@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19470,
author = {Hanno Schaefer and Mark Carine and Fred Rumsey},
title = {From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Azores, Azorean endemic, DNA barcoding, invasive ferns, Marsileaceae, molecular phylogenetics},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The clover fern Marsilea azorica was described in 1983 from the isolated Azores archipelago in the Northern Atlantic, where it is restricted to a single roadside pond. Thought to be an extremely local endemic, it was subsequently listed as a conservation priority species for the Azores, Macaronesia, and Europe, included as ?critically endangered? on the IUCN Red List, and as ?strictly protected? species by the Bern Convention and the European Union?s Habitats Directive. However, in this paper, we present morphological and molecular data (rbcL gene, rps4 gene, rps4-trnS spacer and trnL-trnF spacer sequences), which demonstrate that M. azorica is conspecific with M. hirsuta, a species native to Australia but widely cultivated and locally invasive in the Southern United States. Based on our DNA data, we conclude that the Azorean plants are most likely a recent introduction to the Azores from Florida. We recommend removal of the Azorean Marsilea from conservation priority lists. While there is so far no evidence that the small existing population threatens native species, further spread in the Azores should be prevented.}
}
Citation for Study 11206
Citation title:
"From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien".
Study name:
"From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien".
This study is part of submission 11196
(Status: Published).
Citation
Schaefer H., Carine M., & Rumsey F. 2011. From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien. Systematic Botany, .
Authors
-
Schaefer H.
(submitter)
0049-8161715884
-
Carine M.
-
Rumsey F.
Abstract
The clover fern Marsilea azorica was described in 1983 from the isolated Azores archipelago in the Northern Atlantic, where it is restricted to a single roadside pond. Thought to be an extremely local endemic, it was subsequently listed as a conservation priority species for the Azores, Macaronesia, and Europe, included as ?critically endangered? on the IUCN Red List, and as ?strictly protected? species by the Bern Convention and the European Union?s Habitats Directive. However, in this paper, we present morphological and molecular data (rbcL gene, rps4 gene, rps4-trnS spacer and trnL-trnF spacer sequences), which demonstrate that M. azorica is conspecific with M. hirsuta, a species native to Australia but widely cultivated and locally invasive in the Southern United States. Based on our DNA data, we conclude that the Azorean plants are most likely a recent introduction to the Azores from Florida. We recommend removal of the Azorean Marsilea from conservation priority lists. While there is so far no evidence that the small existing population threatens native species, further spread in the Azores should be prevented.
Keywords
Azores, Azorean endemic, DNA barcoding, invasive ferns, Marsileaceae, molecular phylogenetics
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11206
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19470,
author = {Hanno Schaefer and Mark Carine and Fred Rumsey},
title = {From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Azores, Azorean endemic, DNA barcoding, invasive ferns, Marsileaceae, molecular phylogenetics},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The clover fern Marsilea azorica was described in 1983 from the isolated Azores archipelago in the Northern Atlantic, where it is restricted to a single roadside pond. Thought to be an extremely local endemic, it was subsequently listed as a conservation priority species for the Azores, Macaronesia, and Europe, included as ?critically endangered? on the IUCN Red List, and as ?strictly protected? species by the Bern Convention and the European Union?s Habitats Directive. However, in this paper, we present morphological and molecular data (rbcL gene, rps4 gene, rps4-trnS spacer and trnL-trnF spacer sequences), which demonstrate that M. azorica is conspecific with M. hirsuta, a species native to Australia but widely cultivated and locally invasive in the Southern United States. Based on our DNA data, we conclude that the Azorean plants are most likely a recent introduction to the Azores from Florida. We recommend removal of the Azorean Marsilea from conservation priority lists. While there is so far no evidence that the small existing population threatens native species, further spread in the Azores should be prevented.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19470
AU - Schaefer,Hanno
AU - Carine,Mark
AU - Rumsey,Fred
T1 - From European priority species to invasive weed: Marsilea azorica is a misidentified alien
PY - 2011
KW - Azores
KW - Azorean endemic
KW - DNA barcoding
KW - invasive ferns
KW - Marsileaceae
KW - molecular phylogenetics
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The clover fern Marsilea azorica was described in 1983 from the isolated Azores archipelago in the Northern Atlantic, where it is restricted to a single roadside pond. Thought to be an extremely local endemic, it was subsequently listed as a conservation priority species for the Azores, Macaronesia, and Europe, included as ?critically endangered? on the IUCN Red List, and as ?strictly protected? species by the Bern Convention and the European Union?s Habitats Directive. However, in this paper, we present morphological and molecular data (rbcL gene, rps4 gene, rps4-trnS spacer and trnL-trnF spacer sequences), which demonstrate that M. azorica is conspecific with M. hirsuta, a species native to Australia but widely cultivated and locally invasive in the Southern United States. Based on our DNA data, we conclude that the Azorean plants are most likely a recent introduction to the Azores from Florida. We recommend removal of the Azorean Marsilea from conservation priority lists. While there is so far no evidence that the small existing population threatens native species, further spread in the Azores should be prevented.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -