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Antirrhinum

Antirrhinum is a genus of plants commonly known as dragon flowers, snapdragons and dog flower[1] because of the flowers' fancied resemblance to the face of a dragon that opens and closes its mouth when laterally squeezed. They are native to rocky areas of Europe, the United States, Canada, and North Africa. It is widely used as an ornamental plant in borders and as a cut flower.[2]

Antirrhinum
Temporal range: 5–0 Ma
Recent
Antirrhinum majus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Plantaginaceae
Tribe: Antirrhineae
Genus: Antirrhinum
L.
Type species
Antirrhinum majus
Sections
  • Antirrhinum
  • Orontium
  • Saerorhinum

Description

The Antirrhinum is morphologically diverse, particularly the New World group (Saerorhinum).[3] The genus is characterized by personate flowers with an inferior gibbous corolla.

Taxonomy

Antirrhinum used to be treated within the family Scrophulariaceae, but studies of DNA sequences have led to its inclusion in a vastly enlarged family Plantaginaceae, within the tribe Antirrhineae.

Circumscription

The taxonomy of this genus is complex and not yet fully resolved at present. In particular the exact circumscription of the genus, especially the inclusion of the New World species (Saerorhinum), is contentious.[3] The situation is further complicated by the variety of terms in use for infrageneric ranks, especially of the Old World species, that is Antirrhinum, sensu stricto (e.g. Streptosepalum, Kicksiella, Meonantha).

The USDA Plants Database recognises only two species: A. majus (the garden snapdragon), the only species naturalised in North America, and A. bellidifolium (the lilac snapdragon), now considered to be Anarrhinum bellidifolium (L.) Willd.[4] As of April 2017, The Plant List (Version 1.1) accepts 21 species.[5]

A widely accepted scheme (Thompson 1988) placed 36 species in the genus in three sections. While many botanists accepted this broad circumscription (sensu lato), whose main departure from other classifications was the inclusion of the New World Saerorhinum,[6] others did not, restricting the genus to the Old World. (For a comparison of Thompson with earlier systems, see Oyama and Baum, Table 1.) New species also continue to be discovered (see e.g. Romo et al., 1995).

In 2004 research into the molecular systematics of this group and related species by Oyama and Baum confirmed that the genus sensu lato as described by Thompson is monophyletic, provided that one species (A. cyathiferum) is removed to the separate genus Pseudorontium, and the two species of Mohavea (Mohavea confertiflora and M. breviflora) are included. The species list given here follows these conclusions.[3]

This is the broad circumscription that includes the Old World Misopates and New World Sairocarpus. By contrast the narrow circumscription (sensu stricto) confines the genus to the monophyletic Old World perennial species with a diploid chromosome number of 16, distributed in the Mediterranean basin, approximately 25 species. (Tolety 2011), following the phylogenetic analysis of Vargas et al. (2004) suggesting they are a distinct group. Both Misopates and Sairocarpus are accepted names in The Plant List, and many of the New World species now have Sairocarpus as their accepted name, rather than Antirrhinum. It has been proposed that many of the New World Antirrhinum be now considered under Sairocarpus, in the forthcoming Flora of North America.[7]

Infrageneric subdivision

It is widely agreed that this broad group should be subdivided into three or four subgroups, but the level at which this should be done, and exactly which species should be grouped together, remain unclear. Some authors continue to follow Thompson in using a large genus Antirrhinum, which is then divided into several sections; others treat Thompson's genus as a tribe or subtribe, and divide it into several genera. For a comparison of earlier schemes see Mateu-Andrés and de Paco, Table 1 (2005)[8]

If the broad circumscription is accepted, its three sections as described by Thompson are as follows (two Old World, one New):

  • Section Antirrhinum: 19 Old World species of relatively large flowered perennial plants, including the type species Antirrhinum majus, mostly native to the western Mediterranean region with a focus on the Iberian Peninsula. Chromosomes n=8. (3 subsections: Majora, Sicula, Hispanica)
  • Section Orontium: two species, also from the Mediterranean. Chromosome number=8. The species in this section, including the section type species Antirrhinum orontium (lesser snapdragon) are often treated in the genus Misopates.
  • Section Saerorhinum: 15 small flowered New World species, mostly annual plants and mostly native to California, though species are found from Oregon to Baja California Sur and as far east as Utah. Tetraploid (n=15-16). Like other authors, Thompson placed A. cyathiferum in this section, but Oyama and Baum, following earlier authors, suggest that it should be reclassified in genus Pseudorontium, while Mohavea should be included. Vargas et al., strongly recommending segregation of the New World species suggest that the 14 species originally recognised by Sutton (1988) more properly belong to Sairocarpus (11 species), Howelliella (1 species), and Neogarrhinum (2 species). Other authors would also include Galvezia glabrata, Galvezia juncea, Galvezia rupicola and Galvezia speciosa.[9] None of the names originally allocated to this section are now accepted (see List of Antirrhinum species).

