Amaryllidaceae
Amaryllidaceae | |
---|---|
Amaryllis belladonna | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Monocots |
Order: | Asparagales |
Family: | Amaryllidaceae J.St.-Hil. nom. cons.[1][2] |
Type genus | |
Amaryllis L. | |
Subfamilies | |
The Amaryllidaceae (amaryllids), or Amaryllis family, are a family of herbaceous, mainly perennial and bulbous (rarely rhizomatous) flowering plants included in the monocot order Asparagales. The family takes its name from the genus Amaryllis, hence the common name of the amaryllis family. The leaves are usually linear, the flowers usually bisexual and symmetrical, arranged in umbels on the stem. The petals and sepals are undifferentiated as tepals, which may be fused at the base into a floral tube. Some also display a corona. Allyl sulfide compounds produce the characteristic odour of the onion subfamily (Allioideae).
The family, which was originally created in 1805, now contains about 1600 species, divided into about 75 genera, 17 tribes and three subfamilies, the Agapanthoideae (agapanthus), Allioideae (onions and chives) and Amaryllidoideae (amaryllis, daffodils, snowdrops). Over time it has seen much reorganisation and at various times was combined together with the related Liliaceae. Since 2009 a very broad view has prevailed based on phylogenetics, and including a number of other former families.
The family are found in tropical to subtropical areas of the world and include many ornamental garden plants and vegetables.
Description
The Amaryllidaceae are mainly terrestrial (rarely aquatic) flowering plants that are herbaceous or succulent geophytes (occasionally epiphytes) that are perennial, with the exception of four species. Most genera grow from bulbs, but a few such as Agapanthus, Clivia and Scadoxus develop from rhizomes (underground stems).[3]
The leaves are simple rather fleshy and two-ranked with parallel veins. Leaf shape may be linear, strap like, oblong, elliptic, lanceolate (lance shaped) or filiform (threadlike). The leaves which are either grouped at the base or arranged alternatively on the stem may be sessile or petiolate and possess a meristem.
The flowers, which are hermaphroditic (bisexual), are actinomorphic (radially symmetrical), rarely zygomorphic, pedicellate or sessile, and are typically arranged in umbels at the apex of leafless flowering stems, or scapes and associated with a filiform (thread like) bract. The perianth (perigonium) consists of six undifferentiated tepals arranged in two whorls of three. The tepals are similar in shape and size, and may be free from each other or fused at the base (connate) to form a floral tube (hypanthium). In some genera, such as Narcissus, this may be surmounted by cup or trumpet shaped projection, the corona (paraperigonium or false corolla). This may be reduced to a mere disc in some species.
The position of the ovary varies by subfamily, the Agapanthoideae and Allioideae have superior ovaries, while the Amaryllidoideae have inferior ovaries. There are six stamens arranged in two whorls of three, occasionally more as in Gethyllis (Amaryllidoideae, 9–18).
The fruit is dry and capsule-shaped, or fleshy and berrylike.
The Allioideae produce allyl sulfide compounds which give them their characteristic smell.[4][5]
Taxonomy
History
Pre-Darwinian
The name Amaryllis had been applied to a number of plants over the course of history. When Linnaeus formerly described the type genus Amaryllis, from which the family derives its name, in his Species Plantarum in 1753,[6] there were nine species with this name. He placed Amaryllis in a grouping he referred to as Hexandria monogynia (i.e. six stamens and one pistil)[7] containing 51 genera in all[8] in his sexual classification scheme.
The Hexandria monogynia have come to be treated as either liliaceous or amaryllidaceaous (see Taxonomy of Liliaceae) over time.[9] From 1763, when Adanson conceived of these genera as 'Liliaceae'[10] they were included in this family, placing Amaryllis in Section VII, Narcissi.[11] of his scheme, in which the Liliaceae had eight sections.
With de Jussieu's came the formal establishment of organising genera into families (ordo) in 1789.[12] De Jussieu established the hierarchical system of taxonomy (phylogeny), placing Amaryllis and 15 related genera within a division of Monocotyledons, a class (III) of Stamina Perigynia[13] and 'order' Narcisse, divided into three subfamilies.[14] This system also formally described the Liliaceae, which were a separate order within the Stamina perigynia (Lilia). The use of the term Ordo (order) at that time was closer to what we now understand as Family, rather than Order.[15][16] In creating his scheme he used a modified form of Linnaeus' sexual classification but with the respective topography of stamens to carpels rather than just their numbers.
The Amaryllidaceae family was formally named as 'Amaryllidées' (Amaryllideae) in 1805, by Jean Henri Jaume Saint-Hilaire.[17] In 1810 Brown proposed that a subgroup of Liliaceae be distinguished on the basis of the position of the ovaries and be referred to as Amaryllideae[18] and in 1813 de Candolle described Liliacées Juss. and Amaryllidées Brown as two quite separate families.[19] The literature on the organisation of genera into families and higher ranks became available in the English language with Samuel Frederick Gray's A natural arrangement of British plants (1821).[20] Gray used a combination of Linnaeus' sexual classification and Jussieu's natural classification to group together a number of families having in common six equal stamens, a single style and a perianth that was simple and petaloid, but did not use formal names for these higher ranks. Within the grouping he separated families by the characteristics of their fruit and seed. He treated groups of genera with these characteristics as separate families, such as Amaryllideae, Liliaceae, Asphodeleae and Asparageae.[21]
John Lindley (1830, 1846) was the other important British taxonomist of the early nineteenth century. In his first taxonomic work, An Introduction to the Natural System of Botany (1830)[22] he partly followed Jussieu by describing a subclass he called 'Endogenae, or Monocotyledonous Plants' (preserving de Candolle's Endogenæ phanerogamæ)[23] divided into two tribes, the Petaloidea and Glumaceae. He divided the former, often referred to as petaloid monocots, into 32 orders, including the Amaryllideae.[24] He defined the latter as "Hexapetaloideous bulbous hexandrous monocotyledons, with an inferior ovarium, a 6-parted perianthium with equitant sepals, and flat spongy seeds" and included Amaryllis, Phycella, Nerine, Vallota, and Calostemma.
By 1846, in his final scheme[25] Lindley had greatly expanded and refined the treatment of the monocots, introducing both an intermediate ranking (Alliances) and tribes within families. Lindley placed the Liliaceae within the Liliales, but saw it as a paraphyletic ("catch-all") family, being all Liliales not included in the other orders, but hoped that the future would reveal some characteristic that would group them better. This kept the Liliaceae[26] separate from the Amaryllidaceae[27] (Narcissales Alliance). Of these Liliaceae[26] was divided into eleven tribes (with 133 genera) and Amaryllidaceae[27] into four tribes (with 68 genera), yet both contained many genera that would eventually segregate to each other's contemporary orders (Liliales and Asparagales respectively). The Liliaceae would be reduced to a small 'core' represented by the Tulipeae tribe (18 genera), while large groups such Scilleae and Asparagae would become part of Asparagales either as part of the Amaryllidaceae or as separate families. While of the four tribes of the Amaryllidaceae, the Amaryllideae and Narcissea would remain as core amaryllids while the Agaveae would be part of Asparagaceae but the Alstroemeriae would become a family within the Liliales.
Since then seven of Linnaeus' Hexandria monogynia genera have consistently been placed in a common taxonomic unit of amaryllids, based on the inferior position of the ovaries (whether this be as an order, suborder, family, subfamily, tribe or section).[28] Thus much of what we now consider Amaryllidaceae remained in Liliaceae because the ovary was superior, till 1926 when John Hutchinson transferred them to Amaryllidaceae.[29] This usage of the family entered the English language literature through the work of Samuel Frederick Gray (1821),[30] William Herbert (1837)[31] and John Lindley (1830,[32] 1846[33]). Meanwhile, Lindley had described two Chilean genera which for which he created a new family, Gilliesieae.[34]
The number of known genera within these families continued to grow, and by the time of the Bentham and Hooker classification (1883) the Amaryllidaceae (Amaryllideae) were divided into four tribes, of which only one (Amarylleae) is still included.[35] The Liliaceae[36] were becoming one of the largest families, and Bentham and Hooker divided it into 20 tribes, of which one was the Allieae,[37] which as Allioideae would eventually become part of Amaryllidaceae as two of its three subfamilies. The Allieae included both Agapantheae,[38] the third of the current subfamilies, and Lindley's Gilliesieae[39] as two of its four subtribes.[40] Bentham and Hooker's scheme was the last major classification using the natural approach.[41]
Post-Darwinian
Although Charles Darwin's Origin of Species (1859) preceded Bentham and Hooker's publication, the latter project was commenced much earlier and Bentham was initially sceptical of Darwinism.[41] The new phyletic approach changed the way that taxonomists considered plant classification, incorporating evolutionary information into their schemata. The major works in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century employing this approach were German, those of Eichler (1875–1886), Engler and Prantl (1886–1924) and Wettstein (1901–1935).
