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Dioon

Dioon is a genus of cycads in the family Zamiaceae. It is native to Mexico and Central America.[3] Their habitats include tropical forests, pine-oak forest, and dry hillsides, canyons and coastal dunes.[4][5][6][7]

Description edit

Dioons are dioecious, palmlike shrubs with cylindrical stems, usually with many leaves. The species in the genus Dioon are perennial, evergreen cycads with cylindrical stem axis is partially in the ground. The plant is thickened and made of soft wood, rarely having above ground branches. Leaf bases are persistent or shedding to leave smooth bark. The leaves are pinnate, spirally arranged, interspersed with cataphylls, with leaflets not articulated and lacking a midrib. The lower leaflets are often reduced to spines. The sporophylls are not in vertical rows in cones, and the megasporophyll apices are broadly flattened, upturned, and overlapping.

Species in the genus Dioon have 2n = 18 chromosomes.[8]

The largest species is D. spinolosum, which are over 16 meters high and whose trunk diameter can reach 40 centimeters. However, typical specimens of other species are only between three and six feet high or remain even smaller. Dioon can get very old, maybe even over 1000 years. Dioon edule and Dioon tomasellii have the most widespread ranges. Most species have highly limited geographical ranges.

Leaves edit

 
Leaf of Dioon spinulosum with are identified by the veining and prickly margin

The leaves are paired pinnate and are spirally on the stem axis. Some leaves are initially wrapped in protective leaves during their development, which are called cataphyll. Unlike other cycads such as Stangeria eriopus, the juvenile fins are not curled either transversely or longitudinally, but straight. The lower leaflets are often reduced to their petiole. The petioles are uncorned and thickened at the base.

The leaflets are simple, often with a prickly edge. The primary nerve consists of many forked dividing nerves, without a recognizable midrib. The nerves spring directly from the edge of the leaf rhachis and then run towards the plumage axis. The spars are hairy at least on young leaves. The hairs (trichomes) are colorless, branched or simple.

The stomata for the gas exchange are found either only on the underside of the leaf, or in some species on both sides. Glands are not otherwise colored and difficult to identify. The cells of the leaf epidermis are extended parallel to the plumage axis.

Roots edit

Like other cycads, coral-like roots are sometimes formed that grow up from the primary root and branch out quickly just below the soil surface. The individual roots are thickened rhizomes and are inhabited by cyanobacteria of the genus Nostoc, which mainly used them for nitrogen fixation. There also seems to be a symbiotic relationship with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.[9]

Cones and Seeds edit

All Dioons are dioecious, having either male or female organs, but only on different individuals. The male cone is stalked. The male cone scales called microsporophyll, which are flattened and bent upwards, sterile at the tip . They are arranged spirally around the pin axis. Each microsporophyll carries on its underside (abaxial side) a variety of pollen sacs. These open with slots, from which the pollen then escapes. The pollen grains are streamlined and have only one germ line (monosulcate). The male cones fall off after one year.

The female cones are also stalked and can remain on the plant for more than a year. The female microsporophyll are more leaf-like than those of other cycads, the greatest similarity to those of the genus Cycas. The scales are flattened at the top, widened and bent up. Each sporophyll carries two, rarely three, ovules. These are straight to the axis (orthotropic), are inclined inwardly to this (inverse) and hang on the axis-facing side of the thickened scales. The opening at the tip of the ovules (micropyle) is very small, leaving only a narrow opening on the Nucellus. The megaspore sheath thickened from 3–4.5 microns in the young ovule to 9-10 microns in the mature seed. The number of archegonia varies between one and ten. The nucleus of the egg is unusually large. The largest female cones of the genus D. spinolosum shows up to 80 centimeters in length and a diameter of up to 30 centimeters.

The seeds are spherical, ovate or ellipsoidal and reach a diameter between about one and four centimeters. They are surrounded by a fleshy, white or cream-colored seed coat. The seed coat consists of three layers, a fleshy outer and inner layer, between which a layer of stone cells lies. The embryo is straight with two cotyledons, these are fused at the top. The embryo carrier (suspensor) is very long and spirally twisted. The seeds are radiated (radiosperm). The germination takes place cryptocotylar, i.e. the cotyledons remain during germination in the seed.

