@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref15988,
author = {Robert K Jansen},
title = {Systematics of Spilanthes (Compositae: Heliantheae).},
year = {1981},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {6},
number = {},
pages = {231--257},
abstract = {Spilanthes is widespread throughout the New and Old World tropics. Morphological and chromosomal evidence supports separation of the genus into two genera, Spilanthes and Acmella, which can be distinguished by at least eight morphological characters and by distinctive basic chromosome numbers. Studies of other genera within the Heliantheae suggest that both Spilanthes and Acmella are allied to Salmea in the Verbesininae. Spilanthes is here recognized as comprising six species distributed primarily in sandy soils of South America, the West Indies, northern Australia, Malaysia, and central and western Africa. A phylogenetic reconstruction employing cladistic methods suggests that the New World species, S. leiocarpa, S. nervosa, S. paraguayensis, and S. urens, are more closely allied to each other than to the Old World species. The cladistic analysis further suggests a closer relationship between the Australo-Malaysian S. anactina and the New World species than with S. costata, a species restricted to central and western tropical Africa.}
}
Citation for Study 162
Citation title:
"Systematics of Spilanthes (Compositae: Heliantheae).".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2x2x96c15c46c42
(Status: Published).
Citation
Jansen R.K. 1981. Systematics of Spilanthes (Compositae: Heliantheae). Systematic Botany, 6: 231-257.
Authors
Abstract
Spilanthes is widespread throughout the New and Old World tropics. Morphological and chromosomal evidence supports separation of the genus into two genera, Spilanthes and Acmella, which can be distinguished by at least eight morphological characters and by distinctive basic chromosome numbers. Studies of other genera within the Heliantheae suggest that both Spilanthes and Acmella are allied to Salmea in the Verbesininae. Spilanthes is here recognized as comprising six species distributed primarily in sandy soils of South America, the West Indies, northern Australia, Malaysia, and central and western Africa. A phylogenetic reconstruction employing cladistic methods suggests that the New World species, S. leiocarpa, S. nervosa, S. paraguayensis, and S. urens, are more closely allied to each other than to the Old World species. The cladistic analysis further suggests a closer relationship between the Australo-Malaysian S. anactina and the New World species than with S. costata, a species restricted to central and western tropical Africa.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S162
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref15988,
author = {Robert K Jansen},
title = {Systematics of Spilanthes (Compositae: Heliantheae).},
year = {1981},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {6},
number = {},
pages = {231--257},
abstract = {Spilanthes is widespread throughout the New and Old World tropics. Morphological and chromosomal evidence supports separation of the genus into two genera, Spilanthes and Acmella, which can be distinguished by at least eight morphological characters and by distinctive basic chromosome numbers. Studies of other genera within the Heliantheae suggest that both Spilanthes and Acmella are allied to Salmea in the Verbesininae. Spilanthes is here recognized as comprising six species distributed primarily in sandy soils of South America, the West Indies, northern Australia, Malaysia, and central and western Africa. A phylogenetic reconstruction employing cladistic methods suggests that the New World species, S. leiocarpa, S. nervosa, S. paraguayensis, and S. urens, are more closely allied to each other than to the Old World species. The cladistic analysis further suggests a closer relationship between the Australo-Malaysian S. anactina and the New World species than with S. costata, a species restricted to central and western tropical Africa.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 15988
AU - Jansen,Robert K
T1 - Systematics of Spilanthes (Compositae: Heliantheae).
PY - 1981
UR -
N2 - Spilanthes is widespread throughout the New and Old World tropics. Morphological and chromosomal evidence supports separation of the genus into two genera, Spilanthes and Acmella, which can be distinguished by at least eight morphological characters and by distinctive basic chromosome numbers. Studies of other genera within the Heliantheae suggest that both Spilanthes and Acmella are allied to Salmea in the Verbesininae. Spilanthes is here recognized as comprising six species distributed primarily in sandy soils of South America, the West Indies, northern Australia, Malaysia, and central and western Africa. A phylogenetic reconstruction employing cladistic methods suggests that the New World species, S. leiocarpa, S. nervosa, S. paraguayensis, and S. urens, are more closely allied to each other than to the Old World species. The cladistic analysis further suggests a closer relationship between the Australo-Malaysian S. anactina and the New World species than with S. costata, a species restricted to central and western tropical Africa.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL - 6
IS -
SP - 231
EP - 257
ER -