Italian alien species in Caryophyllaceae: nomenclatural remarks
Author
Iamonico, Duilio
Laboratory of Phytogeography and Applied Geobotany, Section Environment and Landscape, Department PDTA, University of Rome Sapienza, 00196 Rome, Italy.
text
Phytotaxa
2020
2020-06-03
446
5
291
300
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.446.5.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.446.5.3
1179-3163
13878680
Dianthus plumarius
Linnaeus (1753: 411)
.
Lectotype
(designated here):—Herb. Linnaeus, no. 581.19 (LINN!). Image of the
lectotype
available at http://linnean-online.org/6021/
Note:—
Linnaeus (1753: 411)
described
Dianthus plumarius
with a short diagnosis (“
DIANTHUS
floribus solitariis, squamis calycinis subovatis brevissimis, corollis multifidis fauce pubescentibus”), a provenance (“Habitat in Europae &
Canada
pascuis nemorosis”), and five synonyms cited from
Linnaeus (1748: 105)
and
Sauvages (1751: 143)
(“
Dianthus
floribus solitariis, petalis multifidis basi canaliculati”),
Linnaeus (1745: 344
, “
Dianthus
floribus solitariis, corollis lacero-partitis, squamis calycinis ovatis acutis”),
Linnaeus (1737: 170
,
1738: 174
), and
Royen (1740: 443)
(“
Dianthus
petalis multifidis”), and
Bauhin (1623: 209
, 210, “Caryophyllo flore tenuissimo dissecto”, and “Caryophyllo sylvestri, flore laciniato odoratissimo”, respectively).
Four specimens
, which are part of the original material, were found at LINN [
No.
581.19, original label “9 plumarius” (“9”corresponds to the species number in
Species Plantarum
); http://linnean-online.org/6021/], UPS [
Herb. Burser XI
:
1001
(original label “
Caryophylli
flore tenuissimi dissecto
Bauh.
|
Federnelcken. Superba Trag.
|
In
hortis
Lusatiae
| 100”;
Fig. 2
), and
Herb. Burser XI
: 102 (“
Caryophylli
sylvester, flori laciniato odoratissimo
Bauh.
|
In Thuringia
,
Dania
&c. sponte | 102”;
Fig. 3
)], and
S
(No. 179.11, original label “9 plumarius”; http://linnaeus.nrm. se/botany/fbo/d/diant/dianplu2.html.en).
These
four specimens
were listed by
Jarvis (2007)
who considered also the LINN No. 581.22.
This
latter specimen, however, is not part of the original material for
Dianthus plumarius
since the
Species Plantarum
number of the species (i.e. 9) does not occur on the sheet (
Linnaean’s
annotation on the sheet is “
Scania
” [just below the plant], and “16 2” [on the bottom-center], see http://linnean-online.org/6024/)
; note also that it was not identified by Linnaeus.
The four above cited specimens [LINN No. 581.19, UPS (Herb. Burser XI: 100, and Herb. Burser XI: 102), and S No. 179.11] consist of a terminal part of one plant, with cauline leaves and flowers, all matching the original diagnosis, and also correspond to the current concept of
Dianthus plumarius
(see e.g.,
Tutin & Walters 1993
,
Aeschimann & al. 2004
). The LINN specimen, which includes the original Linnaean annotation “9 plumarius” as in Species Plantarum, is here designated as
lectotype
.