Distribution edit

Dioon species can be found in Central America between the 15th and 29th northern latitude and are part of the Neotropical floral kingdom. The distribution area includes Honduras and parts of Mexico; it is limited by orographic conditions (height structures) and limited to the north to south mountain ranges in the region. Despite the widespread distribution and ecological plasticity of the genus it is not a vegetation-determining component. The species are found mainly in the tropical rain forest and in tropical wet forests, but also in tropical deciduous rainforests, with softwood rainforests, on dry, rocky slopes, in canyons and on dunes near the coast.[10]

Prehistorical Distribution edit

At the beginning of the Cenozoic, about 65.5 million years ago, the distribution area of Dioon probably included most of North America. Fossil found in northern Alaska from the Eocene (33.9 - 55.8 ka) indicate this. While the climate was still very warm at the beginning of this geological age, around 2.8 million years ago, the early ice age began with the icing of the North Pole, causing the distribution of Dioon to shrink very sharply.

In the Paleocene (55.8 - 65.5 ka) Dioon was next to Zamia and Anemia the only today neotropical genus that was still present in the flora of Alaska. During the Tertiary period, about 2.6 million years ago, Dioons died in almost all of North America with only a few relic collections remained in a small area in Central America, where today still the diversity center of the genus lies. A spread to South America was not possible because the two continents were not connected until about 3 million years ago. After that, the size of the seeds was the main obstacle to further spreading Dioon into the Caribbean and further south.

Ecology edit

 
Megasporophyll from Dioon edule with ripe seeds. Right: the dry brown stalk, yellow: two seeds, left: the strongly hairy, flat part of the sporophyll

Pollination of Dioon by wind pollination or by animals, has not yet been determined. The nature of the pollen (light, dry, very large number) rather suggests a wind pollination, also increases the number of fertilized ovules in the immediate vicinity of a pollen source.

On the other hand, the inverse position of the ovules speaks against wind pollination, as the pollen is difficult to escape there and fall mainly on the sterile sections in the cone. For cycads of the genus Zamia already a pollination by the weevil Rhopalotria mollis has been detected. Species of the genus Rhopalotria could also be found in cones of Dioon, in which there was also a large number of beetles of the genus Pharaxonotha, which feed on pollen indicating pollination by animals.[11]

Conservation edit

The genus is particularly at risk from habitat destruction, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists ten of the eleven species in a vulnerable category on their Red List. One species, D. caputoi, is considered to be critically endangered, three as endangered (D. holmgrenii, D. sonorense and D. tomasellii) and five as vulnerable. (D. califanoi, D. merolae, D. purpusii, D. rzedowskii and D. spinulosum). D. edule is listed as a kind of "near-threatened" list. For D. mejiae, there is not enough data for an assessment of the hazard.

Locations are destroyed primarily by clearing and reclamation of the land. Dioon species are also very popular with international collectors. Plants are dug up and sold. According to a report from the 1992 Washington Convention on Biological Diversity, trade with D. edule individuals reached a level of about 5,800 copies, with D. spinolosum 1,600 - this does not include illicit trade.[12]

Another potential threat to the genus is the lobster louse (Diaspididae) Aulacaspis yasumatsui. The insect originally comes from Southeast Asia and infests there cycads. The pest has now been introduced to Florida, California, India and the UK, where it causes major damage to cycads. There he was also found at D. edule. If the species were to penetrate Central America, it could drastically reduce or even destroy the populations of Dioon in a short time.[13]

Taxonomy edit

The first description was made in 1843 by John Lindley as Dion. The genus name was given due to the two ovules per megasporophyll: Dioon comes from the ancient Greek prefix δι- di- (= two) and ώόν ōión, ōón (= egg).[14]

The leaf-like character of Sporophylle gives Dioon a special position within the cycads. Dehgan & Dehgan described the genus as the most primitive of the cycads and suggested they put them into their own family.[15] A molecular genetic study of the chloroplast DNA revealed that it is at least the most primitive genus of neotropical cycads.[16]

Classification edit

Classically, the family of Zamiaceae is divided into two subfamilies with four tribes. Dioon is the only genus in the tribe of the Diooeae, which together with the Encephalarteae forms the subfamily of Encephalartoideae. This classification was based on morphological considerations. A morphological study of relationships in fossil and extant taxa revealed the following cladogram:[17]

A molecular biology analysis of a fragment of 26S ribosomal DNA revealed a somewhat similar cladogram that would dramatically alter the structure of Zamiaceae.[17] Dioon would therefore be the basal genus of the family.

