Basic info | Taxonomic history | Classification | Included Taxa |
Morphology | Ecology and taphonomy | External Literature Search | Age range and collections |
Salvia (sage)
Taxonomy
Salvia was named by Linnaeus (1753). It is extant. Its type is Salvia officinalis.
It was assigned to Plantae by Linnaeus (1753).
It was assigned to Plantae by Linnaeus (1753).
Species
S. aegyptiaca, S. aethiopis, S. africana, S. africanalutea, S. canariensis, S. cretica, S. dominica, S. glutinosa, S. haematodes, S. hispanica, S. horminum, S. indica, S. lyrata, S. mexicana, S. natans, S. officinalis (type species), S. pinnata, S. pomifera, S. pratensis, S. pyrenaica, S. sclarea, S. seratophylla, S. sylvestris, S. urticifolia, S. verbenaca, S. verticillata, S. viridis
Synonymy list
Year | Name and author |
---|---|
1753 | Salvia Linnaeus |
Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data
|
|
If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.
G. Salvia Linnaeus 1753 [sage]
show all | hide all
Salvia aegyptiaca Linnaeus 1753
Salvia aethiopis Linnaeus 1753
Salvia africana Linnaeus 1753
Salvia africanalutea Linnaeus 1753
Salvia canariensis Linnaeus 1753
Salvia cretica Linnaeus 1753
Salvia dominica Linnaeus 1753
Salvia glutinosa Linnaeus 1753
Salvia haematodes Linnaeus 1753
Salvia hispanica Linnaeus 1753
Salvia horminum Linnaeus 1753
Salvia indica Linnaeus 1753
Salvia lyrata Linnaeus 1753
Salvia mexicana Linnaeus 1753
Salvia natans Linnaeus 1753
Salvia officinalis Linnaeus 1753
Salvia pinnata Linnaeus 1753
Salvia pomifera Linnaeus 1753
Salvia pratensis Linnaeus 1753
Salvia pyrenaica Linnaeus 1753
Salvia sclarea Linnaeus 1753
Salvia seratophylla Linnaeus 1753
Salvia sylvestris Linnaeus 1753
Salvia urticifolia Linnaeus 1753
Salvia verbenaca Linnaeus 1753
Salvia verticillata Linnaeus 1753
Salvia viridis Linnaeus 1753
Diagnosis
No diagnoses are available