The genus (or first part of the scientific name) for bougainvillea is actually "bougainvillea." There are several species, including Bougainvillea glabra, which if you are in the southern United States, this is most likely the horticultural species you will find.
If in South America, there are species called Bougainvillea peruviana and Bougainvillea spinosa.
Bougainvillea glabra
No, Bougainvillea is a terrestrial plant.
A bougainvillea is a shrub and a climber but if it has no support it will become a creeper.
The botanical name of the paper flower is Bougainvillea. This vibrant, ornamental plant belongs to the Nyctaginaceae family and is native to South America. Known for its colorful bracts that resemble petals, Bougainvillea is commonly used in gardens and landscapes around the world.
Bougainvillea
bougainvillia
The family is Nyctaginaceae, order Caryophyllales
Bougainvillea Glabra. It is more commonly known as Paper Flower.
The accepted scientific name is Melitara prodenialis.
bouganvillea
Bougainvillea is the scientific name of the flowering plant commonly called bougainvillea.Specifically, the plant in question carries the name of explorer Louis Antoine de Bougainville (November 12, 1729 - August 31, 1811), upon whose ship the first Europeans transported the plant from voyages to what is now Latin America. The plant is native to South America. The complete scientific name must include the particular species, of which Bougainvillea glabra and B. spectabilis particularly are well known.
Bougainvillea glabra
Yes, there are a wide range of species and hybrids grown for their blooms.
Bougainvillea glabra
Bougainvillea is both the common and scientific name.Specifically, the thorny, woody vine grows natively in Argentina, Brazil, Peru and Uruguay. The scientific name which ensued after the plant's first known description by a European (Philibert Commerçon, 1727-1773) honors the French doctor's "boss", Louis-Antoine, comte de Bougainville (1729-1811). English speakers never looked to other words to function as the plant's common designation even though there are many such equivalents in Latin America's languages.
The flowering plant is a bougainvillea. (from the genus name)
Actually there is no exact equivalent for Bougainvillea in Tagalog language.
bougainvillea flower