Ticket #5756 (new)
Opened 2 weeks ago
Lose Weight!
Reported by: | "Worlds Healthiest Bread" <KetoDesserts@…> | Owned by: | |
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Priority: | normal | Milestone: | 2.11 |
Component: | none | Version: | 3.8.0 |
Severity: | medium | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Language: | ||
Patch status: | Platform: |
Description
Lose Weight! http://dessertcore.us/yReIavl8V-EB3FjfDka8g4rtCfAs7L0FopROMPg4qVPEyjdwXw http://dessertcore.us/9955-UtDtplh6xLwTTA8Y8huA0ohfQaRzsD7P-w3bj8Cm42WBw riflorus. Leaves were described, in part, as small, rounded, and spatulate-shaped, with fine, reticulate veins and a short wedge-shaped base In 1984, Almut Gitter Jones demoted Aster spatelliformis to a variety of A. lateriflorus.:?379? Note that it was in 1982 that Löve and Löve began moving species to the genus Symphyotrichum.:?358â359? Two years before, in 1980, Jones had placed Symphyotrichum as a subgenus of Aster.:?234? It was not until Nesom's evaluation of Aster sensu lato in 1994 that Jones' subgenus was combined with the genus.:?267? After this, Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. spatelliforme was created, and the two former taxa became its taxonomic synonyms. Variety tenuipes refer to caption S. lateriflorum plant showing a zigzag growing pattern Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. tenuipes (Wiegand) G.L.Nesom is commonly called slender-stalked calico aster. It was said by American botanists Henry A. Gleason and Arthur Cronquist to be a lax plant, with wiry stems, often larger heads in open panicles, and involucres to 6.5 mm. Wiegand first described it as a variety in 1928, Aster lateriflorus var. tenuipes Wiegand, with slender and "somewhat zigzag" stems, larger heads, and longer rays than the standard form of the species. He attached as holotype a specimen from Dundee, Prince Edward Island, collected in 1912 by Fernald, Long & St. John, stored as no. 814 in the Gray Herbarium.:?174? In 1943, Shinners promoted the variety to species level as Aster tenuipes (Wiegand) Shinners, specifying that it lacked the "pubescent midveins" of A. lateriflorus. This name had been in use since 1898 as Aster tenuipes Makino, native to Japan. The following year, Shinners renamed his to Aster acadiensis Shinners. Nesom cre
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