hooked, or bent], tip modified as ± radially symmetrical [to strongly oblique] pollen presenter; stigma terminal [ventral]. Follicles sessile. = 10.

Distribution

Introduced; s Africa, Pacific Islands (New Caledonia), Pacific Islands (New Guinea), Pacific Islands (Sulawesi), Australia (including Tasmania), also widely in tropical and subtropical areas

Discussion

Species ca. 365 (1 in the flora).

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

... more about "Grevillea"
tetrasporangiate +  and bilocular +
Peter H. Weston +
R. Brown ex Knight +
tripinnatisect +
s Africa +, Pacific Islands (New Caledonia) +, Pacific Islands (New Guinea) +, Pacific Islands (Sulawesi) +, Australia (including Tasmania) +  and also widely in tropical and subtropical areas +
For Charles Francis Greville, 1749–1809, Fellow of the Royal Society +
pedicellate +  and zygomorphic +
2-4[-20]-branched +  and unbranched +
persistent +
crescent--shaped +
crassinucellate +, bitegmic +  and hemitropous +
Cult. Prot., xvii, +
distinct +
Grevillea +
Proteaceae +
coherent +