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Selection of morphological traits from pull down-menus allows the identification of Great Britain's about 60 fern species. Most of the species occur in Central Europe as well. [Editorial staff vifabio]
fernid.info/
You can find interesting plants everywhere in Britain and Ireland. This site is intended to help you identify them. On the following pages you will be presented with a questionnaire on the characteristics of the plant you are trying to identify. Fill in the form and press search, the computer will then ... [Information of the supplier]
www.botanicalkeys.co.uk/
The Plant Crib is intended to help experienced botanists identify some of the more difficult groups of plants in Britain & Ireland. It does not cover the critical taxa Rubus, Taraxacum and Hieracium in any detail, but it does include many species and hybrids more fully than you are likely to encounter ... [Information of the supplier]
bsbi.org.uk/identification.html
This web page provides access to keys for the identification of some plant groups occurring in Great Britain (genera Narcissus, Euphrasia, Equisetum, Fumaria, as well as ferns). Some of the keys require the user to install special software. The page is part of BSBI's web site "Find Wild Flowers". [Editorial staff vifabio]
www.botanicalkeys.co.uk/flora/content/subkeys.html
The website deals with barkflies (Psocoptera) in Britain and Ireland. Currently 68 species have been deceted. Recording scheme and species accounts combined with an interactive key allow the rapid identification of adult barkflies. Photos and recent papers (as pdf-files) complete the site. [Information of the supplier, modified]
www.brc.ac.uk/schemes/barkfly/homepage.htm
The aim of this site is to help you to name daffodil cultivars. Churchyards, municipal plantings and parkland are the best places to search for daffodils, and the best time to look for them is between January and April. Most of the plants you find outside gardens will have been planted intentionally or ... [Information of the supplier]
www.thedaffodilsite.co.uk/
Jeremy Roberts’s Botanical Pages are still in development – so far, only Trichophorum, Eleocharis (and a bit on the newly-described Hymenophyllum hybrid, H. x scopulorum) are online, with descriptions, photos and identification keys. All photos are by F.J. Roberts, except where otherwise acknowledged. [Information of the supplier, modified]
www.edencroft2.demon.co.uk/
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