Affiliation:
1. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, New Zealand
2. Queensland Herbarium, Department of Environmental Sciences; Australian Tropical Herbarium, James Cook University, Cairns, Australia
3. Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
The fern genus Microsorum is not monophyletic, with previous phylogenetic analyses finding three lineages to group not with the type species, but to form a grade related to the 13 species of Lecanopteris. These three lineages have recently been recognised as separate
genera: Bosmania , Dendroconche, and Zealandia. Here, we explore the morphological characterisation of Lecanopteris and these other three lecanopteroid genera. While the\ traditional circumscription of Lecanopteris has seemed sacrosanct, its defining morphological
character states of rhizome cavities and ant brooding associations occur in other lecanopteroid ferns and elsewhere in the Polypodiaceae. Instead, we suggest that the morphological characterisation of an expanded Lecanopteris including the Dendroconche and Zealandia
lineages is just as good, if not better, with the pertinent character states being the absence of sclerenchyma strands in the rhizome and atleast some fronds having Nooteboom's type 5 venation pattern. This wider circumscription is also better able to accommodate phylogenetic uncertainty,
and it means that groups of species traditionally placed together in a single genus are not distributed across different genera. General users familiar with the narrower circumscription of Lecanopteris will not be significantly disrupted, because there is little geographic overlap with
the lineages added to the genus. Consequently, we make new combinations in Lecanopteris for 11 species and one subspecies.
Publisher
Naturalis Biodiversity Center
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献