« Typhaceae » : différence entre les versions

De Semantic MediaWiki - Sandbox

FNA>Volume Importer
Aucun résumé des modifications
 
m (1 révision importée : Flora of North America import)
 
(Aucune différence)

Dernière version du 29 février 2020 à 08:31

FNA content
The following content has been copied from the Flora of North America wiki for the purposes of demonstration and educational training. It should not convey a claim of ownership or any other intellectual property to the written content.
familyTyphaceae
Erreur d’expression : caractère de ponctuation « { » non reconnu.
A. L. Jussieu
[[Author:{{#show: Typhaceae|?Author}}|{{#show: Typhaceae|?Author}}]]
Treatment appears in FNA Volume::Volume 22. Treatment on page 278.
[[{{#ask:Plate of taxon::Typhaceae|link=none}}|300px|Please click on the illustration for a higher resolution version.]]
Illustrator: {{#show: Typhaceae|?illustrator}}

Copyright: {{#show: Typhaceae|?illustration copyright}}

{{#set:Illustration=Present}} __SHOWFACTBOX__Herbs, perennial, of fresh to slightly brackish wetlands, often emergent, rhizomatous, caulescent in flower, smooth, glabrous. Leaves basal and cauline, 2-ranked, mostly ascending; sheaths open, margins overlapping, clear, summit tapered into blade or auriculate; blades twisted into loose helix, narrowly linear-attenuate, apex acute, aerenchyma prominent. Inflorescences 1, terminal, erect, equaled or exceeded by cauline leaves, cylindric, spikelike (hereafter "spikes"); staminate spike flowers deciduous but axis generally persistent; staminate spike distal to pistillate spike; young spikes subtended by early-deciduous bracts resembling reduced foliage leaves, 1 bract subtending pistillate spike, 1 bract subtending and several within staminate spike; ,staminate spike flowers deciduous but axis generally persistent; staminate axis with numerous simple or branched scales arising among flowers; pistillate axis with numerous projections ("compound pedicels"), evident on denuded fruiting spike, each bearing several flowers; in some species flowers subtended by slender bracteoles. Flowers unisexual, staminate and pistillate on same plants, numerous, densely packed in unisexual spikes, minute, wind-pollinated (stigmas receptive several days before pollen is shed); perianth probably represented by staminate scales and by hairs on stipes of pistillate flowers. Staminate flowers stipitate; stamens 1–several, filaments connate; anthers basifixed, connective distally extended. Pistillate flowers hypogynous, stipitate (stipe bearing numerous straight hairs, developing after flowering, acting in wind dispersal of fruits); pistils 1, 1-carpellate; ovariesy 1-locular; placentation apical; ovules 1; styles 1, unbranched; stigmas 1, whitish or green, drying brown, 1-sided, smooth; agamous flowers numerous (ovaries modified after flowering as carpodia). Fruits follicles, fusiform; pericarp clear, hyalinetransparent, splitting longitudinally in water to release seed. Seeds: endosperm starchy, oily; embryo cylindric.

Distribution

{{#vardefine: legacyMap | {{#ask: Distribution map for taxon::typhaceae |mainlabel= |link=none }} }}{{#Distribution Maps: {{#show: Typhaceae|?Taxon rank|link=none}}

|Boreal to tropical regions worldwide.

|

|{{#var: legacyMap}} }} Boreal to tropical regions worldwide.

Discussion

The extensive literature on morphology and taxonomy of Typhaceae has been recently reviewed by (U. Müller-Doblies and D. Müller-Doblies (1977); R. M. T. Dahlgren and H. T. Clifford (1982); R. M. T. Dahlgren et al. (19853); and J. W. Thieret and J. O. Luken (1996). The inflorescence is probably reduced from a compound structure.

Sparganium and Typha are very similar and perhaps should be placed in one family, as summarized by J. W. Thieret and J. O. Luken (1996): T (J. W. Thieret and J. O. Luken 1996). Other authors (e.g., D. Müller-Doblies 1970; U. Müller-Doblies and D. Müller-Doblies 1977; W. Schultze-Motel 1980) placed Sparganium in the Typhaceae.

Pre-Englerian [authors] ... placed Typha and Sparganium together in a single family, the Typhaceae. [H. G. A.] Engler (1886) put these genera in separate families, thus starting a tradition that has been followed by almost all subsequent authors until recently, when [D.] Müller-Doblies (1970) re-examined the relationships of the genera and concluded that "the five different characters by which Engler justified the family Sparganiaceae are wrong or, in two cases, without any significance... The few remaining but very obvious differences may be explained to a large extend [sic] by an adaptation of Typha to anemochory [wind-dispersal of propagules]...."

The phylogenetic relationships of the Typhales with other families remain controversial, and it seems best to treat the taxon as an isolated order of uncertain relationships pending further research. Various authors have placed the Typhales close to or within the Pandanales, Arales, Poales, Liliales, Pontederiales, or Philydrales or in the Commeliniflorae generally close to the Cyperales and Juncales (J. W. Thieret and J. O. Luken 1996).

Genus Genera 1, species ca. 8–13 (3 in the flora).

Selected References

Erreur d’expression : caractère de ponctuation « { » non reconnu.

{{#set:

|Taxon name=Typhaceae
|FNA ID=Typhaceae
|Authority=A. L. Jussieu
|Taxon rank=family
|Parent rank=
|Synonyms=|+sep=;
|Taxon family=Typhaceae
|Phenology=
|Habitat=|+sep=,
|Elevation=
|illustrator=John Myers|+sep=;
|illustration copyright=Flora of North America Association
|Distribution=Boreal to tropical regions worldwide.|+sep=;
|Reference=berlin-a;briggs1968a;dahlgren1982a;dahlgren1985c;doblies1970a;doblies1977a;dugle1972a;eckardt1964a;engler1886a;fassett1952a;finlayson1983a;grace1982a;grace1986a;grace1988a;harris1963a;hotchkiss1949a;kaul1974a;kronfeld1889a;little1979c;melchior1964a;morton1975a;motel1980a;naughton1966a;ramey1981a;smith1967a;smith1987a;thieret1996a;tompkins1983a|+sep=;
|Publication title=
|Publication year=
|special status=
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/f50eec43f223ca0e34566be0b046453a0960e173/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V22/V22_377.xml
|subfamily=
|tribe=
|Taxon parent=
|species=

}}

Les cookies nous aident à fournir nos services. En utilisant nos services, vous acceptez notre utilisation de cookies.