epiphyte
Americannoun
noun
Other Word Forms
- epiphytic adjective
- epiphytical adjective
- epiphytically adverb
Etymology
Origin of epiphyte
Example Sentences
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Nadkarni's latest paper reviews the available science on epiphyte communities and categorizes the drivers and consequences of and societal responses to drought, wind, insects, wildfire, logging and other disturbances.
From Science Daily • Oct. 11, 2023
The Bulbophyllum phalaenopsis is an epiphyte - a plant that grows on another plant but gets its own nutrients from the surrounding air and rainwater.
From BBC • Oct. 28, 2022
An epiphyte like the Monstera deliciosa, the staghorn fern has its roots attach to tree trunks and branches in tropical forests, and it gets its nutrients from the water and air.
From Seattle Times • Nov. 1, 2021
An epiphyte like the Monstera deliciosa, the staghorn fern’s roots attach to tree trunks and branches in tropical forests, and it gets its nutrients from the water and air.
From Washington Post • Oct. 13, 2021
The fig-trees, which are among the most gigantic of the tropical forest-trees, and which support an immense profusion of epiphytes, are themselves frequently parasitic and epiphyte in their early condition.
From The Romance of Natural History, Second Series by Gosse, Philip Henry
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
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