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Byblis (plant)

Byblis (/ˈbɪblɪs/ BIB-liss) is a small genus of carnivorous plants, sometimes termed the rainbow plants for the attractive appearance of their mucilage-covered leaves in bright sunshine. Native to Australia and New Guinea,[2] it is the only genus in the family Byblidaceae. The first species in the genus was described by the English botanist Richard Anthony Salisbury in 1808. Eight species are now recognised (see below).

Byblis
Byblis liniflora
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Byblidaceae
Domin[1]
Genus: Byblis
Salisb.

Byblis species look very similar to Drosera and Drosophyllum, but are distinguished by their zygomorphic flowers, with five curved stamens off to one side of the pistil. These genera are in fact not closely related; modern classifications place Byblis in the Lamiales, while the sundews and Drosophyllum are now placed in the Caryophyllales.

Plant characteristics edit

All species of the genus form upright growth supported by a weak, fibrous root system. The genus can be divided into two groups or "complexes": The B. liniflora complex and the B. gigantea complex (see below).

Leaves edit

The leaves of all species are round in cross section and highly elongated, tapering at the end. The surface of the leaves is densely studded with glandular hairs which secrete a mucilaginous substance from their tip. These serve to attract small insects, which upon touching the sticky secretions are ensnared. Unless they are strong enough to escape, the insect prey either die of exhaustion or asphyxiate as the mucilage envelops them and clogs their spiracles. Unlike the sundews, however, Byblis can move neither their tentacles nor the leaves themselves to aid trapping or digestion. As a result, they are grouped among the "passive flypaper traps" along with Pinguicula, Drosophyllum, Roridula, Stylidium and Triphyophyllum peltatum.

Along with the stalked mucilaginous glands, the leaves are also equipped with sessile glands, which assumedly are responsible for the secretion of the digestive juices. Sessile glands are five to ten times as numerous as the stalked glands.

 
B. filifolia flower

Flowers edit

Flowers in this genus are borne singly at the end of unbranching, leaf-like inflorescences which emerge from the leaf axils. The five-petaled flowers are generally purple to pale violet, though B. gigantea and B. filifolia can sometimes produce white flowers. Except for the self-fertile B. liniflora, all species require pollen from other individuals for fertilization. The pollen release of B. gigantea and B. lamellata is only triggered by the resonance frequency of the wings of a landing pollinator, helping ensure cross-pollination with other individuals. The flowers of Byblis start to bloom in early spring and last until late summer.

 
B. liniflora seed capsule

Fruit and seeds edit

Fertilized flowers mature to form an egg-shaped, two-parted seed capsule. As the seed capsule dries out it cracks open (dehisces), dropping the seed on the ground (see gravity dispersal). The black seeds are generally round and often bear webbed surface markings, although those of B. lamellata are strongly ridged (see ). The germination of many species is brought on by bush fires after the dry period; pyrogenic chemicals in the smoke are responsible for triggering germination.

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Distribution of the genus

All Byblis species are native to Australia. B. gigantea and B. lamellata are endemic to the Perth region of southwest Australia, while the species making up the B. liniflora complex are found only in north Australia. The exception here is B. liniflora itself, whose distribution extends into southern Indonesia and Papua New Guinea.

Like many carnivorous plants, Byblis species usually grow in bogs and marshes. They generally prefer seasonally wet sandy soil in partial or direct sunlight with temperatures between ~ 5-40 °C (40-105 °F).

Environmental status edit

As native plants of Australia, all Byblis species are protected. Until the year 2000, they were also given international protection under CITES appendix II, but were removed from the list when Australia entered the CITES agreement. Since then trade of the genus has been unregulated outside of Australia. However, due to the sensitivity of the plant, interest in the genus has been restricted to a small portion of the carnivorous plant hobbyist community. The majority of plant material sold today is produced in cultivation, with the annual B. filifolia and B. liniflora being the most common. Most of the other species must be grown from seed, which is often collected from the wild for this purpose.

The West Australian species B. gigantea und B. lamellata are being threatened by habitat destruction for urban sprawl from cities such as Perth. Particularly damaging is the draining of wet habitats to produce arable land. B. gigantea is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species and is considered critically endangered.

