Acer saccharinum L.

  • Filed As

    Sapindaceae
    Acer saccharinum L.

  • Collector(s)

    T. J. Delendick 757, 01 Jun 1976

  • Location

    United States of America. New York. Bronx Co. New York City. Near Botanical Garden Railroad Station of Conrail.

  • Description

    Tree. For study of leaf chemistry. Collected at 12 PM (midnight) for diurnal chromatographic comparison, no. 76.855.

  • Notes (shown on label)

    Survey executed in partial fulfillment of the degree requirements of the Joint Doctoral Program of CUNY.NYBG. Supported in part by an Herbarium Fellowship from NYBG and an NSF Grant for Improving Doctoral Dissertation Research (DEB 76-20016)

  • Collection Notes

    Vouchers for a Biosystematic Survey of the Aceraceae. Herbarium of Thomas J. Delendrick

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 02377725

    Occurrence ID: 7ae4362c-5449-470e-8865-91a3f9d1b502

  • Feedback

    Send comments on this specimen record

  • Region

    North America

  • Country

    United States of America

  • State/Province

    New York

  • County/Municipio

    Bronx Co.

  • City/Township

    New York City

  • Locality

    Near Botanical Garden Railroad Station of Conrail

  • Coordinates

    40.8568, -73.8754

  • Coordinate Uncertainty (m)

    2289

  • Georeferencing Method

    GEOLocate Web Application. Used GEOLocate Web Application to georeference precise locality. (High precision)

  • Geodetic Datum

    WGS84

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

Acer saccharinum L.
det. D. AthaXNY), 2015
annotation by
J. W. Kelly
ay 04/1994
HERBARIUM OF
Thomas J. Delendick
VOUCHERS FOR A BIOSYSTEMATIC SURVEY OF THE ACERACEAE
voucher No. 757 Acer saccharinum L*
for study of leaf chemistry
Tree near packing lot of Botanical Garden Station of
Conrail; coll, 1 June 197& at 12 P,M, (midnight) for
diurnal chromstographie comparison, by T, J, Delendick^
No. 76.855.	“	.	•
Survey executed in partial fulfillment of degree requirements
of the Joint Doctoral Program of the City University of New
York and The New York Botanical Garden. Supported in part by
am Herbarium Fellowship from The New York Botanical Garden
and an NSF Grant for Improving Doctoral Dissertation Research
(DEB 76-20016).’	,
02377725