Wild Relatives of the Eggplant (Solanum melongena L.: Solanaceae): New Understanding of Species Names in a Complex Group
Author
Knapp, Sandra
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, United Kingdom
s.knapp@nhm.ac. uk
Author
Vorontsova, Maria S.
Herbarium, Library, Art and Archives, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Richmond, Surrey, United Kingdom
Author
Prohens, Jaime
Instituto de Conservación y Mejora de la Agrodiversidad Valenciana, Universitat Politècnica de València, Valencia, Spain
text
PLoS ONE
2013
2013-02-22
8
2
1
12
journal article
20350
10.1371/journal.pone.0057039
fcefd797-1d3e-43c6-ad6e-8550a33e9199
PMC3579775
23451138
6338572
9.
Solanum rigidum
Lam.
, Tabl. Encycl. 2: 23. 1794.
Solanum latifolium
Poir.
, Encycl. (Lamarck) 4: 303. 1797.
Distribution. Endemic to the Cape Verde Islands; a few old collections known from Barbados and Antigua were probably introduced via ships carrying enslaved Africans from the Cape Verdes to the Caribbean; found along washes and at roadsides, sea level to
1000 m
elevation.
This species has long been known as
S. fuscatum
L.
, and was thought to be an American species introduced to the Cape Verde Islands [
60
].
Solanum fuscatum
is a name of uncertain application [
61
,
62
]; it has no type specimen and has recently been proposed for rejection [
63
] under the rules of the Code [
51
]. Morphology and molecular evidence (S. Stern and M.S. Vorontsova, unpublished) both show this species is a member of the eggplant clade and not an introduction from the Americas; it is endemic to the Cape Verdes and thus, despite its somewhat weedy nature, of conservation interest. The assumption that it was an American (New World) species has meant it has been treated as an invasive, rather than the endemic that it is. Its relationships to other eggplant relatives have not yet been rigorously assessed.
Solanum rigidum
resembles
S cerasiferum
morphologically but can be distinguished from it and other members of the group by its long triangular calyx lobes on long-styled flowers that are reflexed at the tips in fruit and the attenuate leaf bases.