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Peridiscaceae

Peridiscaceae is a family of flowering plants in the order Saxifragales.[2] Four genera comprise this family: Medusandra, Soyauxia, Peridiscus, and Whittonia.,[3] with a total of 12 known species.[4] It has a disjunct distribution, with Peridiscus occurring in Venezuela and northern Brazil, Whittonia in Guyana,[5] Medusandra in Cameroon, and Soyauxia in tropical West Africa.[6] Whittonia is possibly extinct, being known from only one specimen collected below Kaieteur Falls in Guyana. In 2006, archeologists attempted to rediscover it, however, it proved unsuccessful.[3]

Peridiscaceae
Botanical illustration of Peridiscus lucidus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Peridiscaceae
Kuhlm.[1]
Type genus
Peridiscus
Genera

The largest genus is Soyauxia, with about seven species. Medusandra has two species. Peridiscus and Whittonia each contain one species. The Peridiscaceae are small trees or erect shrubs of wet tropical forests.

It was not until 2009 that all four of the genera were united into a single family.[3] Peridiscus and Whittonia are clearly close relatives. This pair, and the other two genera have long been considered anomalous, being variously classified by different authors.

Description edit

The following description was created by combining descriptions of Medusandra and Peridiscus by John Hutchinson[7] with descriptions of Soyauxia, Peridiscus, and Whittonia by Clemens Bayer.[5]

Peridiscaceae are small trees or erect shrubs. The leaves are stipulate, alternate, and simple, with margins that are entire or remotely crenulate (Medusandra). The petiole is pulvinate, at its apex, sometimes obscurely so. The stipules are in the axils of the leaves, sometimes enclosing an axillary bud.

The inflorescence is a cluster of axillary racemes or spikes, the clusters often being reduced to a pair of racemes or to a single raceme. The flowers are bisexual and actinomorphic. The sepals are 4 to 7 in number, and free, that is, separate from each other. Medusandra and Soyauxia have five petals. Peridiscus and Whittonia have none.

Medusandra lacks a nectary disk and has five stamens, inserted opposite the petals, and alternating with five long, hairy staminodes. In the others, the stamens are numerous and arranged in a ring around the nectary disk. The anthers are tetrathecal in Medusandra and Soyauxia; bithecal in Peridiscus and Whittonia.

The perianth parts are attached below the ovary. The ovary is therefore superior, but appears half-inferior in Peridiscus because the ovary is embedded in the large, fleshy disk. The gynoecium consists of three or four carpels, united to form a unilocular ovary. The placentation is apical, with two ovules at the apex of each carpel. The ovary has a central column in Medusandra and Soyauxia. Each carpel bears a stylulus and these are well separated at the apex of the ovary.

The fruit is one-seeded; a capsule in Medusandra and Soyauxia; a drupe in Peridiscus and Whittonia.

History edit

George Bentham established the genus Peridiscus in 1862, naming its only species Peridiscus lucidus. He placed it in a group which he called "Tribus Flacourtieae" and which later would be known as the family Flacourtiaceae.[8] Bentham wrote no etymology for this name, but it is generally believed that the name refers to the fact that the stamens are attached along the outer edge of the nectary disk.[9]

Daniel Oliver established the genus Soyauxia in 1880 for Soyauxia gabonensis, placing it in the family Passifloraceae.[10] He named it for the German botanist and plant collector Hermann Soyaux,[11] saying "Mons. Soyaux, now settled in the Gaboon, well deserves that his name should be associated with one of his interesting discoveries in that region".[10]

The family Flacourtiaceae was, as Hermann Sleumer said, a fiction,[12][13] and Peridiscus was, from the outset, one of its most doubtful members.[5][7] Recognizing its distinctiveness, João Kuhlmann segregated it into its own family in 1947.[14]

In 1952, John Brenan named and described Medusandra, erecting a new family, Medusandraceae to accommodate it.[15] In 1953, Brenan transferred Soyauxia from Passifloraceae to Medusandraceae,[16] but few others agreed with his classification. In 1954, John Hutchinson and John McEwen Dalziel followed Brenan's treatment in the second edition of their Flora of West Tropical Africa. Hutchinson, however, soon recanted, explaining in some detail why he thought that Medusandra and Soyauxia were not related.[7]

In 1962, Noel Y. Sandwith named and described Whittonia.[17] In an accompanying article, Charles Russell Metcalfe discussed its close relationship to Peridiscus. For four decades thereafter, Peridiscaceae was viewed as a family of uncertain taxonomic position, containing two genera.