The Amaryllidaceae family were treated similarly in the German language literature to the manner they had been in English. August Eichler (1886)[42] was the first phyletic taxonomist and positioned the Amaryllidaceae and Liliaceae within the Liliiflorae,[43][44] one of the seven orders of Monocotyledons. Liliaceae included both Allium and Ornithogalum (modern Allioideae). Adolf Engler developed Eichler's ideas much further, into much more elaborate scheme. In his system (1903)[45] the Liliineae were a suborder of Liliiflorae, including both Liliaceae and Amaryllidaceae families. Within the Liliaceae the core liliids were segregated in subfamily Lilioideae from the alliaceous subfamily, Allioideae. Allieae, Agapantheae and Gilliesieae were the three tribes within this subfamily.[46] A somewhat similar approach to Liliiflorae[44] was adopted by Wettstein (without suborders or tribes), and with Alliodeae (Allium) and Lilioideae (Ornithogalum) as subfamilies of Liliaceae.[47] Wettstein's Amaryllidaceae contained three subfamilies.,[48] including Amaryllidoideae and Agavoideae.
The early twentieth century was marked by increasing doubts about the placement of the alliaceous genera within Liliaceae. Lotsy was the first taxonomist to propose separating them, and in his system he describes Agapanthaceae, Alliaceae and Gilliesiaceae as new and separate families from Liliaceae.[49] This approach was adopted by a number of other authorities, such as Dahlgren (1985)[50] and Rahn (1998).[51]
Another approach was that of John Hutchinson (1926), who performed the first major recircumscription of the family in over a century. He doubted that Brown's dictum that the position of the ovary was the distinguishing feature that separated Amaryllidaceae and Liliaceae. He believed that the characterising feature of the family was rather "an umbellate inflorescence subtended by an involucre of one or more spathaceous bracts".[29] His work on this has been upheld by subsequent research and his definition remains valid today.[52] Using this criterion, he removed a number of taxa (Agavaceae, Hypoxidaceae, Alstroemeriaceae) and transferred the Agapantheae, Allieae and Gilliesieae from Liliaceae to Amaryllidaceae.[29]
Other writers proposed reuniting Amaryllidaceae with Liliaceae. Thorne (1976)[53] and Cronquist (1988)[54] both included Amaryllidaceae within a broad concept of Liliaceae[28] (although Thorne would later separate them again, but keep Alliaceae as a third family).[55] Thus 'Alliaceae' were variously included in either Liliaceae, Amaryllidaceae, or as a separate entity. This uncertainty of circumscription reflected a wider problem with the petaloid monocots in general. Over the course of time there have been widely differing views as to the limits of the family, and consequently much of the literature dealing with this family requires careful inspection to determine which sense of the Amaryllidaceae the work treats.
Phylogenetic era
The current phylogenetic era of understanding the taxonomic relationships of Amaryllidaceae began with the work of Fay and Chase (1996) who utilised the plastid gene rubisco rbcL to identify the close relationship between Agapanthus, Alliaceae and Amaryllidaceae.[56] Agapanthus had variously been included in Alliaceae or was placed in a separate family, Agapanthaceae. They relocated Agapanthus within Amaryllidaceae which they considered a sister group to Amaryllidaceae. Nevertheless the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) classification (1998) still considered these three separate families within Asparagales.[57] The close relationship was confirmed in a more detailed study by Meerow (1999) who confirmed the monophyly of Amaryllidaceae, with Agapanthaceae as its sister family and Alliaceae in turn as sister to the Amaryllidaceae/Agapanthaceae clade.[9]
In its second iteration (2003) the APG proposed simplifying the higher (core) Asparagales by reducing them to two more broadly circumscribed families, and provisionally proposed the name Alliaceae sensu lato (s.l.) to include the three sister families (Agapanthaceae, Alliaceae sensu stricto, s.s., and Amaryllidaceae), since together they form a monophyletic group. In this respect they were following Hutchinson's system (see above). Under this proposal the three families became reduced to subfamilies (and by extension the subfamilies of Alliaceae s.s. being reduced to tribes.) At the same time they appreciated there was an argument for making Amaryllidaceae s.l. the formal name or the new and larger family,[58][59] a position subsequently strongly supported by Meerow and colleagues.[60][61]
The 2009 version of the APG formally adopted this broad view and the conserved name Amaryllidaceae. To distinguish this broader family from the older narrower family it has become customary to refer to Amaryllidaceae sensu APG, or as used by APG, Amaryllidaceae s.l.. as opposed to Amaryllidaceae s.s..[2][62]
This phylogenetic tree (cladogram) shows the placement of Amaryllidaceae s.l. within the order Asparagales.[63]
Asparagales |
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Subdivision
As reconstituted by the APG, Amaryllidaceae s.l. consists of three subfamilies, Agapanthoideae, Allioideae and Amaryllidoideae, corresponding to the three families that were subsumed into it:[64]
- Agapanthoideae (Agapanthaceae)
- Allioideae (Alliaceae)
- Amaryllidoideae (Amaryllidaceae s.s.)