Carnivorous or protocarnivorous edit

The status of the genus as a truly carnivorous plant has been repeatedly put into question. In their natural habitat, all species have been observed playing host to live bugs of the genus Setocoris, which nourished themselves by eating prey caught by the plants. Following this discovery it was assumed that, as with the genus Roridula, the plants do not actually digest their prey themselves, rather relying on the bugs to do that. The plants, it was reasoned, benefited by absorbing nutrients from the excrements of the bugs, either through their leaves or through the ground. An indirect digestion of these nutrients by a chitinase producing fungus was even proposed. It was not until 2005 that direct digestion of insect prey by enzymes secreted by the sessile glands of B. filifolia was proven.[3] Soon thereafter similar results were found with B. liniflora. These results clearly place this genus among the true carnivorous plants.

Systematics edit

Molecular genetics studies have placed the genus in the order Lamiales. While its placement within the order is still unclear, it is closely related to Martyniaceae, Lentibulariaceae as well as Gesneriaceae.

For a time, the genus Roridula was also assigned to the family Byblidaceae. Since that time, however, it has been placed into its own family, Roridulaceae.

Traditionally the genus was divided into only two species, namely B. gigantea and B. liniflora. Further species were described in the 1980s, particularly through the work of the Australian botanist Allen Lowrie. Eight species are currently recognised:[4]

Subdivision of the genus edit

 
Byblis lamellata in cultivation

Byblis liniflora complex edit

The four species of this complex, B. liniflora, B. rorida, B. filifolia and B. aquatica, are annual herbaceous plants that reach a height of 15–50 cm (5.9–19.7 in) and a maximum leaf length of 4–15 cm (1.6–5.9 in). These species grow from seedlings to flowering plants in only a few months, setting seed and dying with the onset of the dry season. The original haploid chromosome count of this complex is x=8. The diploid number is therefore 2n=16, whereas the tetraploid species B. liniflora is 2n=32.

Byblis gigantea complex edit

The remaining two species, B. lamellata und B. gigantea, make up what is known as the B. gigantea complex. These perennial species are both endemic to Southwest Australia, and reach heights of 45–70 cm (18–28 in). Unlike the annual members of the B. liniflora complex, these species survive the dry season by dying back to an underground rhizome, out of which they emerge come fall. The leaves of this complex can reach 20 cm (7.9 in) in length. The base chromosome count of the complex is x=9; since both species are diploid, their chromosome count is 2n=18.

Paleobotany edit

In the year 2004 a single fossil of a seed, resembling that of members of the modern day B. liniflora complex, was discovered in south Australia dating from the middle of the Eocene epoch. The species was assigned to the Byblidaceae as a parataxon of the genus.[5] The sole specimen was unfortunately destroyed in a lab accident shortly after being photographed.[5] [6]

Etymology edit

The Latin generic name "Byblis" originates from a goddess from Greek mythology, of whom Ovid wrote in his Metamorphoses (IX, l. 454–664). Byblis, niece of Apollo, fell deeply in love with her twin brother Caunus. At his rejection of her advances, she let forth an endless stream of glistening tears, eventually literally transforming into a spring. The droplets lining the leaves of the Byblis are said to resemble those tears.

The English vernacular name - "rainbow plants" - also denotes the mucilaginous droplets which, under the right lighting conditions and viewing angle, sparkle in a rainbow of colors.

See also edit

References edit

Much of the content of this article comes from the equivalent German-language Wikipedia article (retrieved 1 December 2006).

  1. ^ 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, hdl:10654/18083
  2. ^ "Byblis Salisb. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online.
  3. ^ Hartmeyer, Irmgard und Siegfried: Byblis filifolia als echte Karnivore rehabilitiert, Das Taublatt (GFP), 53, 4-5, 2005
  4. ^ Lowrie, A. (2013). Byblis. In: Carnivorous Plants of Australia Magnum Opus - Volume One. Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole. pp. 205–237. ISBN 978-1-908787-11-8.
  5. ^ a b Conran, John G.; Christophel, David C. (2004). "A Fossil Byblidaceae Seed from Eocene South Australia". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 165 (4): 691–694. doi:10.1086/386555. hdl:2440/1805. S2CID 32159540.
  6. ^ Givnish, Thomas J. (2015). "New evidence on the origin of carnivorous plants". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (1): 10–11. Bibcode:2015PNAS..112...10G. doi:10.1073/pnas.1422278112. PMC 4291624. PMID 25538295.
  • Barthlott, Wilhelm; Porembski, Stefan; Seine, Rüdiger; Theisen, Inge: Karnivoren, Stuttgart, 2004, ISBN 3-8001-4144-2
  • Lowrie, Allen: Carnivorous Plants of Australia - Vol. 3, Nedlands, Western Australia, 1998
  • Lowrie, Allen; Conran, John G.: A Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Byblis (Byblidaceae) In Northern Australia, Nuytsia 12(1):59-74, 1998
  • Lowrie, Allen; Conran, John G.; Moyle-Croft, Jessica: A Revision of Byblis (Byblidaceae) In South-Western Australia, Nuytsia 15(1):11-19, 2002
  • Conran, John G.; Houben, Andreas; Lowrie, Allen: Chromosome numbers in Byblidaceae, Aust. J. Bot., 2002, 50, 583-586
  • Hartmeyer, Siegfried: Carnivory of Byblis Revisited—A Simple Method for Enzyme Testing on Carnivorous Plants, Carnivorous Plant Newsletter, 26, 39–45, 1997
  • Hartmeyer, Siegfried: Carnivory in Byblis Revisited II: The Phenomenon of Symbiosis on Insect Trapping Plants, Carnivorous Plant Newsletter, 27, 110–113, 1998
  • Plachno, B. J.; Jankun, A.: Phosphatase Activity in Glandular Structures of Carnivorous Plant Traps., Internationaler Botanischer Kongress 2005 in Wien, P1716, The Jagiellonian Univ., Inst. of Botany, Dept. of Plant Cytology and Embryology, Kraków,Poland.

