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Topic: Engelhardia


In the News (Sun 5 Jul 09)

  
  sp=engelhardia
AF303747 Engelhardia roxburghiana atpB-rbcL intergenic spacer, chloroplast sequence.
AF303748 Engelhardia spicata atpB-rbcL intergenic spacer, chloroplast sequence.
AF303775 Engelhardia spicata trnL-trnF intergenic spacer, chloroplast sequence.
pbil.univ-lyon1.fr /cgi-bin/acnuc-search-sp?query=ENGELHARDIA&db=GenBank   (160 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - walnut : Common Species and Their Uses, Plant (Plants) - Encyclopedia
The single-seeded nuts contain no endosperm; the edible portion is the corrugated, meaty seed leaves of the embryo itself.
Lumber is obtained chiefly from Juglans, Carya, and Engelhardia.
The latter genus is now restricted to East Asia, but fossil trees have been found in the United States.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/W/walnut-common-species-and-their-uses.html   (530 words)

  
 American Journal of Botany, 63, 5, May, 1976/ June, 1976   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
The fossil fruits of Engelhardia and Paraoreomunnea are similar to the fruits of extant Engelhardia and Oreomunnea, respectively.
The present allopatric distribution of Engelhardia and Oreomunnea is the result of Neogene regional extinctions.
Engelhardia and Oreomunnea have probably been distinct genera since early Paleogene time.
www.botany.org /ajb/00029122_di001755.html   (3724 words)

  
 Engelhardia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Engelhardia is a genus of seven species of trees in the family Juglandaceae, native to southeast Asia from northern India east to Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines.
The genus name is commonly mis-spelled "Engelhardtia", an error first made in the Index Kewensis; the original spelling is Engelhardia.
This page was last modified 11:13, 17 July 2005.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Engelhardia   (73 words)

  
 wiki/Engelhardtia Definition / wiki/Engelhardtia Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Engelhardia is a genus of seven species of trees in the family Juglandaceae, native to southeast AsiaThe continent of Asia is defined by subtracting Europe and Africa from the great land mass of Africa-Eurasia.
The exact boundaries are vague (especially for non geographers), especially between Asia and Europe: Asia and Africa meet somewhere near the Suez Canal.
Please helpA stub is a very short article, generally of one paragraph or less.
www.elresearch.com /wiki/Engelhardtia   (503 words)

  
 [No title]
Wheeler (1995) suggested conserving "as complete a cross-section of phylogenetic diversity as is possible", noting that the last representatives of threatened phylogenetic clades represent greater biological diversity than other less threatened species.
The phylogenetically primitive members of the Tribe Engelhardia form a clade that is unrepresented in U.S. collections, and constitute another potentially valuable level of genetic diversity.
Toward that end, isolated accessions of related genera (Platycarya, Engelhardia, Oreomunnea, Alfaroa and Pterocarya,) should be acquired (possibly in conjunction with the National Arboretum).
aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu /carya/CGC\CGC97.HTM   (6527 words)