Of these, one (Agapanthoideae) is monogeneric for Agapanthus (see Cladogram I).
Cladogram I: Amaryllidaceae sensu s.l./APG
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Of the other two subfamilies, Allioideae was resolved into three subdivisions by the initial phylogenetic studies of Fay and Chase (1996). Since they treated Allioideae as family Alliaceae, these were subfamilies Allioideae, Tulbaghioideae and Gilliesioideae. When family Alliaceae was reduced to subfamily Allioideae, the were reduced to tribes, namely Allieae, Tulbaghieae and Gilliesieae (see Cladogram II).[56]
Cladogram II: Allioideae
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Complete resolution of infrafamilial (suprageneric) relationships within subfamily Amaryllidoideae (Amaryllidaceae s.s.) has proven more difficult.[60] Fay and Chase's study lacked sufficient resolution for further elucidation of this group. Historically a wide variety of infrafamilial classification systems have been proposed for the Amaryllidaceae. In the latter twentieth century there were at least six schemes, including Hutchinson (1926),[29] Traub (1963),[65] Dahlgren (1985),[66] Müller-Doblies and Müller-Doblies (1996),[67] Hickey and King (1997)[68] and Meerow and Snijman (1998).[69] Hutchinson was an early proponent of the larger Amaryllidaceae, transferring taxa from Liliaceae and had three tribes, Agapantheae, Allieae and Gilliesieae. Traub (who provides a brief history of the family) largely followed Hutchinson, but with four subfamilies (Allioideae, Hemerocalloideae, Ixiolirioideae and Amaryllidoideae), the Amaryllidoideae he then divided further into two "infrafamilies", Amarylloidinae and Pancratioidinae, an arrangement with 23 tribes in total. In Dahlgren's system, a "splitter" who favoured larger numbers of smaller families, he adopted a narrower circumscription than Traub, using only the latter's Amaryllidoideae which he treated as eight tribes. Müller-Doblies described ten tribes (and 19 subtribes). Hickey and King described ten tribes by which the family were divided, such as the Zephyrantheae.[68] Meerow and Snijder considered thirteen tribes, one (Amaryllideae) with two subtribes (For a comparison of these schemes see Meerow et al. 1999, Table I).[9]
The further application of molecular phylogenetics produced a complex picture that only partially related to the tribal structure considered up to that date, which had been based on morphology alone.[9] RAther Amaryllidaceae resolved along biogeographical lines. A predominantly South African clade identified as Amaryllideae was a sister group to the rest of the family. The two other African tribes were Haemantheae and Cyrtantheae, and a Australasian tribe Calostemmateae was also identified, but a large clade could only be described as Eurasian and American, each of which were monophyletic sister clades to each other. The Eurasian clade was poorly resolved with the exception of Lycorideae (Central and East Asian). The American clade was better resolved identifying both Hippeastreae as a tribe (and Zephyranthinae as a subtribe within it). The American clade also included an Andean clade[9]
Further investigation of the American clade suggested the presence of two groups, the Andean clade and a further "Hippeastroid" clade, in which Griffineae was sister to the rest of the clade (Hippeastreae). Similarly within the Andean clade Eustephieae appeared as sister to the remaining clade, including Hymenocallideae. A new tribe, Clinantheae was also identified in this group.[70]
The Eurasian clade was also further resolved (for historical treatment, see Table I Meerow et al. 2006) into four tribes, Pancratieae, Narcisseae, Galantheae and Lycorideae. This positioned Lycorideae as sister to the remaining Mediterranean tribes.[71]
These relationships are summarised in the following cladogram:
Cladogram III: Tribes of subfamily Amaryllidoideae | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Angiosperm Phylogeny Group
Publication of the third version of the APG classification and acceptance of Amaryllidaceae s.l.[2] was accompanied by a listing of accepted subfamily and tribal names, since the change in rank from family to subfamily necessitated a revision of other lower ranks, as follows:[62]
Family: Amaryllidaceae J.St.-Hil., Expos. Fam. Nat. 1: 134. Feb–Apr 1805, nom. cons.
- Subfamily: Agapanthoideae Endl., Gen. Pl.: 141. Dec 1836.
