↑"Habitatio . . . place of growth; usually the place of growth is associated with the verb cresco 'grow' or habito 'have possession of, inhabit, dwell."—William T. Stearn, Botanical Latin, ed. 3a (Newton Abbott, Londonii, North Pomfret: David & Charles, 1983), p. 438.
↑Vocabulum aliquando cum vocabulo biochora confusum.
↑C. I. Dickinson, British Seaweeds (The Kew Series, 1963).
↑M. Abercrombie, C. J. Hickman, et M. L. Johnson, A Dictionary of Biology (Londinii: Penguin Reference Books, 1966).