Cycas (Cycadaceae)

Stangeria (Stangeriaceae)

Dioon

Zamia

Encephalartos

Lepidozamia

Ceratozamia

Macrozamia

Microcycas

Species edit

The genus is commonly divided into two groups by Norstog & Nichols of distinct morphology. The first includes D. mejiae, D. rzedowskii, and D. spinulosum, which are characterized by the greater size of their fronds, trunks, and cones. The second group contains D. califanoi, D. caputoi, D. edule, D. holmgrenii, D. merolae, D. purpusii, D. sonorense, and D. tomasellii, which are smaller overall, with shorter trunks, much shorter fronds, and smaller cones.[18]

A phylogenetic study from 1993 confirmed these clades with one difference - D. caputoi was assigned to the other clade

Phylogeny of Dioon[19][20]

D. mejiae Standley & Williams

D. rzedowskii De Luca et al.

D. spinulosum Eichl. 1883 ex Dyer

D. edule Lindley

D. merolae De Luca, Sabato & Vázquez-Torres

D. sonorense (De Luca, Sabato & Vázquez-Torres) Chemnick, Gregory & Salas-Morales

D. tomasellii De Luca, Sabato & Vázquez-Torres

D. angustifolium Miquel

D. stevensonii Nicolalde-Morejón & Vovides

D. purpusii Rose

D. argenteum Gregory et al.

D. califanoi De Luca & Sabato

D. caputoi De Luca, Sabato & Vázquez-Torres

D. holmgrenii De Luca, Sabato & Vázquez-Torres

Species accepted:[3]

Image Scientific name Distribution
  Dioon angustifolium Miq. Nuevo León, Tamaulipas
Dioon argenteum T.J.Greg. & al. Oaxaca
  Dioon califanoi De Luca & Sabato Puebla, Oaxaca
  Dioon caputoi De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres Puebla, Oaxaca
  Dioon edule Lindl. Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, Guanajuato, Chiapas, Hidalgo, Mexico State, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí
  Dioon holmgrenii De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres Oaxaca
  Dioon mejiae Standl. & L.O.Williams Honduras
  Dioon merolae De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres Oaxaca, Chiapas
Dioon oaxacensis Gutiérrez-Ortega, Pérez-Farrera & Vovides
Dioon planifolium Salas-Morales, Chemnick & Gregory
Dioon salas-moralesiae Gutiérrez-Ortega & Pérez-Farrera
  Dioon purpusii Rose Oaxaca
  Dioon rzedowskii De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres Oaxaca
Dioon sonorense (De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres) Chemnick et al. Sonora, Sinaloa
  Dioon spinulosum Dyer ex Eichl Veracruz, Oaxaca
Dioon stevensonii Nic.-Mor. & Vovides Michoacán, Guerrero
  Dioon tomasellii De Luca, Sabato & Vázq.Torres Durango, Jalisco, Nayarit
Dioon vovidesii Gutiérrez-Ortega & Pérez-Farreras

Evolution edit

The earliest fossil finds date back to the Eocene and were found on Kupreanof Island in Alaska. However, it is probable that Dioon dates back to the Jurassic (145.5 - 199.6 ka) or even further, since fossils of other, closely related but more developed cycads were already detected from this era.[21] In the Pleistocene (0.011784-1.8 ka) and Holocene (today -0.011784 ka) eras species have probably carried out several north–south migrations and have followed the warm climatic conditions.[22]

One theory is that the recent dioon species have evolved from a number of vicarious events in the early Cenozoic, with different species representing different ecological conditions. These events must have followed each other for a very short time, which precluded an accumulation of synapomorphies, meaning that not many features could be re-acquired.

The extant species of Dioon are attributed to three prototypes. D. mejiae is considered the most evolutionary advanced species of the genus. D. spinulosum and D. rzedowskii are attributed to a second prototype, which was probably better adapted to mesial conditions, such as areas of medium humidity, which enable them to establish on the Atlantic coast of Oaxaca. The remaining species presumably come from a third, to xerotic, dry areas, adapted to the original form.

Uses edit

In Honduras, the female cones of D. mejiae are picked to harvest the seeds. These are processed by about 33,000 indigenous people into tamales or tortillas and replace the cornmeal. The fronds are traditionally used on Palm Sunday.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ a b In: Edwards's Botanical Register 29: misc. 59-60. 1843. "Name - Dioon Lindl". Tropicos. Saint Louis, Missouri: Missouri Botanical Garden. Retrieved February 15, 2010. Annotation: as 'Dion' ; orth. & nom. cons.
    Type Specimen: Dioon edule Lindl.
  2. ^ Original Publication GRIN (October 5, 2007). . Taxonomy for Plants. National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland: USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program. Archived from the original on May 7, 2009. Retrieved February 15, 2010. Comments: this spelling conserved (nom. cons.)(Vienna ICBN Art. 14.11 & App. III) against the original spelling 'Dion'
  3. ^ a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  4. ^ Christenhusz, M. J. M., J. L. Reveal, A. K. Farjon, M. F. Gardner, R. R. Mill & M. W. Chase. 2011. A new classification and linear sequence of extant gymnosperms. Phytotaxa 19: 55–70.
  5. ^ Molina Rosito, A. 1975. Enumeración de las plantas de Honduras. Ceiba 19(1): 1–118.
  6. ^ Vovides, A. P., J. D. Rees & M. Vázquez-Torres. 1983. Zamiaceae. Flora de Veracruz 26: 1–31.
  7. ^ Breedlove, D.E. 1986. Flora de Chiapas. Listados Florísticos de México 4: i–v, 1–246.
  8. ^ Aldo Meretti (August 1990). "Karyotypic Data on North and Central American Zamiaceae (Cycadales) and their Phylogenetic Implications". American Journal of Botany. 77 (8): 1016–1029. doi:10.2307/2444573. JSTOR 2444573.
  9. ^ Jack B. Fisher; Andrew P. Vovides (2004). "Mycorrhizae Are Present in Cycad Roots". The Botanical Review. 70 (1): 16–23. doi:10.1663/0006-8101(2004)070[0016:MAPICR]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 40704849.
  10. ^ A. Moretti; P. Caputo; S. Cozzolino; P. De Luca; L. Gaudio; G. Gigliano Siniscalco; D. W. Stevenson (February 1993). "A phylogenetic analysis of Dioon (Zamiaceae)". American Journal of Botany. 80 (2): 204–214. doi:10.2307/2445041. JSTOR 2445041.
  11. ^ Andrew P. Vovides (March 1991). "Insect Symbionts of Some Mexican Cycads in Their Natural Habitat". Biotropica. 23 (1): 102–104. doi:10.2307/2388697. JSTOR 2388697.
  12. ^ CITES Secretariat, ed. (1992). (PDF). Eighth Meeting of the Conference of the Parties. Kyoto: 29. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-16. Retrieved 2018-02-11.
  13. ^ (in German) {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  14. ^ Helmut Genaust (2005). Etymologisches Wörterbuch der botanischen Pflanzennamen (3rd ed.). Hamburg: Nikol. p. 209. ISBN 3-937872-16-7.
  15. ^ Bijan Dehgan; Nancy B. Dehgan (October 1988). "Comparative pollen morphology and taxonomic affinities in Cycadales". American Journal of Botany. 75 (10): 1501–1516. doi:10.2307/2444700. JSTOR 2444700.
  16. ^ De Luca u. a. (1995). P. Vorster (ed.). "Molecular systematics of cycads". Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Cycad Biology (Stellenbosch ed.): 131–137.
  17. ^ a b Guido Grimm (2000). "Cycadales cladistic analysis of fossile and recent taxa based on morphological and molecular data". Diplomarbeit an der Universität Tübingen.
  18. ^ Norstog, K.J.; Nichols, T.J. (1997). The biology of the cycads. Cornell University Press.
  19. ^ Stull, Gregory W.; Qu, Xiao-Jian; Parins-Fukuchi, Caroline; Yang, Ying-Ying; Yang, Jun-Bo; Yang, Zhi-Yun; Hu, Yi; Ma, Hong; Soltis, Pamela S.; Soltis, Douglas E.; Li, De-Zhu; Smith, Stephen A.; Yi, Ting-Shuang; et al. (2021). "Gene duplications and phylogenomic conflict underlie major pulses of phenotypic evolution in gymnosperms". Nature Plants. 7 (8): 1015–1025. bioRxiv 10.1101/2021.03.13.435279. doi:10.1038/s41477-021-00964-4. PMID 34282286. S2CID 232282918.
  20. ^ Stull, Gregory W.; et al. (2021). "main.dated.supermatrix.tree.T9.tre". Figshare. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.14547354.v1. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ Tom M. Harris (1941-09-19). "Cones of Extinct Cycadales from the Jurassic Rocks of Yorkshire". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences. 231 (577): 75–98. Bibcode:1941RSPTB.231...75H. doi:10.1098/rstb.1941.0004. JSTOR 92322.
  22. ^ T. Walters; T. J. Gregory; J. Chemnick; R. Osborne (2004). Walters, T; Osborne, R (eds.). "Hypotheses on the relationship between biogeography and speciation in Dioon (Zamiaceae)". Cycad Classification: Concepts and Recommendations. Miami: Montgomery Botanical Center. doi:10.1079/9780851997414.0000. ISBN 9780851997414.[permanent dead link]
  23. ^ Mark Bonta; Oscar Flores Pinot; Daniel Graham; Jody Haynes; German Sandoval (2006). "Ethnobotany and conservation of Tiusinte (Dioon mejiae Standl. & L.O. Williams, Zamiaceae) in northeastern Honduras". Journal of Ethnobiology. 26 (2): 228–257. doi:10.2993/0278-0771(2006)26[228:EACOTD]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86014298.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Dioon at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Dioon at Wikispecies
  • Gymnosperm Database: Dioon
  • Dioon on The Cycad Pages

