A revised phylogenetic classification of tribe Phyllantheae (Phyllanthaceae)
Author
Bouman, Roderick W.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Hortus botanicus Leiden, Leiden University, PO Box 9500, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, PO Box 9505, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & r. w. bouman @ hortus. leidenuniv. nl https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 2949 - 3318
r.w.bouman@hortus.leidenuniv.nl
Author
Kebler, Paul J. A.
Hortus botanicus Leiden, Leiden University, PO Box 9500, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, PO Box 9505, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
Author
Telford, Ian R. H.
Botany and N. C. W. Beadle Herbarium, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia & itelford @ une. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3570 - 0053
itelford@une.edu.au
Author
Bruhl, Jeremy J.
Botany and N. C. W. Beadle Herbarium, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia & jbruhl @ une. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9112 - 4436
jbruhl@une.edu.au
Author
Strijk, Joeri S.
Institute for Biodiversity and Environmental Research, Jalan Tungku Link, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Brunei Darussalam & Alliance for Conservation Tree Genomics, Pha Tad Ke Botanical Garden, PO Box 959, 06000 Luang Prabang, Lao PDR
Author
Saunders, Richard M. K.
Division of Ecology & Biodiversity, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China & saunders @ hku. hk; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8104 - 7761
saunders@hku.hk
Author
Esser, Hans-Joachim
Botanische Staatssammlung München, Menzinger Strasse 67, D- 80638 München (Munich), Germany & esser @ snsb. de; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 6518 - 8612
esser@snsb.de
Author
Falcón-Hidalgo, Banessa
Jardin Botánico Nacional, Unisversidad de La Habana, Carretera “ El Rocío ” km 3.5, Calabazar, Boyeros, La Habana, Cuba & banessa @ fbio. uh. cu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2519 - 3278
banessa@fbio.uh.cu
Author
Van, Peter C.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands & Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, PO Box 9505, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-03-18
540
1
1
100
journal article
108685
10.11646/phytotaxa.540.1.1
96149549-23fe-4032-9206-d78e7867312f
1179-3163
6367243
.
Key to the genera of tribe
Phyllantheae
With the following key the genera of tribe
Phyllantheae
can be identified, but it does not take into account any exceptions or subgenera and (sub)sections. An asterisk (*) denotes parts of the key that are not dichotomous.
1. Pistillode present in staminate flowers ...............................................................................................................................................2
1. Pistillode absent in staminate flowers ................................................................................................................................................5
2. Stamens> 10—Africa &
Madagascar
...........................................................................................................................
Lingelsheimia
2. Stamens 4–7........................................................................................................................................................................................3
3. Branching non-phyllanthoid (laminate leaves and flowers on all axes, branchlets not deciduous); staminate sepals 4‒7 (usually 5), stamens 4‒7, filaments free or fused for half of length; anther connectives non-apiculate; fruits capsules or baccate.....................4
3. Branching phyllanthoid (leaves on main stem reduced to scales, = cataphylls, laminate leaves and flowers on lateral axes, lateral branchlets deciduous); staminate sepals 4, stamens 4, filaments connate, anther connectives apiculate; fruits capsules—Asia........ .............................................................................................................................................................................
Glochidion
(
G. moi
)
4. Petals absent; fruits with 2 seeds per locule; pollen exine verruculose—Pantropical ..........................................................
Flueggea
4. Petals present; fruits with 1 or 2 seeds per locule; pollen exine reticulate—West Indies ................................................
Heterosavia
5. Disc absent (sepal scales may be present, these close flower when anthers are unripe, no glandular function) ...............................6
5. Disc / disc glands present .................................................................................................................................................................10
6. Inflorescences on specialized leafless axes; staminate sepals 4, stamens (2‒)3‒4(‒5), filaments free; fruits indehiscent, woody or drupaceous............................................................................................................................................subgenus
Cicca
section
Cicca
6. Inflorescences in axils of leaves to cauliflorous; staminate sepals usually 5 or 6, stamens 2‒15, filaments free or connate; fruits capsules...............................................................................................................................................................................................7
7. Staminate flowers without sepal scales; filaments free or connate, anther connectives sometimes apiculate; stigmas usually entire or erect and tightly together; ovary 3‒15-locular ...............................................................................................................................8
7. Staminate flowers often with sepal scales; filaments connate, anther connectives not apiculate; stigmas usually bifid; ovary 3- locular.................................................................................................................................................................................................9
8. Staminate sepals spreading or united in a tubular shape; disc lobes present; filaments free; ovary 3‒5-locular—
Malesia
................ ...............................................................................................................................................................................
Dendrophyllanthus
8. Staminate sepals often recurved; disc absent; filaments tightly together (separating as flowers age); ovary 3‒15-locular—
Australia
, mainland Asia,
Malesia
, Pacific .........................................................................................................................................
Glochidion
9. Sepal scales often present in staminate flowers; fruits wider than long; seeds smooth ..........................................................
