@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25697,
author = {Steven P Sylvester and Dietmar Quandt and Lolita Ammann and Michael Kessler},
title = {The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov.},
year = {2016},
keywords = {alpine; Andes; Bayesian analysis; dwarfism; Lobelioideae; smallest eudicot},
doi = {10.12705/652},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Taxon},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Botanists and plant morphologists have long been fascinated by how certain species can exhibit such reduced morphologies
that even their identification to genus- or family-level becomes difficult. Such was the case with Lysipomia mitsyae
sp. nov., an exceptionally small plant discovered in the Peruvian Andes which bears lobelioid characteristics but differs in size
by an order of magnitude from the current smallest members known from the entire Campanulaceae and lacks diagnostic characters
allowing it to be reliably placed to genus-level. Molecular analyses of trnL-F, composed of a representative Lobelioideae
sampling, place the samples within the genus Lysipomia, requiring that amendments be made to the description of the genus.
Supplementary ITS analyses of a representative generic sampling indicate a close relationship to Lysipomia sphagnophila and
L. multiflora. We here describe the world?s smallest Campanulaceae, Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov., and discuss its phylogenetic
and systematic relationships to the other members of the genus. Its highly reduced morphology, which has given it status as
the smallest Campanulaceae and, quite possibly, the world?s smallest eudicot, is discussed in the light of current knowledge
on the physiological and anatomical constraints on alpine plant growth and survival.}
}
Citation for Study 19056
Citation title:
"The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov.".
Study name:
"The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov.".
This study is part of submission 19056
(Status: Published).
Citation
Sylvester S.P., Quandt D., Ammann L., & Kessler M. 2016. The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov. Taxon, .
Authors
-
Sylvester S.P.
-
Quandt D.
(submitter)
+49228733315
-
Ammann L.
-
Kessler M.
Abstract
Botanists and plant morphologists have long been fascinated by how certain species can exhibit such reduced morphologies
that even their identification to genus- or family-level becomes difficult. Such was the case with Lysipomia mitsyae
sp. nov., an exceptionally small plant discovered in the Peruvian Andes which bears lobelioid characteristics but differs in size
by an order of magnitude from the current smallest members known from the entire Campanulaceae and lacks diagnostic characters
allowing it to be reliably placed to genus-level. Molecular analyses of trnL-F, composed of a representative Lobelioideae
sampling, place the samples within the genus Lysipomia, requiring that amendments be made to the description of the genus.
Supplementary ITS analyses of a representative generic sampling indicate a close relationship to Lysipomia sphagnophila and
L. multiflora. We here describe the world?s smallest Campanulaceae, Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov., and discuss its phylogenetic
and systematic relationships to the other members of the genus. Its highly reduced morphology, which has given it status as
the smallest Campanulaceae and, quite possibly, the world?s smallest eudicot, is discussed in the light of current knowledge
on the physiological and anatomical constraints on alpine plant growth and survival.
Keywords
alpine; Andes; Bayesian analysis; dwarfism; Lobelioideae; smallest eudicot
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S19056
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25697,
author = {Steven P Sylvester and Dietmar Quandt and Lolita Ammann and Michael Kessler},
title = {The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov.},
year = {2016},
keywords = {alpine; Andes; Bayesian analysis; dwarfism; Lobelioideae; smallest eudicot},
doi = {10.12705/652},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Taxon},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Botanists and plant morphologists have long been fascinated by how certain species can exhibit such reduced morphologies
that even their identification to genus- or family-level becomes difficult. Such was the case with Lysipomia mitsyae
sp. nov., an exceptionally small plant discovered in the Peruvian Andes which bears lobelioid characteristics but differs in size
by an order of magnitude from the current smallest members known from the entire Campanulaceae and lacks diagnostic characters
allowing it to be reliably placed to genus-level. Molecular analyses of trnL-F, composed of a representative Lobelioideae
sampling, place the samples within the genus Lysipomia, requiring that amendments be made to the description of the genus.
Supplementary ITS analyses of a representative generic sampling indicate a close relationship to Lysipomia sphagnophila and
L. multiflora. We here describe the world?s smallest Campanulaceae, Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov., and discuss its phylogenetic
and systematic relationships to the other members of the genus. Its highly reduced morphology, which has given it status as
the smallest Campanulaceae and, quite possibly, the world?s smallest eudicot, is discussed in the light of current knowledge
on the physiological and anatomical constraints on alpine plant growth and survival.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 25697
AU - Sylvester,Steven P
AU - Quandt,Dietmar
AU - Ammann,Lolita
AU - Kessler,Michael
T1 - The world?s smallest Campanulaceae: Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov.
PY - 2016
KW - alpine; Andes; Bayesian analysis; dwarfism; Lobelioideae; smallest eudicot
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.12705/652
N2 - Botanists and plant morphologists have long been fascinated by how certain species can exhibit such reduced morphologies
that even their identification to genus- or family-level becomes difficult. Such was the case with Lysipomia mitsyae
sp. nov., an exceptionally small plant discovered in the Peruvian Andes which bears lobelioid characteristics but differs in size
by an order of magnitude from the current smallest members known from the entire Campanulaceae and lacks diagnostic characters
allowing it to be reliably placed to genus-level. Molecular analyses of trnL-F, composed of a representative Lobelioideae
sampling, place the samples within the genus Lysipomia, requiring that amendments be made to the description of the genus.
Supplementary ITS analyses of a representative generic sampling indicate a close relationship to Lysipomia sphagnophila and
L. multiflora. We here describe the world?s smallest Campanulaceae, Lysipomia mitsyae sp. nov., and discuss its phylogenetic
and systematic relationships to the other members of the genus. Its highly reduced morphology, which has given it status as
the smallest Campanulaceae and, quite possibly, the world?s smallest eudicot, is discussed in the light of current knowledge
on the physiological and anatomical constraints on alpine plant growth and survival.
L3 - 10.12705/652
JF - Taxon
VL -
IS -
ER -