Botanical Nomenclature
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Transcript Botanical Nomenclature
Botanical Nomenclature
Plants
may have many common
names
Plants have only one scientific name
Scientific names are universally
accepted
Binomial System of
Classification
Invented
by the Swedish naturalist
Linnaeus in the year 1753
The genus comes first and is always
capitalized and italicized
The specific epithet comes after the
genus and is always lower case and
italicized
The Species
The
genus and specific epithet
together form the “binomial” that
identifies a species
Example: Cercis canadensis
Eastern Redbud
A group of individual plants that
have a common set of identifiable
characteristics that are inheritable
Species come “true-to-type” from
seed
The Variety
A
group of plants subordinate to the
species; differing from the species in
one or more inheritable characteristics
Varieties come “true-to-type” from seed
Written in lower case and italicized
Two acceptable formats:
Cercis canadensis var. alba
or
Cercis canadensis alba
The Variety
Cercis canadensis
Cercis canadensis var. alba
The Cultivar
In
ornamental horticulture cultivar
characteristics are, generally speaking,
not inheritable
Cultivars, generally speaking, do not come
“true-to-type” from seed
Cultivar names are always capitalized and
written in single quotations
Example:
Cercis canadensis ‘Forest Pansy’
has maroon leaves that fade to green
The Cultivar
A
single species may have many cultivars
Juniperus horizontalis ‘Blue Chip’
Juniperus horizontalis ‘Plumosa’
Juniperus horizontalis ‘Hughes’ etc.
It is possible to have a cultivar of a variety
Gleditsia triacanthos inermis ‘Skyline’
or
Cornus florida rubra ‘Cherokee Chief’
Gleditsia triacanthos
Gleditsia triacanthos
var. inermis
Gleditsia triacanthos
var. inermis ‘Skyline’
The End