svg-backdrop

Cyperaceae source details

Molina, A.; Acedo, C.; Llamas, F. (2008). Taxonomy and new taxa in Eurasian Carex (Section Phaestoglochin, Cyperaceae). Systematic Botany. 33(2): 237-250.
511940
10.1600/036364408784571563 [view]
Molina, A.; Acedo, C.; Llamas, F.
2008
Taxonomy and new taxa in Eurasian Carex (Section Phaestoglochin, Cyperaceae).
Systematic Botany
33(2): 237-250
Publication
Supported by detailed phenetic macro- and micromorphological characters, ecology, chorological studies, numerical and phylogenetic analysis, and all known data about Eurasian species of the Carex muricata group (sect. Phaestoglochin), together with their biogeography, we have redefined this group and its subordinate aggregates. Four new taxa are described, illustrated and compared with putative related species: Carex spicata subsp. andresii, endemic to the inner part of the Iberian Peninsula, has the perigynum beak smooth and slightly corky at the base. Carex omeyica, from the southern mountains of Spain and North Africa, has erect-spreading oval perigynia and oval brown glumes without scarious margins. Two new subspecies of C. muricata are described: C. muricata subsp. cesanensis, from European mountains, has a big trullate perigynium 4.5–5.25 mm long with a short beak, and C. muricata subsp. ashokae, from the Eastern European Mountains to the Himalaya, has an oval perigynium 5–6 mm long with a longer beak. On the other hand, C. pairae is not a taxon subordinate to C. muricata. A key to the new and related taxa belonging to the aggregate is included.
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2025-07-23 07:01:27Z
created
2025-08-21 07:56:39Z
changed

Holotype MA 0100410621, identified as Carex omeyica Molina Gonz., Acedo & Llamas
 Description

Plants without or with short rhizomes. Culms: 20–100 cm × 1.0–2.0 mm at midheight, obtusely trigonous, ... [details]

 Description

A Carice spicatae differt perigyniis ovatis, sine texto spongioso ad basim; a Carice pairae, propter ... [details]

 Etymology

The new species is named from the Omeyas, a family of caliphs in Cordoba (Al-Andalus) between 929–1031 A.D. [details]

 Habitat

Carex omeyica occurs in forests of middle-high mountain, 1,500–1,700 m, in gullies on cedar or oak forests ... [details]