- Subfamily: Allioideae Herb., Amaryllidaceae: 48. late Apr 1837.
- Tribe Allieae Dumort., Fl. Belg.: 139. 1827. (3 tribes)
- Tribe Gilliesieae Baker, J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 14: 509. 24Apr 1875. (18 genera)
- Tribe Tulbaghieae Endl. ex Meisn., Pl. Vasc. Gen.: Tab. Diagn. 397, 399, Comm. 302. 17–20 Dec 1842.
- Subfamily: Amaryllidoideae Burnett, Outl. Bot.: 446. Feb 1835 (15 tribes)
- Tribe Amaryllideae Dumort., Anal. Fam. Pl.: 58. 1829.
- Tribe Calostemmateae D.Müll.-Doblies & U.Müll.Doblies, Feddes Repert. 107 (Short commun.): 7 Dec 1996.
- Tribe Cyrtantheae Traub, Herbertia 5: 111. Nov 1938.
- Tribe Eucharidae Hutch., Fam.Fl.Pl.2:130.20 Jul 1934.
- Tribe Eustephieae Hutch., Fam.Fl.Pl.2:130.20 Jul 1934.
- Tribe Galantheae Parl., Fl. Ital. 3: 75. 1858.
- Tribe Gethyllideae Dumort., Anal. Fam. Pl.: 58. 1829.
- Tribe Haemantheae Hutch., Fam. Fl. Pl. 2: 130. 20 Jul 1934.
- Tribe Hippeastreae Herb. ex Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard., ser. 2, 1: ad t. 14. 1 Sep 1829.
- Tribe Hymenocallideae Small, Man. S.E. Fl.: 315. 30 Nov 1933.
- Tribe Lycoridae Traub ex D.Müll.-Doblies & U.Müll.Doblies, Feddes Repert. 107 (Short commun.): 6. Dec. 1996.
- Tribe Narcisseae Lam. & DC., Syn. Pl. Fl. Gall.: 165. 30 Jun 1806.
- Tribe Pancratieae Dumort., Anal. Fam. Pl.: 58. 1829.
- Tribe Stenomesseae Traub, Pl. Life 19: 60. Jan 1963
This circumscription differs from the phylogenetic descriptions of Meerow and colleagues in several respects. Griffineae is recognised as a distinct tribe within the Hippeastroid clade, and Stenomesseae is recognised as polyphyletic with two distinct types based on leaf shape (lorate-leafed and petiolate-leafed). The lorate-leafed species of the type genus of Stenomesseae, Stemomesson, were transferred to a new tribe, Clinantheae as sister to Hymenocallideae in the Andean clade. The remnants of Stemomesson then formed a distinct clade with Eucharis (Eucharidae) and Eucharidae renamed as Stenomesseae (see Cladogram III).[72][73][70][74][75]
- Tribe Griffineae Ravenna
- Tribe Clinantheae Meerow
Genera
The Angiosperm Phylogeny Website lists 73 genera and 1,605 species within Amaryllidaceae s.l.,[63] while The Plant List (2013) gives 80 genera and 2,258 species.[76]
Distribution
Amaryllidaceae are a cosmopolitan family, whose distribution is pantropical to subtropical, but infrafamilial relationships are related to geographical considerations. The Amaryllideae tribe is primarily South African, and Haemantheae and Cyrtantheae are also African, while the Calostemmateae are Australasian. Other elements are Eurasian and American, including an Andean subclade without necessarily following strictly tribal delimitations. This leads to discussions of, for instance American Amaryllidaceae.[9][70] The Eurasian clade includes Lycorideae. The American clade includes the Hippeastreae, Eustephieae and Zephyranthinae.[9]
Cultivation and uses
The Amaryllidaceae include many ornamental garden plants such as daffodils, snowdrops and snowflake, pot plants such as amaryllis and Clivia, and vegetables, such as onions, chives, leeks and garlic. A number of tropical lily-like plants are also sold, such as the belladonna lily, tuberose (Polianthes), blood lily (Cape tulip), Cornish lily (Nerine), and the Eurasian winter daffodil, Sternbergia.
Their economic importance lies in floriculture for cut flowers and bulbs, and commercial vegetable production.
References
- ↑ Jaume Saint-Hilaire 1805, Amaryllidées vol. 1. pp. 134–142.
- 1 2 3 APG 2009.
- ↑ Dimitri 1987.
- ↑ McGary 2001.
- ↑ Rossi 1990.
- ↑ Linnaeus 1753, Amaryllis I pp. 292–293.
- ↑ Linnaeus Sexual System 2015.
