Etienne-Pierre Ventenat (1757 - 1808) and the gardens of Cels and Empress Joséphine
Author
Callmander, Martin W.
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Author
Durbin, Olivier D.
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Author
Lack, Hans-Walter
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Author
Bungener, Patrick
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Author
Martin, Pascal
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Author
Gautier, Laurent
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
text
Candollea
2017
2017-03-30
72
1
87
132
journal article
20462
10.15553/c2017v721a8
acfdbf0a-a444-4a6d-a27f-2fbb27a6893b
2235-3658
5721919
63.
Polygonum polygamum
Vent., Descr. Pl. Nouv.
: tab. 65. 1802.
Lectotypus
(designated here): [
UNITED STATES
]:
Hort. Cels,
Ventenat s.n.
(
G
[
G00341643
specimen on the left]!)
(
Fig. 11
).
Notes. –
The only collection of this species in Ventenat’s herbarium is mixed: a Ventenat collection from Cels’s garden and fragments of possible isotypes (G [G00341643 specimen on the right]) of
Polygonella parvifolia
Michx.
, a name published one year later (
Michaux, 1803
) (with a duplicate in P-JU n° 4290 [P00681748]). The latter name is probably based on the same original material as mentioned on the sheet by Vernon M. Bates (
Fig. 11
) but we failed to find convincing type material in P-MICH due to the complicated taxonomy of the mixed collections and leave this to a specialist of this genus.
Horton (1963: 198)
designated tab. 65 of
Descriptions
in 1802 as the
lectotype
for the name
Polygonum polygamum
but as original material has been found, our lectotypification supersedes the previous one. We designate Ventenat’s collection as the
lectotype
(specimen on the left of the sheet marked with an asterix). Recent molecular phylogenetic data show that
Polygonella
Michx.
is embedded in
Polygonum
L. and
Polygonella
is currently recognised at the subsectional level within
Polygonum
(
Schuster et al., 2011
)
.