This article is about the French botanist and explorer. For the Swedish Arachnologist, see Tamerlan Thorell.
Clovis Thorel, born April 28, 1833, in Hébécourt, Somme, France, died September 11, 1911, in Bagnoles-de-l'Orne, was a French botanist, explorer of Indochina and doctor.[1] A significant number of plant species are named after him and he described 4,203 species himself.
^Portraits de médecins ('Portraits of doctors': Clovis Thorel)
ClovisThorel, born April 28, 1833, in Hébécourt, Somme, France, died September 11, 1911, in Bagnoles-de-l'Orne, was a French botanist, explorer of Indochina...
family Dipterocarpaceae. The species is named after the French botanist ClovisThorel. It is found in Laos and Thailand. Newman, M.F.; Pooma, R. (2017). "Hopea...
French botanist ClovisThorel. The recorded occurrence of this species is from Cambodia and Vietnam (where it may be called sang trắng Thorel). The Plant...
in the subfamily Grewioideae; it is named after the French botanist ClovisThorel. No subspecies are listed in the Catalogue of Life. The species is distributed...
named after the French botanist ClovisThorel and found in southern Vietnam, where it may be called bội tinh Thorel. Biodiversity Heritage Library:Bulletin...
Angkor in 1866 From left to right: Francis Garnier, Louis Delaporte, ClovisThorel, Captain Ernest Doudart de Lagrée, Lucien Joubert, Louis de Carné engraving...
botanist ClovisThorel. No subspecies are listed in the Catalogue of Life. Distributed throughout Indochina, its name in Vietnam is chai or chai Thorel: and...
to Laos in Indo-China. The genus name of Neothorelia is in honour of ClovisThorel (1833–1911), a French botanist, explorer and doctor. The Latin specific...
beech family Fagaceae. The species is named after the French botanist ClovisThorel. It has been found in Indochina (Laos, Vietnam) and in southern China...
from collected specimens on Vietnam in 1841. It gets its name from ClovisThorel, an explorer of Indochina. It is endemic to Vietnam. It grows on epiphyte...
from near sea level to 1,300 m (4,265 ft). It was originally named by ClovisThorel but formally described and published by François Pellegrin in 1920....
thorelii was made by ClovisThorel between 1862 and 1866 from Ti-tinh, Lo-thieu, Guia-Toan, Vietnam. During this time, Thorel collected a number of specimens...