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{
"count": 942,
"next": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/?format=api&page=35",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/diospyros/?format=api",
"slug": "diospyros",
"latin_name": "Diospyros",
"description": "Diospyros is a genus of over 700 species of deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs. The majority are native to the tropics, with only a few species extending into temperate regions. Individual species valued for their hard, heavy, dark timber, are commonly known as ebony trees, while others are valued for their fruit and known as persimmon trees. Some are useful as ornamentals and many are of local ecological importance. Species of this genus are generally dioecious, with separate male and female plants.",
"gbif_id": 3030169,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/diospyros_thumbnail_4E4GyFV.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/diospyros_thumbnail_2HqfVCf.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/diploglottis/?format=api",
"slug": "diploglottis",
"latin_name": "Diploglottis",
"description": "Diploglottis australis, known as the native tamarind, is a well known rainforest tree of eastern Australia. It is easily identified by the large sausage shaped leaflets.\nThe native tamarind grows in a variety of different rainforests, on basaltic and rich alluvial soils. The southernmost limit of natural distribution is Brogo near Bega (36° S) in New South Wales. They grow naturally along the east coast, northwards to near Proserpine (20° S) in tropical Queensland.",
"gbif_id": 7264951,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/diploglottis_thumbnail_XnCCRTI.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/diploglottis_thumbnail_5yk3uaG.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/diploknema/?format=api",
"slug": "diploknema",
"latin_name": "Diploknema",
"description": "Diploknema is a genus of plant in the Sapotaceae described as a genus in 1884.\nDiploknema is native to Southeast Asia, the Himalayas, and southwestern China.\n\nSpecies\nDiploknema butyracea (Roxb.) H.J.Lam - Uttarakhand, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam, Tibet, Andaman Islands\nDiploknema butyraceoides (M.B.Scott) H.J.Lam - Uttarakhand, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam, Myanmar\nDiploknema oligomera H.J.Lam - Maluku\nDiploknema ramiflora (Merr.) H.J.Lam - Luzon\nDiploknema sebifera Pierre - Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo\nDiploknema siamensis Fletcher - southern Thailand\nDiploknema yunnanensis D.D.Tao, Z.H.Yang & Q.T.Zhang - Yunnan",
"gbif_id": 2886362,
"image_thumbnail": null,
"image_large": null
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/dipsacus/?format=api",
"slug": "dipsacus",
"latin_name": "Dipsacus",
"description": "Dipsacus is a genus of flowering plant in the family Caprifoliaceae. The members of this genus are known as teasel, teazel or teazle. The genus includes about 15 species of tall herbaceous biennial plants (rarely short-lived perennial plants) growing to 1–2.5 metres (3.3–8.2 ft) tall. Dipsacus species are native to Europe, Asia and northern Africa.",
"gbif_id": 2888813,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/dipsacus_thumbnail_UD1iXLu.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/dipsacus_thumbnail_F4XOwAT.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/dipteryx/?format=api",
"slug": "dipteryx",
"latin_name": "Dipteryx",
"description": "Flies are insects of the order Diptera, the name being derived from the Greek δι- di- \"two\", and πτερόν pteron \"wing\". Insects of this order use only a single pair of wings to fly, the hindwings having evolved into advanced mechanosensory organs known as halteres, which act as high-speed sensors of rotational movement and allow dipterans to perform advanced aerobatics. Diptera is a large order containing an estimated 1,000,000 species including horse-flies, crane flies, hoverflies, mosquitoes and others, although only about 125,000 species have been described.\nFlies have a mobile head, with a pair of large compound eyes, and mouthparts designed for piercing and sucking (mosquitoes, black flies and robber flies), or for lapping and sucking in the other groups. Their wing arrangement gives them great maneuverability in flight, and claws and pads on their feet enable them to cling to smooth surfaces. Flies undergo complete metamorphosis; the eggs are often laid on the larval food-source and the larvae, which lack true limbs, develop in a protected environment, often inside their food source. Other species are ovoviviparous, opportunistically depositing hatched or hatching larvae instead of eggs on carrion, dung, decaying material, or open wounds of mammals. The pupa is a tough capsule from which the adult emerges when ready to do so; flies mostly have short lives as adults.