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Wrangelia Penicillata
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscription (taxonomy), circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. [i]-lxxvi, [i]-189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain (office), Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partiall ...
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Carl Adolph Agardh
Carl Adolph Agardh (23 January 1785 in Båstad, Sweden – 28 January 1859 in Karlstad) was a Swedish botanist specializing in algae, who was eventually appointed bishop of Karlstad. Biography In 1807 he was appointed teacher of mathematics at Lund University, in 1812 appointed professor of botany and natural sciences, and was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1817, and of the Swedish Academy in 1831. He was ordained a clergyman in 1816, received two parishes as prebend, and was a representative in the clerical chamber of the Swedish Parliament on several occasions from 1817. He was rector magnificus of Lund University 1819-1820 and was appointed bishop of Karlstad in 1835, where he remained until his death. He was the father of Jacob Georg Agardh, also a botanist. System of plant classification The ''Classes Plantarum'' has nine primary divisions into which his classes and natural orders are grouped. These are, with class numbers; # Acotyledon ...
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Eniwetok
Enewetak Atoll (; also spelled Eniwetok Atoll or sometimes Eniewetok; mh, Ānewetak, , or , ; known to the Japanese as Brown Atoll or Brown Island; ja, ブラウン環礁) is a large coral atoll of 40 islands in the Pacific Ocean and with its 664 people (as of 2011) forms a legislative district of the Ralik Chain of the Marshall Islands. With a land area total less than , it is no higher than and surrounds a deep central lagoon, in circumference. It is the second-westernmost atoll of the Ralik Chain and is west from Bikini Atoll. It was held by the Japanese from 1914 until its capture by the United States in February 1944, during World War II, then became Naval Base Eniwetok. Nuclear testing by the US totaling the equivalent of over 30 megatons of TNT took place during the Cold War; in 1977–1980, a concrete dome (the Runit Dome) was built on Runit Island to deposit radioactive soil and debris. The Runit Dome is deteriorating and could be breached by a typhoon, though ...
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Wrangelia Nigrescens
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Incurva
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Hainanensis
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Gordoniae
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Globifera
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Galeae
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Elegantissima
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Dumontii
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Confluens
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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Wrangelia Bicuspidata
''Wrangelia'' is a genus of red algae in the family Wrangeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Carl Adolf Agardh in his book ''Species algarum rite cognitae, cum synonymis, differentiis specificis et descriptionibus succinctis''. Voluminis secundi. Sectio prior. pp. lxxvi, 189. in 1828. The genus name of ''Wrangelia'' is in honour of Fredrik Anton von Wrangel (1786–1842), who was a Danish-Swedish Chamberlain, and also a botanist and alga specialist. The type species, ''Wrangelia penicillata'' is also commonly called ''Pink bush alga''. They form bushy plants, growing up to in height. They have small branches which travel outwards alternately from either side of the main branches in a single plane. They are light pink purple in colour. The species grows in shallow waters to moderate depths, while attached to nearly any hard substrate Generally, the species has 5 whorl branchlets per segment and a cortex that partially or wholly covers their axes. Distribution The genus ...
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