1 Santiago, Chile [email protected] ABSTRACT Calandrinia

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 Santiago, Chile Cistanthe@Gmail.Com ABSTRACT Calandrinia Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 25 June 2020 1 SYSTEMATICS OF CALANDRINIA PILOSIUSCULA DC A.K.A. CALANDRINIA COMPRESSA SCHRAD. EX DC (MONTIACEAE–MONTIOIDEAE) MARK A. HERSHKOVITZ Santiago, Chile [email protected] ABSTRACT Calandrinia compressa Schrad. ex DC (Prodr. 3: 359. 1828) is the name currently widely applied to a polymorphic annual species of Calandrinia sect. Calandrinia endemic to the Chilean Floristic Region. A total of ten validly published heterotypic names plus six horticultural designations (and orthographic variants thereof) have been considered at some point as taxonomically the same as C. compressa. Two additional heterotypic taxa and their synonyms and two other designations possibly refer to this species. Two other taxa sometimes referred to this species are excluded. I treat here a total of 77 distinct nomenclaturally valid names and invalid designations and variants thereof. The type of one of the valid and legitimate names, Calandrinia pilosiuscula DC (Rev. Portulac. 9. 1827), is judged here to be taxonomically the same as the type of C. compressa. Because of its chronological priority, Calandrinia pilosiuscula DC must be accepted as the correct name for Calandrinia compressa Schrad. ex DC when the two are considered taxonomic synonyms. Here, the taxonomic history of this taxon is articulated and, where possible, types are identified and/or designated. The natural and anthropogenic history of the species is summarized critically in a theoretical context. [Version corrected 21 June 2020.] KEY WORDS: Calandrinia compressa, Calandrinia pilosiuscula, Montiaceae, Chilean Floristic Region, taxonomy, nomenclature, natural history. 1. Introduction De Candolle (1827, 1828a, b) circumscribed what was to become the polyphyletic Calandrinia Kunth “s. l.,” which prevailed in classical Portulacaceae systematics until the end of the 20th Century (Hershkovitz, 2019a). This genus was distinguished from Talinum Adans. (now Talinaceae) on the basis of the persistent rather than caducous sepals and a shorter style. Spach (1836) later segregated Cistanthe Spach from Calandrinia on the basis of the carinate/keeled (or “crested,” e.g., Reiche 1898a: 347; 1898b: 351) sepals of the latter. This trait was overlooked by Carolin (1987, 1993) and Hershkovitz (1993a), but appears to be nonetheless robust. Carolin (1987, 1993) dissolved Calandrinia s. l. on phylogenetic bases, but cladistically misdiagnosed Calandrinia (Hershkovitz, 1993a). Hershkovitz (1993a) established the current phylogenetic circumscription of Calandrinia on the basis of a unique trichome anatomy, leaf venation, and a combination of inflorescence, stomatal, and pollen characteristics. This circumscription has been corroborated repeatedly in molecular/genomic analyses (Hershkovitz, 2019a). Hershkovitz (2019a) erroneously indicated that C. ciliata (Ruiz & Pav.) DC was the conserved type of Calandrinia. In fact, the conserved type is C. caulescens Kunth, as indicated in Hershkovitz (1993a; cf. Wiersma et al., 2018+). [However, Hancock et al. (2018) applied a unique circumscription of Calandrinia comprising this genus plus the Australian genus Rumicastrum (Hershkovitz, 2019a: 53), many species of which were classified originally in the polyphyletic Calandrinia s. lato. Hancock et al. (2018) provided no scientific justification for this circumscription, it has no historical precedent, and it had no support from multiple morphological/molecular cladistic analyses dating to 1987 (see Hershkovitz, 2019a), © 2020 by the author(s). Distributed under a Creative Commons CC BY license. Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 25 June 2020 2 including those of Hancock et al. (2018). Evidently the circumscription was contrived in order to avoid use of the correct name, Rumicastrum. I reemphasize this issue here only because, despite the criticism of Hershkovitz (2018a, 2019a), new species of Rumicastrum have continued to be described as Calandrinia (Obbens, 2019). Most bewildering, the classification is predicated to be cladistic, yet Obbens (2019) made no mention of his own conclusion (as coauthor of Hancock et al., 2018), much less earlier conclusions, that the described species do not pertain cladistically to Calandrinia. In other words, this is not an “error” or oversight. Obbens (2019) amply discussed the cladistic position of the newly described taxa, but evidently deliberately concealed knowledge, including his own, that the species do not pertain cladistically to Calandrinia. And he acknowledged review by Hancock et al. (2019) coauthors. This is “fake taxonomy,” and, moreover, “fake science.” One justifiably might wonder what else in the “scientific” publications of these authors is fake.] Hershkovitz (2019a) recognized two sections within Calandrinia: Calandrinia sect. Calandrinia (incl. C. sect. Monocosmia Hershk.; Hershkovitz, 1993a), comprising rosettiform annual species with apparently cymose inflorescences (see Hershkovitz, 1993a); and C. sect. Caespitosae Phil. (incl. C. sect. Acaules Reiche), comprising the acaulescent perennials with strictly solitary, axillary flowers. Calandrinia sect. Calandrinia comprises ca. seven currently widely accepted species native mainly to far western North America and South America. Five of the species are incidental to the Chilean Floristic Province (ChFR; Hershkovitz, 2019a), and three of these endemic. One of these, operationally called Calandrinia compressa Schrad. ex DC (Prodr. 3: 359. 1828), is native and endemic to current geopolitical Chile (but see Rodriguez et al., 2018, and below), but also is naturalized New Zealand (see below). I provide here a historical taxonomic analysis of the total of ten validly published heterotypic names and six horticultural designations (and orthographic variants thereof) that currently are and/or have been operationally referred to or associated with C. compressa. I also discuss two additional heterotypic taxa that might pertain to this species and two others that have been referred to this species but here are excluded. The analysis demonstrates that the nomenclaturally correct name for this operational species is Calandrinia pilosiuscula DC (Rev. Portulac. 9. 1827). Because of its strongly preferred application in 20th–21st Century scientific communication, the name C. compressa is an excellent candidate for nomenclatural conservation. But for various reasons, consummation of this nomenclatural procedure may be delayed more than two years. The present work articulates the taxonomy and operational taxonomic history of C. pilosiuscula and also summarizes its diagnostic basis and natural and anthropogenic history in an theoretical framework. 2. Operational diagnostics of Calandrinia pilosiuscula Plants of Calandrinia pilosiuscula (including C. compressa) share a distinctive calyx that in bud appears deltoid to hastate to obcordate or turbinate (Fig. 1). The two sepals are fused laterally for half or more of their length. Closed in bud, the bifid calyx appears flattened or “compressed,” which was the basis for the epithet “compressa” (De Candolle, 1828a: 359). The fused portion of the calyx forms the base of the triangular form and the appressed free portions form the acute to acuminate peak. The margin of the free portion of the abaxial sepal clasps the margin of the adaxial (Volgin and Al Taleb, 1998: 81, Abb. 3: F–H). The base of the calyx in bud is inflated laterally, the basal lobes forming small pouches. The calyx is just as distinctive in fruit, though this is not clear from the apparent “dissection” in Fig. 1. The basal fused portion enlarges allometrically and opens into to a shallow funnelform cup, the two triangular apices of the sepals deflexing laterally. But in pressed herbarium specimens, the entire calyx in fruit appears somewhat rhombic in form, the basal fused portion flabellate and the apical free portions of the sepals triangular. Sepals in other species of C. sect. Calandrinia range from ovate to nearly orbicular, fused only near the base or not at all. They are somewhat spreading after anthesis like an open clam shell. Thus, there is no confusing the taxonomic Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 25 June 2020 3 identity of plants of C. pilosiuscula, except in the case of possible intermediates with Calandrinia ciliata (Ruiz & Pav.) DC in the altiplano of northern Chile and Bolivia (Hershkovitz, 2006: 46), discussed later. As elaborated in the taxonomic section, a total of ten taxa (excluding homotypic synonyms) of Calandrinia corresponding to C. pilosiuscula and sharing the peculiar calyx have been validly named. Besides C. pilosiuscula and C. compressa, these include C. compressa var. adscendens DC, C. gaudichaudii Barnéoud, C. macilenta Barnéoud, C. procumbens Moris, C. tenella Hook. & Arn., C. virgata Phil., Talinum linaria Colla, and Talinum lineare Hoffmanns. As articulated in the taxonomic section, five of these taxa were described on the basis of plants cultivated from seed of undocumented Chilean origin. Two additional validly published and legitimate names possibly refer to C. pilosiuscula: Phacosperma peruviana Haw (and its illegitimate synonym, Calandrinia phacosperma DC), and Talinum gracile Colla. Tutuca chilensis Molina was referred to C. pilosiuscula by Philippi (1867) and Hershkovitz (2019a). This synonymy here is disproven and rescinded. However, the designation “Tutuca Feuillée” does pertain to Calandrinia sect. Calandrinia and possibly to C. pilosiuscula, as discussed later.
Recommended publications
  • Bioclimatic and Phytosociological Diagnosis of the Species of the Nothofagus Genus (Nothofagaceae) in South America
    International Journal of Geobotanical Research, Vol. nº 1, December 2011, pp. 1-20 Bioclimatic and phytosociological diagnosis of the species of the Nothofagus genus (Nothofagaceae) in South America Javier AMIGO(1) & Manuel A. RODRÍGUEZ-GUITIÁN(2) (1) Laboratorio de Botánica, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela (USC). E-15782 Santiago de Com- postela (Galicia, España). Phone: 34-881 814977. E-mail: [email protected] (2) Departamento de Producción Vexetal. Escola Politécnica Superior de Lugo-USC. 27002-Lugo (Galicia, España). E-mail: [email protected] Abstract The Nothofagus genus comprises 10 species recorded in the South American subcontinent. All are important tree species in the ex- tratropical, Mediterranean, temperate and boreal forests of Chile and Argentina. This paper presents a summary of data on the phyto- coenotical behaviour of these species and relates the plant communities to the measurable or inferable thermoclimatic and ombrocli- matic conditions which affect them. Our aim is to update the phytosociological knowledge of the South American temperate forests and to assess their suitability as climatic bioindicators by analysing the behaviour of those species belonging to their most represen- tative genus. Keywords: Argentina, boreal forests, Chile, mediterranean forests, temperate forests. Introduction tually give rise to a temperate territory with rainfall rates as high as those of regions with a Tropical pluvial bio- The South American subcontinent is usually associa- climate; iii. finally, towards the apex of the American ted with a tropical environment because this is in fact the Southern Cone, this temperate territory progressively dominant bioclimatic profile from Panamá to the north of gives way to a strip of land with a Boreal bioclimate.
