Sorghum timorense, commonly known as Downs sorghum,[3] is an annual tropical Asian and Australasian grass native to the island of Timor, and Australia in the northern portions of the states of Northern Territory, Queensland, and Western Australia[1] (flourishing in regions from Kimberley to Pilbara).[4]
^ abc Under its treatment as Sorghum timorense, from its basionym Andropogon tropicus var. timorense, this plant name was first published in Vriese, Pl. Ind. bat. orient. 103. 1856. "Sorghum timorense". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
^Andropogon tropicus var. timorense, the basionym of Sorghum timorense, was first described and published in Révis. gramin. 1:367, t. 97. 1830. "Andropogon tropicus var. timorense". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
^Jacques van Rensburg (14 June 2011). "East Arm Wharf Expansion Project - Draft Environmental Impact Statement, Volume 2 of 4; Chapter 16" (PDF). EAW Expansion Project DEIS. Northern Territory Government, Department of Lands and Planning. p. 10. Retrieved 29 November 2011.[permanent dead link]
^P. Chukowry; M. Maier (December 2009). "A Vegetation and Flora Survey of James Price Point: Wet Season 2009" (PDF). Biota Environmental Sciences. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
Sorghumtimorense, commonly known as Downs sorghum, is an annual tropical Asian and Australasian grass native to the island of Timor, and Australia in...