Vittaria Sm., Mém. Acad. Roy. Sci. (Turin)
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https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.332.3.1 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F87DD-FFC7-7904-FF49-FF42FC0FFDCA |
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Felipe |
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Vittaria Sm., Mém. Acad. Roy. Sci. (Turin) |
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Vittaria Sm., Mém. Acad. Roy. Sci. (Turin) View in CoL 5: 413, pl. 9, fig. 5. 1793.
Characterized by greenish to yellowish petioles, and very narrow, linear blades <4 mm wide, each blade with a single row of areoles and a single line of sporangia on both sides of the costae. Vittaria is nearly unique in ferns in having two kinds of spores: most species have globose-tetrahedral spores with a triradiate scar (e.g., V. graminifolia ) while others have bilateral, reniform spores with a monolete scar (e.g., V. lineata ). Vittaria was previously considered to include about 50 species, but most of these are now placed in Ananthacorus , Radiovittaria , and, in the Old World, Haplopteris . A genus of about seven species, with the two most wide-ranging ones in Bolivia. All vittarias are neotropical except Vittaria isoëtifolia Bory , which occurs in Africa, Madagascar, and the Mascarenes. The neotropical ones were treated by Benedict (1914).
In phylogenetic analyses, Vittaria is sister to a small clade comprising two monotypic genera, Scoliosorus (southern Mexico to Panama) + Ananthacorus (which see; Schuettpelz et al. 2016).
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.
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