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Cyperaceae source details

Morales-Alonso, A.; Muñoz-Schüler, P.; Pereira-Silva, L.; Donadío, S.; Martín-Bravo, S.; Jiménez-Mejías, P. (2024). A synopsis of Carex subgenus Psyllophorae, sect. Junciformes (Cyperaceae) in South America. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 207(4): 321–361.
497240
10.1093/botlinnean/boae038 [view]
Morales-Alonso, A.; Muñoz-Schüler, P.; Pereira-Silva, L.; Donadío, S.; Martín-Bravo, S.; Jiménez-Mejías, P.
2024
A synopsis of <i>Carex</i> subgenus <i>Psyllophorae</i>, sect. <i>Junciformes</i> (Cyperaceae) in South America
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
207(4): 321–361.
Publication
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
This is the second study of a series of thorough studies into the taxonomy and systematics of Carex in South America. Here, we present the systematic placement, taxonomic account, formal typifications, and summarized distributions for the 31 accepted South America species of Carex subg. Psyllophorae, all belonging to sect. Junciformes. We have conducted an exhaustive revision of literature, more than 400 specimens from 32 South and North American and European herbaria have been studied, and a Sanger phylogenetic study with four DNA regions and morphometric analyses for the C. phalaroides group have been performed. We present an enlarged phylogenetic study where sect. Junciformes sampling has increased by 11 species regarding previous studies, only lacking four species of the group (C. herba-alpacae, C. moorei, C. nelmesiana, and C. transandina). South American species of sect. Junciformes are grouped into four major lineages: C. camptoglochin Clade, Aciculares Clade (South America and Australia–New Zealand), C. phalaroides group, and Junciformes Clade. We have resolved the C. phalaroides complex into six independent species with a clear geographic structure. We successfully unravelled the systematic placement of three species included here for the first time (C. boelckeiana, C. reicheana, and C. manuelbarrosii). An identification key is provided for the studied species. We propose 30 new typifications, and four new species are described (C. herba-alpacae, C. manuelbarrosii, C. melliza, and C. via-montana).
America, South
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2024-10-22 08:35:48Z
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 Description

Plants very small, growing in clumps; fertile culms 2–4.1 cm × 0.55–0.9 mm, erect, smooth. Leaves ... [details]

 Description

Plants cespitose; fertile culms 7.5–34.5 cm × 0.6–1.1 mm, erect, smooth. Leaves 9.4–24 × 0.55–0.9, ... [details]

 Description

Laxly cespitose. Fertile culms 12.5–20 cm × 0.4–1 mm, trigonous, slightly scabrid. Basal sheaths brownish, ... [details]

 Description

Laxly caespitose, diminutive, base of shoots more or less thickened. Acaulescent or fertile culms 0.4–2 ... [details]

 Diagnosis

A species similar to Carex vallis-pulchrae Phil., from which it differs by the utricles sessile or subsessile, ... [details]

 Diagnosis

A species similar to Carex andina Phil., from which it differs by its scales, exhibiting a greenish coloration at ... [details]

 Diagnosis

This species is similar to C. phalaroides, from which it is distinguished by its densely pubescent utricles, ... [details]

 Diagnosis

This species is similar to C. phalaroides, from which it is mainly distinguished by its size. Carex via-montana ... [details]

 Etymology

From the Latin ‘herba’, herb or grass, and the animal alpaca (Vicugna pacos), a domestic camelid widely bred in ... [details]

 Etymology

Commemorating Manuel Barros, 1880–1973, an Argentinian botanist honorary collaborator at Buenos Aires Natural ... [details]

 Etymology

From ‘mellizo’, one of the terms for twin in Spanish, referring to its overall similitude with C. phalaroides ... [details]

 Etymology

From the Latin via, path, way, and montana, mountain, regarding to its typical location on the margins of paths at ... [details]