    [Show full text]
  • Organización De Las Naciones Unidas Para La Agricultura Alimentación
    Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Agricultura y la Alimentación PRODUCTOS FORESTALES NO MADEREROS EN CHILE Preparado por: Jorge Campos Roasio Corporación de Investigación Tecnológica, INTEC - CHILE Santiago, Chile Con la colaboración de: Elizabeth Barrera, Museo Nacional de Historia Natural Daniel Barros Ramírez, Proplant Limitada Magalis Bittner, Universidad de Concepción Ignacio Cerda, Instituto Forestal María Paulina Fernández, Universidad Católica Rodolfo Gajardo, Universidad de Chile Sara Gnecco Donoso, Universidad de Concepción Adriana Hoffman, Defensores del Bosque Nativo Verónica Loewe, Instituto Forestal Mélica Muñoz Schick, Museo Nacional de Historia Natural DlRECCION DE PRODUCTOS FORESTALES, FAO, ROMA OFICINA REGIONAL DE LA FAO PARA AMERICA LATINA y EL CARIBE Santiago, Chile 1998 Para mayor información dirigirse a: Sr. Torsten Frisk Oficial Principal Forestal Oficina Regional de la FAO para América Latina y el Caribe Casilla 10095 Santiago, Chile Teléfono: (56-2) 3372213 Fax: (56-2) 3372101/2/3 Correo Electrónico: [email protected] Foto portada: Clasificación de varillas de mimbre, Salix viminalis, para su uso en talleres artesanales de Chimbarongo, en la VI Región de Chile. Las denominaciones empleadas en esta publicación y la forma en que aparecen presentados los datos que contiene no implican, de parte de la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Agricultura y la Alimentación, juicio alguno sobre la condición jurídica de países, territorios, ciudades o zonas, o de" sus autoridades, ni respecto de la delimitación de sus fronteras o límites. PROLOGO Así como los productos agrícolas y los productos forestales tienen áreas bien delimitadas y atendidas por diferentes instancias y organizaciones nacionales e internacionales, hay un área "de nadie", que ha ido apareciendo a la luz, revelando su vital importancia.
    [Show full text]
  • Outline of Angiosperm Phylogeny
    Outline of angiosperm phylogeny: orders, families, and representative genera with emphasis on Oregon native plants Priscilla Spears December 2013 The following listing gives an introduction to the phylogenetic classification of the flowering plants that has emerged in recent decades, and which is based on nucleic acid sequences as well as morphological and developmental data. This listing emphasizes temperate families of the Northern Hemisphere and is meant as an overview with examples of Oregon native plants. It includes many exotic genera that are grown in Oregon as ornamentals plus other plants of interest worldwide. The genera that are Oregon natives are printed in a blue font. Genera that are exotics are shown in black, however genera in blue may also contain non-native species. Names separated by a slash are alternatives or else the nomenclature is in flux. When several genera have the same common name, the names are separated by commas. The order of the family names is from the linear listing of families in the APG III report. For further information, see the references on the last page. Basal Angiosperms (ANITA grade) Amborellales Amborellaceae, sole family, the earliest branch of flowering plants, a shrub native to New Caledonia – Amborella Nymphaeales Hydatellaceae – aquatics from Australasia, previously classified as a grass Cabombaceae (water shield – Brasenia, fanwort – Cabomba) Nymphaeaceae (water lilies – Nymphaea; pond lilies – Nuphar) Austrobaileyales Schisandraceae (wild sarsaparilla, star vine – Schisandra; Japanese
    [Show full text]
  • Australia Lacks Stem Succulents but Is It Depauperate in Plants With
    Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Australia lacks stem succulents but is it depauperate in plants with crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM)? 1,2 3 3 Joseph AM Holtum , Lillian P Hancock , Erika J Edwards , 4 5 6 Michael D Crisp , Darren M Crayn , Rowan Sage and 2 Klaus Winter In the flora of Australia, the driest vegetated continent, [1,2,3]. Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), a water- crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), the most water-use use efficient form of photosynthesis typically associated efficient form of photosynthesis, is documented in only 0.6% of with leaf and stem succulence, also appears poorly repre- native species. Most are epiphytes and only seven terrestrial. sented in Australia. If 6% of vascular plants worldwide However, much of Australia is unsurveyed, and carbon isotope exhibit CAM [4], Australia should host 1300 CAM signature, commonly used to assess photosynthetic pathway species [5]. At present CAM has been documented in diversity, does not distinguish between plants with low-levels of only 120 named species (Table 1). Most are epiphytes, a CAM and C3 plants. We provide the first census of CAM for the mere seven are terrestrial. Australian flora and suggest that the real frequency of CAM in the flora is double that currently known, with the number of Ellenberg [2] suggested that rainfall in arid Australia is too terrestrial CAM species probably 10-fold greater. Still unpredictable to support the massive water-storing suc- unresolved is the question why the large stem-succulent life — culent life-form found amongst cacti, agaves and form is absent from the native Australian flora even though euphorbs.
