Circaea L., 1753
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.597.4.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7958616 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FD5F66-FFE1-E154-3DCD-BAECFA114D7C |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Circaea L. |
status |
|
2. Circaea L. View in CoL View at ENA
Lectotype (designated by Britton & Brown 1913):— Circaea lutetiana Linnaeus (1753: 9) View in CoL .
Erect perennial herbs. Stems usually cespitose. Leaves opposite and decussate, with long petiolate. Inflorescence simple or branched racemes. Flowers 2-merous; floral tube, ca. 2.4 mm long; ovary unilocular or bilocular, 1 seed per locule; petal 2, alternate, white or pink, notched at the apex; stamens 2, opposite the sepals; filaments as same color as the petals; nectary completely within and filling the lower part of the floral tube, or elongated and protrude above the opening of the floral tube as a disc. Indehiscent capsule covered with uncinate hairs. Seed smooth, firmly inset to the inner ovary wall. Chromosome number, n = 11 ( Boufford 1982).
Circaea comprises eight species (14 taxa) ( Boufford 1982), and six species (eight taxa including subspecies) in the Pan-Himalaya region. The genus is distinctive with other genera in Onagraceae by having 2-merous flowers and indehiscent fruits covered with hooked hairs ( Boufford et al. 1990). The sister relationship between Fuchsia Linnaeus (1753: 1191) and Circaea has been confirmed by molecular phylogenetic studies ( Berry et al. 2004, Wagner et al. 2007, Xie et al. 2009).
Key to species of Circaea View in CoL View at ENA in the Pan-Himalaya region
1 Ovaries and fruits unilocular; rhizomes terminated by tubers............................................................................................................2
- Ovaries and fruits bilocular; rhizomes without tubers .......................................................................................................................3
2 Apical notch 1/2 or more length of petal; pedicels glandular pubescent; leaves with 9–15 secondary veins; combined length of mature fruit and pedicel 7.5–15 mm .............................................................................................................................. 2.6. C. repens View in CoL
- Apical notch 1/2 or less length of petal; pedicels glabrous; leaves with 4–10 secondary veins; combined length of mature fruit and pedicel 3.5–7.8 mm ........................................................................................................................................................2.1. C. alpina View in CoL
3 Nectary wholly included within the floral tube..................................................................................................................................4
- Nectary exserted beyond the floral tube.............................................................................................................................................5
4 Axis of inflorescence with glandular and nonglandular hairs.......................................................................................2.2. C. cordata View in CoL
- Axis of inflorescence glabrous or with only glandular hairs................................................................................. 2.4. C. glabrescens View in CoL
5 Stem glabrous; petal apical notch to more than 1/10–1/5 their length ................................................................... 2.3. C. erubescens View in CoL
- Stem pubescent with falcately recurved hairs; petal apical notch to more than 1/4–1/2 their length ............................ 2.5. C. mollis View in CoL
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |