@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17382,
author = {Hanno Schaefer and Alexander Kocyan and Susanne S Renner},
title = {Linnaeosicyos (Cucurbitaceae), a new genus for Trichosanthes amara, the sister species to all other Sicyeae},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The Old World genus Trichosanthes has flowers with strikingly fringed petals, and Linnaeus therefore placed a species from Hispaniola that he only knew from an illustration (showing the fringed petals) in that genus. The species remained hidden from the attention of subsequent workers until acquiring new relevance in the context of molecular-biogeographic work on Cucurbitaceae. Based on molecular data, it is the sister to all Sicyeae, a New World clade of about 125 species in 16 genera. We here place this species in a new genus, Linnaeosicyos, describe and illustrate it based on new collections, and discuss its phylogenetic context using molecular and morphological data. Judging from Dominican amber, elements of the flora of Hispaniola date back at least 30 my, and the occurrence on the island of five endemic species of Cucurbitaceae (Linnaeosicyos amara from Benincaseae, Melothria domingensis from Sicyeae, Sicana fragrans from Cucurbiteae, and the sister species Anacaona sphaerica and Penelopeia suburceolata also from Cucurbiteae) points to its long occupation by Cucurbitaceae.}
}
Citation for Study 1906
Citation title:
"Linnaeosicyos (Cucurbitaceae), a new genus for Trichosanthes amara, the sister species to all other Sicyeae".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1883
(Status: Published).
Citation
Schaefer H., Kocyan A., & Renner S.S. 2007. Linnaeosicyos (Cucurbitaceae), a new genus for Trichosanthes amara, the sister species to all other Sicyeae. Systematic Botany, null.
Authors
-
Schaefer H.
-
Kocyan A.
-
Renner S.S.
011-49-(0)89-17861250
Abstract
The Old World genus Trichosanthes has flowers with strikingly fringed petals, and Linnaeus therefore placed a species from Hispaniola that he only knew from an illustration (showing the fringed petals) in that genus. The species remained hidden from the attention of subsequent workers until acquiring new relevance in the context of molecular-biogeographic work on Cucurbitaceae. Based on molecular data, it is the sister to all Sicyeae, a New World clade of about 125 species in 16 genera. We here place this species in a new genus, Linnaeosicyos, describe and illustrate it based on new collections, and discuss its phylogenetic context using molecular and morphological data. Judging from Dominican amber, elements of the flora of Hispaniola date back at least 30 my, and the occurrence on the island of five endemic species of Cucurbitaceae (Linnaeosicyos amara from Benincaseae, Melothria domingensis from Sicyeae, Sicana fragrans from Cucurbiteae, and the sister species Anacaona sphaerica and Penelopeia suburceolata also from Cucurbiteae) points to its long occupation by Cucurbitaceae.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1906
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17382,
author = {Hanno Schaefer and Alexander Kocyan and Susanne S Renner},
title = {Linnaeosicyos (Cucurbitaceae), a new genus for Trichosanthes amara, the sister species to all other Sicyeae},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The Old World genus Trichosanthes has flowers with strikingly fringed petals, and Linnaeus therefore placed a species from Hispaniola that he only knew from an illustration (showing the fringed petals) in that genus. The species remained hidden from the attention of subsequent workers until acquiring new relevance in the context of molecular-biogeographic work on Cucurbitaceae. Based on molecular data, it is the sister to all Sicyeae, a New World clade of about 125 species in 16 genera. We here place this species in a new genus, Linnaeosicyos, describe and illustrate it based on new collections, and discuss its phylogenetic context using molecular and morphological data. Judging from Dominican amber, elements of the flora of Hispaniola date back at least 30 my, and the occurrence on the island of five endemic species of Cucurbitaceae (Linnaeosicyos amara from Benincaseae, Melothria domingensis from Sicyeae, Sicana fragrans from Cucurbiteae, and the sister species Anacaona sphaerica and Penelopeia suburceolata also from Cucurbiteae) points to its long occupation by Cucurbitaceae.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17382
AU - Schaefer,Hanno
AU - Kocyan,Alexander
AU - Renner,Susanne S
T1 - Linnaeosicyos (Cucurbitaceae), a new genus for Trichosanthes amara, the sister species to all other Sicyeae
PY - 2007
KW -
UR -
N2 - The Old World genus Trichosanthes has flowers with strikingly fringed petals, and Linnaeus therefore placed a species from Hispaniola that he only knew from an illustration (showing the fringed petals) in that genus. The species remained hidden from the attention of subsequent workers until acquiring new relevance in the context of molecular-biogeographic work on Cucurbitaceae. Based on molecular data, it is the sister to all Sicyeae, a New World clade of about 125 species in 16 genera. We here place this species in a new genus, Linnaeosicyos, describe and illustrate it based on new collections, and discuss its phylogenetic context using molecular and morphological data. Judging from Dominican amber, elements of the flora of Hispaniola date back at least 30 my, and the occurrence on the island of five endemic species of Cucurbitaceae (Linnaeosicyos amara from Benincaseae, Melothria domingensis from Sicyeae, Sicana fragrans from Cucurbiteae, and the sister species Anacaona sphaerica and Penelopeia suburceolata also from Cucurbiteae) points to its long occupation by Cucurbitaceae.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -