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Now showing items 311-320 of 328
Liatris elegans
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Six color photographs of Liatris elegans (also known as gay-feather), a perennial flowering plant from the Aster family found in prairies and openings of the Texas Coastal Bend.
Aloysia macrostachya
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Three color photographs of Aloysia macrostachya, (also known as vara dulce), a deciduous shrub from the Verbena family found on caliche or dry sand in brushy pastures.
Ziziphus obtusifolia
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Three color photographs of Ziziphus obtusifolia, (also known as lotebush), a deciduous shrub from the Buckthorn family found on various soils in brushy pastures.
Froelichia gracilis
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
One color photograph of Froelichia gracilis (also known as slender snakecotton), an annual flowering plant from the Amaranth family found in the Texas Coastal Bend.
Acleisanthes obtusa
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Oen color photograph of Acleisanthes obtusa.
Polypremum procumbens
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Two color photographs of Polypremum procumbens (also known as polly prim or juniperleaf), a perennial flowering plant from the Buddlejaceae family found in pastures, woods, and dunal areas of the Texas Coastal Bend.
Lantana urticoides
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Two color photographs of Lantana urticoides, (also known as hierba de cristo), a bushy shrub from the Verbena family found on sandy or clayey loams in pastures, woods, and waste places.
Manfreda habit
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Two color photos of the leaves of the manfreda maculosa, a perennial flowering plant with green or purple-mottled leaves. This plant is common in openings or brush and along bluffs or ravines.
Verbena halei
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Two color photographs of Verbena halei, (also known as Texas vervain), a perennial flowering plant from the Verbena family found on various soils in prairies, openings, fields, and waste places.
Dyssodia
(Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
Four color photographs of Dyssodia (also known as Tiny Tim), a flowering plant that can be either perennial or annual from the Aster family found in the Texas Coastal Bend.