University of Alberta Museums Search

131800 - Taraxacum hyparcticum Dahlstedt

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

Place CollectedNorth America: Canada, Northwest Territories, Victoria Island, Boot Inlet Date Collected2010-07-11

Item Details

Place CollectedNorth America: Canada, Northwest Territories, Victoria Island, Boot Inlet Date Collected2010-07-11
Accession Number 131800 Scientific Name Taraxacum hyparcticum Dahlstedt View Species Details » Family Asteraceae Collected By Gillespie, L. J.; Saarela, J. M.; Doubt, J.; Bull, R. D.; Sokoloff, P. C. Date Collected 2010-07-11 Collector Number 09681 Place Collected North America: Canada, Northwest Territories, Victoria Island, Boot Inlet Place Collected Details
Northwest Territories, Victoria Island: Boot Inlet. 1 km up river valley flowing into small round lake (~ 1 km diameter; ca. 4 km N of Boot Inlet on N side of Minto Inlet). South-facing slope, luch meadow. Associates:…
Northwest Territories, Victoria Island: Boot Inlet. 1 km up river valley flowing into small round lake (~ 1 km diameter; ca. 4 km N of Boot Inlet on N side of Minto Inlet). South-facing slope, luch meadow. Associates: Carex , Hedysarum americanum.
Latitude 71.49925 Longitude -117.32325 Max Uncertainty Estimate (km) .01

Citation

Page Citation for 131800 - Taraxacum hyparcticum Dahlstedt

Page Citation

"131800 - Taraxacum hyparcticum Dahlstedt, University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium." University of Alberta Museums Search Site, https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/12-124226. Accessed 19 Apr. 2025.

Taxonomic Hierarchy

Kingdom Plantae Division Flowering Plants Class Eudicots Order Asterales Family Asteraceae Genus Taraxacum F. H. Wigg. Species Taraxacum hyparcticum Dahlstedt
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.