Menegazzia jamesii
Menegazzia jamesii is a species of lichen found in Australia.[1]
Menegazzia jamesii | |
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Species: | M. jamesii |
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Menegazzia jamesii Louwhoff & Kantvilas (2004) | |
Other Menegazzia Species
gollark: If you accept this then any action which reduces future human population in some way is "culling", which is stupid.
gollark: This is another maybe technically accurate (at an even greater stretch) but ridiculous interpretation. If people don't exist, it is not in fact possible to remove them.
gollark: This sort of thing makes natural languages quite annoying, but you can help by, well, not picking the most emotionally charged word which "technically matches".
gollark: If I say "that person is a criminal" you might very well have a worsened opinion of them, even if I know that all they actually did was jaywalking or something. It's technically not *false* to call them that but misleads.
gollark: Using a word which is technically right by a dictionary definition can be misleading because it has connotations which possible alternate choices of word don't.
References
- Kantvilas, G.; Louwhoff, S. (March 2004). "A new eight-spored species of Menegazzia from Australia". The Lichenologist. 36 (2): 103–111. doi:10.1017/S002428290401415X.
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