The monophyletic Anemone section Anemone (Ranunculaceae) includes predominantly diploid and outbreeding geophytic perennials. A revised taxonomy of the section with 16 species (and some infraspecific taxa) is proposed on the basis of a critical morphological analysis of living populations and extensive herbarium material, together with karyological, cytogenetical and DNA-analytical data. A key, descriptions, figures illustrating some type specimens and differential characters, examples of seedling development and pollen grain micromorphology (scanning electron microscopy) and distribution maps are presented. The position of A. section Anemone within the family is illustrated by a plastid DNA phylogram from sequences of the atpB-rbcL intergenic region. A penalized likelihood approach permitted the approximate dating of the origin and major differentiation phases of the section. The analysis of 20 morphological characters from all species of A. section Anemone with A. blanda (A. section Tuberosa) as an outgroup resulted in a morphology-based phylogram which supports the recognition of four subsections, i.e. Somalienses (one species, northern Somalia), Anemone (three species, Mediterranean area), Biflorae (five species, South-West and Central Asia) and Carolinianae (seven species, North and South America). These data allow a discussion of the phylogenetic diversification and stepwise expansion of the section since the late Miocene (c. 9 Mya). Partly by long distance dispersion, section Anemone has developed from a palaeoMediterranean ancestor to its present transcontinental distribution.
Summary
Keener, C. S., Reveal, J. L., Dutton, B. E. & Ziman, S.: A list of suprageneric names in Ranunculaceae (Magnoliophyta). – Taxon 48: 497‐506. 1999. – ISSN 0040‐0262.
A list of suprageneric names associated with the Ranunculaceae is given, including the validly published names of 5 orders, 15 families, 18 subfamilies, 23 tribes, and 21 subtribes, as well as 23 unranked names with Latin diagnoses and 74 invalidly published “names”. For the latter, some of which are in current use, the reason of their non‐valid status is given by means of a reference to the pertinent article in the Code.
The members of Anemone L. sect. Himalayicae (Ulbr.) Juz. (Ranunculaceae) are mainly distributed in the Himalaya of North India, Nepal and Bhutan and the neighbouring mountains of SW China at elevations between 1850 and 4800 m. Their taxonomy is re-evaluated on the basis of a critical morphological analysis of extensive herbarium material. The section is placed in Anemone subgen. Omalocarpus and differentiated into three new series: ser. Obtusilobae, ser. Trullifoliae and ser. Rupestres. A conspectus, keys to species, subspecies and varieties, descriptions of taxa, illustrations and distribution maps are presented. Eleven species with several infraspecific taxa are recognized and their synonymy, variability and relationships are discussed. In addition to the generally accepted species Anemone obtusiloba, A. trullifolia and A. rupestris, we recognize the following: A. polycarpa, A. rockii, A. geum and A. coelestina and four Chinese endemics, A. yulongshanica, A. patula, A. subpinnata and A. subindivisa. Anemone imbricata and A. fuscopurpurea are described but excluded from the section. The origins, morphological differentiations and eco-geographical radiations of Anemone sect. Himalayicae are discussed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.