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- Cambial variants (2)
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Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Plant Sciences
Contents 19(1)
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
No abstract provided.
Map-Making Of Plant Biomass And Leaf Area Index For Management Of Protected Areas, Loretta Gratani, Maria Fiore Crescente
Map-Making Of Plant Biomass And Leaf Area Index For Management Of Protected Areas, Loretta Gratani, Maria Fiore Crescente
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
An inventory of the vegetation types of Castelporziano Estate (Rome), including examples of Mediterranean ecosystems in excellent preserved condition, was compiled. Because Leaf Area Index (LAI) changed with forest structure and developmental stages, maximum LAI provided a good estimate of maximum biomass accumulation. Plant biomass estimation, ranging from 61 tons ha-1 to 360 tons ha-1, fitted well into 14 biomass classes; the highest values (from 301 tons ha-1 to 360 tons ha-1) were related to stratified forested vegetation types, including the more mature Pinus pinea plantations, Quercus ilex evergreen forests and broad leaf mixed …
Wood And Stem Anatomy Of Phytolaccoid And Rivinoid Phytolaccaceae (Caryophyllales): Ecology, Systematics, Nature Of Successive Cambia, Sherwin Carlquist
Wood And Stem Anatomy Of Phytolaccoid And Rivinoid Phytolaccaceae (Caryophyllales): Ecology, Systematics, Nature Of Successive Cambia, Sherwin Carlquist
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Quantitative and qualitative wood features are presented and analyzed for seven species of subfamily Rivinoideae and four of subfamily Phytolaccoideae. All species have nonbordered perforations plates, as elsewhere in suborder Phylocaccineae. Libriform fibers characterize both subfamilies, but vasicentric tracheids occur in two rivinoid species. Axial parenchyma is vasicentric scanty (apotracheal bands and patches in one species). Rays are mostly multiseriate, with procumbent cells infrequent in most species. Rivinoids and phytolaccoids differ from each other in ray height and width and in crystal types. The xeromorphic wood of Petiveria and Rivina is related to their short duration (woody herbs) in disturbed …
Sem Studies On Vessels In Ferns. 18. Montane Cheilanthoid Ferns (Pteridaceae) Of North America, Sherwin Carlquist, Edward L. Schneider
Sem Studies On Vessels In Ferns. 18. Montane Cheilanthoid Ferns (Pteridaceae) Of North America, Sherwin Carlquist, Edward L. Schneider
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Xylem of roots and rhizomes of five species of four genera of tribe Cheilantheae (Pteridaceae; recently recognized by some as a segregate family, Cheilanthaceae) has been studied by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM). All of these species occur in habitats (cliffs, talus) of mountains of North America that are seasonally dry in summer and cold in winter. The vessels prove diverse, indicating that different perforation plate modifications are represented in the cheilanthoid ferns of these habitats, rather than different degrees of the same kind of modification. The modifications include wide perforations alternating with narrow perforations (especially prominent in Bommeria); …
Phylogenetic Relationships In Phoradendreae (Viscaceae) Inferred From Three Regions Of The Nuclear Ribosomal Cistron. Ii. The North American Species Of Phoradendron, Vanessa E. T. M. Ashworth
Phylogenetic Relationships In Phoradendreae (Viscaceae) Inferred From Three Regions Of The Nuclear Ribosomal Cistron. Ii. The North American Species Of Phoradendron, Vanessa E. T. M. Ashworth
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
A parsimony analysis based on sequences from the ITS region and two partitions of the 26S subunit of nuclear ribosomal DNA was used to infer phylogenetic relationships among the North American species of Phoradendron. A strongly supported clade united all but one of the species typically lacking cataphylls, a character used previously to distinguish the northern species from those of Central and South America. The divergent placement of P. californicum relative to the members of this "northern" clade confirmed the hypothesis that species lacking cataphylls are polyphyletic. Four of five species parasitic on conifers formed a well-supported clade. However, a …
Typification And Change In Status Of Yucca Schottii (Agavaceae), Lee W. Lenz, Michael A. Hanson
Typification And Change In Status Of Yucca Schottii (Agavaceae), Lee W. Lenz, Michael A. Hanson
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
George Engelmann's concept of Y. schottii as a plant with short, stiff, yellow-green leaves has not been accepted by recent authors who apply the name to plants of southern Arizona with broad, flexible blue-green leaves. Interspecific hybrids among three yuccas present in the area, Y. baccata, Y. elata, and the wide, blue-green leafed plant are common. We believe that Arthur Schott’s collections made in 1853 upon which Engelmann based his description are of hybrid origin. We accept Engelmann's designation as the earliest applicable binomial but accord it a change in status as Y. Xschottii Engelmann pro. …
A Phylogenetic Classification Of Polemoniaceae, J. Mark Porter, Leigh A. Johnson
A Phylogenetic Classification Of Polemoniaceae, J. Mark Porter, Leigh A. Johnson
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Three hundred seventy nine species of Polemoniaceae are arranged in a phylogenetic classification composed of three subfamilies, eight tribes, and 26 genera. Nomenclature of one tribe is clarified and the circumscription of several tribes differs greatly from previous classifications. Five new genera, Bryantiella, Dayia, Lathrocasis, Microgilia, and Saltugilia, are proposed. In addition, four new species are described from the genera Allophyllum, Dayia, Giliastrum, and lpomopsis. This treatment represents a major reclassification with 59 new combinations, and the application of several additional combinations not used in recent years.
