- "Festuca
bromoides L."
Plants of the
World Online.
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
Retrieved 23 July 2022.
Media related to
Vulpia bromoides at Wikimedia...
- America.
Carex bromoides was
described by Carl
Ludwig Willdenow in 1805. It has two
accepted subspecies:
Carex bromoides subsp.
bromoides —
broadly distributed...
- Festulolium, Hainardia, Lepturus, Melica, and Vulpia.
Lolium bromoides -
Vulpia bromoides Lolium canadense Michx. ex Roem. & Schult. 1817 not Bernh. ex...
-
considered extinct. The
plant was
first described in 1856 as
Podophorus bromoides, and
placed in the
monotypic genus Podophorus. A
genetic analysis of the...
-
Tetraria bromoides is a
species of
flowering plant in the
sedge family,
which is
native to the Cape
Provinces in
Southern Africa.
Tetraria bromoides was first...
-
illegitimate homonym, not ****h 1816
Diaphoranthema versicolor Beer
Platystachys disticha (L.) Beer
Vriesea disticha (L.) ****ze
Tillandsia bromoides Mez...
-
Govenia floridana Oeceoclades seyc****arum
Sporobolus durus Podophorus bromoides Possibly extinct species:
Aechmea cymosopaniculata Aeranthes albidiflora...
-
Brachypodium Dasypyrum Eremopyrum Secale barbatum –
Eremopyrum orientale Secale bromoides –
Brachypodium distachyon Secale hirtum –
Eremopyrum orientale Secale...
- Sichuan, Tibet, Yunnan, Bhutan, Nepal, Sikkim,
Arunachal Pradesh Duthiea bromoides Hack. -
Jammu & Kashmir,
Federally Administered Tribal Areas of ****stan...
-
Catapodium filiforme -
Tripogon filiformis Catapodium fusiforme -
Tripogon bromoides Catapodium halleri -
Micropyrum tenellum Catapodium lolium - Agropyropsis...