
[From FLORA.]
For more information on flora, visit Britannica.com.
[FLOR-uh] The fairly rare white-wine grape that is a cross of gewürztraminer and sémillon developed in the 1950s by the university of california, davis. As the name suggests, the wines have a floral quality with a high degree of spiciness. They're usually vinified medium-sweet to sweet. Never very popular, Flora plantings are now under a hundred acres.
All the kinds of plants, both native and exotic, that grow wild in an area.
Plants, especially the plants of a particular place and time.
| flocculent, floccule, flocculation reaction | |
| flotation coefficient, flotillin, flow birefringence |
The collective plant organisms of a given locality.

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Flora is the plant life occurring in a particular region or time, generally the naturally occurring or indigenous—native plant life. The corresponding term for animal life is fauna. Flora, fauna and other forms of life such as fungi are collectively referred to as biota.
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"Flora" comes from the Latin name of Flora, the goddess of plants, flowers, and fertility in Roman mythology.
Plants are grouped into floras based on region, period, special environment, or climate. Regions can be geographically distinct habitats like mountain vs. flatland. Floras can mean plant life of a historic era as in fossil flora. Lastly, floras may be subdivided by special environments:
Bacterial organisms are sometimes included in a flora,[1] [2] and sometimes the terms bacterial flora and plant flora are used separately.
A flora treatise, also known simply as a Flora, usually requires some specialist botanical knowledge to use with any effectiveness. Traditionally flora treatises are books, but some are now published on CD-ROM or websites.
It is said that the Flora Sinensis by the Polish Jesuit Michał Boym was the first book that used the name "Flora" in this meaning, a book covering the plant world of a region.[3] However, despite its title it covered not only plants, but also some animals of the region.
A flora treatise often contains diagnostic keys. Often these are dichotomous keys, which require the user to repeatedly examine a plant, and decide which one of two alternatives given in the flora best applies to the plant.
A compendium of world floras has been compiled by David Frodin.[4]
Wikipedia has the following mainly flora categories:
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Flora |
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - flora, planteverden
Nederlands (Dutch)
flora (plantleven van een bepaalde omgeving), verhandeling over flora
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - χλωρίδα, φυτικό βασίλειο
Português (Portuguese)
n. - flora (f) (Bot.)
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
植物群
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 植物群
한국어 (Korean)
n. - (한 지방, 시대 특유의) 식물군
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) الحياة النباتيه
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - צמחייה, פלורה
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