Contents 19(2)
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
No abstract provided.
Wood Anatomy Of Fouquieriaceae In Relation To Habit, Ecology, And Systematics; Nature Of Meristems In Wood And Bark, Sherwin Carlquist
Wood Anatomy Of Fouquieriaceae In Relation To Habit, Ecology, And Systematics; Nature Of Meristems In Wood And Bark, Sherwin Carlquist
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Qualitative and quantitative data are presented for wood of all species of Fouquieriaceae, the samples selected so as to cover important variables with respect to organography and age. Wood contains fibertracheids (plus a few vasicentric tracheids). Diffuse axial parenchyma is mostly grouped as diffuse-in-aggregates or diffuse clusters (new term), with transitions to pervasive axial parenchyma in some species. Rays are Heterogeneous Type II. These wood features are relatively unspecialized and are consistent with placement of the family in Ericales s.1. as defined in recent DNA-based cladograms. Xeromorphic wood in nonsucculent species occurs only in Fouquieria shrevei; the lateral branches …
Yuccas (Agavaceae) Of The International Four Corners: Southwestern Usa And Northwestern Mexico, Lee W. Lenz, Michael A. Hanson
Yuccas (Agavaceae) Of The International Four Corners: Southwestern Usa And Northwestern Mexico, Lee W. Lenz, Michael A. Hanson
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Yuccas (Yucca, Agavaceae) are an easily recognizable constituent of the vegetation of the International Four Corners; an area made up of portions of Arizona, New Mexico, Sonora and Chihuahua. We recognize three species as native to the region, Yucca baccata, Y. elata and Y. madrensis, together with interspecific hybrids, and document for the first time naturally occurring intersectional hybridization between baccate-fruited (sect. Yucca) and capsular-fruited (sect. Chaenocarpa) species. We examine the reproductive barriers to hybridization operating within the genus, i.e., spatial, temporal and ethological, and we consider circumstances that may have been responsible for the production and …
New Euphorbiaceae From Mexico, Victor W. Steinmann
New Euphorbiaceae From Mexico, Victor W. Steinmann
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
This article contained descriptions of five new taxa of Mexican Euphorbiaceae. Euphorbia (subg. Agaloma) nayarensis is endemic to pine-oak woodland in the mountains of central Nayarit. It appears related to E. soobyi but differs by possessing linear to linear-ovate leaves. Croton varelae is also endemic to central Nayarit. A key was provided to distinguish this species, a member of sect. Geiseleria, from the seven other Mexican species of this section. Croton ramillatus var. magniglandulifer occurs in the states of Guerrero and Morelos. This new variety differs from var. ramillatus by the possession of larger petiolar glands. Croton michaelii …
Index To Volumes 18 And 19
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
No abstract provided.
Reviewers Of Manuscripts, Volumes 18 And 19
Reviewers Of Manuscripts, Volumes 18 And 19
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
No abstract provided.
Autophagomyces, Bordea, And A New Genus, Rossiomyces, (Laboulbeniales), Richard K. Benjamin
Autophagomyces, Bordea, And A New Genus, Rossiomyces, (Laboulbeniales), Richard K. Benjamin
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
A revision of Autophagomyces (Laboulbeniales) was made based on a comparative morphological study of new collections and 16 species included in the genus by Thaxter in the final volume of his monograph published in 1931 and by others more recently. The concept of Autophagomyces (species on Anthicidae, Phalacridae, and Scapidiidae [Coleoptera]) was narrowed and comprises 12 species, four of them new, i.e., A. hammondii, A. mexicanus, A. protuberans, and A. ramosus. The genus Bordea (species on Pselaphinae, Staphylinidae [Coleopteraj), which had been included in Autophagomyces by Thaxter, was reinstated and comprises 14 species, seven new, i.e., …