871 results on '"Plantae"'
Search Results
2. Morphology, taxonomy, biogeography and ecology of Micrasterias foliacea Bailey ex Ralfs (Desmidiales, Zygnematophyceae)
- Author
-
Anatoliy Levanets and Sanet Janse van Vuuren
- Subjects
Charophyta ,taxonomy ,Botswana ,Conjugatophyceae ,Desmidiales ,new records ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,global distribution ,Biota ,Mozambique ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Micrasterias foliacea (Desmidiales, Zygnematophyceae) is an interesting desmid species as its filamentous life form is quite different from all other species within the genus. Due to the large size of the filaments and cells, accurate species identification is easy. After its original description from Rhode Island (USA) it was recorded from five continents, but no record could be found of its presence in Europe. In this paper a review of the worldwide distribution of M. foliacea (Desmidiales, Zygnematophyceae) is presented, together with notes on the species’ ecology. In addition to its currently known geographical distribution, the paper also records the species’ presence at two new locations in southern Africa, namely Botswana (Okavango River) and Mozambique (Palma, Cabo Delgado). The paper presents a discussion of taxonomical levels of intraspecific taxa, based on morphological characteristics. It is proposed that the taxonomical status of M. foliacea Bailey ex Ralfs f. nodosa should be raised to the variety, as its nodular cell wall thickenings are unique morphological features.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Parallel developments in floral adaptations to obligate moth pollination mutualism in tribe Phyllantheae (Phyllanthaceae)
- Author
-
Peter C. van Welzen, Esmée Winkel, and Roderick W. Bouman
- Subjects
Breynia ,Malpighiales ,Phyllanthaceae ,Dendrophyllanthus ,Plant Science ,morphological adaptation ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Phyllanthus ,Kirganelia ,Glochidion ,Plantae ,Cicca ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Epicephala moths - Abstract
Several groups within tribe Phyllantheae (Phyllanthaceae) formed, independently, an (obligate) pollination mutualism with Epicephala moths, which originally had been parasitic. In this pollination system, female moths actively collect pollen from staminate flowers and deposit it on the stigma of pistillate flowers, after which they place at least one egg in or against the ovary. The high pollination rate makes the system beneficial for the plants, whereas the larvae are provided with food (part of the developing seeds) and some protection against predation. Qualitative comparisons are made between non-moth-pollinated lineages, used as outgroups and various, independently moth-pollinated Phyllantheae clades, used as ingroups, thereby looking for parallel developments. The flowers of both sexes of various groups display similar, convergent morphological adaptations to the pollination system, likely to secure the obligate relationship and to improve efficiency. Sepals in both sexes, free or partly to highly connate, are commonly upright and form a narrow tube. The staminate flowers often have united, vertical stamens with the anthers along the androphore or on top of the androphore. Pistillate flowers generally reduce the stigmatic surface, either by making the stigmas shorter or by uniting them into a cone with a small opening at the top for pollen deposition. Less obvious is the reduction of the stigmatic papillae; these are often present in non-moth-pollinated taxa, but absent in the moth-pollinated species. The most diverging, parallel adaptations to moth pollination are currently found in the Palaeotropics, whereas in the Neotropics, some groups continue to also be pollinated by other insect groups and are morphologically less changed.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Notes on Carex (Cyperaceae) from China (IX): three new species of section Mitratae s.l
- Author
-
Yi-Fei Lu, Zhao-Cen Lu, Yu-Hao Duan, Kun Zhang, and Xiao-Feng Jin
- Subjects
new species ,Tracheophyta ,China ,Carex ,Poales ,Liliopsida ,sect. Lageniformes ,Cyperaceae ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Carex sect. Mitratae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Carex sect. Mitratae s.l. was established by Kükenthal in 1909 and can be distinguished from the closely related sections in having nutlets frequently discoid-annulate at the apex and a persistent style base. Based on field surveys and specimen examination, three new species of sect. Mitratae are described and illustrated here. Carex fatsuaniana was collected from Yunnan and differs from C. truncatigluma in having the utricles nearly glabrous, the nutlets with a ca. 0.5 mm long beak at the apex, the staminate spikes cylindrical, 5–7.5 cm long, 4–5 mm wide, and the pistillate glumes acuminate at the apex. Carex damingshanica was collected from Guangxi and differs from C. breviscapa and C. rhynchachaenium in having 3 or 4 spikes, the lateral spikes cylindrical, the pistillate glumes, utricles and nutlets all shorter than in the other two species. Carex radicalispicula was collected from Sichuan and differs from C. truncatirostris in having the staminate spikes clavate, 1.5–2 mm wide, the pistillate glumes pale yellow-white, 3–3.2 mm long, acuminate or short-awned at the apex, and the nutlets with 3 angles shallowly constricted at the middle.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Endiandra macrocarpa (Lauraceae), a new tree species from south-western China
- Author
-
Dian-yang Zou, Guan-long Cao, Jin-guo Zhang, Lang Li, and Jie Li
- Subjects
Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Lauraceae ,taxonomy ,Endiandra ,Laurales ,morphology ,Yunnan Province ,tropical montane forest ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Endiandra macrocarpa, a new species of Endiandra (Lauraceae) from Yunnan Province of south-western China, is here described and illustrated, based on morphological evidence. Compared to other Endiandra species occurring in south China and the adjacent regions in Indochina, this species is mainly characterised by its much larger ellipsoidal fruits (up to 11 × 6 cm), as well as glabrous branchlets and puberulent inflorescences.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Numerical analyses of seed morphology and its taxonomic significance in the genus Oxytropis DC. (Fabaceae) from northwestern China
- Author
-
Zhao, Xiang, Liu, Yingying, Li, Jigang, Zhang, Hui, Jia, Lingyun, Hou, Qinzheng, and Sun, Kun
- Subjects
China ,PCA ,seed morphology ,Fabales ,Fabaceae ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Oxytropis ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,SEM ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,cluster analysis - Abstract
The lack of diagnostic taxonomic characteristics in some species complexes leave the species delimitation of Oxytropis DC. unresolved. Seed morphological features have proved to be useful diagnostic and taxonomic characteristics in Fabaceae. However, there are few systematic studies on the seed characteristics of Oxytropis. Here, we used scanning electron and stereoscopic microscopy to investigate the seed characteristics of 35 samples obtained from 21 Oxytropis species from northwest China. Our examination showed two main types of hilum positions, terminal and central, and five different types of seed shapes: prolonged semielliptic, reniform, prolonged reniform, quadratic, and cardiform. Seven different sculpturing patterns were identified: scaled, regulated, lophate with stellated testa cells, simple reticulate, rough, compound reticulate, and lophate with rounded testa cells. The seeds ranged from 1.27 to 2.57 mm in length and from 1.18 to 2.02 mm in width, and the length-to-width ratio ranged from 0.89 to 1.55 mm. The seed shape was constant within species and was useful for species delimitation within the genus Oxytropis when combined with other macroscopic traits. In contrast, the sculpturing patterns were highly variable at the species level and could not be used for species identification. Results of the cluster analysis and principal component analysis (PCA) indicated that the seed traits of Oxytropis species are useful for taxa identification at the species level, but have low taxonomic value at the section level.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Resurrection of Leucobryum scalare Müll.Hal. ex M.Fleisch. (Bryophyta, Leucobryaceae) based on phylogenetic and morphometric evidence
- Author
-
Patsakorn Tiwutanon, Kasidis Chaiyasut, H. Thorsten Lumbsch, and Ekaphan Kraichak
- Subjects
