. . "*Buddleja \u00D7 alata (Leeuwenb.)" . . . . "Buddleja alata Rehder & E.H.Wilson is endemic to western Szechuan, China, growing at elevations of 1,300\u20133,000 m; it was first described and named by Rehder and Wilson in 1913. Leeuwenberg found the plant to be such a perfect intermediate of Buddleja albiflora and Buddleja nivea as to consider it a hybrid of the two species."@en . . . .