Species of shrub
Phaulopsis imbricata
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Scientific classification
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Kingdom:
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Plantae
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Clade:
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Tracheophytes
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Clade:
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Angiosperms
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Clade:
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Eudicots
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Clade:
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Asterids
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Order:
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Lamiales
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Family:
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Acanthaceae
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Genus:
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Phaulopsis
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Species:
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P. imbricata
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Binomial name
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Phaulopsis imbricata
(Forssk.) Sweet
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Synonyms
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- Aetheilema anisophyllum R.Br.
- Aetheilema anisophyllum E.Mey. ex Nees
- Aetheilema glutinosum Steud.
- Aetheilema imbricatum R.Br.
- Aetheilema imbricatum (Forssk.) Spreng.
- Aetheilema longifolium Spreng.
- Aetheilema mucronatum Griff.
- Aetheilema parviflorum Spreng.
- Aetheilema reniforme Nees
- Aetheilema rothii Steud.
- Antheilema imbricata Raf.
- Barleria inaequalis Hochst. ex A.Rich.
- Blechum anisophyllum Juss.
- Phaulopsis longifolia Sims
- Phaulopsis parviflora Willd.
- Ruellia imbricata Forssk.
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Phaulopsis imbricata is a shrub native to South Africa.[2] Leaves are opposite, one larger than the other in each pair, usually asymmetrical at the base.[3] Phaulopsis imbricata is a good fodder, the young leaves are eaten as a vegetable and the plant-ash in oil is rubbed into scarifications on the back for rheumatism in Tanganyika.[4] The flowers have an unpleasant smell.[5] It is filed as near-threatened by the IUCN.[1] It is one of the larval host plants of the butterflies great eggfly, tiny grass blue, brown pansy, soldier pansy and marbled elf.
References
External links
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Phaulopsis imbricata | |
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Ruellia imbricata | |
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