Home
About
Search
My SCD
Systematics Collections Data
Log in
|
Sign up
!!
CHR 505393 A – Rhopalostylis H.Wendl. & Drude
Data provider:
Allan Herbarium
Barcode:
CHR 505393 A
Specimen type:
Sheet
Database record added:
12 April 2006
Database record updated:
24 February 2023
Components
Primary component
Active identification
Determined name:
Rhopalostylis aff. sapida
Determiner:
PJ de Lange & PB Heenan
Identification date:
2006-02-13 (Verbatim: 13 Feb 2006)
Preferred name:
Rhopalostylis H.Wendl. & Drude
Division:
Magnoliophyta
Class:
Liliopsida
Order:
Arecales
Family:
Palmae
Identification type:
Determination
Collection events
Primary collection event
Collection event type:
Field
Standard locality
Location:
Chatham Island, Kaingaroa, Kaiwhata
Georeferences:
Latitude and Longitude (WGS84): -43.737065 -176.246439
Verbatim locality:
Kaiwhata farm, near Kaingaroa Harbour (on road to Point Munning)
Verbatim collector:
PJ de Lange & PB Heenan
Standardised collector:
Peter J. de Lange; Peter B. Heenan
Verbatim date:
13 Feb 2006
Start date:
2006-02-13
Land District:
Wellington Land District
Ecological District:
Chathams
Country:
New Zealand
Native lands:
Moriori
Moriori
Ngati Mutunga o Wharekauri
Georeferences:
New Zealand Map Series 260: CH1 701 792 (WGS84 -43.736449 -176.249897)
Altitudes:
from 20m
Habitat:
coastal forest
Notes:
palms upto 7m tall, some plants fruitng, others flowering.
Specimen notes
Subsheet:
Sheets A to B
Permissions
Project permits
Project title:
Local Contexts - Allan Herbarium (CHR)
Reference:
CHR Collection - Local Contexts
Biocultural (BC) Notice
×
x
Create a New Set
Name
Description
x
Download
Organisation
Please indicate your intended purpose for this data.
Biosecurity management/planning
Conservation management/planning
Environmental impact, site assessment
Education
Ecological research
Systematic research
Other scientific research (please enter)
Collection management
Testing
Other
Download format
CSV
Specimens Examined
x
Warning
You have requested a large set of records to download. This may take more than
to process.
A problem has occurred