dioon, genus, cycads, family, zamiaceae, native, mexico, central, america, their, habitats, include, tropical, forests, pine, forest, hillsides, canyons, coastal, dunes, edulescientific, classificationkingdom, plantaeclade, tracheophytesclade, gymnospermaedivi. Dioon is a genus of cycads in the family Zamiaceae It is native to Mexico and Central America 3 Their habitats include tropical forests pine oak forest and dry hillsides canyons and coastal dunes 4 5 6 7 DioonDioon eduleScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade GymnospermaeDivision CycadophytaClass CycadopsidaOrder CycadalesFamily ZamiaceaeSubfamily EncephalartoideaeTribe DiooeaeSchusterGenus DioonLindl 1 2 Type speciesDioon edule 1 Lindl Synonyms 3 Platyzamia Zucc Contents 1 Description 1 1 Leaves 1 2 Roots 1 3 Cones and Seeds 2 Distribution 2 1 Prehistorical Distribution 3 Ecology 4 Conservation 5 Taxonomy 5 1 Classification 5 2 Species 5 3 Evolution 6 Uses 7 References 8 External linksDescription editDioons are dioecious palmlike shrubs with cylindrical stems usually with many leaves The species in the genus Dioon are perennial evergreen cycads with cylindrical stem axis is partially in the ground The plant is thickened and made of soft wood rarely having above ground branches Leaf bases are persistent or shedding to leave smooth bark The leaves are pinnate spirally arranged interspersed with cataphylls with leaflets not articulated and lacking a midrib The lower leaflets are often reduced to spines The sporophylls are not in vertical rows in cones and the megasporophyll apices are broadly flattened upturned and overlapping Species in the genus Dioon have 2n 18 chromosomes 8 The largest species is D spinolosum which are over 16 meters high and whose trunk diameter can reach 40 centimeters However typical specimens of other species are only between three and six feet high or remain even smaller Dioon can get very old maybe even over 1000 years Dioon edule and Dioon tomasellii have the most widespread ranges Most species have highly limited geographical ranges Leaves edit nbsp Leaf of Dioon spinulosum with are identified by the veining and prickly marginThe leaves are paired pinnate and are spirally on the stem axis Some leaves are initially wrapped in protective leaves during their development which are called cataphyll Unlike other cycads such as Stangeria eriopus the juvenile fins are not curled either transversely or longitudinally but straight The lower leaflets are often reduced to their petiole The petioles are uncorned and thickened at the base The leaflets are simple often with a prickly edge The primary nerve consists of many forked dividing nerves without a recognizable midrib The nerves spring directly from the edge of the leaf rhachis and then run towards the plumage axis The spars are hairy at least on young leaves The hairs trichomes are colorless branched or simple The stomata for the gas exchange are found either only on the underside of the leaf or in some species on both sides Glands are not otherwise colored and difficult to identify The cells of the leaf epidermis are extended parallel to the plumage axis Roots edit Like other cycads coral like roots are sometimes formed that grow up from the primary root and branch out quickly just below the soil surface The individual roots are thickened rhizomes and are inhabited by cyanobacteria of the genus Nostoc which mainly used them for nitrogen fixation There also seems to be a symbiotic relationship with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi 9 Cones and Seeds edit All Dioons are dioecious having either male or female organs but only on different individuals The male cone is stalked The male cone scales called microsporophyll which are flattened and bent upwards sterile at the tip They are arranged spirally around the pin axis Each microsporophyll carries on its underside abaxial side a variety of pollen sacs These open with slots from which the pollen then escapes The pollen grains are streamlined and have only one germ line monosulcate The male cones fall off after one year The female cones are also stalked and can remain on the plant for more than a year The female microsporophyll are more leaf like than those of other cycads the greatest similarity to those of the genus Cycas The scales are flattened at the top widened and bent up Each sporophyll carries two rarely three ovules These are straight to the axis orthotropic are inclined inwardly to this inverse and hang on the axis facing side of the thickened scales The opening at the tip of the ovules micropyle is very small leaving only a narrow opening on the Nucellus The megaspore sheath thickened from 3 4 5 microns in the young ovule to 9 10 microns in the mature seed The number of archegonia varies between one and ten The nucleus of the egg is unusually large The largest female cones of the genus D spinolosum shows up to 80 centimeters in length and a diameter of up to 30 centimeters The seeds are spherical ovate or ellipsoidal and reach a diameter between about one and four centimeters They are surrounded by a fleshy white or cream colored seed coat The seed coat consists of three layers a fleshy outer and inner layer between which a layer of stone cells lies The embryo is straight with two cotyledons these are fused at the top The embryo carrier suspensor is very long and spirally twisted The seeds are radiated radiosperm The germination takes place cryptocotylar i e the cotyledons remain during germination in the seed nbsp Female cone of Dioon edule nbsp Male cone of Dioon mejiae nbsp cone of Dioon merolaeDistribution editDioon species can be found in Central America between the 15th and 29th northern latitude and are part of the Neotropical floral kingdom The distribution area includes Honduras and parts of Mexico it is limited by orographic conditions height structures and limited to the north to south mountain ranges in the region Despite the widespread distribution and ecological plasticity of the genus it is not a vegetation determining component The species are found mainly in the tropical rain forest and in tropical wet forests but also in tropical deciduous rainforests with softwood rainforests on dry rocky slopes in canyons and on dunes near the coast 10 Prehistorical Distribution edit At the beginning of the Cenozoic about 65 5 million years ago the distribution area of Dioon probably included most of North America Fossil found in northern Alaska from the Eocene 33 9 55 8 ka indicate this While the climate was still very warm at the beginning of this geological age around 2 8 million years ago the early ice age began with the icing of the North Pole causing the distribution of Dioon to shrink very sharply In the Paleocene 55 8 65 5 ka Dioon was next to Zamia and Anemia the only today neotropical genus that was still present in the flora of Alaska During the Tertiary period about 2 6 million years ago Dioons died in almost all of North America with only a few relic collections remained in a small area in Central America where today still the diversity center of the genus lies A spread to South America was not possible because the two continents were not connected until about 3 million years ago After that the size of the seeds was the main obstacle to further spreading Dioon into the Caribbean and further south Ecology edit nbsp Megasporophyll from Dioon edule with ripe seeds Right the dry brown stalk yellow two seeds left the strongly hairy flat part of the sporophyllPollination of Dioon by wind pollination or by animals has not yet been determined The nature of the pollen light dry very large number rather suggests a wind pollination also increases the number of fertilized ovules in the immediate vicinity of a pollen source On the other hand the inverse position of the ovules speaks against wind pollination as the pollen is difficult to escape there and fall mainly on the sterile sections in the cone For cycads of the genus Zamia already a pollination by the weevil Rhopalotria mollis has been detected Species of the genus Rhopalotria could also be found in cones of Dioon in which there was also a large number of beetles of the genus Pharaxonotha which feed on pollen indicating pollination by animals 11 Conservation editThe genus is particularly at risk from habitat destruction the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN lists ten of the eleven species in a vulnerable category on their Red List One species D caputoi is considered to be critically endangered three as endangered D holmgrenii D sonorense and D tomasellii and five as vulnerable D califanoi D merolae D purpusii D rzedowskii and D spinulosum D edule is listed as a kind of near threatened list For D mejiae there is not enough data for an assessment of the hazard Locations are destroyed primarily by clearing and reclamation of the land Dioon species are also very popular with international collectors Plants are dug up and sold According to a report from the 1992 Washington Convention on Biological Diversity trade with D edule individuals reached a level of about 5 800 copies with D spinolosum 1 600 this does not include illicit trade 12 Another potential threat to the genus is the lobster louse Diaspididae Aulacaspis yasumatsui The insect originally comes from Southeast Asia and infests there cycads The pest has now been introduced to Florida California India and the UK where it causes major damage to cycads There he was also found at D edule If the species were to penetrate Central America it could drastically reduce or even destroy the populations of Dioon in a short time 13 Taxonomy editThe first description was made in 1843 by John Lindley as Dion The genus name was given due to the two ovules per megasporophyll Dioon comes from the ancient Greek prefix di di two and won ōion ōon egg 14 The leaf like character of Sporophylle gives Dioon a special position within the cycads Dehgan amp Dehgan described the genus as the most primitive of the cycads and suggested they put them into their own family 15 A molecular genetic study of the chloroplast DNA revealed that it is at least the most primitive genus of neotropical cycads 16 Classification edit Classically the family of Zamiaceae is divided into two subfamilies with four tribes Dioon is the only genus in the tribe of the Diooeae which together with the Encephalarteae forms the subfamily of Encephalartoideae This classification was based on morphological considerations A morphological study of relationships in fossil and extant taxa revealed the following cladogram 17 Clade with Zamia Chigua Ceratozamia Microcycas Bowenia StangeriaMicrocycasDioonEncephalartosLepidozamiaMacrozamiaA molecular biology analysis of a fragment of 26S ribosomal DNA revealed a somewhat similar cladogram that would dramatically alter the structure of Zamiaceae 17 Dioon would therefore be the basal genus of the family Cycas Cycadaceae Stangeria Stangeriaceae DioonZamiaEncephalartosLepidozamiaCeratozamiaMacrozamiaMicrocycasSpecies edit The genus is commonly divided into two groups by Norstog amp Nichols of distinct morphology The first includes D mejiae D rzedowskii and D spinulosum which are characterized by the greater size of their fronds trunks and cones The second group contains D califanoi D caputoi D edule D holmgrenii D merolae D purpusii D sonorense and D tomasellii which are smaller overall with shorter trunks much shorter fronds and smaller cones 18 A phylogenetic study from 1993 confirmed these clades with one difference D caputoi was assigned to the other clade Phylogeny of Dioon 19 20 D mejiae Standley amp WilliamsD rzedowskii De Luca et al D spinulosum Eichl 1883 ex DyerD edule LindleyD merolae De Luca Sabato amp Vazquez TorresD sonorense De Luca Sabato amp Vazquez Torres Chemnick Gregory amp Salas MoralesD tomasellii De Luca Sabato amp Vazquez TorresD angustifolium MiquelD stevensonii Nicolalde Morejon amp VovidesD purpusii RoseD argenteum Gregory et al D califanoi De Luca amp SabatoD caputoi De Luca Sabato amp Vazquez TorresD holmgrenii De Luca Sabato amp Vazquez TorresSpecies accepted 3 Image Scientific name Distribution nbsp Dioon angustifolium Miq Nuevo Leon TamaulipasDioon argenteum T J Greg amp al Oaxaca nbsp Dioon califanoi De Luca amp Sabato Puebla Oaxaca nbsp Dioon caputoi De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres Puebla Oaxaca nbsp Dioon edule Lindl Nuevo Leon Tamaulipas Veracruz Guanajuato Chiapas Hidalgo Mexico State Queretaro San Luis Potosi nbsp Dioon holmgrenii De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres Oaxaca nbsp Dioon mejiae Standl amp L O Williams Honduras nbsp Dioon merolae De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres Oaxaca ChiapasDioon oaxacensis Gutierrez Ortega Perez Farrera amp VovidesDioon planifolium Salas Morales Chemnick amp GregoryDioon salas moralesiae Gutierrez Ortega amp Perez Farrera nbsp Dioon purpusii Rose Oaxaca nbsp Dioon rzedowskii De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres OaxacaDioon sonorense De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres Chemnick et al Sonora Sinaloa nbsp Dioon spinulosum Dyer ex Eichl Veracruz OaxacaDioon stevensonii Nic Mor amp Vovides Michoacan Guerrero nbsp Dioon tomasellii De Luca Sabato amp Vazq Torres Durango Jalisco NayaritDioon vovidesii Gutierrez Ortega amp Perez FarrerasEvolution edit The earliest fossil finds date back to the Eocene and were found on Kupreanof Island in Alaska However it is probable that Dioon dates back to the Jurassic 145 5 199 6 ka or even further since fossils of other closely related but more developed cycads were already detected from this era 21 In the Pleistocene 0 011784 1 8 ka and Holocene today 0 011784 ka eras species have probably carried out several north south migrations and have followed the warm climatic conditions 22 One theory is that the recent dioon species have evolved from a number of vicarious events in the early Cenozoic with different species representing different ecological conditions These events must have followed each other for a very short time which precluded an accumulation of synapomorphies meaning that not many features could be re acquired The extant species of Dioon are attributed to three prototypes D mejiae is considered the most evolutionary advanced species of the genus D spinulosum and D rzedowskii are attributed to a second prototype which was probably better adapted to mesial conditions such as areas of medium humidity which enable them to establish on the Atlantic coast of Oaxaca The remaining species presumably come from a third to xerotic dry areas adapted to the original