Vascular Plants

Usage of a name (Instance)
An instance of a name in a reference, or usage of a name.
  • At the bottom of this page are the citable links to this Instance object or just use the icon. You can "right click" in most browsers to copy it or open it in a new browser tab.

Rhagodia hastata R.Br., legitimate, scientific secondary reference apni
Mosyakin, S.L. & Iamonico, D. (13 July 2017), Nomenclatural changes in Chenopodium (incl. Rhagodia) (Chenopodiaceae), with considerations on relationships of some Australian taxa and their possible Eurasian relatives. Nuytsia 28: 262 [secondary reference]
  • Type: "Port Jackson, New South Wales, Australia, R. Brown s.n. [Bennett No. 3040] (lectotype fide A.J. Scott, Feddes Repert. 89: 4 (1978): BM 001010211 image seen; isolectotypes: BM 001015889 image seen, K 000898399 [plant of the bottom-half of the sheet] image seen, MEL 545196 image seen)."
  • Text: "In the protologue, Brown (1810...) indicated that he observed living plants at Port Jackson via the citation ‘(J.) v. v.’ (meaning ‘Port Jackson, vidi vivo’) but did not cite any particular specimen that can be regarded as the holotype (as defined by ICN Art. 9.1: McNeill et al. 2012). Scott’s (1978...) reference to the specimen from Brown’s own herbarium with a Bennett number of 3040 (BM 001010211) as the ‘holotype’ is an error to be corrected to ‘lectotype’ according to ICN Art. 9.9 (McNeill et al. 2012)."

Secondary reference of

Rhagodia hastata R.Br.

link to here
  • To cite this object in a database or publication please use the following preferred link.
  • The preferred link is the most specific of the permalinks to here and makes later comparisons of linked resources easier.
  • Note you can access JSON and XML versions of this object by setting the correct mime type in the ACCEPTS header of your HTTP request or by appending ".json" or ".xml" to the end of the URL.

Please cite using: https://id.biodiversity.org.au/instance/apni/9327839
Also known as
  • These are all the non deprecated permalinks to this object. The link with a is the preferred link.
  • Deprecated (old, no longer used) links will not appear here, but will still resolve. You will get a 301, moved permanently, redirect if you use a deprecated link.
  • You may link to this resource with any of the specific links, but we would prefer you used the preferred link as this makes later comparisons of linked resources easier.