the family name of the 19th-century Spanish botanists Claudio and EstebanBoutelou. The species name, dactyloides, is from Latin meaning resembling fingers
1722, having laid out the main structural features, it is assumed. EstebanBoutelou continued in his place. The main source for information on the gardens
y Rubio, Francisco Antonio Zea, and the brothers Claudio Boutelou [es] and EstebanBoutelou [es] got involved. This newspaper was aimed at parish priests
commonly known as grama grass. The genus was named for Claudio and EstebanBoutelou, 19th-century Spanish botanists. David Griffiths produced a 1912 monograph