Chamaecyparis
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Chamaecyparis | ||||||||||||
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Missing image Sawara.jpg Chamaecyparis pisifera foliage and cones | ||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||
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Species | ||||||||||||
Chamaecyparis formosensis |
The genus Chamaecyparis is one of several genera within the family Cupressaceae that have the common name cypress; for the others, see cypress (disambiguation).
There are five or six species of Chamaecyparis, depending on taxonomic opinion; C. taiwanensis is treated by many as a variety of C. obtusa (as C. obtusa var. formosana).
Another species which used to be included in this genus, as Chamaecyparis nootkatensis, has now been transferred on the basis of strong genetic and morphological evidence to the separate genus Callitropsis as Callitropsis nootkatensis, or back to Cupressus nootkatensis (the name it was originally described under in 1824).
Chamaecyparis species are sometimes eaten by the larva of the Juniper Pug moth.