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A review of chromosome cytology in Hyacinthaceae subfamily Ornithogaloideae (Albuca, Dipcadi, Ornithogalum and Pseudogaltonia) in sub-Saharan Africa
Authors:P Goldblatt  JC Manning
Institution:aB.A. Krukoff Curator of African Botany, Missouri Botanical Garden, P.O. Box 299, St Louis, MO 63166, USA;bCompton Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Kirstenbosch, Private Bag X7, Cape Town, 7735, South Africa;cResearch Centre for Plant Growth and Development, School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal Pietermaritzburg, Private Bag X01, Scottsville 3209, South Africa
Abstract:The chromosome cytology of Hyacinthaceae subfamily Ornithogaloideae is reviewed within the framework of a recent molecular-based classification, with particular emphasis on its center of diversity in sub-Saharan Africa. We also provide new chromosome counts for sections that are unknown or poorly known cytologically. Albuca subgen. Namibiogalum (9 spp.) probably has an ancestral base number of x = 10 but subgen. Albuca (± 70 spp), subgen. Monarchos (9 spp.) and subgen. Osmyne (36 spp.) have x = 9. The pattern in subgen. Urophyllon (3 spp.) is remarkable: although x = 6 is likely, the species in the section exhibit a range of 2n = 12, 10, 8, 6 and 4 (exclusive of polyploidy). All karyotypes have three large chromosome pairs and a variable number of small chromosomes. Pseudogaltonia (2 spp.) has x = 9 and Dipcadi (26 spp.) possibly x = 9 in series Uropetalum and x = 6 in series Dipcadi, which exhibits a pattern of descending dysploidy leading to n = 3 in D. marlothii. In Ornithogalum (± 130 spp.) chromosome numbers are known for only 24 of the ± 84 sub-Saharan species, mostly from subgen. Aspasia and subgen. Ornithogalum sect. Linaspasia, both of which have x = 6, and from subgen. Galtonia, which has x = 8. In contrast, x = 7 is basic for the Eurasian sects. Honorius and Melophis, and x = 18 seems likely for sect. Cathissa. Sect. Ornithogalum, the cytology of which we does not examine in detail, may have x = 9. Polyploidy is apparently rare in the sub-Saharan African ornithogaloids, in marked contrast to the high frequency of polyploidy among Eurasian species. In Albuca just 3 or possibly 4 sub-Saharan species (9% or 13% of those counted) are exclusively polyploid and 5 more have diploid and polyploid races; and in sub-Saharan Ornithogalum, only the tropical O. gracillimum is exclusively polyploid, and the western southern African O. hispidum has diploid and polyploid races.
Keywords:Africa  Albuca  Base numbers  Chromosome cytology  Dipcadi  Hyacinthaceae  Ornithogaloideae  Ornithogalum  Polyploidy  Pseudogaltonia
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