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Many recent publications still refer to the family name Chenopodiaceae.
The genus is also sometimes placed in the Chenopodiaceae family.
It includes the plants formerly treated as the family Chenopodiaceae.
Atriplex plebeja is a species of plant in the Chenopodiaceae family.
The genera of this subfamily were formerly classified in family Chenopodiaceae.
They feed on plant sap, mostly of Chenopodiaceae and Caryophyllaceae.
This plant belongs to the Chenopodiaceae family.
The family Chenopodiaceae is now included in Amaranthaceae s.l.
These larvae colonize and feed on the roots of nearby Chenopodiaceae plants for the rest of the summer.
Other authorities suggest the host plants are saltbushes (Atriplex species, Chenopodiaceae).
Note: the authentic genus Bassia is in the Chenopodiaceae.
The former Chenopodiaceae often contain isoflavonoids.
The common glasswort is Salicornia europaea of the goosefoot family, Chenopodiaceae.
In 1914 volume II (Salicaceae to Chenopodiaceae) was the first to be published.
The fast growing Chenopodiaceae discriminate approx.
They usually emerge in April and begin feeding on perennial weeds, preferring plants in the Chenopodiaceae family.
This steppe is characterised by white wormwood (Artemisia herba-alba) and Chenopodiaceae.
The Corispermoideae is a subfamily of the Amaranthaceae, formerly in family Chenopodiaceae.
Halothamnus is a genus of the former Chenopodiaceae that is now included into the family Amaranthaceae.
However, about a quarter of the species, especially in the families Asteraceae, Brassicaceae and Chenopodiaceae, are endemic.
Atriplex rosea called the tumbling oracle or tumbling orach, is a member of the Chenopodiaceae.
This zone supports either no vegetation at all or small pockets of Chenopodiaceae or Poa sinaica.
If Polycnemoideae would be separated as an own family, Chenopodiaceae and Amaranthaceae (s.str.)
Chard and the other beets are chenopods, a group which is either its own family Chenopodiaceae or a subfamily within the Amaranthaceae.
Ambrosia to Dysphania (Chenopodiaceae).