ETIMOLOGIA DELLA PAROLA BOMBACACEOUS
From New Latin Bombācāceae, from Medieval Latin bombāx cotton, from Latin bombyx silkworm, silk, from Greek bombux.
PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «BOMBACACEOUS»
bombacaceous
bombacaceous
define
belonging
bombacaceae
bombax
family
plants
more
relating
tropical
trees
including
kapok
tree
baobab
that
have
very
thick
stems
often
with
wordreference
ˌbɒmbəˈkeɪʃəs
reverso
meaning
also
bomb
bombay
boma
collins
always
adjective
factors
affecting
phenological
patterns
seasonal
forests
costa
rica
mating
systems
jstor
springer
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «BOMBACACEOUS»
Scopri l'uso di
bombacaceous nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
bombacaceous e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science
Both bat species concentrated on one bombacaceous species each month (
Stoner et al. 2003). The sequential use of bombacaceous species by these bats
coincided with the flowering phenology of the tree species. These data suggest
that ...
Mark Donald Schwartz, 2011
2
Durio, a Bibliographic Review
Schumann (1895) described peltate scales 'schuppe' in Durio, and stellate hairs
in Adansonia. He reported that both forms could be found in the tribe Matisieae.
Some typical Malvaceous and Bombacaceous hairs are described and depicted
...
3
ADVANCES IN BOTANICAL RESEARCH APL
By means of fossil pollen grains the history of the bombacaceous plants can, it
seems, be traced back to Late Cretaceous times. Attention should be drawn to
the vague lines of demarcation, in need of revision, between the Bombacaceae
and ...
Reginald Dawson Preston, 1963
... of the tropics are descended from temperate ancestors, and it is indeed a most
striking reminiscence of our northern autumnal season to see a giant silk-cotton
or other Bombacaceous tree standing leafless in a full-foliaged tropical forest.
“Seeds and floss of an apparently undescribed bombacaceous plant, possibly
Bombax. It was recently collected on Camaguin Island, near the active volcano. “
It strikes me that the floss is 'both softer and lighter than is that of the commercial ...
United States. Agricultural Research Service. Plant Science Research Division, United States. Division of Botany, United States. Dept. of Agriculture. Section of Seed and Plant Introduction, 1914
6
Torreya: A Monthly Journal of Botanical Notes and News
From the East Indies, where also the tree occurs, large quantities of this floss are
exported to Europe and America under the Malayan name “ kapok,” though the
fiber of Bomhzx malabaricum and perhaps of other Bombacaceous trees is ...
Marshall Avery Howe, 1906
One is the frequency of thorns on old stems, even, in fact, on the boles of big
trees, such as the bombacaceous Chorisia, which render passage less pleasant
than it might be. Another is the rarity of buttress roots in the American tropics, ...
From the East Indies, where also the trees occur, large quantities of this floss are
exported to Europe and America under the Malayan name " kapok," though the
fibre of Bombax malabaricum and perhaps of other Bombacaceous trees is ...
Jamaica. Dept. of Agriculture, 1907
9
Bulletin of the Department of Agriculture
From the East Indies, where also the trees occur, large quantities of this floss are
exported to Europe and America under the Malayan name " kapok," though the
fibre of Bombax malabaricum and perhaps of other Bombacaceous trees is ...
Jamaica. Dept. of Agriculture, William Fawcett, 1907
10
Bulletin of the Department of Agriculture
From the East Indies, where also the trees occur, large quantities of this floss are
exported to Europe and America under the Malayan name " kapok," though the
fibre of Bombax malabaricum and perhaps of other Bombacaceous trees is ...
Jamaica. Department of Agriculture, William Fawcett, 1907