  
 Abstract 3429 from Intl. Bot. Congress 1999   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Phylogenetic analysis of three previously unpublished data sets was used to address the evolution of fruit morphology and biogeography of the family with complete sampling, including intrageneric exemplars, the Asian taxa Cyclocarya and Annamocarya, and the outgroup Rhoiptelea.
Molecular data resolved three clades, (Engelhardia - (Alfaroa + Oreomunnea)), (Annamocarya + Carya), (Platycarya - (Juglans*- (Cyclocarya + Pterocarya))), with the fl walnuts strongly supported as sister to Pterocarya + Cyclocarya.
The strength of this inference is not consonant with traditional groupings, thus suggesting that molecular data must be combined with morphology to accurately resolve phylogenetic relationships.
www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de /b-online/ibc99/ibc/abstracts/listen/abstracts/3429.html   (128 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
In his study of clays and brown coals from the Eocene of Germany, Pflug (1957) grouped Momipites as a genus more likely to be abundant in clays and inferred that it came from lakeshore vegetation.
Kvacek (1972), reviewing the occurrence of Engelhardia leaf fossils in Europe, emphasized that, because it is not represented in the Glyptostrobus-Taxodium-Alnus-Nyssa community of the Miocene brown coal swamp forest, Engelhardia was not adapted to lowland swampy conditions during the Tertiary.
He believed the fossil Engelhardia of Europe to be "...a typical subtropical component with a great demand on high atmospheric humidity." (p.
www.columbiagypsy.net /finalsyst.htm   (13569 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
It confirms that is the case for Ailanthus and does not mention it for Engelhardia.
In addition, the leaves of A. have a single pinna at the end, while E. has two.
Gene Newcomb newcombg@bcc.orst.edu David Deutsch wrote: > Hello, > > I have a plant which I acquired as Engelhardia spicata, but it looks > remarkably like an Ailanthus (tree of heaven).
iubio.bio.indiana.edu:71 /R172756-174481-/Network-News/bionet/plants/9905.newsm   (221 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
This occurs between 1,200m and 1,900m and is characterised by a high canopy (20-30m) with a few emergents of Podocarpus imbricatus and P.
Above 2,000m, upper montane rain forest is characterised by a dense, low canopy, with thin, gnarled, moss and bryophyte covered tree trunks.
Principal species are Myrica javanica, Myrsine avenis and Vaccinium varingiaefolium, with some Podocarpus imbricatus, Albizia lophantha, Lithocarpus sp., Schefflera rugosa, Engelhardia spicota and Melastoma pachyphylum.
www.unep-wcmc.org /sites/pa/0668v.htm   (1552 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Newsgroups: bionet.plants Subject: Re: Vegetative diagnostic distinction between Ailanthus and Engelhardia Date: Sun, 16 May 1999 16:39:47 -0400 Organization: Michigan State Lines: 39 Message-ID:
It confirms that is > > the case for Ailanthus and does not mention it for Engelhardia.
In > > addition, the leaves of A. have a single pinna at the end, while E. has > > two.
iubio.bio.indiana.edu:70 /R209191-211411-/Network-News/bionet/plants/9905.newsm   (300 words)

  
 New data on Cenozoic stratigraphy in Pritumanganye, southern Far East (Russia) (NewslStratigr Volume 30)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Until recently they had been considered as coals of the same age, although the age of the coal-bearing succession had been postulated as Palaeogene (in earlier concepts) or as Neogene (in modern concepts).
In fact, both Palaeogene and Neogene deposits are coal-bearing: In the west Pritumangan depressions the coal-bearing succession is overlapped by plant-bearing beds with Trochodendroides arctica of Eocene age while in the east Pritumangan depressions the coal-bearing sediments are overlapped by plant-bearing Miocene beds with Engelhardia koreanica.
Thus, in the Pritumangan region which belongs to Russia, China (PRC) and Northern Korea (DPRK), two epochs of active coal accumulation can be fixed.
www.schweizerbart.de /pubs/journals/0078-0421/paper/30/91   (272 words)

  
 Field Trip   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
16) Debate exists over whether the parent Engelhardia complex plant actually existed in the swamp; Bill Elsik believed high percentages represented an influx of regional pollen over "silent" marsh vegetation.
The presence of Engelhardia peltate leaf hairs in lignite pollen samples and much lower percentages in clastic samples (see Text-Fig.
17, Piedmont Interval) suggests that one of the Engelhardia complex plants was actually present in the peat forming wetland.
www.columbiagypsy.net /IPCTRIP.htm   (4691 words)

  
 OMSI Paleontology Research Team 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
David helps Jaysen up to tie a knot while setting up a kitchen in the Ochocos.
Steve and Kat are trimming down an engelhardia winged nut.
Erica doing what she normally does: sit and read.
www.calstatela.edu /faculty/nmcquee/sean/prt2004/photos20.html   (111 words)

  
 Faunal inventory of Bolusao watershed
White Collard Kingfisher and Common Moorhen were found in relatively open area near a creek.
Surprisingly, several Asian Glossy Starlings were observed in a reforestation site feeding on the fruits of buntan (Engelhardia rigida), a naturally occurring pioneer species in reforestation sites.
Steere's Pitta (Pitta steerii), Philippine Tailorbird (Orthothomus castaneiceps) and Philippine Eagle-owl (Bubo philippensis) were all observed in Site 4 only.
lawaanesamar.bravehost.com /wildlife/wildlife.html   (4835 words)

  
 Oreomunnea   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
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MAGAZINES The Botanical Review 1/1/2001 VANDER WALL, STEPHEN B. the Juglandaceae: Engelhardia, Oreomunnea, and Alfaroa (Crane & Manchester...
Engelhardia and Oreomunnea fruits consist of nutlets at...
enciclopedia.cc /Oreomunnea   (139 words)

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