Find the word definition

Crossword clues for phyllodoce

Wikipedia
Phyllodoce (plant)

Phyllodoce is a small genus of plants in the heather family, Ericaceae. They are known commonly as mountainheaths, mountain heaths, or mountain heathers. They are native to North America and Eurasia, where they have a circumboreal distribution.

Plants of this genus are subshrubs that occur in arctic-alpine regions. They often grow from rhizomes, the stem bases formed by clumps of old leaf stalks. They have erect or spreading stems, the new shoots covered in glandular hairs, the old ones bare, tough, and shreddy. The leaves are alternately arranged. They have narrow, leathery blades that roll under tightly at the edges. The inflorescence is a solitary flower or an array of up to 30. The flower has a cup- or bell-shaped corolla of five petals that are fused together for at least half their lengths. There are usually ten stamens, which sometimes protrude from the corolla. The fruit is a capsule containing over 100 tiny seeds.

There are four to seven or eight species in genus Phyllodoce. Even after detailed phylogenetic analyses the relationships between plants in this genus are still unclear.

Species include:

  • Phyllodoce aleutica – Aleutian mountain heath
  • Phyllodoce breweri – purple mountain heath, red mountain heather, Brewer's mountain heath
  • Phyllodoce caerulea – blue mountain heath, purple mountain heather
  • Phyllodoce empetriformis – pink mountain heath, red mountain heath
  • Phyllodoce glanduliflora – yellow mountain heath

Hybrids between species also occur.

The name Phyllodoce belongs to one of the sea nymphs of Greek mythology.

Phyllodoce

Phyllodoce may refer to:

  • Phyllodoce (plant), a genus of plants which includes the mountainheaths or mountain heathers
  • Phyllodoce (worm), a genus of polychaete worms, one of the Nereids
Phyllodoce (worm)

Phyllodoce is a genus of polychaete worms, which contains about 120 species. The prostomium bears eyes, two pairs of antennae and a pair of large retractile nuchal organs. The eversible proboscis is clearly divided into two parts.