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The only known host plant records are in Capparaceae.
Steriphoma urbani is a species of plant in the Capparaceae family.
Cadaba is a genus of shrubs in family Capparaceae.
Boscia senegalensis or hanza, is a member of the family Capparaceae.
An associated series of papers describes research in the family Cleomaceae, which was separated from the Capparaceae.
The larvae probably feed on Capparaceae species.
The families Capparaceae and Brassicaceae are closely related.
Phylogeny of Capparaceae and Brassicaceae based on chloroplast sequence data.
Boscia belongs to the caper family Capparaceae.
Later publications formed a series, Studies in the Capparaceae, which includes 24 publications, including newly described species and genera.
New combinations in South American Capparaceae.
Paeoniaceae to Capparaceae.
Two new genera of Capparaceae: Sarcotoxicum and Mesocapparis stat.
The food plant for the larvae is Capparis grandis, a caper shrub in the Capparaceae family.
Iltis was primarily trained in plant systematics and taxonomy with a focus on the families Cleomaceae and Capparaceae.
However Cleome and several related genera are more closely related to members of Brassicaceae than to other Capparaceae.
The genus has been classified in a number of different families including Capparaceae, Cistaceae, Papaveraceae, and Tiliaceae.
A close relationship has long been acknowledged between Brassicaceae and the caper family, Capparaceae, in part because members of both groups produce glucosinolate (mustard oil) compounds.
While at the University of Arkansas from 1952-55, Iltis completed a study of the Capparaceae of Nevada.
The larvae feed on various Capparaceae species, including Capparis canescens and Capparis mitchellii.
This article deals with Brassicaceae sensu stricto, i.e. treating Cleomaceae and Capparaceae as segregate families.
The Zigzag Caper-bush(Capparis fascicularis) is a plant in the Capparaceae family and is native to Africa.
The only families included were the Brassicaceae and Capparaceae (treated as separate families), the Tovariaceae, Resedaceae, and Moringaceae.
Capparis cyanophallophora, commonly known as the Jamaican Caper, is small tree in the caper family, Capparaceae, that is native to the neotropics.