Tectaria Cav., Anales Hist. Nat.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.334.3.6 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FD270F-FF8E-9F68-5FDA-FF20FA8AFBC6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Tectaria Cav., Anales Hist. Nat. |
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Tectaria Cav., Anales Hist. Nat. View in CoL 1(2): 115. 1799.
A large, variable, and somewhat unwieldy genus with many generic synonyms that is difficult to characterize. Most species have a combination of finely areolate venation with areoles often (but not always) containing free included veinlets; proximal pinnae each with a basal basiscopic lobe or an elongated pinnule; and round, abaxial sori; sori generally abaxial, not close to the blade margins, indusiate (as in all Bolivian species) and indusia peltate, round-reniform, or occasionally J-shaped (athyrioid), but indusia lost in some lineages. Some extraterritorial species are strongly dimorphic, and others have marginal sori (or even coenosori). A pantropical genus of about 230 species, with at least 30 currently recognized species in the Neotropics ( Morton 1966, Holttum 1986b, Kessler & Smith 2007, Rojas-Alvarado & Sanín 2014). The genus appears to be of Asian origin, with the American species falling into a monophyletic clade ( Zhang et al. 2017). The genus Draconopteris , a single species, has recently been segregated ( Zhang et al. 2016), largely on the basis of molecular evidence. The genus Tectaria is one of the most common and conspicuous fern genera in neotropical lower elevation forests, showing a preference for nutrient-rich soils ( Tuomisto & Poulsen 1996).
The genus, and, in the Neotropics, especially the species centered around Tectaria incisa , are in need of detailed taxonomic study; not all Bolivian specimens can at present be reliably placed in the recognized species. In a series of papers on Tectaria in the Neotropics, primarily those occurring from areas in Costa Rica to Peru, Rojas-Alvarado has described nine new species, a new variety, as well as a new interspecific hybrid (involving T. lizarzaburui ) in the genus ( Rojas-Alvarado 2001, 2004, 2006 a, 2006b, Rojas-Alvarado & Sanín 2014), and also cited new distributional records. In the most recent of these papers, the authors presented a key to the 28 species occurring in the area from Costa Rica to Colombia. One of these new species described ( Rojas-Alvarado 2001), T. pascoensis , is now known from Bolivia and treated herein; others may eventually be found to occur further south in the Andes as well: Tectaria atropurpurea A.R.Sm. , from Ecuador and Peru; T. andina (Sodiro) C.Chr. , from Colombia and Peru; T. chimborazensis (C.Chr.) C.Chr. , from Ecuador and Peru; Tectaria microsora A.R.Sm. , from Ecuador and Peru; and T. pubens R.C.Moran , from Peru. Jeferson Costa (BHCB) has recently revised Tectaria in the Neotropics, but this work is still unpublished.
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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Tectaria Cav., Anales Hist. Nat.
Kessler, Michael & Smith, Alan R. 2018 |
Tectaria
Tectaria Cav. 1799: 115 |