    [Show full text]
  • Native Plant Diversity and Composition Across a Pinus Radiata D.Don Plantation Landscape in South-Central Chile—The Impact Of
    Article Native Plant Diversity and Composition Across a Pinus radiata D.Don Plantation Landscape in South-Central Chile—The Impact of Plantation Age, Logging Roads and Alien Species Steffi Heinrichs 1,*, Aníbal Pauchard 2,3 and Peter Schall 1 1 Department Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones, University of Goettingen, 37077 Göttingen, Germany; [email protected] 2 Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción 3349001, Chile; [email protected] 3 Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity (IEB), Santiago 8320000, Chile * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +49-551-395-974 Received: 18 July 2018; Accepted: 12 September 2018; Published: 14 September 2018 Abstract: Alien tree plantations are expanding globally with potential negative effects for native biodiversity. We investigated plant species diversity and composition in a Pinus radiata landscape in south-central Chile, a biodiversity hotspot, by sampling understory vegetation in different plantation age classes, along forest roads and in natural forest remnants in order to find effective conservation measures for native biodiversity. Plantations, including different age classes and roadsides, maintained high native species richness at the landscape scale but supported a completely different community composition than natural forests. Thus, natural forest remnants must be conserved as plantations cannot replace them. Certain natural forest species occurred frequently in mature plantations and can represent starting points for retaining natural elements in plantations. Generalist native and alien species benefited from plantation management, mainly in young plantations and along roadsides. Stand maturation and a closed canopy, though, reduced alien species occurrences within plantations. Along roads, shade-tolerant aliens should be monitored and removed as they can potentially invade natural forests.
    [Show full text]
  • Synopsis of a New Taxonomic Synthesis Of
    Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 8 October 2018 doi:10.20944/preprints201808.0496.v2 Hershkovitz Montiaceae Synopsis of a new taxonomic synthesis of Montiaceae (Portulacineae) based on rational metadata analysis, with critical new insights on historically poorly understood taxa and a review of ecological evolution and phylogeography Mark Alan HERSHKOVITZ1 1Santiago, Chile [email protected] Abstract: Montiaceae (Portulacineae) comprise a clade of at least 280 species and ca. 30 subspecific taxa primarily of western America and Australia. This work uses existing phylogenetic metadata to elaborate a new cladistic taxonomic synthesis, and clarifies morphological circumscriptions of several poorly known species. A total of 20 taxa are validated, seven new and 13 necessary nomenclatural recombinations. Hypotheses of Montiaceae historical biogeography and phenotypic evolution are evaluated in light of recent metadata. Key words: Montiaceae, taxonomy, phylogeny, ecology, phylogeography, evolution. 1. Introduction This work presents a new cladistic taxonomy of Montiaceae (Portulacineae) and several of its included taxa, along with notes on the diagnostics of certainly poorly known species and a summary of new interpretations of phylogeography and phenotypic and ecological evolution. The present work includes 20 nomenclatural novelties. However, the whole of the novelty is greater than the sum of these parts. The generic circumscriptions and diversity estimates are modified from Hernández-Ledesma et al. (2015).The suprageneric taxonomy is the first proposed since McNeill (1974) and the only phylogenetic one. Critical reevaluation of certain common and usually misidentified Chilean taxa is the first since Reiche (1898). Existing metadata are interpreted as evidence for a hybrid origin of a genus.
    [Show full text]
  • The Systematic Revision of Chaetanthera Ruiz & Pav., and The
    A systematic revision of Chaetanthera Ruiz & Pav., and the reinstatement of Oriastrum Poepp. & Endl. (Asteraceae: Mutisieae) Alison Margaret Robertson Davies München 2010 A systematic revision of Chaetanthera Ruiz & Pav., and the reinstatement of Oriastrum Poepp. & Endl. (Asteraceae: Mutisieae) Dissertation der Fakultät für Biologie der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München vorgelegt von Alison Margaret Robertson Davies München, den 03. November 2009 Erstgutachter: Prof. Dr. Jürke Grau Zweitgutachter: Prof. Dr. Günther Heubl Tag der mündlichen Prüfung: 28. April 2010 For Ric, Tim, Isabel & Nicolas Of all the floures in the meade, Thanne love I most those floures white and rede, Such as men callen daysyes. CHAUCER, ‘Legend of Good Women’, Prol. 43 (c. 1385) “…a traveller should be a botanist, for in all views plants form the chief embellishment.” DARWIN, ‘Darwin’s Journal of a Voyage round the World’, p. 599 (1896) Acknowledgements The successful completion of this work is due in great part to numerous people who have contributed both directly and indirectly. Thank you. Especial thanks goes to my husband Dr. Ric Davies who has provided unwavering support and encouragement throughout. I am deeply indebted to my supervisor, Jürke Grau, who made this research possible. Thank you for your support and guidance, and for your compassionate understanding of wider issues. The research for this study was funded by part-time employment on digital archiving projects coordinated via the Botanische Staatssammlung Munchen (INFOCOMP, 2000 – 2003; API- Projekt, 2005). Appreciative thanks go to the many friends and colleagues from both the Botanische Staatssammlung and the Botanical Institute who have provided scientific and social support over the years.
    [Show full text]
  • Obbens, FJ a Review of the Tuberous Calandrinia Species (Section Tuberosae)
    WESTERN AUSTRALIA’S JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC BOTANY ISSN 0085-4417 G Obbens, F.J. A review of the tuberous Calandrinia species (section Tuberosae), including three new species for Western Australia Nuytsia 16(1): 95–115 (2006) All enquiries and manuscripts should be directed to: The Editor – NUYTSIA Western Australian Herbarium Telephone: +61 8 9334 0500 Dept of Environment and Conservation Facsimile: +61 8 9334 0515 Locked Bag 104 Bentley Delivery Centre Email: [email protected] Western Australia 6983 Web: science.calm.wa.gov.au/nuytsia/ AUSTRALIA All material in this journal is copyright and may not be reproduced except with the written permission of the publishers. © Copyright Department of Environment and Conservation . F.Nuytsia J. Obbens, 16(1):95–115(2006) A review of the tuberous Calandrinia species (section Tuberosae) 95 A review of the tuberous Calandrinia species (section Tuberosae), including three new species for Western Australia Frank Obbens c/o Western Australian Herbarium, Department of Environment and Conservation, Locked Bag 104, Bentley Delivery Centre WA 6983 Abstract Obbens, F. J. A review of the tuberous Calandrinia species (section Tuberosae), including three new species for Western Australia. Nuytsia 16(1): 95–115 (2006). Background on the current systematic status of Australian Calandrinia is explained. Three new species of section Tuberosae von Poellnitz are described and illustrated: Calandrinia crispisepala Obbens, C. kalanniensis Obbens and C. translucens Obbens. A key to section Tuberosae is provided. Additional descriptive material for the previously named species is provided along with notes that explain the important differences and similarities between the six species now belonging to this section.
    [Show full text]
  • Pollen Morphology of Nothofagus (Nothofagaceae, Fagales) and Its Phylogenetic Significance
    Acta Palaeobotanica 56(2): 223–245, 2016 DOI: 10.1515/acpa-2016-0017 Pollen morphology of Nothofagus (Nothofagaceae, Fagales) and its phylogenetic significance DAMIÁN ANDRÉS FERNÁNDEZ1,*, PATRICIO EMMANUEL SANTAMARINA1,*, MARÍA CRISTINA TELLERÍA2,*, LUIS PALAZZESI 1,* and VIVIANA DORA BARREDA1,* 1 Sección Paleopalinología, MACN “B. Rivadavia”, Ángel Gallardo 470 (C1405DJR) C.A.B.A.; e-mails: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] 2 Laboratorio de Sistemática y Biología Evolutiva (LASBE), Museo de La Plata, UNLP, Paseo del Bosque s/n° (B1900FWA) La Plata; e-mail: [email protected] * Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina Received 31 August 2016, accepted for publication 10 November 2016 ABSTRACT. Nothofagaceae (southern beeches) are a relatively small flowering plant family of trees confined to the Southern Hemisphere. The fossil record of the family is abundant and it has been widely used as a test case for the classic hypothesis that Antarctica, Patagonia, Australia and New Zealand were once joined together. Although the phylogenetic relationships in Nothofagus appear to be well supported, the evolution of some pollen morphological traits remains elusive, largely because of the lack of ultrastructural analyses. Here we describe the pollen morphology of all extant South American species of Nothofagus, using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and light microscopy (LM), and reconstruct ancestral character states using a well-supported phylogenetic tree of the family. Our results indicate that the main differences between pollen of subgenera Fuscospora (pollen type fusca a) and Nothofagus (pollen type fusca b) are related to the size of microspines (distinguishable or not in optical section), and the thickening of colpi margins (thickened inwards, or thickened both inwards and outwards).
    [Show full text]
  • Molecular Phylogenetic Relationships Among Members of the Family Phytolaccaceae Sensu Lato Inferred from Internal Transcribed Sp
    Molecular phylogenetic relationships among members of the family Phytolaccaceae sensu lato inferred from internal transcribed spacer sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA J. Lee1, S.Y. Kim1, S.H. Park1 and M.A. Ali2 1International Biological Material Research Center, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, South Korea 2Department of Botany and Microbiology, College of Science, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Corresponding author: M.A. Ali E-mail: [email protected] Genet. Mol. Res. 12 (4): 4515-4525 (2013) Received August 6, 2012 Accepted November 21, 2012 Published February 28, 2013 DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.4238/2013.February.28.15 ABSTRACT. The phylogeny of a phylogenetically poorly known family, Phytolaccaceae sensu lato (s.l.), was constructed for resolving conflicts concerning taxonomic delimitations. Cladistic analyses were made based on 44 sequences of the internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA from 11 families (Aizoaceae, Basellaceae, Didiereaceae, Molluginaceae, Nyctaginaceae, Phytolaccaceae s.l., Polygonaceae, Portulacaceae, Sarcobataceae, Tamaricaceae, and Nepenthaceae) of the order Caryophyllales. The maximum parsimony tree from the analysis resolved a monophyletic group of the order Caryophyllales; however, the members, Agdestis, Anisomeria, Gallesia, Gisekia, Hilleria, Ledenbergia, Microtea, Monococcus, Petiveria, Phytolacca, Rivinia, Genetics and Molecular Research 12 (4): 4515-4525 (2013) ©FUNPEC-RP www.funpecrp.com.br J. Lee et al. 4516 Schindleria, Seguieria, Stegnosperma, and Trichostigma, which belong to the family Phytolaccaceae s.l., did not cluster under a single clade, demonstrating that Phytolaccaceae is polyphyletic. Key words: Phytolaccaceae; Phylogenetic relationships; Internal transcribed spacer; Nuclear ribosomal DNA INTRODUCTION The Caryophyllales (part of the core eudicots), sometimes also called Centrospermae, include about 6% of dicotyledonous species and comprise 33 families, 692 genera and approxi- mately 11200 species.
