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{{Main|List of Brachyscome species}}
{{Main|List of Brachyscome species}}
Species include:
Species include:
*''[[Brachyscome angustifolia]]'' - stiff daisy, grassland daisy
*''[[Brachyscome chrysoglossa]]'' - yellow-tongue daisy
*''[[Brachyscome chrysoglossa]]'' - yellow-tongue daisy
*''[[Brachyscome ciliaris]]'' - variable daisy
*''[[Brachyscome ciliaris]]'' - variable daisy
*''[[Brachyscome graminea]]'' - stiff daisy, grassland daisy
*''[[Brachyscome iberidifolia]]'' - Swan River daisy
*''[[Brachyscome iberidifolia]]'' - Swan River daisy
*''[[Brachyscome multifida]]'' - cut-leaved daisy, rock daisy, Hawkesbury daisy
*''[[Brachyscome multifida]]'' - cut-leaved daisy, rock daisy, Hawkesbury daisy

Revision as of 23:05, 31 January 2019

Brachyscome
Brachyscome graminea
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Brachyscome

Species

see List of Brachyscome species

Brachyscome is a genus of flowering plants in the aster family, Asteraceae. Most are endemic to Australia, and a few occur in New Zealand and New Guinea.[1]

The genus name is spelled Brachycome by some authors. Henri Cassini published the name Brachyscome in 1816, forming it from the classical Greek brachys ("short") and kome ("hair"), a reference to the very short pappus bristles. Because the combining form of brachys in Greek compound words is brachy-, Cassini later corrected the spelling to Brachycome. Australian taxonomists still debate whether Cassini's corrected spelling is admissible under the rules of botanical nomenclature. A proposal to conserve Brachycome was rejected in 1993 by the Committee for Spermatophyta.[2]

These are annual and perennial herbs and small shrubs. Species have a basal rosette of leaves and/or leaves alternately arranged on the stem. The blades are entire or divided. The flower heads are solitary or borne in small corymbs. The head has a row of ray florets in shades of white, blue, pink, or mauve, and yellow disc florets.[1]

The genus is distinguished from other genera in tribe Astereae mainly by the structure of the fruit. These achenes or cypselas are roughly club-shaped but usually incurved and flattened. They often have a membranous rim or wing around the edge that is sometimes wavy or fringed. The pappus is less than one millimeter long in most species.[3]

Brachyscome species are found in a wide range of habitats. They occupy rainy coastal and mountainous regions as well as dry central Australia.[4]

One of the annual plains species, Brachyscome dichromosomatica, is remarkable for its low chromosome count. In this species n=2, though some plants have 1, 2 or 3 additional large B chromosomes.[5] The genus has an unusually large range of chromosome counts, from n=2 to n=18.[4]

Some Brachyscome are popular as easily cultivated ornamental plants for flower gardens, and many cultivars are bred for their form, foliage, and flowers.[6]

Species

There are between 65 and 80 species in the genus.[1][4][7]

Species include:

References

  1. ^ a b c Genus Brachyscome. PlantNet. New South Wales Flora Online. The Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, Sydney.
  2. ^ Brummitt, R. K. (1993). Report of the Committee for Spermatophyta: 38. Taxon 42(3), 687-97.
  3. ^ Everett, J. "Brachycome". In: Harden, G. J. (ed.) Flora of New South Wales volume 3, pages 155-67. University of New South Wales Press. 1992.
  4. ^ a b c Watanabe, K., et al. (1999). Chromosomal evolution in the genus Brachyscome (Asteraceae, Astereae): statistical tests regarding correlation between changes in karyotype and habit using phylogenetic information. Journal of Plant Research 112(2), 145-61.
  5. ^ Carter, C. R. (1978). Taxonomy of the Brachycome lineariloba complex (Asteraceae). Telopea 5, 387-93.
  6. ^ Research Garden. Royal Botanic Gardens, Cranbourne.
  7. ^ Brachyscome. The Plant List.

Further reading