Dianella Congesta
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Dianella Congesta
Dianella may refer to: * Dianella (beetle), ''Dianella'' (beetle), a species and genus of beetle in the family Carabidae now known as ''Diamella'' * Dianella (gastropod), ''Dianella'' (gastropod), a genus of freshwater snails in the family Hydrobiidae * Dianella (plant), ''Dianella'' (plant), a genus of flowering plants * Dianella, Western Australia, a suburb of Perth, Australia ** Dianella White Eagles, a football club from the suburb {{disambiguation, genus ...
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Dianella (beetle)
''Diamella'' is a genus of beetle in the family Carabidae. It was originally described by Arnošt Jedlička in 1952 as ''Dianella.'' Hongliang Shi, Hongzhang Zhou, and Hongbin Liang proposed ''Diamella'' as a replacement name in 2013, since Jedlička's ''Dianella'' was a junior homonym of the gastropod genus ''Dianella'', described by Gerard Pierre Laurent Kalshoven Gude in 1913. Originally monotypic, ''Diamella'' now contains five species in total: * ''Diamella arrowi'' Jedlicka, 1952 * ''Diamella barsevskisi'' Anichtchenko, 2016 * ''Diamella cupreomicans'' Oberthür, 1883 * ''Diamella kaszabi'' Jedlicka, 1952 * ''Diamella singularis ''Diamella'' is a genus of beetle in the family Carabidae. It was originally described by Arnošt Jedlička in 1952 as ''Dianella.'' Hongliang Shi, Hongzhang Zhou, and Hongbin Liang proposed ''Diamella'' as a replacement name in 2013, since Jedl ...'' Anichtchenko, 2017 References Lebiinae {{Lebiinae-stub ...
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Dianella (gastropod)
''Dianella'' is a little-known genus of small freshwater snails with a gill and an operculum, aquatic gastropod molluscs in the family Hydrobiidae. Distribution These are European freshwater snails; they occur in southeastern Europe, from northern Italy, through the Balkans, to the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea Description Their relatively big shell has an onic or turriform shape with a common, prominent, spiral sculpture. The radula shows a rhachidian tooth with no basal cusps. Their stomach has a caecal appendix at its pyloric end. They have a Hydrobia-like central nervous system, a simple penis and a characteristic, big seminal receptacle at the end of a prominent spiral of the coiled oviduct. Species Species within the genus ''Dianella'' include:The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.2. . Downloaded on 31 July 2014. * † ''Dianella gracilis'' (Pavlović, 1903) *''Dianella schlickum'' Schütt, 1962 *''Dianella thiesseana'' Kobelt, 1878 ;Species br ...
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Dianella (plant)
''Dianella'' is a genus of about forty species of flowering plants in the monocot family Asphodelaceae and are commonly known as flax lilies. Plants in this genus are tufted herbs with more or less linear leaves and bisexual flowers with three sepals more or less similar to three petals and a superior ovary, the fruit a berry. They occur in Africa, South-east Asia, the Pacific Islands, New Zealand and Australia. Several species of this genus, or the whole genus, are sometimes referred to by the common name blue flax lily, particularly in Australia. Description Plants in the genus ''Dianella'' are tufted perennial, rhizomatous herbs with fibrous or fleshy roots, more or less linear leaves with their bases overlapping, bisexual flowers with three sepals more or less similar to three blue, purple or white petals and a superior ovary, and the fruit a berry. Taxonomy The name ''Dianella'' was first formally published by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck in 1786 in his ''Encyclopédie Méthodiq ...
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Dianella, Western Australia
Dianella is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. It is within the local government area of the City of Stirling. Dianella was named after the botanical title of a small blue lily, '' Dianella revoluta'', a narrow-leafed plant that was plentiful in the area prior to residential development. History Early development of the area was slow, as the sandy soil, part of the Banksia sandplain, was considered unsuitable for agriculture. Much of Dianella was subdivided in the 1880s by the Intercolonial Investment Company of Sydney, but growth was still slow and by 1919, the only development was along Walter Road, a track leading to dairy farms in the Morley area. Dianella comprised localities known as North Inglewood, East Yokine, Morley Park and Bedford Park. They were amalgamated into Dianella in 1958, which generated some growth. Development progressed during the 1960s and housing construction first occurred north from Walter Road and Grand Promenade, with St Andrews, Montclair R ...
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