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TUNA UYSAL KUDDISI ERTUĞRUL ALFONSO SUSANNA NÚRIA GARCİA‐JACAS 《Botanical journal of the Linnean Society. Linnean Society of London》2009,159(2):280-286
Twenty‐two chromosome counts are reported in 16 species, four subspecies and two varieties of the genus Centaurea. These are mostly Turkish local endemics of section Cheirolepis, a complicated group from the Eastern clade of the Jacea group. Twenty‐one reports are new. Prevalence of the basic chromosome number x = 9 among the eastern sections of the Jacea group is confirmed. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 159 , 280–286. 相似文献
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The Mediterranean group Acrocentron of the genus Centaurea is defined mainly on the basis of pollen type, but also by achene characters and involucral bracts morphology. We have revised
the delineation of the group by cladistically comparing the sequences of the ITS spacers of the nuclear ribosomal DNA. Our
results confirm that the Acrocentron group is a natural one, with a different delimitation from the commonly accepted. The ITS phylogeny supports that Centaurea sect. Chamaecyanus and sect. Stephanochilus belong to the Acrocentron group and suggests that sect. Chamaecyanus should be merged in sect. Acrocentron as a subsection. Contrary, sect. Aegialophila and sect. Crocodylium form a natural group that cannot be placed in the Acrocentron group and should be considered a different genus. The inclusion of Centaurea crocodylium in Aegialophila makes that the prioritary name for the generic level is Crocodylium; thus, two new nomenclatural combinations are proposed: Crocodylium creticum and Crocodylium pumilum. The groups suggested by the ITS sequences are correlated to the main geographical centers of speciation of Acrocentron. However, support for internal nodes of the tree is extremely poor. The low support within the tree and the absence of correlation
between karyology and molecular phylogeny suggest that hybridization has played an important role in the diversification of
Acrocentron.
Received June 6, 2001; accepted April 2, 2002 Published online: November 7, 2002
Address of the authors: Mònica Font, Teresa Garnatje, Núria Garcia-Jacas, and Alfonso Susanna, Botanic Institute of Barcelona
(CSIC-Ajuntament de Barcelona), Av.Muntanyans s.n., E-08038 Barcelona, Spain. 相似文献
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