Cucurbita foetidissima

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Noun1.Cucurbita foetidissima - perennial vine of dry parts of central and southwestern United States and Mexico having small hard mottled green inedible fruitCucurbita foetidissima - perennial vine of dry parts of central and southwestern United States and Mexico having small hard mottled green inedible fruit
gourd vine, gourd - any vine of the family Cucurbitaceae that bears fruits with hard rinds
Cucurbita, genus Cucurbita - type genus of the Cucurbitaceae
prairie gourd - small hard green-and-white inedible fruit of the prairie gourd plant
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Gray ER, P N 5997 Cucurbitaceae Cucurbita foetidissima Kunth EA N 6024 Cyperaceae Carex blanda Dewey ER, H, P N 6019 Carex planostachys Kunze ER, H, P N 6012 Euphorbiaceae Tragia ramosa Torr.
(Poaceae), prickly Russian thistle, pitseed goosefoot, Chenopodium berlandieri (Chenopodiaceae), buffalo gourd, Cucurbita foetidissima (Cucurbitaceae), Drummond's clematis, Clematis drummondii (Ranunculaceae), peppergrass, Lepidium sp.
Pollen dispersal in Cucurbita foetidissima (Cucurbitaceae) by bees of the genera Apis, Peponapis and Xenoglossa (Hymenoptera: Apidae, Anthophoridae).
The desert gourd (Cucurbita foetidissima) is a recumbent, multi-stemmed vine extending 6 m or more with a large perennial root, occurring from Missouri west to Nebraska and south to southern California, northern Mexico, and western Texas (Correll and Johnston, 1979).
Development of Buffalo Gourd (Cucurbita foetidissima) as a semiaridland starch and oil crop.
In the United States, these include Cucurbita foetidissima or the Missouri gourd; Cucurbita digitata or the finger-leaved gourd; Cucurbita palmata an or the coyote melon; Cucurbita texana or Texas gourd; and the wild Cucurbita pepo.
Buffalo Gourd (Cucurbita foetidissima) is widely spread throughout the Southwestern United States and can be found in remote deserts and in urban vacant lots.
These results are similar to those of Kohn and Biardi (1995) for Cucurbita foetidissima. Inbreeding depression in S.
Here, women prepared a full meal, including tortillas, over stoves fueled with Cucurbita foetidissima. As in Zimbabwe, Shultz says, all preferred the easy-to-ignite roots and their relatively Smokeless fires.
Pollen-mediated gene flow in Cucurbita foetidissima (Cucurbitaceae).
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