Further reading edit

  • Conran, John G.: The embryology and relationships of the Byblidaceae, Australian Syst. Bot. 9, 243–254, 1996
  • Conran, John G.; Carolin, R.: Byblidaceae, in: Kadereit, J. (ed.): The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants, Vol. VII: Flowering Plants: Dicotyledons: Lamiales (except Acanthaceae including Avicenniaceae), Springer, 2004, 45–49.
  • Fukushima, K., K. Imamura, K. Nagano & Y. Hoshi (2011). Fukushima, Kenji; Imamura, Kaori; Nagano, Katsuya; Hoshi, Yoshikazu (2011). "Contrasting patterns of the 5S and 45S rDNA evolutions in the Byblis liniflora complex (Byblidaceae)". Journal of Plant Research. 124 (2): 231–244. Bibcode:2011JPlR..124..231F. doi:10.1007/s10265-010-0366-x. PMC 3040357. PMID 20623155. Journal of Plant Research 124(2): 231–244. doi:10.1007/s10265-010-0366-x

External links edit

  • Carnivorous Plant FAQ on Byblis
  • Cultivation notes
  • The family Byblidaceae at the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website
  • in Delta.
  • Botanical Society of America, Byblis - the Rainbow Plants 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine

byblis, plant, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, message, byblis, lis. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Byblis ˈ b ɪ b l ɪ s BIB liss is a small genus of carnivorous plants sometimes termed the rainbow plants for the attractive appearance of their mucilage covered leaves in bright sunshine Native to Australia and New Guinea 2 it is the only genus in the family Byblidaceae The first species in the genus was described by the English botanist Richard Anthony Salisbury in 1808 Eight species are now recognised see below Byblis Byblis liniflora Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Clade Asterids Order Lamiales Family ByblidaceaeDomin 1 Genus ByblisSalisb Byblis species look very similar to Drosera and Drosophyllum but are distinguished by their zygomorphic flowers with five curved stamens off to one side of the pistil These genera are in fact not closely related modern classifications place Byblis in the Lamiales while the sundews and Drosophyllum are now placed in the Caryophyllales Contents 1 Plant characteristics 1 1 Leaves 1 2 Flowers 1 3 Fruit and seeds 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Environmental status 4 Carnivorous or protocarnivorous 5 Systematics 6 Subdivision of the genus 6 1 Byblis liniflora complex 6 2 Byblis gigantea complex 7 Paleobotany 8 Etymology 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksPlant characteristics editAll species of the genus form upright growth supported by a weak fibrous root system The genus can be divided into two groups or complexes The B liniflora complex and the B gigantea complex see below Leaves edit The leaves of all species are round in cross section and highly elongated tapering at the end The surface of the leaves is densely studded with glandular hairs which secrete a mucilaginous substance from their tip These serve to attract small insects which upon touching the sticky secretions are ensnared Unless they are strong enough to escape the insect prey either die of exhaustion or asphyxiate as the mucilage envelops them and clogs their spiracles Unlike the sundews however Byblis can move neither their tentacles nor the leaves themselves to aid trapping or digestion As a result they are grouped among the passive flypaper traps along with Pinguicula Drosophyllum Roridula Stylidium and Triphyophyllum peltatum Along with the stalked mucilaginous glands the leaves are also equipped with sessile glands which assumedly are responsible for the secretion of the digestive juices Sessile glands are five to ten times as numerous as the stalked glands nbsp B filifolia flower Flowers edit Flowers in this genus are borne singly at the end of unbranching leaf like inflorescences which emerge from the leaf axils The five petaled flowers are generally purple to pale violet though B gigantea and B filifolia can sometimes produce white flowers Except for the self fertile B liniflora all species require pollen from other individuals for fertilization The pollen release of B gigantea and B lamellata is only triggered by the resonance frequency of the wings of a landing pollinator helping ensure cross pollination with other individuals The flowers of Byblis start to bloom in early spring and last until late summer nbsp B liniflora seed capsule Fruit and seeds edit Fertilized flowers mature to form an egg shaped two parted seed capsule As the seed capsule dries out it cracks open dehisces dropping the seed on the ground see gravity dispersal The black seeds are generally round and often bear webbed surface markings although