revision ,Dicranidae ,Bryophytes ,Dicranales ,Bryophyta ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Bryopsida ,mosses ,Leucobryaceae ,tropical biodiversity ,classification ,Leucobryum aduncum ,Plantae ,Bryobiotina ,Leucobryum ,Leucobryum aduncum scalare ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Leucobryum scalare was described in 1904 but its taxonomic status has been disputed, being reduced to a variety of Leucobryum aduncum or synonymized with Leucobryum aduncum. The taxonomic confusion of this taxon has remained unresolved. Hence, we revisited the taxonomic status of the taxon using phylogenetic and morphometric approaches. A total of 27 samples from Leucobryum aduncum var. aduncum and Leucobryum aduncum var. scalare were used to generate data from four markers, including ITS1, ITS2, atpB-rbcL spacer, and trnL-trnF. The concatenated dataset was used to reconstruct a phylogenetic tree. Both qualitative and quantitative morphological characters were measured and analyzed with Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and PERMANOVA. The results showed that the two taxa are closely related but they are reciprocally monophyletic. Both qualitative and quantitative characters could also separate Leucobryum aduncum var. scalare from Leucobryum aduncum var. aduncum as shown with PCA and PERMANOVA. We propose the resurrection of the species rank for Leucobryum scalare as separate from Leucobryum aduncum. This work highlights the need for a more thorough revision of Leucobryum to clarify the actual level of diversity in this genus.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Lithocarpus dahuensis (Fagaceae), a new species from Fujian Province based on morphology and genomic data
- Author
-
Miao Zhang, Xiao-Hui Zhang, Shi Shi, and Bing-Hua Chen
- Subjects
Lithocarpus dahuoaiensis ,Lithocarpus ,Lithocarpus dinhensis ,Plant Science ,Fagaceae ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,morphology ,Lithocarpus dalatensis ,Fagales ,Plantae ,chloroplast genome ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biodiversity - Abstract
Lithocarpus dahuensis, a new Fagaceae species from Fujian Province, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is morphologically similar to L. konishii, but its oblanceolate leaf blade has more pairs of acute teeth on the margin, denser lateral veins, smaller cupules enclosing up to 1/4–1/3 of the nut, and its nut is only half as long as those of L. konishii. The plastome of L. dahuensis was 161,303 bp in length and displayed the typical quadripartite structure. Phylogenetic analyses distinguished L. dahuensis from L. konishii with strong support based on whole plastome and nrITS, respectively.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Taxonomy and nomenclature of Abutilon albidum (Malvaceae, Malvoideae), a cryptic Saharo-Canarian species recently rediscovered in Tenerife
- Author
-
Filip Verloove, Alexander N. Sennikov, J. Alfredo Reyes-Betancort, Finnish Museum of Natural History, and Botany
- Subjects
Malvales ,Tenerife ,Nomenclature ,Canary Islands ,Abutilon indicum indicum ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Abutilon ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Abutilon indicum ,1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology ,Abutilon fruticosum ,Malvoideae ,Plantae ,Malvaceae ,Saharo-Canarian ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Abutilon albidum, a cryptic Saharo-Canarian species, was thought to have been last collected in 1945 in Tenerife by E.R. Sventenius. In 2019, it was rediscovered in the same area. The characteristic features of the Canarian plants are discussed, especially in relation to the morphologically similar-looking and probably closely-related species Abutilon indicum and A. bidentatum. It is concluded that the plants from Tenerife and north-western Africa indeed represent a distinct species. The species is illustrated and a key for the identification of this and related species is presented.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Veronica hongii (Plantaginaceae), a new species from Central China
- Author
-
Song-Zhi Xu, Qi-Liang Gan, Zun-Wei Ke, and Zhen-Yu Li
- Subjects
new species ,Plantaginaceae ,Digitalidoideae ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Veronica ,Veronica maritima ,Lamiales ,Veronica hongii ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Central China ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new species Veronica hongii, from western Hubei Province, Central China is described and illustrated. The species is morphologically similar to V. henryi Yamazaki, but mainly differs in the glabrous plant, except pedicels, broadly ovate leaf blades, glandular-pubescent pedicels, obovate calyx lobes, smaller corolla, broadly ovate capsule and much smaller seeds.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Aeschynanthus smaragdinus F.Wen & J.Q.Qin (Gesneriaceae), a new species from Yunnan Province, China
- Author
-
Jia-Qi Qin, Rui-Feng Li, Yan-Ping Pang, and Fang Wen
- Subjects
Aeschynanthus ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Flora of Yunnan ,taxonomy ,Didymocarpoideae ,Aeschynanthus chiritoides ,Plant Science ,Gesneriaceae ,Plantae ,Biota ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lamiales - Abstract
Aeschynanthus smaragdinus F.Wen & J.Q.Qin, a new species of Gesneriaceae from the monsoon rain forest in Mangbang township, Tengchong City, Yunnan Province, China, is described and illustrated here. It morphologically resembles A. chiritoides C.B.Clarke in size, shape and hairs on the leaf blades. But it can easily be distinguished from the latter by the green corolla limb with brownish-red to maroon lower lobes. At the same time, the hairs of the pedicel and calyx lobes, the length of the staminode and the size of the seed grain can also help distinguish both. It is provisionally assessed as Data Deficient (DD), according to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, because field surveys for this new taxon have not been completed.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The correct name for an Aquilegia (Ranunculaceae) hybrid of the parentage Aquilegia flavescens × A. formosa
- Author
-
Quentin C. B. Cronk
- Subjects
Ranunculales ,linear discriminant analysis ,Aquilegia ,Aquilegia × miniana ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Wells diagram ,columbines ,Plantae ,Thalictroideae ,Aquilegia flavescens ,Ranunculaceae ,hybridization ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Aquilegia × miniana (J.F.Macbr. & Payson) Cronk, hybr. & stat. nov. is the correct name for the hybrid Aquilegia flavescens S.Watson × A. formosa Fisch. & DC. var. formosa. In 1916 Payson and Macbride, while exploring the mountains of Idaho, found populations of Aquilegia that were pink in flower colour and appeared intermediate between the yellow-flowered A. flavescens and red-flowered A. formosa. They named these plants A. flavescens var. miniana J.F.Macbr. & Payson. There has been uncertainty over whether their type collections (in GH, RM, MO, US, E, CM, CAS, NY) do indeed represent hybrids or pink-flowered morphs of A. flavescens. Using a Wells diagram, the holotype (in the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University) is shown to be intermediate, allowing its identification as a clear hybrid. However, some of the isotype material is indistinguishable from A. flavescens. The holotype matches material from British Columbia that has been determined to be of hybrid origin using molecular and morphological data. A. flavescens var. miniana J.F.Macbr. & Payson is, therefore, an available name for the hybrid, which is here raised to the status of hybrid binomial.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Comprehensive molecular and morphological analysis of Brachystemma calycinum and Stellaria ovatifolia in the tribe Alsineae (Caryophyllaceae)
- Author
-
Wen-Qiao Wang, Zhi-Wei Su, and Zhong-Hui Ma
- Subjects
Stellaria ,Caryophyllaceae ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Caryophyllales ,Brachystemma calycinum ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Alsineae ,Stellaria ovatifolia ,Brachystemma ,Plantae ,molecular phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Over the course of the recent decade, the composition of Alsineae has been drastically changed by means of molecular phylogeny. However, the genus Brachystemma has not been sampled in any of the previous studies, and its phylogenetic position is still pending. In addition, the related species Stellaria ovatifolia, which has at times been placed in Brachystemma, Schizotechium, or Stellaria, has also not been sampled. Here, nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and four plastid regions (trnL-F, matK, rbcL, rps16) were used to conduct phylogenetic analyses within Caryophyllaceae and the tribe Alsineae. Ancestral characters (petal margin and number of seeds) were reconstructed in the tribe Alsineae based on the phylogenetic results. Our results indicate that Brachystemma is nested in the tribe Alsineae and forms a monophylum with S. ovatifolia, and apically lobed petals and numerous seeds may be the ancestral characters in the tribe Alsineae. Based on our study, Stellaria ovatifolia should be considered within Brachystemma, and Brachystemma is clearly a separate genus and now includes two species.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Ranunculus jiguanshanicus (Ranunculaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China
- Author
-
Wen-Qun Fei, Qiong Yuan, and Qin-Er Yang
- Subjects
Ranunculus ,Asia ,Ranunculales ,Ranunculoideae ,Halerpestes ,Ceratocephala ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Ranunculus pegaeus ,Ranunculus glareosus ,buttercups ,Plantae ,Ranunculaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Ranunculus jiguanshanicus (Ranunculaceae), a new species from Chongzhou in Sichuan province, China, is here described and illustrated. The new species is easily distinguishable from other Chinese members of the genus by an array of characters, including small stature, glabrous and prostrate stems, 3-foliolate leaves with obvious petiolules (3–5 mm long), unequally 3-sected leaflets, lanceolate to linear ultimate leaflet segments, small flowers (5.2–6 mm in diameter), and long styles in the carpels and achenes (ca. 0.8 mm long). A distribution map of this new species is also provided.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Liparis tianchiensis (Orchidaceae), a new species from Gansu, China
- Author
-
Liu, Xiao-juan and Sun, Xue-gang
- Subjects
Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Liliopsida ,Asparagales ,Plant Science ,Noctuoidea ,Scorpaeniformes ,Gnathostomata ,Liparis ,morphology ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Orchidaceae ,Wenxian County ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Lymantriinae ,new species ,Actinopterygii ,Erebidae ,Biota ,Liparidae ,Lepidoptera ,Malaxideae ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,Penthophera - Abstract
Liparis tianchiensis (Orchidaceae, Epidendroideae), a new species from Wenxian County, Gansu Province, China, is described and illustrated, based on morphological characters. Liparis tianchiensis is morphologically similar to L. damingshanensis, L. pauliana and L. mengziensis with erect, lax flowered-inflorescences, small persistent floral bracts, small greenish-purple flowers, spreading sepals, free reflexed and linear petals, a lip with 2 calli near the base and an arcuate column. Liparis tianchiensis differs from L. pauliana by the single and much smaller leaf, shorter sepals and petals, smaller and reflexed oblong lip. It differs from L. mengziensis by having fewer and larger flowers and not connate lip apex. The novelty mostly resembles L. damingshanensis, but can be readily identified by having longer sepals and a reflexed oblong lip. Liparis tianchiensis only occurs in evergreen broad-leaved forest around a mountain lake in Wenxian County, Gansu Province, China.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Sinosenecio pingwuensis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae), a new species from northern Sichuan, China
- Author
-
Xiu-Jiang Su, Wen-Qun Fei, Ding Zhao, Ying Liu, and Qin-Er Yang
- Subjects
Asteroideae ,Compositae ,Asterales ,Sinosenecio ,Xuebaoding National Nature Reserve ,Plant Science ,Asteraceae ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,floral micromorphology ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Sinosenecio pingwuensis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae), a new species from Pingwu county in northern Sichuan, China, is described and illustrated. This species is distinguished in Sinosenecio by having leathery, glabrous, ovate or ovate-oblong leaves often pinnately-veined and solitary capitula 2.3–4.3 cm in diameter, a unique character combination hitherto never recorded in the genus. Two floral micromorphological characters (configuration of filament collar of stamens and anther endothecial cell wall thickenings) and achene surface features of the new species are reported. Color photographs of living plants and a distribution map are also provided for the new species.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Glossoloma magenticristatum (Gesneriaceae), a new species from the Cordillera Oriental of the Colombian Andes
- Author
-
David Hoyos, Laura Clavijo, and John L. Clark
- Subjects
Andes ,Plant Science ,Gesneriaceae ,Biota ,Lamiales ,Caquetá ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Glossoloma ,taxonomy ,Gesnerioideae ,Huila ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biodiversity - Abstract
A narrowly endemic new species of Glossoloma is described from the Cordillera Oriental of the northern Andes, in the Colombian departments of Caquetá and Huila. Glossoloma magenticristatum J.L.Clark, D.Hoyos & Clavijo, sp. nov. differs from most other congeners by a habit that is usually epiphytic with elongate scandent subwoody shoots, the presence of a magenta corolla tube, and a creased calyx formed by tightly appressed adjacent lobes. A brief summary of Gesneriaceae diversity in the Colombia departments of Caquetá and Huila is discussed with an emphasis on the old highway between Florencia and Guadalupe. The conservation status of G. magenticristatum is assessed as Endangered (EN) based on IUCN Criteria.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Yushania tomentosa (Poaceae, Bambusoideae), a new combination from Guangxi
- Author
-
Xing Li, Jing-Bo Ni, Fei Tan, Yi-Hua Tong, and Nian-He Xia
- Subjects
Tracheophyta ,bamboo ,taxonomy ,Poales ,Liliopsida ,Yushania ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Poaceae ,Sasa ,Biota ,Jiuwan Mountain ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Sasa tomentosa is transferred to the genus Yushania following a reassessment based on a new collection with pachymorph and long-necked rhizomes from its type locality in Guangxi, China. Morphologically, it is most similar to Yushania doupengshanensis, but differs in culm, branch complement and foliage leaf characters. A revised description of its morphology and color photos are also provided.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Systematics of the Trembleya sensu stricto clade of Microlicia (Melastomataceae, Lavoisiereae)
- Author
-
Ricardo Pacifico, Frank Almeda, Darin S. Penneys, and Karina Fidanza
- Subjects
Myrtales ,Microlicia ,Plant Science ,Melastomatoideae ,Biota ,campo rupestre ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Melastomataceae ,Cadeia do Espinhaço ,Minas Gerais ,Plantae ,Brazil ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Endemism - Abstract
A systematic monograph of the Trembleya s.s. clade is presented, a Brazilian endemic lineage of Melastomataceae comprising 11 species and currently recognised as part of Microlicia s.l. (Melastomataceae). First, we investigate phylogenetic relationships within Lavoisiereae using two nuclear markers and two sampling datasets (102 and 134 terminals). Then, we provide a systematic revision and new circumscription of the Trembleya s.s. clade, including line drawings, photos of living specimens, leaves and floral parts, distribution maps, a key to the 11 accepted species, comments on morphology, reproductive biology, richness, endemism, biogeography and recommended conservation assessments. A nomenclatural update of all taxa previously treated in Trembleya is also provided, including the designation of 45 lectotypes and the proposal of 38 new synonyms.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Quercus mangdenensis, a new species of Quercus (Fagaceae) from Kon Tum Province, Vietnam
- Author
-
Ngoc Nguyen and Hoang Thi Binh
- Subjects
Quercus macrocarpa depressa ,Kon Plong ,Plant Science ,Fagaceae ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Quercus ,flora ,taxonomy ,Quercus macrocarpa ,Fagales ,Mang Den ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Quercus mangdenensis Binh & Ngoc, sp. nov. (Fagaceae) is newly described from Mang Den Town in the central highland of Vietnam. The new species is characterized by lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate leaves with entire margin, 1–5-fruited infructescence, larger fruit size 6–10.5 cm long, broadly bowl-shaped cupules enclosing 1/5 of the nut, bracts of cupule entire and arranged in 5–7 rings, and cylindrical-ellipsoid and basally flat nuts 4.5–7.5 cm long. Quercus mangdenensis is morphologically similar to Q. bidoupensis Binh & Ngoc and Q. kontumensis A.Camus in having similar leaf shape, cuneate leaf base, and bracts arrangement in cupules. However, it differs from Q. bidoupensis and Q. kontumensis by cupules broadly bowl-shaped, much larger fruits, cylindrical-ellipsoid nut shape, and cupule enclosing 1/5 of the nuts. A description, photographs, and preliminary species conservation status of the new species are also provided.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A new species of Diplostephium (Asteraceae, Astereae) from the Atacama Desert, Chile
- Author
-
Sergio T. Ibáñez, Mélica Muñoz-Schick, Rosa A. Scherson, and Andrés Moreira-Muñoz
- Subjects
Asteroideae ,fog oasis ,Asterales ,Diplostephium ,lomas ,Análisis molecular ,Plant Science ,Asteraceae ,oasis de niebla ,Antofagasta ,taxonomía ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Paposo ,coast ,molecular analysis ,Plantae ,costa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new species,Diplostephium paposanumS.T.Ibáñez & Muñoz-Schick,sp. nov., is described for Chile, extending the southern distribution of the genus. Its position within the genus was confirmed by morphological and molecular data, discussed here. The new species was found in a coastal environment, new to the genus, and is geographically far removed from the other Chilean species, which are from the Andes. The formation where it occurs, known as lomas, acts as a biodiversity refuge in hyperarid environments. The presence ofD. paposanumin this environment contributes to the evidence of a floristic connection between the Atacama Desert and the Neotropical Andes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Inflorescences of Fargesia angustissima T.P. Yi and Yushania pauciramificans T.P. Yi (Poaceae, Bambusoideae) shed light on the taxonomy of the Sino-Himalayan alpine bamboos
- Author
-
Xia-Ying Ye, Zu-Chang Xu, Yue-Hong Cheng, Wei-Hua Wang, and De-Zhu Li
- Subjects
Poales ,Liliopsida ,Yushania ,Plant Science ,Poaceae ,infloresence ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Borinda ,reproductive characters ,Fargesia angustissima ,Plantae ,Yushania pauciramificans ,Fargesia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The taxonomy of the Sino-Himalayan alpine bamboos is controversial due to their complex evolutionary history and further complicated by the scarcity of inflorescence. Here, we supplement the description of the inflorescence of Fargesia angustissima T.P. Yi and Yushania pauciramificans T.P. Yi, which shed light on the taxonomy of Fargesia Franchet, Borinda Stapleton and Yushania Keng. F. angustissima has compressed inflorescence unilateral stretching out from reduced spathe, showing a transitional state between species with condensed inflorescence embraced by spathe-like bracts and species with open inflorescence without bracts. Considering that extensive gene flow existed between several clades of Fargesia found in recent studies, a broadly-defined Fargesia s. l. should be adopted. Meanwhile, the inflorescence of Y. pauciramificans has typical characteristics of Yushania, such as axilla with tuberculate glands, rachilla internodes ciliate and cylindrical florets, supporting the delimitation of Yushania.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Argostemma ehuangzhangense (Rubiaceae), a new species from Guangdong, China
- Author
-
Zhong-Cheng Liu, Jia Liu, Wan-Yi Zhao, Qiang Fan, Hua-Gu Ye, Lei Wang, and Wen-Bo Liao
- Subjects
new species ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,China ,Guangdong ,Argostemma ,Rubiaceae ,Argostemma ehuangzhangense ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Gentianales - Abstract
Argostemma ehuangzhangense, a new Rubiaceae species from E’huangzhang Nature Reserve, Guangdong Province, China, is here described and illustrated. A morphological comparison between the new species and its putative relatives, A. lamxayanum, A. laotica and A. verticillatum, is presented. The new species is mostly similar to A. laotica, but they can be distinguished from each other since Argostemma ehuangzhangense presents solitary flower (vs. 2-flowered inflorescences), flower lobes 4 (vs. 5) and anthers opening by longitudinal slits (vs. apical pores). In a preliminary IUCN Red List status of Argostemma ehuangzhangense this species is assigned as Vulnerable (VU).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Artemisia calcicola (Asteraceae, Anthemideae), a new species from karst region in Guizhou, southwestern China
- Author
-
Cheng-Sheng Li, Xiao-Rui Chi, Xin-Qiang Guo, and Long Wang
- Subjects
Asteroideae ,Compositae ,Asterales ,Plant Science ,Asteraceae ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Artemisia ,limestone flora ,morphology ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Artemisia calcicola (Asteraceae, Anthemideae), a new species from karst region in Shibing county, Guizhou province, southwestern China, is described and illustrated. The species can be readily assigned to A. subg. Artemisia in having fertile disk florets and glabrous receptacles. Within this subgenus, A. calcicola is distinguished by having (2- or) 3-pinnatipartite leaves and narrowly ellipsoid involucres 0.9–1.3 mm in diameter. It resembles A. annua to some extent, but differs immediately by the plant duration, stem and leaf indumentum, and involucre shape and size. A detailed description and distribution map of this species are also provided herein.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Coptis huanjiangensis, a new species of Ranunculaceae from Guangxi, China
- Author
-
Wang, Yiheng, Sun, Jiahui, Wang, Jingyi, Mao, Qiang, Dong, Wenpan, Yuan, Qingjun, Guo, Lanping, and Huang, Luqi
- Subjects
China ,Ranunculales ,Guangxi ,Plant Science ,Biota ,new taxa ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Coptidoideae ,Plantae ,Ranunculaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Coptis - Abstract
Coptis huanjiangensis, a new species of Ranunculaceae distributed in the valleys of Jiuwanshan National Natural Reserve in Huanjiang county (Guangxi, China), is described and illustrated for the first time based on morphological and plastome sequences data. It differs from C. chinensis, C. deltoidei and C. omeiensis mainly by having notably longer petiole, scape, bigger leaf blade with lobes obviously remote and robust rhizomes without stolons. Phylogenetic analyses support that C. huanjiangensis is sister to C. omeiensis and C. deltoidei.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Three new species of Polycarpaea (Caryophyllaceae) from Kerala, South India
- Author
-
Sindhu Arya, Venugopalan Nair Saradamma Anil Kumar, Ambika Viswanathan Pillai, Alex Philip Alen, Jose Sojan, and Veerankutty Suresh
- Subjects
Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Polycarpaea ,Caryophyllaceae ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Caryophyllales ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Palakkad gap ,Western Ghats - Abstract
Three new species of Polycarpaea, Polycarpaea barbellata, P. ebracteata and P. psammophila, are described from the Palakkad district of Kerala, India. The new species are allied to P. corymbosa and P. aurea but can be visibly distinguished by unique character combinations, viz. shape of sepal, petal, bract and bracteole and seed morphology. Detailed descriptions along with illustrations and photographs are provided.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Morphological, ecological, and molecular phylogenetic approaches reveal species boundaries and evolutionary history of Goodyera crassifolia (Orchidaceae, Orchidoideae) and its closely related taxa
- Author
-
Kenji Suetsugu, Shun K. Hirota, Narumi Nakato, Yoshihisa Suyama, and Shunsuke Serizawa
- Subjects
cryptic species ,Liliopsida ,reproductive biology ,Asparagales ,Plant Science ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,MIG-seq ,Goodyera ,chromosome ,Plantae ,Orchidaceae ,species complex ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,integrative taxonomy - Abstract
Species delimitation within the genus Goodyera is challenging among closely related species, because of phenotypic plasticity, ecological variation, and hybridization that confound identification methods based solely on morphology. In this study, we investigated the identity of Goodyera crassifolia H.-J.Suh, S.-W.Seo, S.-H.Oh & T.Yukawa, morphologically similar to Goodyera schlechtendaliana Rchb.f. This recently described taxon has long been known in Japan as “Oh-miyama-uzura” or “Gakunan” and considered a natural hybrid of G. schlechtendaliana and G. similis Blume (= G. velutina Maxim. ex Regel). Because the natural hybrid between G. schlechtendaliana and G. similis was described as G. × tamnaensis N.S.Lee, K.S.Lee, S.H.Yeau & C.S.Lee before the description of G. crassifolia, the latter might be a synonym of G. × tamnaensis. Consequently, we investigated species boundaries and evolutionary history of G. crassifolia and its closely related taxa based on multifaceted evidence. Consequently, morphological examination enabled us to distinguish G. crassifolia from other closely related species owing to the following characteristics: coriaceous leaf texture, laxly flowered inflorescence, long pedicellate ovary, large and weakly opened flowers, and column with lateral appendages. Ecological investigation indicates that G. crassifolia (2n = 60) is agamospermous, requiring neither pollinators nor autonomous self-pollination for fruit set, whereas G. schlechtendaliana (2n = 30) is neither autogamous nor agamospermous but is obligately pollinator-dependent. MIG-seq-based phylogenetic analysis provided no evidence of recent hybridization between G. crassifolia and its close congeners. Thus, molecular phylogeny reconstructed from MIG-seq data together with morphological, cytological, and ecological analyses support the separation of G. crassifolia as an independent species.
- Published
- 2022
28. An update on the taxonomy of Calamagrostis nagarum (Bor) G.Singh and its allies (Poaceae, Agrostidinae): morphometrics and micro-morphology
- Author
-
Dileshwar Prasad, Ravindra Kumar, Shubham Jaiswal, Rekha Yadav, Smita Tiwari, and Priyanka Agnihotri
- Subjects
Poales ,Liliopsida ,Calamagrostis ,Calamagrostis nagarum ,Deyeuxia ,Plant Science ,Poaceae ,Biota ,micro-morphology ,Tracheophyta ,taxonomy ,lectotypification ,Western Himalaya ,Cool season grass ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Calamagrostis nagarum, previously considered to be a poorly known species, has been reassessed taxonomically. It is a member of C. lahulensis-C. scabrescens complex and may be segregated by morphological characters such as the presence of pilose hairs on adaxial surface of leaf blades, spreading panicle branches, filiform awn and nerve prolongation of lemma. Besides, the micromorphology of adaxial surface of leaf blades, dorsal surface of glume and lemma differentiates Calamagrostis nagarum from its allies, C. lahulensis and C. scabrescens. It is known from Nagaland and Uttarakhand, India, and Bhutan. In this study, we have provided an emended description of the species, a discussion of its habitat and distribution, and taxonomic notes along with field photographs and photo plates for its correct identification. In addition, we also lectotypify the names C. lahulensis and C. scabrescens.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Phedimus daeamensis (Crassulaceae), a new species from Mt. Daeam in Korea
- Author
-
Tae-Young Choi, Dong Chan Son, Takashi Shiga, and Soo-Rang Lee
- Subjects
new species ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Phedimus ,Molecular diagnosis ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Crassulaceae ,Sempervivoideae ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Saxifragales ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Phedimus individuals from Mt. Daeam, once referred to as Phedimus sikokianus, exhibit certain morphological characters that are unique within the genus. Phedimus is one of the most notorious groups for taxonomic problems due to the high morphological variation found in leaf shape, stem numbers, phyllotaxis and seed structure. Taxa in Phedimus also easily hybridize, further leading to taxonomic confusion. To carefully confirm the identity of the putative new species from Mt. Daeam, we examined morphological characters from ~100 herbarium sheets of six closely related Phedimus species. A molecular phylogenetic approach was also employed to delimit the species boundary and infer the phylogenetic relationships among the seven Phedimus species, including the species from Mt. Daeam. Both morphological and molecular phylogenetic results indicated that the species found on Mt. Daeam is a new species that is more closely related to P. middendorffianus and P. takesimensis than to the remaining four Phedimus species. Here, we provided a full description of the new species P. daeamensis as well as an updated key for the seven Phedimus species examined.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Danxiaorchis mangdangshanensis (Orchidaceae, Epidendroideae), a new species from central Fujian Province based on morphological and genomic data
- Author
-
Miao Zhang, Xiao-Hui Zhang, Chang-Li Ge, and Bing-Hua Chen
- Subjects
Liliopsida ,Asparagales ,Plant Science ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,taxonomy ,morphology ,Danxiaorchis ,Chloroplast genome ,Epidendroideae ,Plantae ,Orchidaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Danxiaorchis mangdangshanensis, a new mycoheterotrophic species from Fujian Province, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is morphologically similar to D. singchiana, but its callus of labellum is a less distinctive Y-shape with three auricles on the apex, four pollinia that are narrowly elliptic in shape and equal in size, and it lacks fine roots. The plastome of D. mangdangshanensis is highly degraded. Phylogenetic analyses distinguished D. mangdangshanensis from its congeners, D. singchiana and D. yangii, with strong support based on nrITS + matK and plastomes, respectively.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Polygonatum praecox (Asparagaceae), a new species from mid-eastern China revealed by morphological and molecular evidence
- Author
-
Yingfeng Hu, Yujun Liu, Maroof Ali, Wei Wu, Xiaohong Li, Longsheng Chen, and Jianwen Shao
- Subjects
flowering phenology ,P. cyrtonema ,P. odoratum ,Liliopsida ,Polygonatum ,Asparagales ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,medicinal plant ,Polygonatum caulialatum ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Asparagaceae - Abstract
A new species, Polygonatum praecox Y.F.Hu & J.W.Shao (Asparagaceae), is described and illustrated. This species is similar to P. cyrtonema, P. odoratum and P. caulialatum, but can be distinguished from P. cyrtonema by its racemose inflorescence, cylindrical hairless filaments and apex without a retrorse spur; from P. odoratum by its stout moniliform rhizome, straight stem and longer (1.7–2.2 cm long) floral tube; and from P. caulialatum by its upper part straight stem, yellowish-green corolla, lobes excurved and earlier flowering. The complete chloroplast genome of this new species is 155,115–155,256 bp in length. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that P. praecox is not genetically related to the above three morphological similar species, but is closely related to the two European species (P. multiforum and P. latifolium). This species is relatively common in mid-eastern China and has previously been confused with P. cyrtonema. As its wild resources have decreased in recent years due to over-exploitation for medicinal or edible purposes, we classify it as Near Threatened (NT) according to the IUCN Red List Criteria.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Two new species of Boesenbergia (Zingiberaceae), from Sabah, Malaysia
- Author
-
Lam, Nyee Fan, Ibrahim, Halijah, Sam, Yen Yen, Mohammad Zakaria, Rozainah, and Poulsen, Axel Dalberg
- Subjects
hill slope ,Tracheophyta ,Zingiberaceae ,Borneo ,Liliopsida ,Zingiberales ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Boesenbergia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sabah - Abstract
Two new species of Boesenbergia, B. sugudensissp. nov. and B. truncatasp. nov. were discovered in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. Boesenbergia sugudensis resembles B. imbakensis in that the leaf sheath of the plant is not thickened and in the anther thecae dehiscing by longitudinal slits, but differs in having a longer petiole and tubular calyx. Boesenbergia truncata resembles B. orbiculata by the short petiole and a bilobed calyx, but differs by the truncate leaf base, the acute leaf apex, opposite leaves with a narrower lamina parallel to the ground and anther thecae dehiscing by pores. The new species are described and illustrated in detail.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Lectotypification of Cycas debaoensis (Cycadaceae)
- Author
-
Yong Yang and David K. Ferguson
- Subjects
Cycas ,gathering ,Cycadaceae ,Cycadales ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,gymnosperm ,Cycadopsida ,lectotypification ,nomenclature ,Plantae ,Cycas debaoensis ,Shenzhen Code ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The type of Cycas debaoensis Y.C.Zhong & C.J.Chen (Y.C.Zhong 8762) consists of nine duplicates in PE. Our new investigation of the type collection suggests that the type includes at least two different gatherings which should be considered as syntypes. For nomenclatural purposes, we lectotypify the name Cycas debaoensis with the herbarium sheet PE00047578 and consider other duplicates in PE and GXMI as isolectotypes. The seeds in the capsule (Y.C.Zhong s.n. collected in Oct 1998) are considered as a syntype.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Thismia limkokthayi (Thismiaceae): A new mycoheterotrophic species from Genting Highlands in Pahang, Malaysia
- Author
-
Mat Yunoh Siti-Munirah, Mustafa Suhaida, and Chan Eddie
- Subjects
Tracheophyta ,taxonomy ,Genting Highlands ,Liliopsida ,Dioscoreales ,Burmanniaceae ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Thismia ,upper hill dipterocarp forest ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,fairy lantern - Abstract
