University of Alberta Museums Search

123427 - Amphiscirpus nevadensis (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeb.

University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium Read more about this collection »

Place CollectedNorth America: Canada, Alberta, Lost Creek Date Collected1994-07-20

Item Details

Place CollectedNorth America: Canada, Alberta, Lost Creek Date Collected1994-07-20
Accession Number 123427 Scientific Name Amphiscirpus nevadensis (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeb. View Species Details » Family Cyperaceae Collected By Macdonald, Ian D. Date Collected 1994-07-20 Collector Number 27085 Place Collected North America: Canada, Alberta, Lost Creek Place Collected Details
ALBERTA Sweetgrass Hills North Slope [Near Lost Creek] Fourty Mile Dist. – Sweetgrass Hills northern lower slope. Mixedgrass Ecoregion: interface between dry prairie and marl pond backshore; seepage meadow with Poa…
ALBERTA Sweetgrass Hills North Slope [Near Lost Creek] Fourty Mile Dist. – Sweetgrass Hills northern lower slope. Mixedgrass Ecoregion: interface between dry prairie and marl pond backshore; seepage meadow with Poa sandbergii, Hordeum jubatum, Deschampsia cespitosa, Plantago eriopoda; also in intermittent alkali seeps. Map: 72E/2
Latitude 49.002283 Longitude -110.890743 Max Uncertainty Estimate (km) .569

Citation

Page Citation for 123427 - Amphiscirpus nevadensis (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeb.

Page Citation

"123427 - Amphiscirpus nevadensis (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeb., University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium." University of Alberta Museums Search Site, https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/12-107280. Accessed 29 Apr. 2025.

Taxonomic Hierarchy

Kingdom Plantae Division Flowering Plants Class Monocots Order Poales Family Cyperaceae Genus Amphiscirpus Oteng-Yeb. Species Amphiscirpus nevadensis (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeb.
This hierarchy is created from our museum records, it may not always accurately reflect modern taxonomies.

Taxonomic Hierarchy for University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium

Disclaimer
This hierarchy is created from our museum records, it may not always accurately reflect modern taxonomies.