The vascular plant flora and vegetation of the islands associated with Singapore’s first Marine Park (III): St. John’s Island The vascular plant flora of abandoned plantations in Singapore I: Clementi Forest The vascular plant flora of abandoned plantations in Singapore III: Lentor Forest The vascular plant flora of abandoned plantations in Singapore IV: Windsor Forest The vascular plant.
Centotheca lappacea Centotheca cf. lappacea JH-2017 Megastachya Megastachya mucronata Megastachya cf. mucronata JH-2017. The NCBI taxonomy database is not an authoritative source for nomenclature or classification - please consult the relevant scientific literature for the most reliable information. Comments and questions to.
Although Centotheca lappacea was reported from natural rainforests of Thailand or Malaysia (26, 27), this species grows in Indonesia mainly as a weed in clearings, forest edges and paths, road sides, waste places, cocoa, oil palm and rubber plantations. The species is the most frequent grass in the understory of oil palm and rubber plantations in the investigated regions of the Jambi province.
Classification. Aphidinae: Aphidini. Common name(s) Soybean aphid. Diagnosis. Small yellow aphids with black siphunculi and pale yellow cauda, found colonising the stem apices and young leaves of growing soybean plants, and undersides of leaves of mature plants; sometimes even colonize the pods.Body 5-6 times as long as siphunculi.Antenna approximately 1.3 times as long as body.
A number of grasses have been identified, which are highly preferred and consumed by the herbivorous fauna, in the Mahananda wildlife sanctuary and other wildlife reserves of north Bengal. On the contrary, the famous alluvial savanna grasslands of this region have been declining. However, it has been found that the larger varieties such as Agrostis brachiata, Anthistiria gigantea var.
Intensive transformation of lowland rainforest into oil palm and rubber monocultures is the most common land-use practice in Sumatra (Indonesia), accompanied by invasion of weeds. In the Jambi province, Centotheca lappacea is one of the most abundant alien grass species in plantations and in jungle rubber (an extensively used agroforest), but largely missing in natural rainforests.
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