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  2. Hoya anulata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_anulata

    Hoya anulata is a species of flowering plant in the Apocynaceae or dogbane family and is endemic to Cape York and parts of Southeast Asia. It is a epiphytic or lithophytic vine with fleshy, egg-shaped leaves, fleshy pale pink and white flowers, and spindle-shaped follicles .

  3. Hoya bella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_bella

    The Cornish plant collector Thomas Lobb found plants of Hoya bella growing on trees on a hill near Moulmein, then the capital of British Burma. Lobb shipped the live plants to his employers, Messrs. Veitch and Son of Exeter. [2] Kew Gardens consider that the plant is also native to Manipur in northeast India on the border of Myanmar. [1]

  4. Hoya (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_(plant)

    Hoya carnosa Hoya mindorensis, Sydney, Australia.. Hoya is a genus of over 500 species of plants in the dogbane family, Apocynaceae, commonly known as waxflowers. [2] Plants in the genus Hoya are mostly epiphytic or lithophytic vines, rarely subshrubs, with leathery, fleshy or succulent leaves, shortly tube-shaped or bell-shaped flowers with five horizontally spreading lobes, the flowers in ...

  5. List of Hoya species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hoya_species

    Hoya devogelii Rodda & Simonsson – Borneo (Sarawak) Hoya deykei T.Green – Sumatera; Hoya dickasoniana P.T.Li – Myanmar; Hoya dictyoneura K.Schum. – New Guinea; Hoya dimorpha F.M.Bailey – New Guinea; Hoya diptera Seem. – Vanuatu, Fiji; Hoya dischorensis Schltr. – New Guinea; Hoya diversifolia Blume – Hainan, Indo-China to Malesia ...

  6. Hoya obscura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_obscura

    Hoya obscura is a fast-growing, climbing species of Hoya in the dogbane family, Apocynaceae, found in the Philippines. [1] The plant's many aerial roots (which the vine produces along its entire length) will gradually adhere to vertical surfaces nearby, such as buildings, trees or poles, acting as anchors and enabling the plant to receive better sun exposure away from the ground.

  7. Hoya australis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_australis

    Hoya australis is a succulent climbing vine to subshrub that typically reaches a height of 4–10 m (13–33 ft). It has fleshy or leathery, elliptic, oblong, egg-shaped or more or less round leaves up to 150 mm (5.9 in) long and 120 mm (4.7 in) wide.