Atkinsonia is a hemi-parasitic shrub with oppositely set, entire leaves and yellowish, later rusty-red colored flowers, that is found in Eastern Australia. It is a monotypic genus, the only species being Atkinsonia ligustrina, and is assigned to the showy mistletoe family, Loranthaceae.[1] It is sometimes called Louisa's mistletoe.[2][3]
^B. Wiecek. "New South Wales Flora Online: Atkinsonia ligustrina". Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust, Sydney, Australia. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
^"Atkinsonia ligustrina". Charles Sturt University – Virtual Herbarium. Retrieved 2017-03-29.
^"Atkinsonia ligustrina (A.Cunn. ex F.Muell.) F.Muell". plantNet - New South Wales Flora online. Retrieved 2017-03-29.
Atkinsonia is a hemi-parasitic shrub with oppositely set, entire leaves and yellowish, later rusty-red colored flowers, that is found in Eastern Australia...
Lethe atkinsonia, the small goldenfork, is a species of Satyrinae butterfly found in the Indomalayan realm (Sikkim to Bhutan) . Hewitson, W., 1876 Notes...
the family Stathmopodidae. This genus is closely related to the genus Atkinsonia and tough to differentiate externally. Oedematopoda beijingana Yang, 1977...
species are Nuytsia floribunda (the Western Australian Christmas tree), Atkinsonia ligustrina (from the Blue Mountains of Australia), and Gaiadendron punctatum...
monotypic genus, Nuytsia. This species was seen as a sister taxon to Atkinsonia ligustrina (Loranthaceae) in its description as Nuytsia ligustrina by...
species for old growth coniferous forest in the Pacific Northwest: Galerina atkinsonia, Galerina cerina, Galerina heterocystis, Galerina sphagnicola, and Galerina...
Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne), who named a species of mistletoe, Atkinsonia ligustrina after her. Xanthosia atkinsoniana, Erechtites atkinsoniae (now...
it flowers from October to December, or January to April. Xanthosia atkinsonia was described in 1861 by Ferdinand von Mueller. The specific epithet,...
sheer inventiveness". She is commemorated in the Loranthaceous genus Atkinsonia, and in the species Erechtites atkinsoniae, Epacris calvertiana, Helichrysum...
distributed M. sanguinolenta is another "bleeder", but it is smaller than M. atkinsonia, with a cap diameter ranging from 3 to 15 mm (0.1 to 0.6 in). Additionally...
Louisa Atkinson) whose name is commemorated in five species and one genus (Atkinsonia). Rigby, Rebecca; Walsh, Neville (8 April 2014). "Bate, Mary Harriet (1855...