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Definition of Lycopodium alopecuroides
1. Noun. Ground pine thickly covered with bristly leaves; widely distributed in barren sandy or peaty moist coastal regions of eastern and southeastern United States.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lycopodium Alopecuroides
Literary usage of Lycopodium alopecuroides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States, Canada and the British by Nathaniel Lord Britton, Addison Brown (1913)
"Lycopodium alopecuroides L. Fox-tail Club-moss. Fig. 105. Lycopodium alopecuroides
L. Sp. PI. 1102. 1753. Stems stout, mostly recurved and more or less ..."
2. The Vascular Flora of Pennsylvania: Annotated Checklist and Atlas by Ann Fowler Rhoads, William M. Klein (1993)
"... Openings in moist, coastal plain woods. A hybrid with L. appressa (L.
copelandii Eig.) has been collected occasionally. Lycopodium alopecuroides L. ..."
3. Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, Exhibiting a View of the Progressive by Robert Jameson, Sir William Jardine, Henry D Rogers (1864)
"The habitat " Canada" is given for Lycopodium alopecuroides, Linn., in the "
Species Plantarum," ed. 3, vol. ii. p. 1565 ; but it is probably not a Canadian ..."
4. Handbook of the Flora of Philadelphia and Vicinity: Containing Data Relating by Ida Augusta Keller, Stewardson Brown (1905)
"Lycopodium alopecuroides LM p. 25. Pine-barren swamps. Summer. Bucks—Tullytown (Fr.).
Delaware—Tinicum, Dr. Geo. Smith (Fu.). New Jersey—Common in the pine ..."