Loranthaceae Juss.
Amyema dolichopoda Barlow , legitimate, scientific
Barlow, B.A. (26 January 1983), Supplement to a revision of the Loranthaceae of Australia. Brunonia 5(2): 209 [tax. nov.]
  • Type: Western Australia: Gardner District: 75 km WNW. of Wyndham, c. 7 km SSW. of Paradise Pool on Ernest R., Lazarides 8649, 20.iii.1978 (CANB).
Barlow, B.A. in George, A.S. (ed.) (1984), Loranthaceae. Flora of Australia 22: 103, Fig. 25A, Map 121 [secondary reference]
Green, J.W. (18 October 1987), Census of the Vascular Plants of Western Australia Edn. 2, Suppl. 5: 17 [secondary reference]
orthographic variant: Amyema dolichopodium J.W.Green orth. var.
Barlow, B.A. (1992), Conspectus of the genus Amyema Tieghem (Loranthaceae). Blumea 36(2): 326, fig. 5 (map) [secondary reference]
Rye, B.L. in Wheeler, J.R. (ed.) (1992), Loranthaceae. Flora of the Kimberley Region: 571, Fig. 174D [secondary reference]
  • Comment: Cited as 'A. dolichopodum Barlow'
Kenneally, K.F., Edinger, D.C. & Willing, T. (1996), Broome and Beyond. Plants and people of the Dampier Peninsula, Kimberley, Western Australia: 117 [secondary reference]
Curry, S. & Chapman, A.R. (25 January 1996), Update to the informal names used in "Flora of the Kimberley Region". Nuytsia 10(3): 465 [secondary reference]
taxonomic synonym: Amyema sp. C Kimberley Flora [n/a]
Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria (2006), Australian Plant Census: - [secondary reference]
orthographic variant: Amyema dolichopodum Barlow orth. var. taxonomic synonym: Amyema sp. C Kimberley Flora (K.F.Kenneally 9067) [n/a]
  • APC Dist.: WA
Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria (7 July 2021), Australian Plant Census: - APC [secondary reference]
orthographic variant: Amyema dolichopodum Barlow orth. var. taxonomic synonym: Amyema sp. C [n/a] taxonomic synonym: Amyema sp. C Kimberley Flora [n/a] taxonomic synonym: Amyema sp. C Kimberley Flora (K.F.Kenneally 9067) [n/a]
  • APC Dist.: WA
Start, A.N. & Thiele, K.R. (2023), Mistletoes of Western Australia: 56-57 [secondary reference]
  • Etymology: "From the Greek for 'long-footed', in reference to the long inflorescence axes."