{"title":"工厂的记录","authors":"","doi":"10.1080/20423489.2015.1121646","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":". New 10 km square records for Rare and Scarce plants, defined as those species in the New Atlas mapped in the British Isles in 100 10 km squares or fewer. (See BSBI News no. 95, January 2004 pp. 36–43). Records for the subdivisions of vice-counties will not be treated separately; they must therefore be records for the vice-county as a whole. However, records will be accepted for the major islands in v.cc. 100, 102–104, 110 and 113. In the following list, records are arranged in the order given in the List of Vascular Plants of the British Isles and its supplements by D. H. Kent (1992). Nomenclature and taxonomy also follow this list except where changes have been made in the 3rd edition of theNew Flora of the British Isles by C. A. Stace, in which cases, the changed names have been used. The Ordnance Survey national grid reference follows the habitat and locality. With the exception of collectors’ initials, herbarium abbreviations are those used in British and Irish Herbaria by D. H. Kent & D. E. Allen (1984). Records are field records if no other source is stated. For all records, ‘det.’ or ‘conf.’ appear after the herbarium if the determination was based on material already in an institutional herbarium, otherwise before the herbarium. The following signs are used: * before the vice-county number: to indicate a new vice-county record. † before the species number: to indicate that the plant is an archaeophyte. ‡ before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a neophyte. © before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a casual. The above three signs may also used before the vice-county number to indicate the status of the plant in that vicecounty. ® before the vice-county number: to indicate that this is an additional hectad for a Rare or Scarce plant. Ø at end of entry: established taxon not in Vice-County Census Catalogue. Name of authority provided. [ ] enclosing a previously published record: to indicate that that record should be deleted or changed. Records are now published in two separate sections – (1) NATIVES (including archaeophytes) and (2) ALIENS (neophytes and casuals). The following list contains records up to and including the year 2015. Records up to and including the year 2016 will be published in the next but one issue of the New Journal of Botany. Records from the following vice-counties are included: 1b, 2, 6, 9, 12, 29, 35, 36, 41, 42, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 52, 54, 55, 62, 63, 69, 70, 71, 73, 81, 83 and 110.","PeriodicalId":19229,"journal":{"name":"New Journal of Botany","volume":"20 1","pages":"205 - 215"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-09-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Plant records\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/20423489.2015.1121646\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\". New 10 km square records for Rare and Scarce plants, defined as those species in the New Atlas mapped in the British Isles in 100 10 km squares or fewer. (See BSBI News no. 95, January 2004 pp. 36–43). Records for the subdivisions of vice-counties will not be treated separately; they must therefore be records for the vice-county as a whole. However, records will be accepted for the major islands in v.cc. 100, 102–104, 110 and 113. In the following list, records are arranged in the order given in the List of Vascular Plants of the British Isles and its supplements by D. H. Kent (1992). Nomenclature and taxonomy also follow this list except where changes have been made in the 3rd edition of theNew Flora of the British Isles by C. A. Stace, in which cases, the changed names have been used. The Ordnance Survey national grid reference follows the habitat and locality. With the exception of collectors’ initials, herbarium abbreviations are those used in British and Irish Herbaria by D. H. Kent & D. E. Allen (1984). Records are field records if no other source is stated. For all records, ‘det.’ or ‘conf.’ appear after the herbarium if the determination was based on material already in an institutional herbarium, otherwise before the herbarium. The following signs are used: * before the vice-county number: to indicate a new vice-county record. † before the species number: to indicate that the plant is an archaeophyte. ‡ before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a neophyte. © before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a casual. The above three signs may also used before the vice-county number to indicate the status of the plant in that vicecounty. ® before the vice-county number: to indicate that this is an additional hectad for a Rare or Scarce plant. Ø at end of entry: established taxon not in Vice-County Census Catalogue. Name of authority provided. [ ] enclosing a previously published record: to indicate that that record should be deleted or changed. Records are now published in two separate sections – (1) NATIVES (including archaeophytes) and (2) ALIENS (neophytes and casuals). The following list contains records up to and including the year 2015. Records up to and including the year 2016 will be published in the next but one issue of the New Journal of Botany. 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引用次数: 0
Plant records
. New 10 km square records for Rare and Scarce plants, defined as those species in the New Atlas mapped in the British Isles in 100 10 km squares or fewer. (See BSBI News no. 95, January 2004 pp. 36–43). Records for the subdivisions of vice-counties will not be treated separately; they must therefore be records for the vice-county as a whole. However, records will be accepted for the major islands in v.cc. 100, 102–104, 110 and 113. In the following list, records are arranged in the order given in the List of Vascular Plants of the British Isles and its supplements by D. H. Kent (1992). Nomenclature and taxonomy also follow this list except where changes have been made in the 3rd edition of theNew Flora of the British Isles by C. A. Stace, in which cases, the changed names have been used. The Ordnance Survey national grid reference follows the habitat and locality. With the exception of collectors’ initials, herbarium abbreviations are those used in British and Irish Herbaria by D. H. Kent & D. E. Allen (1984). Records are field records if no other source is stated. For all records, ‘det.’ or ‘conf.’ appear after the herbarium if the determination was based on material already in an institutional herbarium, otherwise before the herbarium. The following signs are used: * before the vice-county number: to indicate a new vice-county record. † before the species number: to indicate that the plant is an archaeophyte. ‡ before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a neophyte. © before the species number: to indicate that the plant is a casual. The above three signs may also used before the vice-county number to indicate the status of the plant in that vicecounty. ® before the vice-county number: to indicate that this is an additional hectad for a Rare or Scarce plant. Ø at end of entry: established taxon not in Vice-County Census Catalogue. Name of authority provided. [ ] enclosing a previously published record: to indicate that that record should be deleted or changed. Records are now published in two separate sections – (1) NATIVES (including archaeophytes) and (2) ALIENS (neophytes and casuals). The following list contains records up to and including the year 2015. Records up to and including the year 2016 will be published in the next but one issue of the New Journal of Botany. Records from the following vice-counties are included: 1b, 2, 6, 9, 12, 29, 35, 36, 41, 42, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 52, 54, 55, 62, 63, 69, 70, 71, 73, 81, 83 and 110.