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MORPHOLOGY,EVOLUTION, AND TAXONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE OF THE INFLORESCENCE IN CORDYLANTHUS (SCROPHULARIACEAE)
Authors:Tsan-Iang Chuang  Lawrence R Heckard
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, 61761

Jepson Herbarium, Department of Botany, University of California, Berkeley, 94720

Abstract:The genus Cordyhmthus has considerable diversity in its inflorescences while the other genera of tribe Rhinantheae (Scrophulariaceae) uniformly have racemes or spikes. Four distinct inflorescence types are recognized and their homologies and evolutionary history are postulated. Thus it is suggested that the basic florescence type, the elongated spike (Type I), has undergone evolutionary reduction to a few-flowered spike and ultimately to a single-flowered florescence (Type II). Further evolution involving processes of compaction and clustering of the single-flowered florescences has resulted in glomerulate clusters (Type III) and spiciform clusters (Type IV). Knowledge of inflorescence homologies and distribution of the four inflorescence types in the genus has been of considerable aid in formulating a new infrageneric classification. Using evidence primarily from inflorescence, floral, and seed morphology, as well as from geographical distribution and ecology, a classification is proposed establishing three subgenera, namely subg. Dicranostegia, subg. Hemistegia, and subg. Cordylanthus, the last with three sections, sect. Cordylanthus, sect. Anisocheila, and sect. Ramosi.
Keywords:
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