Thismia limkokthayi, a distinct mitriform species of the mycoheterotrophic genus Thismia, is described and illustrated. It was found at a locality in the upland areas of Genting Highlands, Pahang, Malaysia. This new species is morphologically similar to members of Thismia sect. Geomitra, but differs in several characteristics, including the colour of the floral tube, the inner surface of the floral tube with longitudinal ribs and absent transverse bars, a stamen apex with a central lobe (prolongation of the rib) and two lateral lobes (the tips of each are recurved) and a black-purplish stigma. Thismia limkokthayi is provisionally classified as Critically Endangered according to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Two new endemic species, Peucedanum miroense and P. tongkangense (Apiaceae), from Korea
- Author
-
Kyeonghee Kim, Hwa-Jung Suh, and Jun-Ho Song
- Subjects
new species ,Korea ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Apiales ,taxonomy ,Apioideae ,Peucedanum ,FE-SEM ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Apiaceae - Abstract
Two new species of Peucedanum (Apiaceae), P. miroense and P. tongkangense, from Gangwon Province, South Korea, are described. Both species are most similar to P. elegans and P. hakuunense because of their linear ultimate leaf segments. Peucedanum miroense was found on crevices of rocks in mountain summits and can be distinguished by its pubescent ovary, purple anthers, oblong schizocarp, and 1 or (2) vittae per vallecula and 4 on the commissural face. Peucedanum tongkangense was found in open areas on rocky cliffs along the Donggang River and can be distinguished by its glabrous ovary, whitish-yellow anthers, narrowly ellipsoid schizocarp, and 3 vittae per vallecula and 4 on the commissural face. Distinguishing characteristics, full descriptions, illustrations, photographs, taxonomic notes on geographical distribution, ecology, and phenology of the two species are presented. An identification key for all Korean species of Peucedanum is also provided. In addition, the mericarp surface of two new species and their close relatives are compared using micromorphological analysis.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Mosla dadoensis (Lamiaceae), a new species from the southern islands of South Korea
- Author
-
Hyun-Do Jang, Kwi-Kwan Jeong, Myoung-Ja Nam, Jun-Ho Song, Hye-Kyoung Moon, and Hyeok Jae Choi
- Subjects
Lamiaceae ,Mosla ,Korean endemic plant ,Plant Science ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Lamiales ,Elsholtzieae ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,morphology ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Mosla dadoensis (Lamiaceae), a new species from the southern islands of South Korea, is described and illustrated. The new species is morphologically similar to M. chinensis, but is distinguished from the latter by having two types of hairs on its stems, wider leaf blades, longer corolla length, and ellipsoid nutlets with a narrowly U-shaped extended area of abscission scar. Mosla dadoensis is also distinguished from the Chinese narrow endemic M. hangchouensis by having an included pistil to the corolla, smaller ellipsoid nutlets, and later flowering and fruiting season. Phylogenetic analyses, based on two nuclear ribosomal (ETS, ITS) and three chloroplast (rbcL, matK, trnL-F) DNA regions, confirmed that the new species was constructed as monophyletic, and that M. dadoensis and M. hangchouensis form a sister group with robust support. We hereby provide a detailed morphological description of M. dadoensis with its corresponding geographical distributions, and comparison tables of related taxa.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A new propaguliferous species of Pohlia (Mielichhoferiaceae, Bryopsida) from Tibet, China
- Author
-
Rui-Hong Wang, A. Jonathan Shaw, Xiao-Ming Shao, and Xiao-Rui Wang
- Subjects
Bryaceae ,Ranidae ,Sarcopterygii ,Asexual reproduction ,Bryophyta ,Foraminifera ,Fusulinata ,Plant Science ,Amphibia ,Gnathostomata ,Afusulinana ,Tournayellinae ,Animalia ,Sygera Mountain ,Plantae ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Tournayellidae ,Chromista ,Archaediscida ,Lithobates ,Pohlia ,Biota ,Bryopsida ,Osteichthyes ,axillary gemma ,Bryales ,Anura ,Tournayelloidea - Abstract
A new propaguliferous moss species, Pohlia tibetana X.R.Wang & X.M.Shao (Mielichhoferiaceae), from Tibet, southwest China, is described. The new species differs most saliently from other species of Pohlia by its combination of slender plants, loosely attached leaves and axillary solitary, and dark red and flower-like gemmae. In this paper, the line drawings, photographs, habit of the new species are provided and a morphological comparison of it with the similar species is made.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Re-circumscription of the mimosoid genus Entada including new combinations for all species of the phylogenetically nested Elephantorrhiza (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, mimosoid clade)
- Author
-
O’Donnell, Shawn A, Ringelberg, Jens J, Lewis, Gwilym P, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
Ecology ,Evolution ,Entada ,Fabales ,F800 ,Fabaceae ,monophyly ,Plant Science ,580 Plants (Botany) ,Biota ,extrafloral nectaries ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,10121 Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany ,taxonomy ,Elephantorrhiza ,Behavior and Systematics ,generic delimitation ,nomenclature ,10211 Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Recent phylogenomic analyses of 997 nuclear genes support the long-held view that the genus Entada is congeneric with Elephantorrhiza. Entada is resolved as monophyletic only if the genus Elephantorrhiza is subsumed within it. The two genera were distinguished solely by relatively minor differences in the mode of dehiscence of the fruits (a craspedium separating into one-seeded endocarp segments in Entada versus a craspedium with the whole fruit valve breaking away from the persistent replum in Elephantorrhiza) and the craspedial fruit type itself provides a shared synapomorphy for the re-circumscribed Entada. Here, we provide a synopsis of Entada, including 11 new combinations in total, for the eight species, one subspecies and one variety previously placed in Elephantorrhiza, as well as a new combination for a subspecies of Entada rheedei Spreng. not previously dealt with when Entada pursaetha DC. was placed in synonymy. These new combinations are: Entada burkei (Benth.) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada elephantina (Burch.) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada goetzei (Harms) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada goetzei subsp. lata (Brenan & Brummitt) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada obliqua (Burtt Davy) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada praetermissa (J.H. Ross) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada rangei (Harms) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada rheedei subsp. sinohimalensis (Grierson & D.G. Long) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada schinziana (Dinter) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; Entada woodii (E. Phillips) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov.; and Entada woodii var. pubescens (E. Phillips) S.A. O’Donnell & G.P. Lewis, comb. nov. We provide a revised circumscription of the genus Entada which now comprises 40 species distributed pantropically, with the greatest diversity of species in tropical Africa. We present a complete taxonomic synopsis, including a map showing the global distribution of the genus and photographs showing variation amongst species in habit, foliage, flowers and fruits. A short discussion about extrafloral nectaries, mainly observed in the Madagascan species, is presented.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A new generic circumscription of Hydrochorea (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, mimosoid clade) with an amphi-Atlantic distribution
- Author
-
Marcos Vinicius Batista Soares, Erik Jozef Mathieu Koenen, João Ricardo Vieira Iganci, and Marli Pires Morim
- Subjects
Fabales ,Fabaceae ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Cathormion ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,nomenclature ,Hydrochorea ,Balizia ,Plantae ,Albizia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Hydrochorea and Balizia were established to accommodate four and three species, respectively, that were previously included in different ingoid genera, based primarily on differences in fruit morphology. Both genera have Amazonia as their centre of diversity, extending to Central America and the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest. Previous phylogenetic evidence showed Balizia to be paraphyletic with respect to Hydrochorea, and species of Hydrochorea and Balizia were placed in a large unresolved polytomy with species of Jupunba. Here we present a new phylogenomic analysis based on 560 exons, from which 686 orthologous alignments were derived for gene tree inference. This analysis confirms a paraphyletic Balizia in relation to Hydrochorea, together with two African species formerly placed in Albizia nested within the clade. Jupunba macradenia was resolved as sister to the clade combining those taxa. However, quartet support is low for several of the branches at the base of the clade combining the genera Jupunba, Balizia and Hydrochorea, suggesting that rapid initial divergence in this group led to extensive incomplete lineage sorting and consequently poor phylogenetic resolution. Because of these phylogenomic complexities, we decided to use morphology as the main guide to consider Hydrochorea as a distinct genus from Jupunba, and Balizia as a new synonym for Hydrochorea. The taxonomic treatment includes the study of collections from various herbaria and fieldwork expeditions. We present a re-circumscribed Hydrochorea accommodating a total of 10 species, including six new combinations, five new synonyms, one new taxonomic status, two corrections of nomenclature category for lectotypes, and a second step lectotype and three new lectotypes. A new species from the Brazilian Amazon is described and illustrated. An identification key for all species of Hydrochorea is presented, together with comments and illustrations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Re-establishment of the genus Pseudalbizzia (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, mimosoid clade): the New World species formerly placed in Albizia
- Author
-
Aviles Peraza, Gabriela, Koenen, Erik J M, Riina, Ricarda, Hughes, Colin E, Ringelberg, Jens J, Carnevali Fernández-Concha, German, Ramírez Morillo, Ivón Mercedes, Can Itza, Lilia Lorena, Tamayo-Cen, Ivan, Ramírez Prado, Jorge Humberto, Cornejo, Xavier, Mattapha, Sawai, Duno de Stefano, Rodrigo, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
Neotropics ,Ecology ,Evolution ,Fabales ,Fabaceae ,monophyly ,Plant Science ,580 Plants (Botany) ,phylogeny ,Biota ,Arthrosamanea ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,10121 Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany ,Behavior and Systematics ,hydrochory ,10211 Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center ,Plantae ,Albizia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Following recent mimosoid phylogenetic and phylogenomic studies demonstrating the non-monophyly of the genus Albizia, we present a new molecular phylogeny focused on the neotropical species in the genus, with much denser taxon sampling than previous studies. Our aims were to test the monophyly of the neotropical section Arthrosamanea, resolve species relationships, and gain insights into the evolution of fruit morphology. We perform a Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of sequences of nuclear internal and external transcribed spacer regions and trace the evolution of fruit dehiscence and lomentiform pods. Our results find further support for the non-monophyly of the genus Albizia, and confirm the previously proposed segregation of Hesperalbizia, Hydrochorea, Balizia and Pseudosamanea. All species that were sampled from section Arthrosamanea form a clade that is sister to a clade composed of Jupunba, Punjuba, Balizia and Hydrochorea. We find that lomentiform fruits are independently derived from indehiscent septate fruits in both Hydrochorea and section Arthrosamanea. Our results show that morphological adaptations to hydrochory, associated with shifts into seasonally flooded habitats, have occurred several times independently in different geographic areas and different lineages within the ingoid clade. This suggests that environmental conditions have likely played a key role in the evolution of fruit types in Albizia and related genera. We resurrect the name Pseudalbizzia to accommodate the species of section Arthrosamanea, except for two species that were not sampled here but have been shown in other studies to be more closely related to other ingoid genera and we restrict the name Albizia s.s. to the species from Africa, Madagascar, Asia, Australia, and the Pacific. Twenty-one new nomenclatural combinations in Pseudalbizzia are proposed, including 16 species and 5 infraspecific varietal names. In addition to the type species Pseudalbizzia berteroana, the genus has 17 species distributed across tropical regions of the Americas, including the Caribbean. Finally, a new infrageneric classification into five sections is proposed and a distribution map of the species of Pseudalbizzia is presented.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Taxonomic study of a novel terrestrial alga, Spongiosarcinopsis qinghaiensis sp. nov. (Protosiphonaceae, Chlorophyta), from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
- Author
-
Qiufeng Yan, Huan Zhu, Jiao Fang, Benwen Liu, and Guoxiang Liu
- Subjects
new species ,Spongiosarcinopsis ,ITS2 secondary structure ,Chlorophyta ,Chlorophyceae ,phylogenetic analysis ,Chlamydomonadales ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Chlorophytina ,Protosiphonaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
There is only one species of Spongiosarcinopsis in the literature currently. It was found in gray soil in Russia for the first time. According to molecular data analysis results, the isolated algal strain is most closely related to Spongiosarcinopsis terrestris. Unlike Spongiosarcinopsis terrestris, the isolated strain was found on soil surfaces at high altitudes, the young vegetative cell is spherical, vegetative cells are relatively large, and pyrenoids are generally fewer. In view of such morphological differences, phylogenetic analysis results, and comparison of ITS2 secondary structure and ultrastructure, the strain isolated in the present study was proposed to be a novel species.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Hymenasplenium tholiformis (Aspleniaceae), a new fern species from southeastern Xizang, China based on morphological and molecular evidence
- Author
-
Yong-Lin Qiu, Ke-Wang Xu, Wen-Bin Ju, Wang-Lin Zhao, and Liang Zhang
- Subjects
pinna morphology ,Tracheophyta ,Medog ,Hymenasplenium ,H. excisum subclade ,Polypodiales ,Plant Science ,Polypodiopsida ,Plantae ,Biota ,Aspleniaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new species of Aspleniaceae, Hymenasplenium tholiformis sp. nov., is described from Medog County in southeastern Xizang, China. The new species is morphologically similar to H. apogamum and H. szechuanense, but the former has ascending pinnae, pinna apex obtuse to rounded, pinna-marginal teeth entire, and veins terminating just below marginal teeth. Phylogenetic analysis based on five plastid markers confirmed that this new species represents a diverging lineage in the H. excisum subclade of Hymenasplenium.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Hymenophyllum chamaecyparicola (Hymenophyllaceae), a new filmy fern species from Taiwan
- Author
-
Zhi-Xiang Chang, Tian-Chuan Hsu, and Li-Yaung Kuo
- Subjects
new species ,Tracheophyta ,Hymenophyllaceae ,Hymenophyllum ,Taiwan ,Hymenophyllales ,Hymenophylloideae ,Filmy fern ,Plant Science ,Polypodiopsida ,Plantae ,Biota ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Hymenophyllum chamaecyparicola T.C.Hsu & Z.X.Chang, a new filmy fern species (Hymenophyllaceae) has been described from Taiwan and illustrated based on morphological and phylogenetic evidence. Although the new species resembles members in the subgenus Mecodium, namely H. wrightii, our plastid phylogeny has revealed that it is genetically distant from H. wrightii and forms a clade nested within subg. Hymenophyllum. The most notable characteristic to differentiate H. chamaecyparicola from related species is the presence of minute spathulate hairs on the surface of the rachis and veins. Hymenophyllum chamaecyparicola is currently only known from a small area in northern Taiwan, and endemic to that country.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Paraphlomis jinggangshanensis (Lamiaceae), a new species from Jiangxi, China
- Author
-
Wan-Yi Zhao, Zhong Zhang, Qiang Fan, Chun-Quan Chen, Wen-Bo Liao, and David E. Boufford
- Subjects
Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Lamiaceae ,IUCN ,Paraphlomideae ,Paraphlomis ,Jinggangshan ,phylogenetic ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lamiales - Abstract