Snapdragons

While Antirrhinum majus is the plant that is usually meant by the term of "snapdragon" if used on its own, many other species in the genus, and in the family Scrophulariaceae more widely, have common names that include the word "snapdragon". Such as Antirrhinum molle is known as "dwarf snapdragon" in the UK.[10]

Species

Etymology

The word "antirrhinum" is derived from the Greek ἀντίρρινον antirrhinon "calf's snout, Antirrhinum Orontium"[11] which in turn is derived from ἀντί anti "against, like", and ῥίς rhis "nose" (GEN ῥινόϛ rhinos);[12] thus, possibly "noselike", possibly referring to the noselike capsule in its mature state.[13]

Ecology

Snapdragons are short-lived perennial plants that survive well in cold seasons but are often replanted each spring and considered annual plants. They do best in full or partial sun, in well-drained soil since their roots are susceptible to rotting (although they do require regular watering[14]). They are classified commercially as a range of heights: midget or dwarf (15–20 cm or 6–8 in), medium (40–75 cm or 15–30 in) and tall (75–120 cm or 30–48 in). Removing the dead flowers, referred to as deadheading, is important to help them to continuously produce beautiful flowers throughout their growing season. They are susceptible to ethylene gas so removing dead flowers and keeping them away from ripe fruits or vegetables also helps them bloom longer.[15] They grow during their peak seasons of April to June and August to October in the Northern Hemisphere.[15] and bloom in a variety of colors ranging from: white, yellow, orange, red, purple, pink and some multicolored patterns.[16]

They are ecologically diverse, particularly the New World species (Saerorhinum).[3]

Cultivation

The snapdragon is an important garden plant, widely cultivated from tropical to temperate zones as a bedding, rockery, herbaceous border or container plant. (Tolety 2011) Cultivars have showy white, crimson, or yellow bilabiate flowers (with two lips). It is also important as a model organism in botanical research, and its genome has been studied in detail.

Genetic studies

Antirrhinum is a genus that has been used from the earliest genetic studies of Gregor Mendel and Charles Darwin and was used as a model by Erwin Baur (Tolety 2011). Together with closely related genera, it has become a model organism for the investigation of the genetic basis of plant development, particularly floral development.[3][17] The genus is a typical example of incomplete dominance by the red allele with the anthocyanin pigment. Any cross between red-flowered and white-flowered snapdragons, give an intermediate and heterozygous phenotype with pink flowers, that carries both the dominant and recessive alleles.[18]

Several species of Antirrhinum are self-incompatible, meaning that a plant cannot be fertilised by its own pollen.[19] Self-incompatibility in the genus has been studied since the early 1900s.[19] Self-incompatibility in Antirrhinum species is controlled gametophytically and shares many important features with self-incompatibility systems in Rosaceae and Solanaceae.[20]