\nDiptera is one of the major insect orders and of considerable ecological and human importance. Flies are important pollinators, second only to the bees and their Hymenopteran relatives. Flies may have been among the evolutionarily earliest pollinators responsible for early plant pollination. Fruit flies are used as model organisms in research, but less benignly, mosquitoes are vectors for malaria, dengue, West Nile fever, yellow fever, encephalitis, and other infectious diseases; and houseflies, commensal with humans all over the world, spread foodborne illnesses. Flies can be annoyances especially in some parts of the world where they can occur in large numbers, buzzing and settling on the skin or eyes to bite or seek fluids. Larger flies such as tsetse flies and screwworms cause significant economic harm to cattle. Blowfly larvae, known as gentles, and other dipteran larvae, known more generally as maggots, are used as fishing bait, as food for carnivorous animals, and in medicine in debridement, to clean wounds.",
"gbif_id": 2947121,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/dipteryx_thumbnail_3hF5e6P.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/dipteryx_thumbnail_cLhXut9.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/distimake/?format=api",
"slug": "distimake",
"latin_name": "Distimake",
"description": "Distimake is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Convolvulaceae.\nIts native range is Tropics and Subtropics.\nSpecies:",
"gbif_id": 7324349,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/distimake_thumbnail_4qXerK5.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/distimake_thumbnail_ZoVO0j8.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/dombeya/?format=api",
"slug": "dombeya",
"latin_name": "Dombeya",
"description": "",
"gbif_id": 8683601,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/dombeya_thumbnail_ScEvWbI.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/dombeya_thumbnail_lzBlUN0.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/dovyalis/?format=api",
"slug": "dovyalis",
"latin_name": "Dovyalis",
"description": "Dovyalis caffra the Umkokola, Kei apple, Kayaba, Kai apple, or Kau apple, is a small to medium-sized tree, native to southern Africa. Its distribution extends from the Kei River in the south, from which the common name derives, northwards along the eastern side of the continent to Tanzania. The ripe fruits are tasty, reminiscent of a small apple.\nIt is a usually found in dry types of woodland when it grows to 6 m tall. In moister types of open woodland it reaches its greatest size of about 8–9 metres. A tree, with sharp, 3–6 cm long stem spines in the leaf axils, and large sturdy thorns. Buds at the base of the spine produce clusters of alternately arranged simple ovate leaves 3–6 cm long.\nThe flowers are inconspicuous, solitary or clustered, with no petals. It is dioecious, with male and female flowers on separate plants, though some female plants are parthenogenetic.\nThe fruit is an edible bright yellow or orange globose berry 2.5–4 cm diameter, with the skin and flesh of a uniform colour and containing several small seeds. Production is often copious, weighing down the branches during the summer. They are juicy, tasty and very acidic.",
"gbif_id": 2874130,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/dovyalis_thumbnail_4Nx32G0.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/dovyalis_thumbnail_Jzsr6b1.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/dracaena/?format=api",
"slug": "dracaena",
"latin_name": "Dracaena",
"description": "Dracaena () is a genus of about 120 species of trees and succulent shrubs. The formerly accepted genera Pleomele and Sansevieria are now included in Dracaena. In the APG IV classification system, it is placed in the family Asparagaceae, subfamily Nolinoideae (formerly the family Ruscaceae). It has also formerly been separated (sometimes with Cordyline) into the family Dracaenaceae or placed in the Agavaceae (now Agavoideae).\nThe name dracaena is derived from the romanized form of the Ancient Greek δράκαινα – drakaina, \"female dragon\".\nThe majority of the species are native to Africa, southern Asia through to northern Australia, with two species in tropical Central America.",
"gbif_id": 2752062,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/dracaena_thumbnail_XzqH5EG.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/dracaena_thumbnail_mO8Gyzv.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/genera/drimia/?format=api",
"slug": "drimia",
"latin_name": "Drimia",
"description": "Drimia is a genus of African, south European and south Asian flowering plants. In the APG IV classification system, it is placed in the family Asparagaceae, subfamily Scilloideae (formerly the family Hyacinthaceae). When broadly circumscribed, the genus includes a number of other genera previously treated separately, including Litanthus, Rhodocodon, Schizobasis and Urginea.\nOne of the best-known species is the sea squill, Drimia maritima (formerly Urginea maritima). Drimia intricata (formerly Schizobasis intricata) is sometimes cultivated as a bulbous or succulent plant.",
"gbif_id": 2776527,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/drimia_thumbnail_luATe99.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/drimia_thumbnail_TgHcqJ7.jpg"
}
]
}