    [Show full text]
  • Descriptions of the Plant Types
    APPENDIX A Descriptions of the plant types The plant life forms employed in the model are listed, with examples, in the main text (Table 2). They are described in this appendix in more detail, including environmental relations, physiognomic characters, prototypic and other characteristic taxa, and relevant literature. A list of the forms, with physiognomic characters, is included. Sources of vegetation data relevant to particular life forms are cited with the respective forms in the text of the appendix. General references, especially descriptions of regional vegetation, are listed by region at the end of the appendix. Plant form Plant size Leaf size Leaf (Stem) structure Trees (Broad-leaved) Evergreen I. Tropical Rainforest Trees (lowland. montane) tall, med. large-med. cor. 2. Tropical Evergreen Microphyll Trees medium small cor. 3. Tropical Evergreen Sclerophyll Trees med.-tall medium seier. 4. Temperate Broad-Evergreen Trees a. Warm-Temperate Evergreen med.-small med.-small seier. b. Mediterranean Evergreen med.-small small seier. c. Temperate Broad-Leaved Rainforest medium med.-Iarge scler. Deciduous 5. Raingreen Broad-Leaved Trees a. Monsoon mesomorphic (lowland. montane) medium med.-small mal. b. Woodland xeromorphic small-med. small mal. 6. Summergreen Broad-Leaved Trees a. typical-temperate mesophyllous medium medium mal. b. cool-summer microphyllous medium small mal. Trees (Narrow and needle-leaved) Evergreen 7. Tropical Linear-Leaved Trees tall-med. large cor. 8. Tropical Xeric Needle-Trees medium small-dwarf cor.-scler. 9. Temperate Rainforest Needle-Trees tall large-med. cor. 10. Temperate Needle-Leaved Trees a. Heliophilic Large-Needled medium large cor. b. Mediterranean med.-tall med.-dwarf cor.-scler.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Flora of Australia
    L'IBRARY'OF THE GRAY HERBARIUM HARVARD UNIVERSITY. BOUGHT. THE FLORA OF AUSTRALIA, ITS ORIGIN, AFFINITIES, AND DISTRIBUTION; BEING AN TO THE FLORA OF TASMANIA. BY JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M.D., F.R.S., L.S., & G.S.; LATE BOTANIST TO THE ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. LONDON : LOVELL REEVE, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. r^/f'ORElGN&ENGLISH' <^ . 1859. i^\BOOKSELLERS^.- PR 2G 1.912 Gray Herbarium Harvard University ON THE FLORA OF AUSTRALIA ITS ORIGIN, AFFINITIES, AND DISTRIBUTION. I I / ON THE FLORA OF AUSTRALIA, ITS ORIGIN, AFFINITIES, AND DISTRIBUTION; BEIKG AN TO THE FLORA OF TASMANIA. BY JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M.D., F.R.S., L.S., & G.S.; LATE BOTANIST TO THE ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. Reprinted from the JJotany of the Antarctic Expedition, Part III., Flora of Tasmania, Vol. I. LONDON : LOVELL REEVE, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1859. PRINTED BY JOHN EDWARD TAYLOR, LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS. CONTENTS OF THE INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. § i. Preliminary Remarks. PAGE Sources of Information, published and unpublished, materials, collections, etc i Object of arranging them to discuss the Origin, Peculiarities, and Distribution of the Vegetation of Australia, and to regard them in relation to the views of Darwin and others, on the Creation of Species .... iii^ § 2. On the General Phenomena of Variation in the Vegetable Kingdom. All plants more or less variable ; rate, extent, and nature of variability ; differences of amount and degree in different natural groups of plants v Parallelism of features of variability in different groups of individuals (varieties, species, genera, etc.), and in wild and cultivated plants vii Variation a centrifugal force ; the tendency in the progeny of varieties being to depart further from their original types, not to revert to them viii Effects of cross-impregnation and hybridization ultimately favourable to permanence of specific character x Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection ; — its effects on variable organisms under varying conditions is to give a temporary stability to races, species, genera, etc xi § 3.
    [Show full text]