In the year 2000, a DNA sequence for the rbcL gene of Whittonia was produced and used in a molecular phylogenetic study of the eudicots.[18] This study placed Peridiscaceae in a clade with Elatinaceae and Malpighiaceae, a very surprising and unexpected result. On the basis of this phylogeny, the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group placed Peridiscaceae in Malpighiales when they published the APG II system of plant classification in 2003.[19] It was soon found that the rbcL sequence for Whittonia was a chimera, formed by DNA from unidentified plants that had contaminated the sample.[20] No subsequent attempt to extract DNA from Whittonia has been made.

In 2004, using DNA from Peridiscus, it was shown that Elatinaceae and Malpighiaceae are indeed sister families and that Peridiscaceae belong to Saxifragales.[20] Medusandra and Soyauxia, meanwhile, were listed in APG II in an appendix entitled "TAXA OF UNCERTAIN POSITION".[19]

DNA from Soyauxia was eventually obtained, and in 2007, it was shown that Soyauxia is most closely related to Peridiscus and, presumably, Whittonia.[21] Since this result has a good morphological basis, Soyauxia was duly transferred to Peridiscaceae. This study also found strong statistical support for the inclusion of Peridiscaceae in Saxifragales, but no strong support for any particular position within that order.[21]

In 2008, in a study employing a large amount of chloroplast DNA data, as well as some mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, it was shown that Peridiscaceae is sister to the rest of Saxifragales.[22]

It had been suspected that Medusandra might belong somewhere in Malpighiales, but a phylogeny of that order, generated in 2009, placed Medusandra in Saxifragales. The authors had included Medusandra and a few other members of Saxifragales in their outgroup, finding strong support for a clade of [Medusandra + (Soyauxia + Peridiscus)].[3] When the APG III system was published in October 2009, Peridiscaceae was expanded to include Medusandra and Soyauxia.[1] John Brenan, 57 years before, had been prescient in his perception of a relationship between Medusandra and Soyauxia.

Phylogeny edit

The phylogeny is diagrammed as a phylogenetic tree below. The relationships shown are from Wurdack and Davis (2009) [3] except for the position of Whittonia, for which no DNA sequences are known. Peridiscus and Whittonia are undoubtedly sister taxa due to their many shared morphological characters.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (2009). "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III" (PDF). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 161 (2): 105–121. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00996.x. hdl:10654/18083. Retrieved 2013-07-06.
  2. ^ Peter F. Stevens. 2001 onwards. "Peridiscaceae". At: Angiosperm Phylogeny Website At: Missouri Botanical Garden Website. (see External links below).
  3. ^ a b c d e Kenneth J. Wurdack and Charles C. Davis. 2009. "Malpighiales phylogenetics: Gaining ground on one of the most recalcitrant clades in the angiosperm tree of life." American Journal of Botany 96(8):1551-1570.
  4. ^ Christenhusz, M. J. M. & Byng, J. W. (2016). "The number of known plants species in the world and its annual increase". Phytotaxa. 261 (3): 201–217. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.261.3.1.
  5. ^ a b c Clemens Bayer. 2007. "Peridiscaceae" pages 297-300. In: Klaus Kubitski (editor). The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants volume IX. Springer-Verlag: Berlin;Heidelberg, Germany. ISBN 978-3-540-32214-6
  6. ^ Vernon H. Heywood, Richard K. Brummitt, Ole Seberg, and Alastair Culham. Flowering Plant Families of the World. Firefly Books: Ontario, Canada. (2007). ISBN 1-55407-206-9
  7. ^ a b c John Hutchinson. The Families of Flowering Plants, Third Edition (1973). Oxford University Press: London.
  8. ^ George Bentham and Joseph Dalton Hooker. 1862. Genera Plantarum volume 1, part 1, page 127. A. Black, William Pamplin, Lovell Reeve & Co., Williams & Norgate: London, England. (see External links below).
  9. ^ Umberto Quattrocchi. 2000. CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names. volume III, page 2010. CRC Press: Baton Rouge, New York, London, Washington DC. ISBN 978-0-8493-2673-8. (see External links below)
  10. ^ a b Joseph Dalton Hooker. 1880. Hooker's Icones Plantarum volume XIV (volume IV of the third series):page 73 and plate 1393. (see External links below).
  11. ^ Umberto Quattrocchi. 2000. CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names. volume IV, page 2521. CRC Press: Baton Rouge, New York, London, Washington DC. ISBN 978-0-8493-2677-6.
  12. ^ Regis B. Miller (1975). "Systematic anatomy of the xylem and comments on the relationships of Flacourtiaceae". Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 56(1):79.
  13. ^ Mark W. Chase, Sue Zmarzty, M. Dolores Lledó, Kenneth J. Wurdack, Susan M. Swensen, and Michael F. Fay. 2002. "When in doubt, put it in Flacourtiaceae: a molecular phylogenetic analysis based on plastid rbcL DNA sequences." Kew Bulletin 57(1):141-181.
  14. ^ João G. Kuhlmann. 1947. "Peridiscaceae (Kuhlmann)". Arquivos do Serviço Florestal 3(1):3-7.
  15. ^ John P.M. Brenan. 1952. "Plants of the Cambridge Expedition, 1947-1948: II. A new order of flowering plants from the British Cameroons". Kew Bulletin 7:227-236.
  16. ^ John P.M. Brenan. 1953. "Soyauxia, a second genus of Medusandraceae". Kew Bulletin 8:507-511.
  17. ^ Noel Y. Sandwith. 1962. "Contributions to the flora of tropical America: LXIX. A new genus of Peridiscaceae". Kew Bulletin 15:467-471.
  18. ^ Vincent Savolainen, Michael F. Fay, Dirk C. Albach, Anders Backlund, Michelle van der Bank, Kenneth M. Cameron, S.A. Johnson, M. Dolores Lledo, Jean-Christophe Pintaud, Martyn P. Powell, Mary Clare Sheahan, Douglas E. Soltis, Pamela S. Soltis, Peter Weston, W. Mark Whitten, Kenneth J. Wurdack and Mark W. Chase. 2000. "Phylogeny of the eudicots: a nearly complete familial analysis based on rbcL gene sequences". Kew Bulletin 55(2):257-309.
  19. ^ a b The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group. 2003. "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG II". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 141(4):399-436.
  20. ^ a b Davis, C. C. & Chase, M. W. (2004). "Elatinaceae are sister to Malpighiaceae; Peridiscaceae belong to Saxifragales". American Journal of Botany. 91 (2): 262–273. doi:10.3732/ajb.91.2.262. hdl:2027.42/141309. PMID 21653382.
  21. ^ a b Soltis 2007.
  22. ^ Shuguang Jian, Pamela S. Soltis, Matthew A. Gitzendanner, Michael J. Moore, Ruiqi Li, Tory A. Hendry, Yin-Long Qiu, Amit Dhingra, Charles D. Bell, and Douglas E. Soltis. 2008. "Resolving an Ancient, Rapid Radiation in Saxifragales". Systematic Biology 57(1):38-57.