- ↑ Linnaeus 1753, Hexandria monogynia I pp. 285–332.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Meerow et al. 1999.
- ↑ Adanson 1763, VIII. Liliaceae. Part II. p. 42.
- ↑ Adanson 1763, VIII. Liliaceae Sectio VII. Part II. pp. 55–57.
- ↑ Jussieu 1789.
- ↑ Jussieu 1789, Stamina Perigynia p. 35.
- ↑ Jussieu 1789, Narcisse pp. 54–56.
- ↑ ICN 2011, Names of families and subfamilies, tribes and subtribes p. 18.2.
- ↑ Candolle 1813, Des familles et des tribus pp. 192–195.
- ↑ Jaume Saint-Hilaire 1805, Amaryllidées vol. 1. pp. 134–142.
- ↑ Brown 1810, Prodromus. Amaryllideae p. 296.
- ↑ Candolle 1813, Esquisse. D'une Série linéaire et par conséquent artificielle, pour la disposition des familles naturelles du règne végetal p. 219.
- ↑ Gray 1821.
- ↑ Gray 1821, p.vi.
- ↑ Lindley 1830.
- ↑ Lindley 1830, Endogenae, or Monocotyledonous Plants p. 251.
- ↑ Lindley 1830, Amaryllideae The Narcissus Tribe p. 259.
- ↑ Lindley 1846.
- 1 2 Lindley 1846, Liliaceae - Lilyworts p. 200.
- 1 2 Lindley 1846, Amaryllidaceae - Amaryllids p. 155.
- 1 2 Meerow et al. 2000a.
- 1 2 3 4 Hutchinson 1926.
- ↑ Gray 1821, Fam. XIV Amaryllideae Brown. II p. 190–193; Liliaceae p. 173.
- ↑ Herbert 1837.
- ↑ Lindley 1830, CCXXXVIII Amaryllideae The Narcissus Tribe pp. 259–260; Liliaceae p. 279.
- ↑ Lindley 1846, Order XLVI Amaryllidaceae—Amaryllids pp. 155–158; Liliaceae p. 200 .
- ↑ Lindley 1846, CCXLVIII Gilliesieae. pp. 275-277.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Amaryllideae pp. 711–740.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Liliaceae pp. 748–836.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Allieae pp. 798–807.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Agapantheae p. 798.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Gilliesieae pp. 804–806.
- ↑ Bentham & Hooker 1883, Vol. 3, Part 2. Allieae (Conspectus) pp. 750.
- 1 2 Stuessy 2009, Natural classification p. 47.
- ↑ Eichler 1886.
- ↑ Eichler 1886, Liliiflorae p. 34.
- 1 2 Wettstein 1924, Liliiflorae p. 862.
- ↑ Engler 1903, Liliiflorae p. 93.
- ↑ Engler 1903, Subfamily Allioideae p. 96.
- ↑ Wettstein 1924, Liliaceae p. 863.
- ↑ Wettstein 1924, Amaryllidaceae p. 871.
- ↑ Lotsy 1911, Agapanthaceae, Alliaceae, Gilliesiaceae pp. 732–734.
- ↑ Dahlgren, Clifford & Yeo 1985, Alliaceae pp. 193–198.
- ↑ Kubitzki 1998, K. Rahn. Alliaceae pp. 70–78.
- ↑ Wilkin 2012.
- ↑ Thorne 1976.
- ↑ Cronquist 1988.
- ↑ Thorne 1992.
- 1 2 Fay & Chase 1996.
- ↑ APG 1998.
- ↑ APG 2003.
- ↑ Kamenetsky 2012, p. 25.
- 1 2 Meerow & Snijman 2006.
- ↑ Meerow et al. 2007.
- 1 2 Chase et al. 2009.
- 1 2 Stevens 2016, Amaryllidaceae
- ↑ Garcia et al 2014.
- ↑ Traub 1963.
- ↑ Dahlgren, Clifford & Yeo 1985.
- ↑ Müller-Doblies & Müller-Doblies 1996.
- 1 2 Hickey & King 1997, p. 177.
- ↑ Meerow & Snijman 1998.
- 1 2 3 Meerow et al. 2000b.
- ↑ Meerow et al 2006a.
- ↑ Weber & Wilkin 2007.
- ↑ Meerow et al 2004.
- ↑ PBS 2012, Clinanthus.
- ↑ Byng 2014, Amaryllidaceae.
- ↑ The Plant List 2013.
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Modern
- Byng, James W. (2014). The Flowering Plants Handbook: A Practical Guide to Families and Genera of the World. Plant Gateway Ltd. ISBN 978-0992999308.