form Uses editIn Honduras the female cones of D mejiae are picked to harvest the seeds These are processed by about 33 000 indigenous people into tamales or tortillas and replace the cornmeal The fronds are traditionally used on Palm Sunday 23 References edit a b In Edwards s Botanical Register 29 misc 59 60 1843 Name Dioon Lindl Tropicos Saint Louis Missouri Missouri Botanical Garden Retrieved February 15 2010 Annotation as Dion orth amp nom cons Type Specimen Dioon edule Lindl Original Publication GRIN October 5 2007 Dioon information from NPGS GRIN Taxonomy for Plants National Germplasm Resources Laboratory Beltsville Maryland USDA ARS National Genetic Resources Program Archived from the original on May 7 2009 Retrieved February 15 2010 Comments this spelling conserved nom cons Vienna ICBN Art 14 11 amp App III against the original spelling Dion a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Christenhusz M J M J L Reveal A K Farjon M F Gardner R R Mill amp M W Chase 2011 A new classification and linear sequence of extant gymnosperms Phytotaxa 19 55 70 Molina Rosito A 1975 Enumeracion de las plantas de Honduras Ceiba 19 1 1 118 Vovides A P J D Rees amp M Vazquez Torres 1983 Zamiaceae Flora de Veracruz 26 1 31 Breedlove D E 1986 Flora de Chiapas Listados Floristicos de Mexico 4 i v 1 246 Aldo Meretti August 1990 Karyotypic Data on North and Central American Zamiaceae Cycadales and their Phylogenetic Implications American Journal of Botany 77 8 1016 1029 doi 10 2307 2444573 JSTOR 2444573 Jack B Fisher Andrew P Vovides 2004 Mycorrhizae Are Present in Cycad Roots The Botanical Review 70 1 16 23 doi 10 1663 0006 8101 2004 070 0016 MAPICR 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 40704849 A Moretti P Caputo S Cozzolino P De Luca L Gaudio G Gigliano Siniscalco D W Stevenson February 1993 A phylogenetic analysis of Dioon Zamiaceae American Journal of Botany 80 2 204 214 doi 10 2307 2445041 JSTOR 2445041 Andrew P Vovides March 1991 Insect Symbionts of Some Mexican Cycads in Their Natural Habitat Biotropica 23 1 102 104 doi 10 2307 2388697 JSTOR 2388697 CITES Secretariat ed 1992 Interpretation and Implementation of the Convention Trade in Plant Specimens PDF Eighth Meeting of the Conference of the Parties Kyoto 29 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 16 Retrieved 2018 02 11 in German a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Helmut Genaust 2005 Etymologisches Worterbuch der botanischen Pflanzennamen 3rd ed Hamburg Nikol p 209 ISBN 3 937872 16 7 Bijan Dehgan Nancy B Dehgan October 1988 Comparative pollen morphology and taxonomic affinities in Cycadales American Journal of Botany 75 10 1501 1516 doi 10 2307 2444700 JSTOR 2444700 De Luca u a 1995 P Vorster ed Molecular systematics of cycads Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Cycad Biology Stellenbosch ed 131 137 a b Guido Grimm 2000 Cycadales cladistic analysis of fossile and recent taxa based on morphological and molecular data Diplomarbeit an der Universitat Tubingen Norstog K J Nichols T J 1997 The biology of the cycads Cornell University Press Stull Gregory W Qu Xiao Jian Parins Fukuchi Caroline Yang Ying Ying Yang Jun Bo Yang Zhi Yun Hu Yi Ma Hong Soltis Pamela S Soltis Douglas E Li De Zhu Smith Stephen A Yi Ting Shuang et al 2021 Gene duplications and phylogenomic conflict underlie major pulses of phenotypic evolution in gymnosperms Nature Plants 7 8 1015 1025 bioRxiv 10 1101 2021 03 13 435279 doi 10 1038 s41477 021 00964 4 PMID 34282286 S2CID 232282918 Stull Gregory W et al 2021 main dated supermatrix tree T9 tre Figshare doi 10 6084 m9 figshare 14547354 v1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tom M Harris 1941 09 19 Cones of Extinct Cycadales from the Jurassic Rocks of Yorkshire Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 231 577 75 98 Bibcode 1941RSPTB 231 75H doi 10 1098 rstb 1941 0004 JSTOR 92322 T Walters T J Gregory J Chemnick R Osborne 2004 Walters T Osborne R eds Hypotheses on the relationship between biogeography and speciation in Dioon Zamiaceae Cycad Classification Concepts and Recommendations Miami Montgomery Botanical Center doi 10 1079 9780851997414 0000 ISBN 9780851997414 permanent dead link Mark Bonta Oscar Flores Pinot Daniel Graham Jody Haynes German Sandoval 2006 Ethnobotany and conservation of Tiusinte Dioon mejiae Standl amp L O Williams Zamiaceae in northeastern Honduras Journal of Ethnobiology 26 2 228 257 doi 10 2993 0278 0771 2006 26 228 EACOTD 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86014298 External links edit nbsp Media related to Dioon at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Dioon at Wikispecies Gymnosperm Database Dioon Dioon on The Cycad Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dioon amp oldid 1146973445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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