Bibliography edit

Websites
  • Peridiscaceae At: Angiosperm Phylogeny Website At: Missoure Botanical Garden Website
  • CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: M-Q At: Hooker's Icones Plantarum
  • Peridiscaceae in L. Watson and M.J. Dallwitz (1992 onwards). The families of flowering plants: descriptions, illustrations, identification, information retrieval.
  • WFO (2019). "Peridiscaceae Kuhlm". World Flora Online. Retrieved 1 November 2019.

peridiscaceae, family, flowering, plants, order, saxifragales, four, genera, comprise, this, family, medusandra, soyauxia, peridiscus, whittonia, with, total, known, species, disjunct, distribution, with, peridiscus, occurring, venezuela, northern, brazil, whi. Peridiscaceae is a family of flowering plants in the order Saxifragales 2 Four genera comprise this family Medusandra Soyauxia Peridiscus and Whittonia 3 with a total of 12 known species 4 It has a disjunct distribution with Peridiscus occurring in Venezuela and northern Brazil Whittonia in Guyana 5 Medusandra in Cameroon and Soyauxia in tropical West Africa 6 Whittonia is possibly extinct being known from only one specimen collected below Kaieteur Falls in Guyana In 2006 archeologists attempted to rediscover it however it proved unsuccessful 3 Peridiscaceae Botanical illustration of Peridiscus lucidus Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Order Saxifragales Family PeridiscaceaeKuhlm 1 Type genus PeridiscusBenth Genera Medusandra Brenan Peridiscus Benth Soyauxia Oliv Whittonia Sandwith The largest genus is Soyauxia with about seven species Medusandra has two species Peridiscus and Whittonia each contain one species The Peridiscaceae are small trees or erect shrubs of wet tropical forests It was not until 2009 that all four of the genera were united into a single family 3 Peridiscus and Whittonia are clearly close relatives This pair and the other two genera have long been considered anomalous being variously classified by different authors Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Phylogeny 4 References 5 BibliographyDescription editThe following description was created by combining descriptions of Medusandra and Peridiscus by John Hutchinson 7 with descriptions of Soyauxia Peridiscus and Whittonia by Clemens Bayer 5 Peridiscaceae are small trees or erect shrubs The leaves are stipulate alternate and simple with margins that are entire or remotely crenulate Medusandra The petiole is pulvinate at its apex sometimes obscurely so The stipules are in the axils of the leaves sometimes enclosing an axillary bud The inflorescence is a cluster of axillary racemes or spikes the clusters often being reduced to a pair of racemes or to a single raceme The flowers are bisexual and actinomorphic The sepals are 4 to 7 in number and free that is separate from each other Medusandra and Soyauxia have five petals Peridiscus and Whittonia have none Medusandra lacks a nectary disk and has five stamens inserted opposite the petals and alternating with five long hairy staminodes In the others the stamens are numerous and arranged in a ring around the nectary disk The anthers are tetrathecal in Medusandra and Soyauxia bithecal in Peridiscus and Whittonia The perianth parts are attached below the ovary The ovary is therefore superior but appears half inferior in Peridiscus because the ovary is embedded in the large fleshy disk The gynoecium consists of three or four carpels united to form a unilocular ovary The placentation is apical with two ovules at the apex of each carpel The ovary has a central column in Medusandra and Soyauxia Each carpel bears a stylulus and these are well separated at the apex of the ovary The fruit is one seeded a capsule in Medusandra and Soyauxia a drupe in Peridiscus and Whittonia History editGeorge Bentham established the genus Peridiscus in 1862 naming its only species Peridiscus lucidus He placed it in a group which he called Tribus Flacourtieae and which later would be known as the family Flacourtiaceae 8 Bentham wrote no etymology for this name but it is generally believed that the name refers to the fact that the stamens are attached along the outer edge of the nectary disk 9 Daniel Oliver established the genus Soyauxia in 1880 for Soyauxia gabonensis placing it in the family Passifloraceae 10 He named it for the German botanist and plant collector Hermann Soyaux 11 saying Mons Soyaux now settled in the Gaboon well deserves that his name should be associated with one of his interesting discoveries in that region 10 The family Flacourtiaceae was as Hermann Sleumer said a fiction 12 13 and Peridiscus was from the outset one of its most doubtful members 5 7 Recognizing its distinctiveness Joao Kuhlmann segregated it into its own family in 1947 14 In 1952 John Brenan named and described Medusandra erecting a new family Medusandraceae to accommodate it 15 In 1953 Brenan transferred Soyauxia from Passifloraceae to Medusandraceae 16 but few others agreed with his classification In 1954 John Hutchinson and John McEwen Dalziel followed Brenan s treatment in the second edition of their Flora of West Tropical Africa Hutchinson however soon recanted explaining in some detail why he thought that Medusandra and Soyauxia were not related 7 In 1962 Noel Y Sandwith named and described Whittonia 17 In an accompanying article Charles Russell Metcalfe discussed its close relationship to Peridiscus For four decades thereafter Peridiscaceae was viewed as a family of uncertain taxonomic position containing two genera In the year 2000 a DNA sequence for the rbcL gene of Whittonia was produced and used in a molecular phylogenetic study of the eudicots 18 This study placed Peridiscaceae in a clade with Elatinaceae and Malpighiaceae a very surprising and unexpected result On the basis of this phylogeny the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group placed Peridiscaceae in Malpighiales when they published the APG II system of plant classification in 2003 19 It was soon found that the rbcL sequence for Whittonia was a chimera formed by DNA from unidentified plants that had contaminated the sample 20 No subsequent attempt to extract DNA from Whittonia