University of Alberta Museums Search

97394 - Erysimum cheiranthoides L.

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

Place CollectedNorth America: United States, Alaska, Valdez-Cordova, Chitina Date Collected1987-06-30

Item Details

Place CollectedNorth America: United States, Alaska, Valdez-Cordova, Chitina Date Collected1987-06-30
Accession Number 97394 Scientific Name Erysimum cheiranthoides L. View Species Details » Family Brassicaceae Collected By Marvin, L. C. Date Collected 1987-06-30 Collector Number 02525 Place Collected North America: United States, Alaska, Valdez-Cordova, Chitina Place Collected Details
Copper River Basin: Ca. 2.5 km. north of Chitina between One and Two Mile Lakes on the Edgerton Highway (Route 10). South facing slope below a rock outcrop overlooking a creek and nearby gravel pit. Two species of…
Copper River Basin: Ca. 2.5 km. north of Chitina between One and Two Mile Lakes on the Edgerton Highway (Route 10). South facing slope below a rock outcrop overlooking a creek and nearby gravel pit. Two species of juniper, flax, wallflower, goldenrod, jacobs ladder, pasqueflower, anemone, arctic bladderpod, bearberry, painbrush, oxytrope, bedstraw, saxifraga, raspberry, rose.
Latitude 61.533333 Longitude -144.45 Max Uncertainty Estimate (km) 2.208

Citation

Page Citation for 97394 - Erysimum cheiranthoides L.

Page Citation

"97394 - Erysimum cheiranthoides L., University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium." University of Alberta Museums Search Site, https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/12-120503. Accessed 22 Feb. 2025.

Taxonomic Hierarchy

Kingdom Plantae Division Flowering Plants Class Eudicots Order Brassicales Family Brassicaceae Genus Erysimum L. Species Erysimum cheiranthoides L.
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.