“…The bamboos (Poaceae: Bambusoideae), with ∼1700 species, are the third largest grass subfamily and represent the only major clade of grasses to diversify primarily in association with forests ( Clark et al, 2015 ; Soreng et al, 2017 ; Clark and Oliveira, 2018 ). The bamboos are well supported as monophyletic and comprise three strongly supported lineages recognized as tribes: Arundinarieae (temperate woody bamboos, ∼580 species), Bambuseae (tropical woody bamboos, ∼1,000 species) and Olyreae (herbaceous bamboos, ∼124 species) ( Kelchner and Bamboo Phylogeny Group, 2013 ; Clark et al, 2015 ; Wysocki et al, 2015 ; Zhang et al, 2016 ; Soreng et al, 2017 ; Ruiz-Sanchez et al, 2021 ). The woody bamboos (Arundinarieae and Bambuseae) share the woody syndrome, including gregarious monocarpy in most ( Guerreiro, 2014 ; Clark et al, 2015 ; Wysocki et al, 2015 ), whereas the herbaceous bamboos (Olyreae) have relatively weakly lignified culms, restricted vegetative branching, and virtually all exhibit seasonal flowering ( Clark et al, 2015 ).…”