Eugenia - Selected Species

Selected Species

  • Eugenia aurata
  • Eugenia aggregata – Cherry of the Rio Grande
  • Eugenia alternifolia
  • Eugenia atropunctata
  • Eugenia bimarginata
  • Eugenia blastantha
  • Eugenia brasiliensis – Grumichama (Brazil)
  • Eugenia brejoensis
  • Eugenia candolleana
  • Eugenia cerasiflora
  • Eugenia confusa
  • Eugenia conglomerata
  • Eugenia copacabanensis – Copacabana Beach Pitanga (Atlantic Coast restingas in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
  • Eugenia coronata
  • Eugenia dysenterica a.k.a Stenocalyx dysentericus
  • Eugenia earthiana (Costa Rica)
  • Eugenia fernandopoana
  • Eugenia foetida
  • Eugenia fulva
  • Eugenia hiemalis
  • Eugenia jutiapensis
  • Eugenia klotzschiana
  • Eugenia koolauensis – Koʻolau Eugenia, Nioi (Islands of Molokaʻi and Oʻahu in Hawaii)
  • Eugenia kunthiana
  • Eugenia lamprophylla
  • Eugenia ligustrina
  • Eugenia livida
  • Eugenia luschnathiana – Pitomba (Bahia, Brazil)
  • Eugenia monticola
  • Eugenia natalitia
  • Eugenia orbiculata
  • Eugenia pitanga – Pitanga
  • Eugenia pluriflora
  • Eugenia polyantha
  • Eugenia punicifolia
  • Eugenia racemulosa
  • Eugenia reinwardtiana – Mountain Stopper, Cedar Bay Cherry (Queensland in Australia, Indonesia, Pacific Islands)
  • Eugenia sprengelii
  • Eugenia stipitata – Arazá (Amazon Rainforest)
  • Eugenia supra-axillaris
  • Eugenia umtamvunensis (South Africa)
  • Eugenia uniflora – Surinam Cherry (Neotropics)
  • Eugenia uruguayensis
  • Eugenia uvalha (Brazil)
  • Eugenia zeyheri (South Africa)

Read more about this topic:  Eugenia

Famous quotes containing the words selected and/or species:

    There is no reason why parents who work hard at a job to support a family, who nurture children during the hours at home, and who have searched for and selected the best [daycare] arrangement possible for their children need to feel anxious and guilty. It almost seems as if our culture wants parents to experience these negative feelings.
    Gwen Morgan (20th century)

    There are acacias, a graceful species amusingly devitalized by sentimentality, this kind drooping its leaves with the grace of a young widow bowed in controllable grief, this one obscuring them with a smooth silver as of placid tears. They please, like the minor French novelists of the eighteenth century, by suggesting a universe in which nothing cuts deep.
    Rebecca West (1892–1983)