Anadendrum

Anadendrum is a genus of flowering plants in the family Araceae. It is native to China and Southeast Asia.[1][2][3]

Anadendrum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Araceae
Subfamily: Monsteroideae
Tribe: Anadendreae
Genus: Anadendrum
Schott

Species

  1. Anadendrum affine Schott - Borneo, Sumatra
  2. Anadendrum angustifolium Engl. - Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia
  3. Anadendrum badium P.C.Boyce - Thailand
  4. Anadendrum cordatum Schott - Sumatra
  5. Anadendrum ellipticum Widyartini & Widjaja - Borneo, Sumatra, Java, Peninsular Malaysia
  6. Anadendrum griseum P.C.Boyce - Thailand
  7. Anadendrum latifolium Hook.f - Yunnan, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi, Philippines
  8. Anadendrum marcesovaginatum P.C.Boyce - Thailand
  9. Anadendrum marginatum Schott - Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak
  10. Anadendrum microstachyum (de Vriese & Miq.) Backer & Alderw. - Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi, Philippines, Thailand, southern China
  11. Anadendrum montanum Schott - Yunnan, Indochina, Java, Sulawesi, Philippines
  12. Anadendrum superans Alderw. - Sumatra
gollark: The GPT-3 documentation says it doesn't know about anything past 2019, but there's no reason Codex couldn't use newer data.
gollark: Where you gave it a natural language command and it wrote bash code to hopefully do it.
gollark: It might be fun to use Codex to make that AI shell thing someone had.
gollark: They might struggle to write *idiomatic* Haskell.
gollark: I sort of know it, or at least can write reasonably working code in it even if I don't have an intuitive grasp of the weird underlying category theory stuff, but it's really annoying to do the sort of things my code usually involves in it. It's great for stuff like compilers and complex algorithms at least.

References

  1. Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  2. Govaerts, R. & Frodin, D.G. (2002). World Checklist and Bibliography of Araceae (and Acoraceae): 1-560. The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
  3. Bown, Deni (2000). Aroids: Plants of the Arum Family [ILLUSTRATED]. Timber Press. ISBN 0-88192-485-7


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