
thumb|Chrysopogon castaneus Veldkamp & C. B. Salunkhe thumb|Chrysopogon castaneus Veldkamp & C. B. Salunkhe, inflorescence. thumb|Chrysopogon densipaniculatus Landge & A. P. Tiwari, illustration. thumb|Chrysopogon velutinus (Hook.f.) Bor Chrysopogon is a genus of tropical and subtropical plants in the grass family. They are widespread across Eurasia, Africa, Australia, southeastern North America, and various islands.
Indiangrass
species
Chrysopogon is a genus of robber flies in the family Asilidae. There are at least 40 described species in Chrysopogon.[1][2] Species These 43 species belong to the genus Chrysopogon: Chrysopogon agilis Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon albopunctatus (Macquart, 1846) c g Chrysopogon albosetosus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon aureocinctus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon aureus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon bellus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon bicolor Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon brunnipes Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon castaneus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon catachrysus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon conopsoides (Fabricius, 1775) c g Chrysopogon crabroniformis Roder, 1881 c g Chrysopogon daptes Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon dialeucus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon diaphanes Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon fasciatus Ricardo, 1912 c g Chrysopogon fuscus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon gammonensis Lavigne, 2006 c g Chrysopogon harpaleus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon horni Hardy, 1934 c g Chrysopogon leucodema Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon megalius Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon melanorrhinus Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon melas Clements, 1985 c g Chrysopogon micrus Clements, 1985 c g
via · Kew POWO
via PubMed
thumb|Chrysopogon castaneus Veldkamp & C. B. Salunkhe thumb|Chrysopogon castaneus Veldkamp & C. B. Salunkhe, inflorescence. thumb|Chrysopogon densipaniculatus Landge & A. P. Tiwari, illustration. thumb|Chrysopogon velutinus (Hook.f.) Bor Chrysopogon is a genus of tropical and subtropical plants in the grass family. They are widespread across Eurasia, Africa, Australia, southeastern North America, and various islands.
==Species==
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).