Honeysuckles

Área de elementos

Taxonomía

Código

fst00959992

Nota(s) sobre el alcance

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  • SEE ALSO: Caprifoliaceae

Nota(s) sobre el origen

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      Términos jerárquicos

      Honeysuckles

        Términos equivalentes

        Honeysuckles

        • Usado para Honeysuckle

        • Usado para Lonicera

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        Términos asociados

        Honeysuckles

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          SDSU-Archives UA 053.004-UA 53.4: B07-UA 53.4: B07-F06 · Folder · 1924 June 11
          Parte de N. E. Hansen Papers

          Caprifoliaceae Vent. Lonicera Maacki Turcr. Plant specimen from the honeysuckle family collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924. This plant is native to temperate western Asia, specifically in northern and western China south to Yunnan, Mongolia, Primorsky Krai in southeastern Russia, Korea, and, albeit rare there, central and northern Honshu, Japan. N.E. Hansen (1866-1950) was a Danish-American horticulturist and botanist who was a pioneer in plant breeding. Hansen came to South Dakota in 1895 and became the first head of the Horticultural Department of South Dakota State College. He also served as agricultural explorer for the United States Department of Agriculture. He searched for hardy grasses, fruits, and other plants throughout Europe and Asia and brought them back to the United States to raise or crossbreed with American varieties to produce hardy plants.

          SDSU-Archives UA 053.004-UA 53.4: B07-UA 53.4: B07-F05 · Folder · 1924 March 30
          Parte de N. E. Hansen Papers

          Caprifoliaceae Vent. Lonicera edulis Turcr. Plant specimen from the honeysuckle family collected by N.E. Hansen, 1924. N.E. Hansen (1866-1950) was a Danish-American horticulturist and botanist who was a pioneer in plant breeding. Hansen came to South Dakota in 1895 and became the first head of the Horticultural Department of South Dakota State College. He also served as agricultural explorer for the United States Department of Agriculture. He searched for hardy grasses, fruits, and other plants throughout Europe and Asia and brought them back to the United States to raise or crossbreed with American varieties to produce hardy plants. Specimen is mounted on an 11.5 x 16.5 inch herbarium sheet accompanied by a label printed in Russian in Cyrillic letter with hand-written notation in black ink.