Uses

In addition to growing the plants for cut flowers, the seeds have been used to extract edible oils, particularly in Russia, while the leaves and flowers have been considered to possess antiphlogistic (anti-inflammatory) properties and have been used in poultices. A green dye has also been extracted from the flowers.[21]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "Antirrhinum majus - Dog Flower". www.flowersofindia.net. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
  2. ^ RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 978-1405332965.
  3. ^ a b c d e Oyama, R. K.; Baum, D. A. (2004). "Phylogenetic relationships of North American Antirrhinum (Veronicaceae)". American Journal of Botany. 91 (6): 918–925. doi:10.3732/ajb.91.6.918. PMID 21653448.
  4. ^ "Plants Profile for Antirrhinum (snapdragon)". plants.usda.gov. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  5. ^ The Plant List: Antirrhinum (retrieved 23 April 2017)
  6. ^ Thompson, D. M. (1988). Systematics of Antirrhinum (Scrophulariaceae) in the New World. Systematic Botany Monographs 22.
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on Mar 4, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  8. ^ Mateu-Andrés, I.; De Paco, Lorena (Feb 1, 2005). "Allozymic Differentiation of the Antirrhinum majus and A. siculum Species Groups". Annals of Botany. 95 (3): 465–473. doi:10.1093/aob/mci055. PMC 4246802. PMID 15596453 – via academic.oup.com.
  9. ^ Fernández-Mazuecos, Mario; Blanco-Pastor, José Luis; Vargas, Pablo (2013). "A Phylogeny of Toadflaxes (Linaria Mill.) Based on Nuclear Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequences: Systematic and Evolutionary Consequences". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 174 (2): 234–249. doi:10.1086/668790. JSTOR 10.1086/668790. S2CID 85302392.
  10. ^ "Antirrhinum molle. dwarf snapdragon". rhs.org.uk. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  11. ^ ἀντίρρινον. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  12. ^ ἀντί, ῥίς in Liddell and Scott.
  13. ^ "Antirrhinum orontium, Misopates orontium, Small Snapdragon, לוע-ארי קטן". Flowersinisrael.com. Retrieved 2011-07-15.
  14. ^ "Snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus)". Sunset Magazine. Sep 22, 2004. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  15. ^ a b "Snapdragon information from Flowers.org.uk". www.flowers.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  16. ^ "Antirrhinum majus - Plant Finder". www.missouribotanicalgarden.org. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  17. ^ Wilson, Yvette (2011). "The evolutionary history of Antirrhinum suggests that ancestral phenotype combinations survived repeated hybridizations". The Plant Journal. 66 (6): 1032–1043. doi:10.1111/j.1365-313X.2011.04563.x. PMID 21435047. S2CID 26113532.
  18. ^ Hartl, Daniel L.; Elizabeth W. Jones (2005). Genetics : analysis of genes and genomes (sixth ed.). Jones & Bartlett publishers. pp. 3.6 Incomplete Dominance and Epistasis. ISBN 978-0-7637-1511-3.
  19. ^ a b Xue, Yongbiao; Rosemary Carpenter; Hugh G. Dickinson; Enrico S. Coen (May 1996). "Origin of allelic diversity in antirrhinum S locus RNases". The Plant Cell. 8 (5): 805–814. doi:10.2307/3870283. JSTOR 3870283. PMC 161139. PMID 8672882.
  20. ^ Takayama, Seiji; Akira Isogai (2005). "Self-incompatibility in plants". Annual Review of Plant Biology. 56: 467–489. doi:10.1146/annurev.arplant.56.032604.144249. PMID 15862104. S2CID 1196223.
  21. ^ Tolety 2011

Sources

  • Sutton, D.A. (1988) A Revision of the Tribe Antirrhineae. Oxford: OUP.
  • Rothmaler W. 1956. Taxonomische Monographie der Gattung Antirrhinum. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin, Germany.
  • Romo, A.; Stubing, G.; Peris, J. B. (1995). "A new species of Antirrhinum (Scrophulariaceae) from North Morocco". Annales Botanici Fennici. 32: 165–168.
  • Albach, D. C.; Meudt, H. M.; Oxelman, B. (2005). "Piecing together the "new" Plantaginaceae". American Journal of Botany. 92 (2): 297–315. doi:10.3732/ajb.92.2.297. PMID 21652407.
  • Tolety J, Sane A. Antirrhinum , in Kole C (ed.) Wild Crop Relatives: Genomic and Breeding Resources. Plantation and Ornamental Crops. Springer 2011, pp. 1-14
  • A. R. Doaigey, K. J. Harkiss. Application of epidermis characters to the taxonomy of European species of Antirrhinum (Schrophulariaceae). Nordic Journal of Botany. Volume 11, Issue 5, pages 513–524, December 1991. DOI: 10.1111/j.1756-1051.1991.tb01258.x
  • Vargas P, JA Rosselló, R Oyama, J Güemes. 2004 Molecular evidence for naturalness of genera in the tribe Antirrhineae (Scrophulariaceae) and three independent evolutionary lineages from the New World and the Old. Plant Syst Evol 249:151–172.