those of B lamellata are strongly ridged see 1 The germination of many species is brought on by bush fires after the dry period pyrogenic chemicals in the smoke are responsible for triggering germination Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Distribution of the genus All Byblis species are native to Australia B gigantea and B lamellata are endemic to the Perth region of southwest Australia while the species making up the B liniflora complex are found only in north Australia The exception here is B liniflora itself whose distribution extends into southern Indonesia and Papua New Guinea Like many carnivorous plants Byblis species usually grow in bogs and marshes They generally prefer seasonally wet sandy soil in partial or direct sunlight with temperatures between 5 40 C 40 105 F Environmental status editAs native plants of Australia all Byblis species are protected Until the year 2000 they were also given international protection under CITES appendix II but were removed from the list when Australia entered the CITES agreement Since then trade of the genus has been unregulated outside of Australia However due to the sensitivity of the plant interest in the genus has been restricted to a small portion of the carnivorous plant hobbyist community The majority of plant material sold today is produced in cultivation with the annual B filifolia and B liniflora being the most common Most of the other species must be grown from seed which is often collected from the wild for this purpose The West Australian species B gigantea und B lamellata are being threatened by habitat destruction for urban sprawl from cities such as Perth Particularly damaging is the draining of wet habitats to produce arable land B gigantea is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature s Red List of Threatened Species and is considered critically endangered Carnivorous or protocarnivorous editThe status of the genus as a truly carnivorous plant has been repeatedly put into question In their natural habitat all species have been observed playing host to live bugs of the genus Setocoris which nourished themselves by eating prey caught by the plants Following this discovery it was assumed that as with the genus Roridula the plants do not actually digest their prey themselves rather relying on the bugs to do that The plants it was reasoned benefited by absorbing nutrients from the excrements of the bugs either through their leaves or through the ground An indirect digestion of these nutrients by a chitinase producing fungus was even proposed It was not until 2005 that direct digestion of insect prey by enzymes secreted by the sessile glands of B filifolia was proven 3 Soon thereafter similar results were found with B liniflora These results clearly place this genus among the true carnivorous plants Systematics editMolecular genetics studies have placed the genus in the order Lamiales While its placement within the order is still unclear it is closely related to Martyniaceae Lentibulariaceae as well as Gesneriaceae For a time the genus Roridula was also assigned to the family Byblidaceae Since that time however it has been placed into its own family Roridulaceae Traditionally the genus was divided into only two species namely B gigantea and B liniflora Further species were described in the 1980s particularly through the work of the Australian botanist Allen Lowrie Eight species are currently recognised 4 Byblis aquatica annual scrambling stem up to 45 cm 18 in semiaquatic habitats Byblis filifolia annual up to 60 cm 24 in anthers longer than filaments Byblis gigantea perennial up to 70 cm 28 in seeds with honeycomb pattern Byblis guehoi Byblis lamellata perennial up to 45 cm 18 in deeply ridged seeds Byblis liniflora annual up to 15 cm 5 9 in anthers shorter than filaments Byblis pilbarana Byblis rorida annual up to 30 cm 12 in heavily set with glandular tentacles Subdivision of the genus edit nbsp Byblis lamellata in cultivation Byblis liniflora complex edit The four species of this complex B liniflora B rorida B filifolia and B aquatica are annual herbaceous plants that reach a height of 15 50 cm 5 9 19 7 in and a maximum leaf length of 4 15 cm 1 6 5 9 in These species grow from seedlings to flowering plants in only a few months setting seed and dying with the onset of the dry season The original haploid chromosome count of this complex is x 8 The diploid number is therefore 2n 16 whereas the tetraploid species B liniflora is 2n 32 Byblis gigantea complex edit The remaining two species B lamellata und B gigantea make up what is known as the B gigantea complex These perennial species are both endemic to Southwest Australia and reach heights of 45 70 cm 18 