@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17236,
author = {James E. Rodman and Michael K. Oliver and Robert R. Nakamura and James U. McClammer and Anthony H. Bledsoe},
title = {A taxonomic analysis and revised classification of Centrospermae.},
year = {1984},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {9},
number = {},
pages = {297--323},
abstract = {Clustering and ordination studies demonstrated a phenetically coherent assemblage of 11 core families of Centrospermae, widely separated from Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Cladistic analyses based on 71 out-group-polarized characters provided strong evidence for monophyly of centrosperms but only weak support for close sister-group status with Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Both phenetic and cladistic results indicated divergence between Caryophyllaceae, problematically allied with Molluginaceae, and the betalain-producing centrosperms. Three distinct clades emerged among the betalain taxa: a primitive group of Nyctaginaceae + Phytolaccaceae; an intermediate group of Amaranthaceae + Chenopodiaceae; and an advanced group of succulents?Aizoaceae + Cactaceae, Portulacaceae, and Basellaceae + Didiereaceae. We present a revised classification of Centrospermae, emphasizing cladistic relationships of the 11 core families and including several aberrant or little-known genera subordinated and sequenced according to conventions described by Wiley (1981). The new classification is compatible with recent interpretations of floral homologies and with external data from nucleic acid, ultrastructural, and serological comparisons.}
}
Citation for Study 358
Citation title:
"A taxonomic analysis and revised classification of Centrospermae.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S292
(Status: Published).
Citation
Rodman J., Oliver M., Nakamura R., Mcclammer J., & Bledsoe A. 1984. A taxonomic analysis and revised classification of Centrospermae. Systematic Botany, 9: 297-323.
Authors
-
Rodman J.
-
Oliver M.
-
Nakamura R.
-
Mcclammer J.
-
Bledsoe A.
Abstract
Clustering and ordination studies demonstrated a phenetically coherent assemblage of 11 core families of Centrospermae, widely separated from Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Cladistic analyses based on 71 out-group-polarized characters provided strong evidence for monophyly of centrosperms but only weak support for close sister-group status with Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Both phenetic and cladistic results indicated divergence between Caryophyllaceae, problematically allied with Molluginaceae, and the betalain-producing centrosperms. Three distinct clades emerged among the betalain taxa: a primitive group of Nyctaginaceae + Phytolaccaceae; an intermediate group of Amaranthaceae + Chenopodiaceae; and an advanced group of succulents?Aizoaceae + Cactaceae, Portulacaceae, and Basellaceae + Didiereaceae. We present a revised classification of Centrospermae, emphasizing cladistic relationships of the 11 core families and including several aberrant or little-known genera subordinated and sequenced according to conventions described by Wiley (1981). The new classification is compatible with recent interpretations of floral homologies and with external data from nucleic acid, ultrastructural, and serological comparisons.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S358
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17236,
author = {James E. Rodman and Michael K. Oliver and Robert R. Nakamura and James U. McClammer and Anthony H. Bledsoe},
title = {A taxonomic analysis and revised classification of Centrospermae.},
year = {1984},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {9},
number = {},
pages = {297--323},
abstract = {Clustering and ordination studies demonstrated a phenetically coherent assemblage of 11 core families of Centrospermae, widely separated from Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Cladistic analyses based on 71 out-group-polarized characters provided strong evidence for monophyly of centrosperms but only weak support for close sister-group status with Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Both phenetic and cladistic results indicated divergence between Caryophyllaceae, problematically allied with Molluginaceae, and the betalain-producing centrosperms. Three distinct clades emerged among the betalain taxa: a primitive group of Nyctaginaceae + Phytolaccaceae; an intermediate group of Amaranthaceae + Chenopodiaceae; and an advanced group of succulents?Aizoaceae + Cactaceae, Portulacaceae, and Basellaceae + Didiereaceae. We present a revised classification of Centrospermae, emphasizing cladistic relationships of the 11 core families and including several aberrant or little-known genera subordinated and sequenced according to conventions described by Wiley (1981). The new classification is compatible with recent interpretations of floral homologies and with external data from nucleic acid, ultrastructural, and serological comparisons.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17236
AU - Rodman,James E.
AU - Oliver,Michael K.
AU - Nakamura,Robert R.
AU - McClammer,James U.
AU - Bledsoe,Anthony H.
T1 - A taxonomic analysis and revised classification of Centrospermae.
PY - 1984
UR -
N2 - Clustering and ordination studies demonstrated a phenetically coherent assemblage of 11 core families of Centrospermae, widely separated from Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Cladistic analyses based on 71 out-group-polarized characters provided strong evidence for monophyly of centrosperms but only weak support for close sister-group status with Plumbaginaceae and Polygonaceae. Both phenetic and cladistic results indicated divergence between Caryophyllaceae, problematically allied with Molluginaceae, and the betalain-producing centrosperms. Three distinct clades emerged among the betalain taxa: a primitive group of Nyctaginaceae + Phytolaccaceae; an intermediate group of Amaranthaceae + Chenopodiaceae; and an advanced group of succulents?Aizoaceae + Cactaceae, Portulacaceae, and Basellaceae + Didiereaceae. We present a revised classification of Centrospermae, emphasizing cladistic relationships of the 11 core families and including several aberrant or little-known genera subordinated and sequenced according to conventions described by Wiley (1981). The new classification is compatible with recent interpretations of floral homologies and with external data from nucleic acid, ultrastructural, and serological comparisons.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL - 9
IS -
SP - 297
EP - 323
ER -