External links

  • The Plant List
  • The Genus Antirrhinum (Snapdragon): A Flowering Plant Model for Evolution and Development
  • Antirrhinum majus genetic and phenotypic database

antirrhinum, confused, with, anthurium, this, article, about, genus, plants, commonly, known, snapdragon, chipsets, produced, qualcomm, qualcomm, snapdragon, other, uses, snapdragon, disambiguation, genus, plants, commonly, known, dragon, flowers, snapdragons,. Not to be confused with Anthurium This article is about the genus of plants commonly known as Snapdragon For chipsets produced by Qualcomm see Qualcomm Snapdragon For other uses see Snapdragon disambiguation Antirrhinum is a genus of plants commonly known as dragon flowers snapdragons and dog flower 1 because of the flowers fancied resemblance to the face of a dragon that opens and closes its mouth when laterally squeezed They are native to rocky areas of Europe the United States Canada and North Africa It is widely used as an ornamental plant in borders and as a cut flower 2 AntirrhinumTemporal range 5 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N RecentAntirrhinum majusScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder LamialesFamily PlantaginaceaeTribe AntirrhineaeGenus AntirrhinumL Type speciesAntirrhinum majusL SectionsAntirrhinum Orontium Saerorhinum Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Circumscription 2 2 Infrageneric subdivision 2 3 Snapdragons 2 4 Species 2 5 Etymology 3 Ecology 4 Cultivation 4 1 Genetic studies 5 Uses 6 Gallery 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksDescription EditThe Antirrhinum is morphologically diverse particularly the New World group Saerorhinum 3 The genus is characterized by personate flowers with an inferior gibbous corolla Taxonomy EditAntirrhinum used to be treated within the family Scrophulariaceae but studies of DNA sequences have led to its inclusion in a vastly enlarged family Plantaginaceae within the tribe Antirrhineae Circumscription Edit The taxonomy of this genus is complex and not yet fully resolved at present In particular the exact circumscription of the genus especially the inclusion of the New World species Saerorhinum is contentious 3 The situation is further complicated by the variety of terms in use for infrageneric ranks especially of the Old World species that is Antirrhinum sensu stricto e g Streptosepalum Kicksiella Meonantha The USDA Plants Database recognises only two species A majus the garden snapdragon the only species naturalised in North America and A bellidifolium the lilac snapdragon now considered to be Anarrhinum bellidifolium L Willd 4 As of April 2017 The Plant List Version 1 1 accepts 21 species 5 A widely accepted scheme Thompson 1988 placed 36 species in the genus in three sections While many botanists accepted this broad circumscription sensu lato whose main departure from other classifications was the inclusion of the New World Saerorhinum 6 others did not restricting the genus to the Old World For a comparison of Thompson with earlier systems see Oyama and Baum Table 1 New species also continue to be discovered see e g Romo et al 1995 In 2004 research into the molecular systematics of this group and related species by Oyama and Baum confirmed that the genus sensu lato as described by Thompson is monophyletic provided that one species A cyathiferum is removed to the separate genus Pseudorontium and the two species of Mohavea Mohavea confertiflora and M breviflora are included The species list given here follows these conclusions 3 This is the broad circumscription that includes the Old WorldMisopates and New World Sairocarpus By contrast the narrow circumscription sensu stricto confines the genus to the monophyletic Old World perennial species with a diploid chromosome number of 16 distributed in the Mediterranean basin approximately 25 species Tolety 2011 following the phylogenetic analysis of Vargas et al 2004 suggesting they are a distinct group Both Misopates and Sairocarpus are accepted names in The Plant List and many of the New World species now have Sairocarpus as their accepted name rather than Antirrhinum It has been proposed that many of the New World Antirrhinum be now considered under Sairocarpus in the forthcoming Flora of North America 7 Infrageneric subdivision Edit It is widely agreed that this broad group should be subdivided into three or four subgroups but the level at which this should be done and exactly which species should be grouped together remain unclear Some authors continue to follow Thompson in using a large genus Antirrhinum which is then divided into several sections others treat Thompson s genus as a tribe or subtribe and divide it into several genera For a comparison of earlier schemes see Mateu Andres and de Paco Table 1 2005 8 If the broad circumscription is accepted its three sections as described by Thompson are as follows two Old World one New Section Antirrhinum 19 Old World species of relatively large flowered perennial plants including the type species Antirrhinum majus mostly native to the western Mediterranean region with a focus on the Iberian Peninsula Chromosomes n 8 3 subsections Majora Sicula Hispanica Section Orontium two species also from the Mediterranean Chromosome number 8 The species in this section including the section type species Antirrhinum orontium lesser snapdragon are often treated in the genus Misopates Section Saerorhinum 15 small flowered New World species mostly annual plants and mostly native to California though species are found from Oregon to Baja California Sur and as far east as Utah Tetraploid n 15 16 Like other authors Thompson placed A cyathiferum in this section but Oyama and Baum following earlier authors suggest that it should be reclassified in genus Pseudorontium while Mohavea should be included Vargas et al strongly recommending segregation of the New World species suggest that the 14 species originally recognised by Sutton 1988 more properly belong to Sairocarpus 11 species Howelliella 1 species and Neogarrhinum 2 species Other authors would also include Galvezia glabrata Galvezia juncea Galvezia rupicola and Galvezia speciosa 9 None of the names originally allocated to this section are now accepted see List of Antirrhinum species Snapdragons Edit While Antirrhinum majus is the plant that is usually meant by the term of snapdragon if used on its own many other species in the genus and in the family Scrophulariaceae more widely have common names that include the word snapdragon Such as Antirrhinum molle is known as dwarf snapdragon in the UK 10 Species Edit Main article List of Antirrhinum species Etymology Edit The word antirrhinum is derived from the Greek ἀntirrinon antirrhinon calf s snout Antirrhinum Orontium 11 which in turn is derived from ἀnti anti against like and ῥis rhis nose GEN ῥinoϛ rhinos 12 thus possibly noselike possibly referring to the noselike capsule in its mature state 13 Ecology EditSnapdragons are short lived perennial plants that survive well in cold seasons but are often replanted each spring and considered annual plants They do best in full or partial sun in well drained soil since their roots are susceptible to rotting although they do require regular watering 14 They are classified commercially as a range of heights midget or dwarf 15 20 cm or 6 8 in medium 40 75 cm or 15 30 in and tall 75 120 cm or 30 48 in Removing the dead flowers referred to as deadheading is important to help them to continuously produce beautiful flowers throughout their growing season They are susceptible to ethylene gas so removing dead flowers and keeping them away from ripe fruits or vegetables also helps them bloom longer 15 They grow during their peak seasons of April to June and August to October in the Northern Hemisphere 15 and bloom in a variety of colors ranging from white yellow orange red purple pink and some multicolored patterns 16 They are ecologically diverse particularly the New World species Saerorhinum 3 Cultivation EditThe snapdragon is an important garden plant widely cultivated from tropical to temperate zones as a bedding rockery herbaceous border or container plant Tolety 2011 Cultivars have showy white crimson or yellow bilabiate flowers with two lips It is also important as a model organism in botanical research and its genome has been studied in detail Genetic studies Edit Antirrhinum is a genus that has been used from the earliest genetic studies of Gregor Mendel and Charles Darwin and was used as a model by Erwin Baur Tolety 2011 Together with closely related genera it has become a model organism for the investigation of the genetic basis of plant development particularly floral development 3 17 The genus is a typical example of incomplete dominance by the red allele with the anthocyanin pigment Any cross between red flowered and white flowered snapdragons give an intermediate and heterozygous phenotype with pink flowers that carries both the dominant and recessive alleles 18 Several species of Antirrhinum are self incompatible meaning that a plant cannot be fertilised by its own pollen 19 Self incompatibility in the genus has been studied since the early 1900s 19 Self incompatibility in Antirrhinum species is controlled gametophytically and shares many important features with self incompatibility systems in Rosaceae and Solanaceae 20 Uses EditIn addition to growing the plants for cut flowers the seeds have been used to extract edible oils particularly in Russia while the leaves and flowers have been considered to possess antiphlogistic anti inflammatory properties and have been used in poultices A green dye has also been extracted from the flowers 21 Gallery Edit Yellow Snapdragon Flower Antirrhinum majus Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower Yellow Snapdragon Flower Antirrhinum majus Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower White Snapdragon Flower Yellow Snapdragon Flower Antirrhinum majus Flower Variety in Pakistan Variety in Pakistan Yellow Snapdragon Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower White Snapdragon Flower Yellow Snapdragon Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower White Snapdragon Flower Antirrhinum majus Flower Variety in Pakistan Yellow Snapdragon Flower Variety in Pakistan Variety in Pakistan Yellow Snapdragon Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower White Snapdragon Flower Yellow Snapdragon Flower Pink Snapdragon Flower Antirrhinum in Pakistan Snapdragon cultivar in IndiaReferences Edit Antirrhinum majus Dog Flower www flowersofindia net Retrieved 2022 02 20 RHS A Z encyclopedia of garden plants United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley 2008 p 1136 ISBN 978 1405332965 a b c d e Oyama R K Baum D A 2004 Phylogenetic relationships of North American Antirrhinum Veronicaceae American Journal of Botany 91 6 918 925 doi 10 3732 ajb 91 6 918 PMID 21653448 Plants Profile for Antirrhinum snapdragon plants usda gov Retrieved May 30 2020 The Plant List Antirrhinum retrieved 23 April 2017 Thompson D M 1988 Systematics of Antirrhinum Scrophulariaceae in the New World Systematic Botany Monographs 22 Barringer K 2013 New combinations in Sairocarpus Plantaginaceae Phytoneuron 2013 34 1 3 PDF Archived from the original PDF on Mar 4 2016 Retrieved May 30 2020 Mateu Andres I De Paco Lorena Feb 1 2005 Allozymic Differentiation of the Antirrhinum majus and A siculum Species Groups Annals of Botany 95 3 465 473 doi 10 1093 aob mci055 PMC 4246802 PMID 15596453 via academic oup com Fernandez Mazuecos Mario Blanco Pastor Jose Luis Vargas Pablo 2013 A Phylogeny of Toadflaxes Linaria Mill Based on Nuclear Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequences Systematic and Evolutionary Consequences International Journal of Plant Sciences 174 2 234 249 doi 10 1086 668790 JSTOR 10 1086 668790 S2CID 85302392 Antirrhinum molle dwarf snapdragon rhs org uk Retrieved 1 September 2017 ἀntirrinon Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project ἀnti ῥis in Liddell and Scott Antirrhinum orontium Misopates orontium Small Snapdragon לוע ארי קטן Flowersinisrael com Retrieved 2011 07 15 Snapdragon Antirrhinum majus Sunset Magazine Sep 22 2004 Retrieved May 30 2020 a b Snapdragon information from Flowers org uk www flowers org uk Retrieved 2020 04 30 Antirrhinum majus Plant Finder www missouribotanicalgarden org Retrieved 2020 04 30 Wilson Yvette 2011 The evolutionary history of Antirrhinum suggests that ancestral phenotype combinations survived repeated hybridizations The Plant Journal 66 6 1032 1043 doi 10 1111 j 1365 313X 2011 04563 x PMID 21435047 S2CID 26113532 Hartl Daniel L Elizabeth W Jones 2005 Genetics analysis of genes and genomes sixth ed Jones amp Bartlett publishers pp 3 6 Incomplete Dominance and Epistasis ISBN 978 0 7637 1511 3 a b Xue Yongbiao Rosemary Carpenter Hugh G Dickinson Enrico S Coen May 1996 Origin of allelic diversity in antirrhinum S locus RNases The Plant Cell 8 5 805 814 doi 10 2307 3870283 JSTOR 3870283 PMC 161139 PMID 8672882 Takayama Seiji Akira Isogai 2005 Self incompatibility in plants Annual Review of Plant Biology 56 467 489 doi 10 1146 annurev arplant 56 032604 144249 PMID 15862104 S2CID 1196223 Tolety 2011Sources EditSutton D A 1988 A Revision of the Tribe Antirrhineae Oxford OUP Rothmaler W 1956 Taxonomische Monographie der Gattung Antirrhinum Akademie Verlag Berlin Germany Romo A Stubing G Peris J B 1995 A new species of Antirrhinum Scrophulariaceae from North Morocco Annales Botanici Fennici 32 165 168 Albach D C Meudt H M Oxelman B 2005 Piecing together the new Plantaginaceae American Journal of Botany 92 2 297 315 doi 10 3732 ajb 92 2 297 PMID 21652407 Tolety J Sane A Antirrhinum in Kole C ed Wild Crop Relatives Genomic and Breeding Resources Plantation and Ornamental Crops Springer 2011 pp 1 14 A R Doaigey K J Harkiss Application of epidermis characters to the taxonomy of European species of Antirrhinum Schrophulariaceae Nordic Journal of Botany Volume 11 Issue 5 pages 513 524 December 1991 DOI 10 1111 j 1756 1051 1991 tb01258 x Vargas P JA Rossello R Oyama J Guemes 2004 Molecular evidence for naturalness of genera in the tribe Antirrhineae Scrophulariaceae and three independent evolutionary lineages from the New World and the Old Plant Syst Evol 249 151 172 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antirrhinum The Plant List Antirrhinum in Topwalks The Genus Antirrhinum Snapdragon A Flowering Plant Model for Evolution and Development Antirrhinum majus genetic and phenotypic database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antirrhinum amp oldid 1119860834, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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