Antheropeas wallacei

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Definition

Noun: * A small, herbaceous, flowering annual plant native to specific arid regions of the southwestern United States. It is characterized by its woolly, greyish foliage and clusters of small, bright yellow flower heads.

Usage
  • This word is a specific scientific (botanical) name. Its primary use is in academic, scientific, or highly specialized contexts such as botany, ecology, and field guides.
  • It is not used in everyday conversation. In common language, it would be referred to by a general term like "wildflower" or, if known, by a common name (e.g., woolly daisy).
Examples
  • The rare Antheropeas wallacei was documented in the Mojave Desert survey.
  • Botanists are studying the drought tolerance of Antheropeas wallacei.
  • The field guide listed Antheropeas wallacei as an endemic species of the Great Basin.
Advanced Usage
  • In taxonomic writing, the genus name () is often abbreviated after first use (e.g., ).
  • The name follows binomial nomenclature, where is the genus and is the specific epithet, often honoring a person (likely the botanist or explorer William A. Wallace or a namesake).
Variants and Related Words
  • Synonym (Taxonomic): . This reflects a previous or alternative classification within a different genus ().
  • Common Name: Woolly daisy, Wallace's woolly daisy. These are the non-scientific names used in wildflower guides and by enthusiasts.
  • Hypernyms: daisy, wildflower, composite, annual plant, herb.
Synonyms
  • (As a type of plant) wildflower, desert annual, composite.
Notes on Meaning
  • The meaning is fixed and technical, referring exclusively to this specific plant species. It does not have figurative or idiomatic meanings.
  • The name itself provides descriptive and historical information: "antheropeas" relates to flowers, and "wallacei" indicates it was named for an individual named Wallace.
Noun
  1. tiny grey woolly tufted annual with small golden-yellow flower heads; southeastern California to northwestern Arizona and southwestern Utah; sometimes placed in genus Eriophyllum