taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
03D9DA488C688F1EFF5DFA54FC118DDD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7087290/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7087290	FIGURE 2. The leaves of most species of Umbilicus, such as U. rupestris (Salisbury 1796: 307) Dandy (1948: 611) shown here as a lithophyte on a rock wall in central Portugal near the town of Serra de Santo António, are peltate, more or less round in outline, and have a navel-like depression in the centre (for which the genus was named). Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	FIGURE 2. The leaves of most species of Umbilicus, such as U. rupestris (Salisbury 1796: 307) Dandy (1948: 611) shown here as a lithophyte on a rock wall in central Portugal near the town of Serra de Santo António, are peltate, more or less round in outline, and have a navel-like depression in the centre (for which the genus was named). Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	2022-09-16	Smith, Gideon F.;Monro, Anna M.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.;Monro, Anna M.			
03D9DA488C688F1EFF5DFA54FC118DDD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7087288/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7087288	FIGURE 1. The leaves of Umbilicus oppositifolius are more or less ovate and, unlike those of most species of Umbilicus, not peltate. Photograph provided by and © of Ray Stephenson, U.K. Reproduced with his permission.	FIGURE 1. The leaves of Umbilicus oppositifolius are more or less ovate and, unlike those of most species of Umbilicus, not peltate. Photograph provided by and © of Ray Stephenson, U.K. Reproduced with his permission.	2022-09-16	Smith, Gideon F.;Monro, Anna M.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.;Monro, Anna M.			
