WebOn the Virtual Herbarium web site Miami Tree Puzzle (248 species) (includes most of the tree species growing on their own in the Miami area) Flowering Plants of Jamaica Other Interactive Keys Freely Available on the Web Key to the Plant Families of the La Selva Biological Field Station (Costa Rica) WebThe Fairchild Farm, located in the Redland, is a working fruit grove with an extensive collection of some of the world’s most important tropical fruit crops. These include collections of mango, avocado, jackfruit, mamey sapote, sapodilla, canistel, abrico (Mammea americana), caimito, spanish lime (Melicoccus bijugatus) and tamarind.
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WebThe Virtual Herbarium. The Virtual Herbarium is a text and photographic database of the specimens in the Fairchild Tropical Garden Herbarium. The FTG herbarium now … Welcome to the Center for Tropical Plant Conservation's Dan Austin … The Fairchild Tropical Garden Virtual Herbarium (FTG) presents the virtual … serve as an educational tool for the public (garden clubs, school groups, etc.); … Search the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Virtual Herbarium (FTG) Search … The Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Herbarium, located at the Center for … On the Virtual Herbarium web site. Miami Tree Puzzle (248 species) (includes … Other Herbarium and Database Systems Databases with Text Only. IOPI list of … WebGarden Contact Information10901 Old Cutler RoadMiami, Florida 33156Main number: 305.667.1651Fax: 305.661.8953The Shop at Fairchild 305.667.1651, ext. kissimmee vacation rentals with water park
Tropical Fruit Program - Virtual Herbarium
Webthe tropical garden 3 historical curiosities of 31 the fairchild herbarium features from the director from the chief operating officer schedule of events get in on the conservation tropical cuisine explaining vis-a-vis volunteers conserving what’s in store book review what’s in a name plant collections bug beat from the archives garden ... http://www.virtualherbarium.org/vh/db/vhsearch.php WebOf the 65 plant taxa believed extinct from the continental United States and Canada, 4 were endemic to Florida, with 2 being global single-site endemics. Each of these Florida extinctions will be discussed in detail. Lecturer Bio: Wesley Knapp is the Chief Botanist at NatureServe, a leading biodiversity conservation non-profit in the United States. lyt til radio victoria