Breynia
9. Sepal scales absent in staminate flowers (except in
Synostemon bacciformis
); fruits longer than wide; seeds sculptured................. ...........................................................................................................................................................................................
Synostemon
10. Branching non-phyllanthoid or sub-phyllanthoid (leaves at base of branchlets not reduced to scales (often in juveniles), lateral branchlets deciduous) .......................................................................................................................................................................11
10. Branching phyllanthoid ....................................................................................................................................................................19
11. Stamens> 10—Africa &
Madagascar
...........................................................................................................................
Lingelsheimia
11. Stamens 2‒5......................................................................................................................................................................................12
12. Sepals 4; staminate disc entire; stamens 4, filaments free; seeds with blue sarcotesta—Pantropical............................
Margaritaria
12. Sepals 5 or 6 (rarely 4, but then with 2 stamens); staminate disc entire or segmented; stamens 2 or 3, filaments free or connate; seeds with no or whitish sarcotesta ..................................................................................................................................................13
13. Staminate disc entire (H-shaped in
Moeroris arenaria
)...................................................................................................................14
13. Staminate disc segmented into glands..............................................................................................................................................15
14*. Sepals
6 in
both sexes; staminate disc urceolate; stamens 3, filaments connate—Asia........................................................
Cathetus
14*. Sepals
6 in
both sexes; staminate disc not urceolate; stamens 2, filaments free—Africa...............................................
Plagiocladus
14*. Sepals
4 in
staminate flowers,
6 in
pistillate flowers; staminate disc H-shaped around filaments; stamens 2, filaments free—North America ..........................................................................................................................................................
Moeroris
(
M. arenaria
)
15. Sepals 5; stamens 5, filaments free—Africa .............................................
Kirganelia
subgenus
Kirganelia
section
Pseudomenarda
15. Sepals 5 or 6; stamens usually 3 (rarely 2), filaments connate (free in
Moeroris rosmarinifolius
)—Africa to Asia.......................16
16. Plagiotropic branchlets caducous,usually fascicled (non-phyllanthoid in section
Elutanthos
, but then with paniculate inflorescences); fruits capsules or berries....................................................................................................................................................
Phyllanthus
16. Plagiotropic branchlets persistent; inflorescences axillary fascicles, never paniculate; fruits capsules ..........................................17
17. Leaves on all axes spirally arranged; filaments connate; pistillate disc consisting of free glands—(North America, Africa and Asia/
Australia
) ..................................................................................................................................................................................
Nellica
17. Leaves on all axes distichous (except at basal nodes in
Cicca
); filaments free or connate; pistillate disc mostly entire (when segmented then filaments mostly free and leaves always distichous)..............................................................................................18
18*. Leaves distichous; pollen 4-colporate; seeds smooth or verrucate—Americas ................................................................................... .....................................................................................................................
Phyllanthus
subgenus
Phyllanthus
section
Loxopodium
18*. Leaves distichous; pollen clypeate; seeds smooth or verrucate—Africa, Asia,
Australia
and Pacific...
Cathetus
subgenus
Macraea
18*. Leaves spiral at basal nodes, distichous at upper nodes; pollen grains perisyncolporate with median pores, colpi bordered by parallel muri; seeds smooth or striate—
Madagascar
.................................................................................
Cicca
subgenus
Betsileani
19. Herbs or subshrubs (small plants with woody base) ........................................................................................................................20
19. Shrubs to trees, rarely climbers ........................................................................................................................................................25
20. Inflorescences unisexual...................................................................................................................................................................21
20. Inflorescences bisexual.....................................................................................................................................................................24
21. Pistillate inflorescences on proximal position and staminate inflorescences on distal position on plagiotropic branchlets; seeds transversely ribbed—ovary often covered with tubercles—pantropical, but origin Asia ..........................
Emblica
section
Urinaria
21. Pistillate inflorescences on distal position and staminate inflorescences on proximal position on plagiotropic branchlets; seeds smooth or longitudinally or transversely striate, but not ribbed ......................................................................................................22
22. Cataphyllary stipules not auriculate ..................................................................................................................................
Phyllanthus
22. Cataphyllary stipules (unilaterally) auriculate..................................................................................................................................23
23. Filaments connate, anthers free; seeds smooth or longitudinally striate—Africa.................................................................
Moeroris
23. Filaments usually free, sometimes connate, anthers free or connate in a synandrium; seeds smooth, striate or verrucate—South America .............................................................................................................................................................................
Phyllanthus
24*. Stamens 3, filaments free, anthers dehiscing vertically; pistillate disc entire; pollen 3-syncolporate, exine reticulate; stigmas entire or emarginate; seeds smooth or with faintly striate—
Australia
,
Malesia
, Pacific .................
Dendrophyllanthus
section
Leptonema
24*. Stamens 2 or 3, filaments entirely or partially connate (free in
M. arenaria
), anthers dehiscing oblique to horizontally (vertically in
M. arenaria
); pistillate disc entire; pollen 3-colporate, exine reticulate; seeds smooth or longitudinally striate—North America, pantropical invasive.............................................................................................................................
