Eucalyptus, from Greek ευ (well) + κάλυπτος (veiled) = "Well covered"
Anthesis in Eucalyptus robusta (Swamp Mahogany) flowers.
Photography by Brian Johnston (Click image to enlarge)
References
Links
Anthesis, from Greek άνθος (flower) + ησις (event) = "The time or action of a flower opening"
Anthesis in Eucalyptus robusta (Swamp Mahogany) flowers.
Photography by Brian Johnston (Click image to enlarge)
"The tree above described appears to be undoubtedly of the same genus as that cultivated in some greenhouses in England, which Mr. L'Héritier has described in his Sertum Anglicum (1) but we dare not assert it to be the same species, nor can this point be determined till the flowers and every part of both be seen and compared"
John White Esquire, Surgeon-General to the First Fleet and the Settlement at Port Jackson (2)
References
- (1) = L'Héritier de Brutelle, Charles Louis (1788) Eucalyptus obliqua L'Hérit. Sertum Anglicum seu Plantae Rariores quae in Hortis juxta Londinum; 18, t. 20. Imprimis in Horto Regio Kewensi Excoluntur, ab Anno 1786 ad Annuum 1787 Observatae. Paris
- (2) = White, John (1790) Journal of a voyage to New South Wales : with sixtyfive plates of non descript animals, birds, lizards, serpents, curious cones of trees and other natural productions. Debrett, London
Links
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by Brian Johnston (Canada)
Also in EUCALYPTOLOGICS...
The Footprints of Citizen Labillardière
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© 2008 Gustavo Iglesias Trabado. Please contact us if you want to use all or part of this text and photography elsewhere. We like to share, but we do not like rudeness.
2 Comments by our readers :::
Posted by Phil in Sydney on 3/3/2008, 10:54 pm, in reply to "Discovering Eucalyptus - Anthesis (I)"
So that ridge below the flower was actually caused by the outer operculum, which was shed much earlier?
Posted by Gus on 3/6/2008, 12:30 am, in reply to "Re: Discovering Eucalyptus - Anthesis (I)"
You can bet! I think I have some photos depicting exactly that for some of my eucalypts here, but darn it, I cannot find it now! But I will! >:-)
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