Asteraceae Bercht. & J.Presl
Synedrella Gaertn. , nom. cons., scientific
Gaertner, J. (1791), De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum 2(3): 456, t. 171 [tax. nov.]
  • Type: Synedrella nodiflora (L.) Gaertner
  • Etymology: (not specified.)
Bailey, J.F. & White, C.T. (1917), Contributions to the Queensland flora. Botany Bulletin. Department of Agriculture, Queensland 19: 10 [secondary reference]
Greuter, W., Burdet, H.M., Chaloner, W.G., Demoulin, V., Grolle, R., Hawkesworth, D.L., Nicolson, D.H., Silva, P.C., Stafleu, F.A., Voss, E.G. & McNeill, J. (ed.) (1988), International Code of Botanical Nomenclature, Berlin, 1988. Regnum Vegetabile 118: 281 [secondary reference]
  • Type: "S. nodiflora (Linnaeus) J. Gaertner"
Du Puy, D.J., Telford, I.R.H. & Orchard, A.E. (1993), Asteraceae. Flora of Australia 50: 421 [secondary reference]
Dunlop, C.R. in Cowie, I.D., Short, P.S. & Osterkamp Madsen, M. (2000), Asteraceae. Floodplain Flora. A flora of the coastal floodplains of the Northern Territory, Australia: 187 [secondary reference]
Cooper, W.E. & Cooper, W.T. (2004), Fruits of the Australian Tropical Rainforest: 84 [secondary reference]
Anderberg, A.A., Baldwin, B.G., Bayer, R.G., Breitwieser, I., Jeffrey, C., Dillon, M.O., Eldenäs, P., Funk, V., Garcia-Jacas, N., Hind, D.J.N., Karis, P.O., Lack, H.W., Nesom, G., Nordenstam, B., Oberprieler, C., Panero, J.J., Puttock, C., Robinson, H., Stuessy, T.F., Susanna, A., Urtubey, E., Vogt, R., Ward, J. & Watson, L.E. in Kubitzki, K. (ed.) (2007), Compositae. The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants 8: 457 [secondary reference]
Mabberley, D.J. (1 May 2008), Mabberley's Plant-Book Edn. 3: 835 [secondary reference]
Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria (2011), Australian Plant Census: - APC [secondary reference]
  • APC Dist.: WA (naturalised), CoI (naturalised), ChI (naturalised), NT (naturalised), Qld (naturalised)
Cross, E.W. & Orchard, A.E. in Wilson, A.J.G. (ed.) (2015), Synedrella. Flora of Australia 37: 493-494 [secondary reference]
  • Etymology: "from the Greek synedros (aggregated or clustered), in reference to the dense axillary clusters of heads."