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- Dimitri, M (1987). Enciclopedia Argentina de Agricultura y Jardinería. Tomo I. Descripción de plantas cultivadas. Buenos Aires: Editorial ACME S.A.C.I. see Enciclopedia Argentina de Agricultura y Jardinería
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- Traub, H.P. (1963). Genera of the Amaryllidaceae. La Jolla, California: American Plant Life Society.
Chapters
- Meerow, AW; Snijman, DA. Amaryllidaceae. pp. 83–110. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-03533-7_11., in Kubitzki (1998). (additional excerpts)
- Meerow, Alan W.; Fay, Michael F.; Chase, Mark W.; Guy, Charles L.; Li, Qin-Bao; Snijman, Deirdre; Yang, Si-Lin (2000). Phylogeny of Amaryllidaceae: Molecules and morphology. pp. 372–386. ISBN 9780643099296. Retrieved 25 January 2015., in Wilson & Morrison (2000)
- Meerow, Alan. Towards a phylogeny of the Amaryllidaceae. pp. 169–179., in Rudall et al. (1995)
Symposia
- Rudall, P.J.; Cribb, P.J.; Cutler, D.F.; Humphries, C.J., eds. (1995). Monocotyledons: systematics and evolution (Proceedings of the International Symposium on Monocotyledons: Systematics and Evolution, Kew 1993). Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens. ISBN 978-0-947643-85-0. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- Wilson, K. L.; Morrison, D. A., eds. (19 May 2000). Monocots: Systematics and evolution (Proceedings of the Second International Conference on the Comparative Biology of the Monocotyledons, Sydney, Australia 1998). Collingwood, Australia: CSIRO. ISBN 0-643-06437-0. Retrieved 14 January 2014. Excerpts
Articles
- Cutler, David F.; Gregory, Mary (13 Oct 1983). "Current anatomical research in Liliaceae, Amaryllidaceae and Iridaceae". Telopea 2 (4): 425–452. doi:10.7751/telopea19834408. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- Fay, Michael F.; Chase, Mark W. (August 1996). "Resurrection of Themidaceae for the Brodiaea alliance, and Recircumscription of Alliaceae, Amaryllidaceae and Agapanthoideae". Taxon 45 (3): 441–451. doi:10.2307/1224136. JSTOR 1224136.
- García, Nicolás; Meerow, Alan W.; Soltis, Douglas E.; Soltis, Pamela S. (1 March 2014). "Testing Deep Reticulate Evolution in Amaryllidaceae Tribe Hippeastreae (Asparagales) with ITS and Chloroplast Sequence Data". Systematic Botany 39 (1): 75–89. doi:10.1600/036364414X678099.
- Meerow, A.W.; Fay, M.F.; Guy, C.L.; Li, Q.-B.; Zaman, F.Q.; Chase, M.W. (1999). "Systematics of Amaryllidaceae based on cladistic analysis of plastid rbcL and trnL-F sequence data". Am. J. Bot. 86 (9): 1325–1345. doi:10.2307/2656780. JSTOR 2656780. PMID 10487820.
- Meerow, A.W.; Guy, C.L.; Li, Q.-B.; Yang, S.-L. (2000). "Phylogeny of the American Amaryllidaceae Based on nrDNA ITS Sequences" (PDF). Systematic Botany 25 (4): 708–726. doi:10.2307/2666729. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
- Meerow, Alan W.; Snijman, Deirdre A. (December 2001). "Phylogeny of Amaryllidaceae Tribe Amaryllideae Based on nrDNA ITS Sequences and Morphology". American Journal of Botany 88 (12): 2321–2330. doi:10.2307/3558392.
- Meerow, Alan W.; Guy, Charles L.; Li, Qin-Bao; Clayton, Jason R. (2002). "Phylogeny of the Tribe Hymenocallideae (Amaryllidaceae) Based on Morphology and Molecular Characters". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 89 (3): 400–413. doi:10.2307/3298600. JSTOR 3298600.
- Meerow, Alan W.; Clayton, Jason R. (1 February 2004). "Generic relationships among the baccate-fruited Amaryllidaceae (tribe Haemantheae) inferred from plastid and nuclear non-coding DNA sequences". Plant Systematics and Evolution 244 (3-4): 141–155. doi:10.1007/s00606-003-0085-z.
- Meerow, Alan W.; van der Werff, Henk (1 July 2004). "Pucara (Amaryllidaceae) Reduced to Synonymy with Stenomesson on the Basis of Nuclear and Plastid DNA Spacer Sequences, and a New Related Species of Stenomesson" (PDF). Systematic Botany 29 (3): 511–517. doi:10.1600/0363644041744400.
