Academic literature on the topic 'Clinantheae'

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Journal articles on the topic "Clinantheae"

1

Esquerre-Ibañez, Boris, and Alan W. Meerow. "A new species of Clinanthus (Amaryllidaceae: Amaryllidoideae: Clinantheae) from Cordillera de los Tarros, Northwest Peru, and notes on related species." Phytotaxa 438, no. 1 (2020): 53–61. https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.438.1.7.

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Esquerre-Ibañez, Boris, Meerow, Alan W. (2020): A new species of Clinanthus (Amaryllidaceae: Amaryllidoideae: Clinantheae) from Cordillera de los Tarros, Northwest Peru, and notes on related species. Phytotaxa 438 (1): 53-61, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.438.1.7, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.438.1.7
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2

Meerow, Alan W., and Segundo Leiva. "A new species of Clinanthus from northern Peru (Asparagales, Amaryllidaceae, Amarylloideae, Clinantheae)." PhytoKeys 63 (June 2, 2016): 99–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.63.8895.

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3

Leiva, Segundo, and Alan W. Meerow. "A new species of Clinanthus from northern Peru (Asparagales, Amaryllidaceae, Amarylloideae, Clinantheae)." PhytoKeys 63 (June 2, 2016): 99–106. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.63.8895.

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Clinanthus milagroanthus S. Leiva & Meerow, sp. nov. is described from the Department of La Libertad in Peru. The new species is most closely related to C. mirabilis (Ravenna) Meerow, with further affinities to C. viridiflorus (R. & P.) Meerow. It can be distinguished from C. mirabilis by its wider leaves, the much more brightly colored and wide spreading limb, and the much lighter colored perigone tube (yellowish green vs. dark green in C. mirabilis). A conspicuous bulge just proximal to the midpoint of the tube is a unique character of the new species.
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4

Meerow, Alan W., Philip A. Silverstone-Sopkin, Alejandro Zuluaga-Tróchez, and Jhon A. Sánchez-Taborda. "A remarkable new species of Pamianthe (Amaryllidaceae) from the Department of Cauca, Colombia." PhytoKeys 115 (January 17, 2019): 73–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.115.30755.

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A new saxicolous species of Amaryllidaceae tentatively assigned to the tribe Clinantheae, Pamiantheecollis Silverst., Meerow & Sánchez-Taborda, is described from the western slope of the Cordillera Occidental in the department of Cauca, Colombia. The new species differs from the two hitherto known species of Pamianthe in its yellow flowers and in its nearly obsolete perianth tube. The near loss of the perianth tube may be correlated with a change in pollinator. The new species lacks a bulb; it produces a large number of winged seeds that are wind-dispersed. A key to the species of Pami
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5

Meerow, Alan W., Philip A. Silverstone-Sopkin, Alejandro Zuluaga-Tróchez, and Jhon A. Sánchez-Taborda. "A remarkable new species of Pamianthe (Amaryllidaceae) from the Department of Cauca, Colombia." PhytoKeys 115 (January 17, 2019): 73–82. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.115.30755.

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A new saxicolous species of Amaryllidaceae tentatively assigned to the tribe Clinantheae, Pamianthe ecollis Silverst., Meerow & Sánchez-Taborda, is described from the western slope of the Cordillera Occidental in the department of Cauca, Colombia. The new species differs from the two hitherto known species of Pamianthe in its yellow flowers and in its nearly obsolete perianth tube. The near loss of the perianth tube may be correlated with a change in pollinator. The new species lacks a bulb; it produces a large number of winged seeds that are wind-dispersed. A key to the species of Pamiant
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6

GONZÁLES, PAÚL, and ALAN W. MEEROW. "Two new species of Clinanthus (Asparagales: Amaryllidaceae: Clinantheae) from northern Peru." Phytotaxa 472, no. 1 (2020): 13–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.472.1.2.

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Clinanthus fabianae and C. thiagoi are described from Ancash and La Libertad departments of Peru. Both species have similar perigone coloration, broadly lobed staminal coronas, and incurved free filaments. They may represent a distinct species group, along with the previously described C. inflatus. The species can be separated by number of flowers, pedicel length, flower habit, tube length, morphology and pattern of dilation, and color of the tepal apiculum.
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7

MEEROW, ALAN W., and KYOKO NAKAMURA. "Two new species of Peruvian Amaryllidaceae, an expanded concept of the genus Paramongaia, and taxonomic notes in Stenomesson." Phytotaxa 416, no. 2 (2019): 184–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.416.2.6.

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A new species of Paramongaia, P. multiflora, and of Rauhia, R. albescens, are described from Peru. We also present an updated parsimony analysis of aligned ITS sequences across the tetraploid Andean clade of Amaryllidaceae subfam. Amaryllidoideae that places both the new species and the only other species known of Paramongaia into a clade within the tribe Clinantheae with three erstwhile species of Clinanthus. We propose an expanded concept of the genus Paramongaia, conserved over Callithauma, for all five species, provide a neotype for Paramongaia viridiflora, and make the necessary combinati
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8

ESQUERRE-IBAÑEZ, BORIS, and ALAN W. MEEROW. "A new species of Clinanthus (Amaryllidaceae: Amaryllidoideae: Clinantheae) from Cordillera de los Tarros, Northwest Peru, and notes on related species." Phytotaxa 438, no. 1 (2020): 53–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.438.1.7.

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Clinanthus longissimus B. Esquerre & Meerow sp. nov. is described from the Department of Cajamarca in northwest Peru. This new species has affinity with C. coccineus (Ruiz. & Pav.) Meerow, C. incarnatus (Kunth) Meerow and C. variegatus (Ruiz & Pav.) Meerow, from which it can be distinguished mainly by the length of the flower, the continuous floral tube without protuberances, the size of the staminal cup and the color of the tepals. C. longissimus is so far known only from the Province of Cutervo.
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9

Meerow, Alan W., and Asunción Cano. "Taxonomic novelties in Amaryllidaceae from the Department of Ancash, Peru, and a new combination in Clinanthus." PhytoKeys 131 (September 16, 2019): 115–26. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.131.36160.

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Clinanthus inflatus (Amaryllidaceae) and Ismene parviflora are described from Ancash Department in Peru. The flower of C. inflatus is urceolate, and resembles that of Urceolina (Amaryllidaceae tr. Eucharideae), a unique morphology for the genus. Ismene parviflora, with its small, loosely formed, narrowly funnelform-tubular perigone with a ventricose limb, appears to have some affinity to subgen. Pseudostenomesson and may represent an intermediate form between the former and species of subgen. Ismene. Stenomesson rubrum is transferred to Clinanthus as C. ruber on the basis of its narrowly lorat
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10

Meerow, Alan. "Classification and phylogeny of Amaryllidaceae, the modern synthesis and the road ahead: a review." Boletín de la Sociedad Argentina de Botánica 58, no. 3 (2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v58.n3.40046.

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The classification and phylogenetic history of the Amaryllidaceae is reviewed since the dawn of molecular systematics in the 1990’s. The family is now recognized as comprising three subfamilies: Agapanthoideae, Allioideae, and Amaryllidoideae, of which the latter is the largest. The family likely had a Gondwanaland origin in what is now Africa. Agapanthoideae is monotypic, endemic to South Africa, and the first branch in the family tree of life; Allioidieae is sister to Amaryllidoideae. Four tribes are recognized in Allioideae: Allieae (monotypic, with nearly 1000 species of Allium across the
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