Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)

Eriophorum crinigerum (Scirpeae, Cyperaceae) has been placed in either the genus Scirpus (club-rushes) or Eriophorum (cottograsses), but a unique combination of bristle and inflorescence features suggests that it could represent a new generic lineage. In addition, prior field studies and initial ana...

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Main Author: Gilmour, Claire N.
Other Authors: Starr, Julian
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23854
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3618
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-238542018-01-05T19:01:32Z Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae) Gilmour, Claire N. Starr, Julian Cyperaceaee Calliscirpus Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae clade Eriophorum crinigerum (Scirpeae, Cyperaceae) has been placed in either the genus Scirpus (club-rushes) or Eriophorum (cottograsses), but a unique combination of bristle and inflorescence features suggests that it could represent a new generic lineage. In addition, prior field studies and initial analyses suggested that E. crinigerum could consist of two species. Using molecular, morphological, anatomical, embryological and geographical data, I examine relationships within the hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae clade (ca. 2055 species)to which E. crinigerum belongs and I explore whether this species could contain undocumented species diversity. Results demonstrate not only that E. crinigerum represents a new genus within Cyperaceae, here called Calliscirpus, but it can be divided into two allopatric species, C. criniger and C. brachythrix sp. nov. Calliscirpus brachythrix is confined to the Sierra Nevada Mountains and C. criniger is confined to the Klamath-Siskiyou and North Coastal Mountains; all three mountain ranges are found within the California Floristic Province (USA) which is well known for its high generic and species endemism. My results suggest that Calliscirpus is distantly related to Eriophorum, but that it could be most closely related to the Cariceae, a osmopolitan clade representing almost 40% of all Cyperaceae diversity. 2013-02-28T15:30:32Z 2014-03-01T11:00:04Z 2013 2013 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23854 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3618 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Cyperaceaee
Calliscirpus
Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae clade
spellingShingle Cyperaceaee
Calliscirpus
Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae clade
Gilmour, Claire N.
Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
description Eriophorum crinigerum (Scirpeae, Cyperaceae) has been placed in either the genus Scirpus (club-rushes) or Eriophorum (cottograsses), but a unique combination of bristle and inflorescence features suggests that it could represent a new generic lineage. In addition, prior field studies and initial analyses suggested that E. crinigerum could consist of two species. Using molecular, morphological, anatomical, embryological and geographical data, I examine relationships within the hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae clade (ca. 2055 species)to which E. crinigerum belongs and I explore whether this species could contain undocumented species diversity. Results demonstrate not only that E. crinigerum represents a new genus within Cyperaceae, here called Calliscirpus, but it can be divided into two allopatric species, C. criniger and C. brachythrix sp. nov. Calliscirpus brachythrix is confined to the Sierra Nevada Mountains and C. criniger is confined to the Klamath-Siskiyou and North Coastal Mountains; all three mountain ranges are found within the California Floristic Province (USA) which is well known for its high generic and species endemism. My results suggest that Calliscirpus is distantly related to Eriophorum, but that it could be most closely related to the Cariceae, a osmopolitan clade representing almost 40% of all Cyperaceae diversity.
author2 Starr, Julian
author_facet Starr, Julian
Gilmour, Claire N.
author Gilmour, Claire N.
author_sort Gilmour, Claire N.
title Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
title_short Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
title_full Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
title_fullStr Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
title_full_unstemmed Calliscirpus Gen. Nov. and its Relationships Within the Hyperdiverse Cariceae + Dulichieae + Scirpeae Clade (Cyperaceae)
title_sort calliscirpus gen. nov. and its relationships within the hyperdiverse cariceae + dulichieae + scirpeae clade (cyperaceae)
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23854
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-3618
work_keys_str_mv AT gilmourclairen calliscirpusgennovanditsrelationshipswithinthehyperdiversecariceaedulichieaescirpeaecladecyperaceae
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