an introduction of the epiphytic Orchids of East Africa

dc.bibliographicCitation.issueNo 1en
dc.bibliographicCitation.titleEast African Agricultural And Forestry Journalen
dc.bibliographicCitation.volumeXVIIen
dc.contributor.authorMoreau, W.M.null
dc.contributor.authorMoreau, R.
dc.contributor.corpauthorAmaninull
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-28T10:05:27Znull
dc.date.available2015-08-28T10:05:27Znull
dc.date.issued1943en
dc.description.abstractOver fifteen thousand species of orchids haye been described,the vast majority of them tropical , and the greater part of them epiphytic, that is, normally growing on trees without deriving sustenance from them. But little more than t n per cent of the majestic total belong to Tropical Africa and moreover, so far as is known at present, within that area ground orchids predominate over epiphytic in the proportion of more than three to one.en
dc.identifier.citationMoreau, W. M. Moreau, R. (1943). An introduction to the epiphytic orchids of East Africa. East African Geographical Review, 1943(75), 1-32.en
dc.identifier.issn0012-8325*
dc.identifier.urihttps://kalroerepository.kalro.org/handle/0/11920null
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/en
dc.subject.agrovocOrchidaceaeen
dc.subject.agrovocEpiphytesen
dc.subject.agrovocEcologyen
dc.subject.agrovocSpeciesen
dc.titlean introduction of the epiphytic Orchids of East Africaen
dc.typeJournal Contribution*
dc.type.refereedRefereeden
dc.type.specifiedArticleen

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