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  1. The Botany of Lord Auckland's Group and Campbell's Island is a description of the plants discovered in those islands during the Ross expedition written by Joseph Dalton Hooker and published by Reeve Brothers in London between 1844 and 1845. Hooker sailed on HMS Erebus as assistant surgeon.

  2. Botany of Lord Auckland's Group and Campbell's Island. Part I, published between 1844 and 1845, covers the Flora of Lord Auckland and Campbell's Islands. It has 208 pages, 370 species, 80 plates and a map, and illustrates 150 species.

  3. Of these, the two most important, Lord Auckland's group, in 50½° S. lat., 166° E. long., and Campbell's Island, lat. 52½° S. and long. 169° E., were visited by the "Erebus and Terror," and the former also by the French and American Discovery Ships.

  4. Antennaria scoriadea, Berk.; spongiosa, floccis fasciculatis sursum lateraliter connexis, peridiis subellipticis irregularibus. (Tab. LXVII. Fig. III.) Hab. Lord Auckland's group and Campbell's Island; on the branches and twigs of several shrubs and trees, but especially of Dracophyllum longifolium. Spongiosa, ramos incrustans.

  5. 22 de jul. de 2013 · Some species on New Zealand's subantarctic islands have spectacular, highly pigmented inflorescences, yet the depauperate insect fauna provides little apparent opportunity for biotic pollination. We document breeding systems and floral visitors for six Campbell Island species.

  6. The botany of the islands was first described in the Flora of Lord Auckland and Campbell's Islands, a product of the Ross expedition of 1839–43, written by Joseph Dalton Hooker and published by Reeve Brothers in London between 1843 and 1845.

  7. A very singular substance, which must strike the traveller through the woods especially of New Zealand or of Lord Auckland's group, in both which localities it is very abundant, resembling charcoal, and sometimes so widely diffused that the branches look as if burnt.