IntroductionThe family Brassicaceae is the richest in the United States (616 species, 148 endemic) and the second richest in Turkey (606 species, 39 subspecies, 18 varieties, and 226 endemics) in terms of species number Al-Shehbaz, 2010;. Forty species belonging to the family Brassicaceae in Turkey were published as new species in the last decade , and this number has continued to increase.The authors collected numerous species in Malatya Province between 2011 and 2013, and one of these species was published as a new species (Mutlu and Karakuş, 2012). One of the collected samples could not be designated according to the current literature (
Campanula malatyaensis Mutlu & Karakuş is described as a new species from the Malatya province (Eastern Turkey). The new species belongs to section Tracheliopsis (Buser) Damboldt and morphologically resembles C. myritifolia Boiss. & Heldr. and C. fruticulosa (Schwarz & Davis) Damboldt. Morphological differences between C. malatyaensis and these taxa are discussed. This study presents SEM images (pollen, seed, corolla hair, and stylus hairs), photographs (type specimen, habitat, flowering specimens, and fruiting specimens), and conservation status of the new species.
B u çalışmada Campanula peshmenii Güner için yeni bir tip (epitip) örneği belirlenmiştir. Bu türe ait ayrıntılı bir morfolojik tür tanımı ve tehlike kategorisi verilmiştir. Ayrıca bu çalışmada, polen, tohum, korolla tüyü, sitilus SEM görüntüleri ile holotip ve epitip örnekleri, habitatı, çiçekli ve meyveli durumlarının fotoğrafları verilmiştir.
Allium dönmezii is described as a new species from east Anatolia, Turkey. The molecular marker ITS (Internal Transcribed Spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA) confirms that the new species belongs to A. sect. Melanocrommyum. The diagnostic characters of the new species are morphologically compared with the related A. woronowii, A. serpentinicum, and A. moderense, as well as with A. rothii and A. chrysantherum. In addition, the ITS regions of A. purpureoviride and A. chrysantherum were sequenced and uploaded on GenBank for the first time.
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