Moeroris
subgenus
Swartziani
24*. Stamens 3, filaments free, anthers dehiscing horizontally; pistillate disc segmented; pollen grains brevicolporate and diorate or porate, exine pilate; seeds verruculose—South America .......................................
Phyllanthus
subgenus
Conami
section
Apolepsis
25. Sepals
4 in
staminate flowers; stamens 2, filaments connate, anthers dehiscing horizontally (
Nymphanthus
or
Phyllanthus chryseus
) or vertically (
Phyllanthus
section
Thamnocaris
)—pollen pantoporate or clypeate.........................................................................26
25. Sepals 5 or
6 in
staminate flowers (
4 in
Cicca acida
, but then stamens 4, filaments free); stamens 3–15, filaments free or connate, anthers dehiscing mostly vertically, sometimes horizontally ...........................................................................................................27
26. Inflorescences mostly unisexual; staminate disc segmented; anthers dehiscing horizontally (except in
N. ruber
&
N. touranensis
); pollen pantoporate—Asia...............................................................................................................................................
Nymphanthus
26. Inflorescences unisexual (
P. chryseus
) or bisexual; staminate disc entire (
P. chryseus
) or segmented; anthers dehiscing horizontally (
P. chryseus
) or vertically (
P.
section
Thamnocaris
); pollen clypeate—South America...................................................
Phyllanthus
27. Filaments fused in sets, rarely free (
K. glauca
&
K. flexuosa
), stamens 2 (
K. flexuosa
) or 5, connectives not apiculate; fruits baccate—Africa to
Australia
..............................................................................................................................................
Kirganelia
27. Filaments never in sets, free or connate, stamens 3‒20, connectives sometimes apiculate; fruits capsules or baccate (then with 3 connate stamens) ..............................................................................................................................................................................28
28. Plagiotropic branchlets sometimes differentiated in vegetative (with larger leaves) and floriferous (with smaller leaves) branchlets, pinnatiform; stamens 3, filaments connate, anthers dehiscing vertically, connectives apiculate; pistillate disc segmented—Asia & Pacific.................................................................................................................................................................................
Glochidion
28. Plagiotropic branchlets not differentiated and all with leaves of similar size (or unifoliate), sometimes bipinnatiform; stamens 3–20, filaments connate or free, anthers dehiscing horizontally to vertically, connectives apiculate or not; pistillate disc entire..29
29. Branchlets (bi-)pinnatiform; sepals often biseriate (inner whorl much longer); staminate disc often of 3 massive emarginate (or 5 separate) segments to absent, stamens may be inserted on a wide receptaculum; stamens usually 3 or 5 (up to
20 in
Pacific species); stigmas mostly entire, rarely bifid—pollen 3–(syn-)colporate.........................................................................................................30
29. Branchlets pinnatiform; sepal whorls indistinct; staminate disc segmented or entire; stamens 2–7(–
15 in
species of South America and West Indies) stigmas usually bifid or lacerate ...........................................................................................................................31
30. Inflorescences fascicles or panicles; sepals 5 or 6, filaments free or connate, anthers dehiscing vertically to obliquely, connectives usually apiculate; pollen 3- or 4-syncolporate, exine rugulose-reticulate, vermiculate, pilate or ± vermiculate—Calyx in fruit sometimes saccate—
Malesia
,
Australia
, Pacific ...................................................................................................
Dendrophyllanthus
30. Inflorescences fascicles; sepals 6 (
5 in
P. tuerckheimii
), filaments connate (free in
P. tuerckheimii
), anthers dehiscing horizontally (vertically in in
P. tuerckheimii
), connectives rarely elongated; pollen diverse, often 3-colporate or porate with diorate colpi (see
Webster & Carpenter 2002
), exine vermiculate to pilate—Fruits conspicuously veined—South and Central America..................... ...................................................................................................................................
Phyllanthus
subgenus
Conami
section
Conami
31*. Branchlets never transformed to phylloclades; sepals 6; staminate disc segmented; stamens 3, filaments connate, anthers dehiscing vertically, connectives often apiculate; fruits capsules (drupe in
E. officinalis
)—Asia.........................................................
Emblica
31*. Branchlets never transformed to phylloclades; sepals 5 or 6; staminate disc segmented; stamens 3, filaments connate, anthers dehiscing mostly horizontally to obliquely, connectives rarely apiculate; fruits capsules—mainly Africa..........................
Moeroris
31*. Branchlets sometimes transformed to phylloclades; sepals 4‒8; staminate disc mostly segmented, sometimes entire; stamens 3‒15, filaments free or fused, sometimes fused in several whorls, anthers dehiscing horizontally to vertically, connectives sometimes apiculate; fruits capsules or berries—Americas............................................................................................................…
Phyllanthus