28 in Unlike the annual members of the B liniflora complex these species survive the dry season by dying back to an underground rhizome out of which they emerge come fall The leaves of this complex can reach 20 cm 7 9 in in length The base chromosome count of the complex is x 9 since both species are diploid their chromosome count is 2n 18 Paleobotany editIn the year 2004 a single fossil of a seed resembling that of members of the modern day B liniflora complex was discovered in south Australia dating from the middle of the Eocene epoch The species was assigned to the Byblidaceae as a parataxon of the genus 5 The sole specimen was unfortunately destroyed in a lab accident shortly after being photographed 5 6 Etymology editThe Latin generic name Byblis originates from a goddess from Greek mythology of whom Ovid wrote in his Metamorphoses IX l 454 664 Byblis niece of Apollo fell deeply in love with her twin brother Caunus At his rejection of her advances she let forth an endless stream of glistening tears eventually literally transforming into a spring The droplets lining the leaves of the Byblis are said to resemble those tears The English vernacular name rainbow plants also denotes the mucilaginous droplets which under the right lighting conditions and viewing angle sparkle in a rainbow of colors See also editCarnivorous plants of AustraliaReferences editMuch of the content of this article comes from the equivalent German language Wikipedia article retrieved 1 December 2006 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 hdl 10654 18083 Byblis Salisb Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Hartmeyer Irmgard und Siegfried Byblis filifolia als echte Karnivore rehabilitiert Das Taublatt GFP 53 4 5 2005 Lowrie A 2013 Byblis In Carnivorous Plants of Australia Magnum Opus Volume One Redfern Natural History Productions Poole pp 205 237 ISBN 978 1 908787 11 8 a b Conran John G Christophel David C 2004 A Fossil Byblidaceae Seed from Eocene South Australia International Journal of Plant Sciences 165 4 691 694 doi 10 1086 386555 hdl 2440 1805 S2CID 32159540 Givnish Thomas J 2015 New evidence on the origin of carnivorous plants Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 1 10 11 Bibcode 2015PNAS 112 10G doi 10 1073 pnas 1422278112 PMC 4291624 PMID 25538295 Barthlott Wilhelm Porembski Stefan Seine Rudiger Theisen Inge Karnivoren Stuttgart 2004 ISBN 3 8001 4144 2 Lowrie Allen Carnivorous Plants of Australia Vol 3 Nedlands Western Australia 1998 Lowrie Allen Conran John G A Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Byblis Byblidaceae In Northern Australia Nuytsia 12 1 59 74 1998 Lowrie Allen Conran John G Moyle Croft Jessica A Revision of Byblis Byblidaceae In South Western Australia Nuytsia 15 1 11 19 2002 Conran John G Houben Andreas Lowrie Allen Chromosome numbers in Byblidaceae Aust J Bot 2002 50 583 586 Hartmeyer Siegfried Carnivory of Byblis Revisited A Simple Method for Enzyme Testing on Carnivorous Plants Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 26 39 45 1997 Hartmeyer Siegfried Carnivory in Byblis Revisited II The Phenomenon of Symbiosis on Insect Trapping Plants Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 27 110 113 1998 Plachno B J Jankun A Phosphatase Activity in Glandular Structures of Carnivorous Plant Traps Internationaler Botanischer Kongress 2005 in Wien P1716 The Jagiellonian Univ Inst of Botany Dept of Plant Cytology and Embryology Krakow Poland Further reading editConran John G The embryology and relationships of the Byblidaceae Australian Syst Bot 9 243 254 1996 Conran John G Carolin R Byblidaceae in Kadereit J ed The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants Vol VII Flowering Plants Dicotyledons Lamiales except Acanthaceae including Avicenniaceae Springer 2004 45 49 Fukushima K K Imamura K Nagano amp Y Hoshi 2011 Fukushima Kenji Imamura Kaori Nagano Katsuya Hoshi Yoshikazu 2011 Contrasting patterns of the 5S and 45S rDNA evolutions in the Byblis liniflora complex Byblidaceae Journal of Plant Research 124 2 231 244 Bibcode 2011JPlR 124 231F doi 10 1007 s10265 010 0366 x PMC 3040357 PMID 20623155 Journal of Plant Research 124 2 231 244 doi 10 1007 s10265 010 0366 xExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Byblis Carnivorous Plant FAQ on Byblis Cultivation notes The family Byblidaceae at the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website The family Byblidaceae in Delta Photos of Byblis in the wild Botanical Society of America Byblis the Rainbow Plants Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Byblis plant amp oldid 1221091024, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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