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Drosera sect. Stolonifera

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Warning: Display title "<i>Drosera <span style="font-style:normal;">sect.</span> Stolonifera</i>" overrides earlier display title "<i>Drosera</i> sect. <i>Stolonifera</i>" (help).{| class="infobox biota" style="text-align: left; width: 200px; font-size: 100%" |- ! colspan=2 style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(180,250,180)" | Drosera sect. Stolonifera |- | colspan=2 style="text-align: center" | |- | colspan=2 style="text-align: center; font-size: 88%" | Drosera platypoda |-

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|- |- ! colspan=2 style="min-width:15em; text-align: center; background-color: rgb(180,250,180)" | Scientific classification Edit this classification |- |Kingdom: |Plantae |- |Clade: |Tracheophytes |- |Clade: |Angiosperms |- |Clade: |Eudicots |- |Order: |Caryophyllales |- |Family: |Droseraceae |- |Genus: |Drosera |- |Subgenus: |Drosera subg. Ergaleium |- |Section: |Drosera sect. Stolonifera
DeBuhr |-














































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| colspan=2 style="text-align: center" | D. stolonifera

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  • Drosera subser. Stoloniferae Planch. (as Stolmiferae)

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Drosera sect. Stolonifera is a section of ten tuberous perennial species in the genus Drosera that are endemic to south-west Western Australia. The species all have a similar growth habit and all have fan-shaped leaves, but the morphological differences and lack of natural hybrids support the division of the D. stolonifera species complex.[1]

Taxonomy

The first species in the section was discovered by Charles von Hügel in the Swan River region in 1833. D. stolonifera was formally described by Stephan Endlicher in 1837. Johann Georg Christian Lehmann followed that with two more species in 1844: D. ramellosa and D. porrecta. In 1848, Jules Émile Planchon organized these three species under section Ergaleium series Erythrorhizae subseries Stoloniferae (initially spelled Stolmiferae). Planchon also added the species D. humilis and D. penduliflora (later reduced to synonymy under D. ramellosa) to the new subseries. D. platypoda was added in 1854 by Nicolai Stepanovitch Turczaninow and D. purpurascens, described by August Friedrich Schlotthauber followed in 1856. In 1864, George Bentham reorganized the species under section Ergaleium, recognized fewer taxa, and suggested the reclassification of D. humilis as a variety of D. stolonifera. In 1906, Ludwig Diels took Bentham's suggestion and reduced D. humilis to the variety rank. In Diels' monograph of the family, he reorganized the species in this section into subgenus Ergaleium section Erythrorhiza.[1]

The next new member of the section came when Larry Eugene DeBuhr described D. fimbriata in 1975. Two years later DeBuhr re-evaluated the classification of subgenus Ergaleium and established the current three sections and also formally established the current section Stolonifera, which was based on Planchon's subseries Stoloniferae. At this point, section Stolonifera contained four species: D. fimbriata, D. platypoda, D. ramellosa, and D. stolonifera.[1]

In 1982, N. G. Marchant's treatment of the section included DeBuhr's four species but also four subspecies of D. stolonifera. Subsequent publications identified three additional subspecies of D. stolonifera, two of which were new taxa. Allen Lowrie, one of the coauthors of some of those subspecies, elevated all of the D. stolonifera subspecies to species rank, bringing the total number of species in the section to ten. In his 2005 revision of the section, however, he neglected to include a full basionym citation when elevating D. stolonifera subsp. monticola to D. monticola, thus rendering the new species name invalid due to Article 33.4 of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.[1][2] Therefore, the section then had nine species with two accepted subspecies of D. stolonifera, which includes the autonym D. stolonifera subsp. stolonifera.[1] Lowrie corrected this error in a short note in the 2011 volume of the journal Nuytsia where he provided the correct page number for the basionym and finally validated the name Drosera monticola, bringing the total number of species to ten.[3]

Species

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Lowrie, A. 2005. A taxonomic revision of Drosera section Stolonifera (Droseraceae), from south-west Western Australia[permanent dead link]. Nuytsia, 15(3): 355-393.
  2. ^ International Plant Names Index (IPNI). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries; Australian National Botanic Gardens. 29 January 2009 https://www.ipni.org/n/77075862-1. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ Lowrie, Allen. 2011. Validation of the name Drosera monticola (Droseraceae), a species from the south-west of Western Australia. Nuytsia, 21(3): 152.