ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD CAESALPINOID
From New Latin Caesalpinia type genus, named after Andrea Cesalpino (1519–1603), Italian botanist.
WHAT DOES CAESALPINOID MEAN IN ENGLISH?
Definition of caesalpinoid in the English dictionary
The definition of caesalpinoid in the dictionary is of, relating to, or belonging to the Caesalpinoideae, a mainly tropical subfamily of leguminous plants that have irregular flowers: includes carob, senna, brazil, cassia, and poinciana.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CAESALPINOID»
Discover the use of
caesalpinoid in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
caesalpinoid and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
... caesalpinoid Amherstia (Leguminosae) 20 The flower of the caesalpinoid
Intsia (Leguminosae) 21 The butterfly-pollinated flowers of the caesalpinoid
Bauhinia flammifera (Leguminosae) 22 Arillate fruits of Aphanamixis (mahogany
family, ...
2
Tropical Forests of the Guiana Shield: Ancient Forests in a ...
The tribe Swartzieae is considered intermediate between ancestral caesalpinoid
and derived papilinoid groups. It is particularly well represented across many
parts of the shield region through its main tree genus, Swartzia (but also Aldina),
...
3
The Ecology of Trees in the Tropical Rain Forest
These forests were generally dominated by a single species of caesalpinoid
legume, e.g. Gilbertiodendron dewevrei in the Congo Basin and Mora excelsa on
Trinidad and in Guyana. Both of these species can have stands exceeding 100
kmz ...
4
Biology and Breeding of Food Legumes
Molecular systematics results place some caesalpinoid clades basally in the
papilionoid subfamily, some along a grade leading to the mimosoid subfamily
and some in separate lineages. Some caesalpinoid legumes of agronomic value
...
Aditya Pratap, Jitendra Kumar, 2011
5
People and Plants in Ancient Eastern North America
Tree legume Fabaceae Caesalpinoideae or Mimosoideae Divi-divi Fabaceae-
Caesalpinoid Caesalpinia (C. coriaria) Gray nickers Fabaceae-Caesalpinoid cf.
Caesalpinia sp. Cat's claw Fabaceae-Mimosoid cf. Pithecellobium sp. Money
bush ...
On both continents the monodominant ectomycorrhizal species are often
caesalpinoid legumes, most of which appear not to be involved in nitrogen
fixation. There is little evidence to support the notion that these monodominant
stands are ...
Sally E. Smith, David J. Read, 2010
7
Plants in Action: Adaptation in Nature, Performance in ...
The Caesalpinoideae are largely trees or shrubs, and the tew species which
nodulate have little nodule mass proportional to plant biomass (Sprent and
Raven 1985). In most of the caesalpinoid species that do nodulate. the
microsymbiont ...
Brian James Atwell, Paul E. Kriedemann, Colin G. N. Turnbull, 1999
8
Tropical Rainforest Responses to Climatic Change
... rather than forest vegetation with near-modern precipitation estimates for this
area (Jacobs and Heerenden, 2004). The plant community was dominated by
caesalpinoid legumes and was physiognomically comparable to miombo
woodland.
Mark Bush, John Flenley, William Gosling, 2011
9
Pollination and Floral Ecology
... in various Boraginaceae and caprifoliaceae; (I) dimorphic stamens set at two
heights in Oxalis; (J) seesaw anther head on filament, in Lilium; (K) filament with
nodes in Sparmannia; (L) anther with terminal pore in caesalpinoid Fabaceae.
10
The Fungal Community: Its Organization and Role in the ...
Even in communities that are initially considered stable, such as the Cameroon
Berlinia/Tetraberlinia rain forest, a gradual increase over time in the size and
number of individuals in the groves of these caesalpinoid legumes is apparent; ...
John Dighton, James F. White Jr., James White, 2005