Informaton found on Wikipedia, like most web sites, needs to be corroborated with information from other sources in order to obtain some confidence. Of course, in the process of looking at multiple web sites, you may find information which conflicts rather than agrees. In principle, this is nothing new; nothing web-specific; the same things can happen when you research in libraries or ask learned colleagues. Sometimes there is genuine lack of agreement; other times mis-informaton (eg. mis-identified plants) can lead to apparent lack of agreement.
Back to Wikipedia: I find it has become more reliable over the last few years.
But I always pay heed to the motto of the Royal Society: '
Nullius in verba' ('Take nobody's word for it').
When it comes to finding information about specific plants, it is very important to identify the plant correctly. That may mean correcting the name on the plant label where you bought it (eg. a nursery) or saw it (unfortunately, even learned botanical gardens can mis-label plants). Some of those mis-labellings may be due to botanists/horticulturists renaming plants after they were labelled. One has to cut the nurseries and gardens a bit of slack for that.
For correct plant names, I refer you to:
- The Plant List -
http://www.theplantlist.org.
To quote from the home page:
"The Plant List is a working list of all known plant species. Version 1 aims to be comprehensive for species of Vascular plant (flowering plants, conifers, ferns and their allies) and of Bryophytes (mosses and liverworts).
Collaboration between the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Missouri Botanical Garden enabled the creation of The Plant List by combining multiple checklist data sets held by these institutions and other collaborators.
The Plant List provides the Accepted Latin name for most species, with links to all Synonyms by which that species has been known. It also includes Unresolved names for which the contributing data sources did not contain sufficient evidence to decide whether they were Accepted or Synonyms."
Relationship to Index Kewensis and IPNI (which are of some renown): The Plant List "builds on the original work of English naturalist Charles Darwin, when in the 1880s he started a plant list entitled Index Kewensis that contained 400,000 names of species with an average of 6,000 species being added to it every year since it was first published." It also incorporates the International Plant Names Index (IPNI).
- The RHS Plant Finder, especially for cultivars -
http://apps.rhs.org.uk/rhsplantfinder