- Meerow, AW; Francisco-Ortega, J; Schnell, RJ (2006). "Phylogenetic relationships and biogeography within the Eurasian clade of Amaryllidaceae based on plastid ndhF and nrDNA ITS sequences: lineage sorting in a reticulate area?". Systematic Botany 31 (1): 42–60. doi:10.1600/036364406775971787. JSTOR 25064128. Full text
- Meerow, Alan W.; Snijman, Deirdre A. (2006). "The never-ending story: multigene approaches to the phylogeny of Amaryllidaceae". Aliso 22: 355–366. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
- Meerow, Alan W.; Reveal, James L.; Snijman, Deirdre A.; Dutilh, Julie H. (November 2007). "(1793) Proposal to conserve the name Amaryllidaceae against Alliaceae, a "superconservation" proposal". Taxon 56 (4): 1299–1300. doi:10.2307/25065925. Retrieved 28 January 2015.
- Müller-Doblies, U.; Müller-Doblies, D. (1996). "Tribes and subtribes and some species combinations in Amaryllidaceae J St Hil R Dahlgren & al. 1985". Feddes Repertorium 107 (5–6): S.c.1–S.c.9.
- Thorne, Robert F. (1976). "A Phylogenetic Classification of the Angiospermae". Evolutionary Biology 9: 35–106. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-6950-3_2. Retrieved 28 January 2015.
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- Weber, Odile; Wilkin, Paul (May 2007). "588. Stenomesson pearcei". Curtis's Botanical Magazine 24 (2): 114–120. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8748.2007.00572.x.
APG system
- Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (1998). "An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 85 (4): 531–553. doi:10.2307/2992015. JSTOR 2992015.
- Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (April 2003). "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG II". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 141 (4): 399–436. doi:10.1046/j.1095-8339.2003.t01-1-00158.x.
- Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (2009), "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III", Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 (2): 105–121, doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00996.x, retrieved 7 January 2015
- Chase, M.W.; Reveal, J.L.; Fay, M.F. (2009), "A subfamilial classification for the expanded asparagalean families Amaryllidaceae, Asparagaceae and Xanthorrhoeaceae", Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 (2): 132–136, doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00999.x, retrieved 25 January 2015
Pharmacology
- Strydom, Adéle. Phylogenetic relationships in the family Amaryllidaceae. PhD thesis, Department of Plant Sciences, University of the Free State, 2005
- Ronsted, N; Symonds, MR; Birkholm, T; Christensen, SB; Meerow, AW; et al. (2012). "Can phylogeny predict chemical diversity and potential medicinal activity of plants? A case study of Amaryllidaceae". BMC Evol Biol 12 (1): 182. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-12-182.
- Takos, Adam; Rook, Fred (31 May 2013). "Towards a Molecular Understanding of the Biosynthesis of Amaryllidaceae Alkaloids in Support of Their Expanding Medical Use". International Journal of Molecular Sciences 14 (6): 11713–11741. doi:10.3390/ijms140611713. PMID 23727937. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
Websites
- Vigneron, Pascal. "Amaryllidaceae". Amaryllidaceae.org (in French). Retrieved 23 October 2014.
- Meerow, A (2009). "Neotropical Amaryllidaceae". Milliken, W., Klitgård, B. & Baracat, A. Neotropikey - Interactive key and information resources for flowering plants of the Neotropics. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- Dutilh, J.H.A. (2009). "Neotropical Alliaceae". Milliken, W., Klitgård, B. & Baracat, A. Neotropikey - Interactive key and information resources for flowering plants of the Neotropics. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- "Linnaeus Sexual System". CronkLab. Biodiversity Research Centre, University of British Columbia. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ICN (2011). "International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants". Bratislava: International Association for Plant Taxonomy. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
- "Pacific Bulb Society". Pacific Bulb Society. 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
Databases
- "Amaryllidaceae". The Plant List (2013). Version 1.1. 2013. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
- "Quick Search". World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- Stevens, P.F. (2016) [2001], Angiosperm Phylogeny Website, Missouri Botanical Gardens, retrieved 7 February 2016
- Wilkin, Paul (2012). "Amaryllidaceae J.St.-Hil.". eMonocot. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
- International Organization for Plant Information (IOPI). "Plant Name Search Results" (HTML). International Plant Names Index.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amaryllidaceae. |
External identifiers for Amaryllidaceae | |
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Also found in: Wikispecies, emonocot, Amaryllidaceae project |
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