Paraphlomis jinggangshanensis (Lamiaceae), a new species from Jiangxi Province, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is morphologically similar to P. intermedia, but can be easily distinguished from the latter by its cordate leaf base (vs. cuneate, decurrent), stem and calyx tube with glandular hairs (vs. short pubescent), and glabrous anthers (vs. ciliate anthers). A phylogenetic analysis, based on ITS regions, suggests that P. jinggangshanensis represents a separate branch in Paraphlomis and is closely related to Clade II. It is currently known only from Jinggangshan National Natural Reserve. Because of its limited distribution and small population size, the species was assessed as Near Threatened (NT) according to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Erythroxylum austroguangdongense (Erythroxylaceae), a new species from Guangdong, China
- Author
-
Chun-Mei He, Xin-Xin Zhou, Xue-He Ye, Weijun Chen, and Yi-Hua Tong
- Subjects
Coca family ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Malpighiales ,morphology ,Plant Science ,Plantae ,Biota ,Erythroxylaceae ,Erythroxylum ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Erythroxylum austroguangdongense (Erythroxylaceae), a new species from Guangdong Province, China, is described and illustrated. This new species is morphologically most similar to E. calyptratum, but is distinguished by the leathery leaf blade with fewer pairs of secondary veins and flowers borne on leafless nodes of the basal part of the current branch with much longer pedicels and sub-rectangular petal appendages. This is the second native species of Erythroxylum recorded from China.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A new classification of C4- Atriplex species in Russia, with the first alien record of Atriplex flabellum (Chenopodiaceae, Amaranthaceae) from North Siberia
- Author
-
Maria Kushunina, Alexander P. Sukhorukov, Alexander Sennikov, and Botany
- Subjects
Россия ,Amaranthaceae ,PHYLOGENY ,CHENOPODIOIDEAE ,Сибирь ,Alien species ,Plant Science ,11831 Plant biology ,Atriplex flabellum ,Biota ,Caryophyllales ,Russia ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,таксономия ,лебеда веероплодная ,амарантовые ,маревые ,Atriplex ,distribution ,чужеродные виды ,Plantae ,systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
For a long time, the systematics of Atriplex was based solely on morphological characters and leaf anatomy. The latest worldwide phylogenetic study of Atriplex significantly improved our knowledge about the relationships within the genus, but a new classification has not been put forward thus far. Here we re-evaluate the taxonomy of C4-species of Atriplex that are native to Russia. Seven species are classified into two sections, A. sect. Obione (incl. A. sect. Sclerocalymma, syn. nov.) (A. altaica, A. centralasiatica, A. rosea, A. sibirica, and A. sphaeromorpha), and A. sect. Obionopsis (incl. A. sect. Psammophila, syn. nov.) (A. fominii and A. tatarica). Although the majority of Eurasian C4-species have similar morphology, leafy inflorescence is a typical character for A. sect. Obione. The members of A. sect. Obionopsis are characterised mostly by aphyllous inflorescences, but some species (A. laciniata, A. pratovii, and A. tornabenei) have leafy inflorescences. Geographically, almost all members of A. sect. Obione are confined to Central Asia, although A. rosea is a typical Mediterranean element and A. argentea occurs in North America. The representatives of A. sect. Obionopsis are distributed mostly in the Mediterranean and the Irano-Turanian floristic region. The alien status of A. rosea, A. sibirica and A. tatarica is discussed. Atriplex flabellum, a desert species from the Irano-Turanian region, is reported for the first time from Russia (Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District, North Siberia) as a casual alien. This species occupies a phylogenetic position distant from both aforementioned sections. An identification key to all C4-species of the genus growing in Russia is given, and a sectional checklist with updated nomenclature and revised synonymy is provided.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Nomenclatural notes of Sabina convallium var. microsperma (Cupressaceae)
- Author
-
Yong Yang and Keith Rushforth
- Subjects
Cupressacae ,Pinales ,Cupressaceae ,Pinopsida ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Juniperus convallium ,Tracheophyta ,Juniperus ,nomenclature ,Plantae ,Sabina convallium var. microsperma ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Juniperus convallium convallium ,Conifer - Abstract
The name Sabina convallium var. microsperma W.C.Cheng & W.T.Wang was not validly published when it was first described in 1975, but was validated in 1978 at the same time as the specific combination Sabina convallium (Rehder & E.H.Wilson) W.C.Cheng & W.T.Wang was validly published in Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae. Under Art. 41.6 of the Shenzhen Code, other names based onSabina convallium var. microsperma were valid, including Sabinamicrosperma (W.C.Cheng & L.K.Fu) W.C.Cheng & L.K.Fu, Juniperus convallium var. microsperma (W.C.Cheng & L.K.Fu) Silba, Juniperus microsperma (W.C.Cheng & L.K.Fu) R.P.Adams, despite the reference of the basionym being erroneously cited when these authors made the new combinations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Euonymus aquifolium (Celastraceae): Rediscovered in flowering with respect to its taxonomy, nomenclature, and rarity
- Author
-
Jun Hu, Jun-Yi Zhang, Ding-Xiang Yu, Hong Jiang, Bo Xu, Qing Liu, and Hai He
- Subjects
Celastrales ,endemic species ,Plant Science ,Celastraceae ,Celastroideae ,Glyptopetalum ,Euonymus aquifolium ,Biota ,flora of China ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Glyptopetalum aquifolium ,nomenclature ,floral character ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A small population of Euonymus aquifolium (Celastraceae) with flowering plants was discovered more than 100 kilometers away from its type locality. The incomplete original description of this species is supplemented here with floral materials since it is known from only two gatherings of fruiting specimens. Its 5-merous flowers and two ovules per locule support its position in Euonymus, and this inference is further reinforced by phylogenetic analysis based on the nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) of rDNA. The specific epithet has long been treated as “aquifolius” to agree with the generic gender of Euonymus. But after examination of the protologues of this and other related species described simultaneously by the same authors, as well as their handwritten annotations attached on the type specimens, we conclude that the epithet aquifolium was used as a noun and it should be retained unchanged. Despite this newly discovered population some 100 kilometers away from its type locality, this species is still assessed as Critical Endangered (CR) according to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Taxonomic notes on Sorbus megalocarpa (Rosaceae) and related taxa
- Author
-
Xin Chen, JianHui Ma, and LiYang Geng
- Subjects
synonymization ,Plant Science ,resurrection ,Biota ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Amygdaloideae ,taxonomy ,Sorbus ,Wilsonaria ,Wilsonaria megalocarpa ,Rosales ,Plantae ,Rosaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Four Sorbus taxa endemic to China, S. arguta, S. guanxianensis, S. megalocarpa var. megalocarpa and S. megalocarpa var. cuneata, are morphologically similar to one another in having large brown fruits with persistent calyx and dense lenticels. In literature, either all of the four taxa were accepted, or two of them, S. arguta and S. megalocarpa var. cuneata, were treated as synonyms of S. megalocarpa var. megalocarpa, or S. guanxianensis alone was dubious. In this study, based on morphological comparison, S. arguta is reinstated for its relatively small inflorescence, small fruit and timing of flowering after leaves are unfolded. S. megalocarpa var. cuneata is confirmed as a synonym and S. guanxianensis is proposed as a new heterotypic synonym of S. megalocarpa.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Typification of six names in Camellia (Theaceae)
- Author
-
Dongwei Zhao
- Subjects
Thea ,Theaceae ,Camellia ,Plant Science ,Biota ,Caryophyllales ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,lectotypification ,Pentaphylacaceae ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ericales ,Asteropeiaceae - Abstract
Six names in Camellia or its synonym Thea, including Camellia reticulata f. simplex, C. symplocifolia, Thea forrestii, T. lanceolata var. stenophylla, T. megacarpa and T. yunnanensis are lectotypified here with nomenclatural and taxonomic notes provided.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.