has been made In 2004 using DNA from Peridiscus it was shown that Elatinaceae and Malpighiaceae are indeed sister families and that Peridiscaceae belong to Saxifragales 20 Medusandra and Soyauxia meanwhile were listed in APG II in an appendix entitled TAXA OF UNCERTAIN POSITION 19 DNA from Soyauxia was eventually obtained and in 2007 it was shown that Soyauxia is most closely related to Peridiscus and presumably Whittonia 21 Since this result has a good morphological basis Soyauxia was duly transferred to Peridiscaceae This study also found strong statistical support for the inclusion of Peridiscaceae in Saxifragales but no strong support for any particular position within that order 21 In 2008 in a study employing a large amount of chloroplast DNA data as well as some mitochondrial and nuclear DNA it was shown that Peridiscaceae is sister to the rest of Saxifragales 22 It had been suspected that Medusandra might belong somewhere in Malpighiales but a phylogeny of that order generated in 2009 placed Medusandra in Saxifragales The authors had included Medusandra and a few other members of Saxifragales in their outgroup finding strong support for a clade of Medusandra Soyauxia Peridiscus 3 When the APG III system was published in October 2009 Peridiscaceae was expanded to include Medusandra and Soyauxia 1 John Brenan 57 years before had been prescient in his perception of a relationship between Medusandra and Soyauxia Phylogeny editThe phylogeny is diagrammed as a phylogenetic tree below The relationships shown are from Wurdack and Davis 2009 3 except for the position of Whittonia for which no DNA sequences are known Peridiscus and Whittonia are undoubtedly sister taxa due to their many shared morphological characters Peridiscaceae Medusandra Soyauxia Peridiscus WhittoniaReferences edit a b Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 2009 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG III PDF Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 2 105 121 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 00996 x hdl 10654 18083 Retrieved 2013 07 06 Peter F Stevens 2001 onwards Peridiscaceae At Angiosperm Phylogeny Website At Missouri Botanical Garden Website see External links below a b c d e Kenneth J Wurdack and Charles C Davis 2009 Malpighiales phylogenetics Gaining ground on one of the most recalcitrant clades in the angiosperm tree of life American Journal of Botany 96 8 1551 1570 Christenhusz M J M amp Byng J W 2016 The number of known plants species in the world and its annual increase Phytotaxa 261 3 201 217 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 261 3 1 a b c Clemens Bayer 2007 Peridiscaceae pages 297 300 In Klaus Kubitski editor The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants volume IX Springer Verlag Berlin Heidelberg Germany ISBN 978 3 540 32214 6 Vernon H Heywood Richard K Brummitt Ole Seberg and Alastair Culham Flowering Plant Families of the World Firefly Books Ontario Canada 2007 ISBN 1 55407 206 9 a b c John Hutchinson The Families of Flowering Plants Third Edition 1973 Oxford University Press London George Bentham and Joseph Dalton Hooker 1862 Genera Plantarum volume 1 part 1 page 127 A Black William Pamplin Lovell Reeve amp Co Williams amp Norgate London England see External links below Umberto Quattrocchi 2000 CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names volume III page 2010 CRC Press Baton Rouge New York London Washington DC ISBN 978 0 8493 2673 8 see External links below a b Joseph Dalton Hooker 1880 Hooker s Icones Plantarum volume XIV volume IV of the third series page 73 and plate 1393 see External links below Umberto Quattrocchi 2000 CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names volume IV page 2521 CRC Press Baton Rouge New York London Washington DC ISBN 978 0 8493 2677 6 Regis B Miller 1975 Systematic anatomy of the xylem and comments on the relationships of Flacourtiaceae Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 56 1 79 Mark W Chase Sue Zmarzty M Dolores Lledo Kenneth J Wurdack Susan M Swensen and Michael F Fay 2002 When in doubt put it in Flacourtiaceae a molecular phylogenetic analysis based on plastid rbcL DNA sequences Kew Bulletin 57 1 141 181 Joao G Kuhlmann 1947 Peridiscaceae Kuhlmann Arquivos do Servico Florestal 3 1 3 7 John P M Brenan 1952 Plants of the Cambridge Expedition 1947 1948 II A new order of flowering plants from the British Cameroons Kew Bulletin 7 227 236 John P M Brenan 1953 Soyauxia a second genus of Medusandraceae Kew Bulletin 8 507 511 Noel Y Sandwith 1962 Contributions to the flora of tropical America LXIX A new genus of Peridiscaceae Kew Bulletin 15 467 471 Vincent Savolainen Michael F Fay Dirk C Albach Anders Backlund Michelle van der Bank Kenneth M Cameron S A Johnson M Dolores Lledo Jean Christophe Pintaud Martyn P Powell Mary Clare Sheahan Douglas E Soltis Pamela S Soltis Peter Weston W Mark Whitten Kenneth J Wurdack and Mark W Chase 2000 Phylogeny of the eudicots a nearly complete familial analysis based on rbcL gene sequences Kew Bulletin 55 2 257 309 a b The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 2003 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG II Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 141 4 399 436 a b Davis C C amp Chase M W 2004 Elatinaceae are sister to Malpighiaceae Peridiscaceae belong to Saxifragales American Journal of Botany 91 2 262 273 doi 10 3732 ajb 91 2 262 hdl 2027 42 141309 PMID 21653382 a b Soltis 2007 Shuguang Jian Pamela S Soltis Matthew A Gitzendanner Michael J Moore Ruiqi Li Tory A Hendry Yin Long Qiu Amit Dhingra Charles D Bell and Douglas E Soltis 2008 Resolving an Ancient Rapid Radiation in Saxifragales Systematic Biology 57 1 38 57 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peridiscaceae nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Peridiscaceae Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998 An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 85 4 531 553 doi 10 2307 2992015 JSTOR 2992015 Angiosperm Phylogeny Group II 2003 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG II Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 141 4 Bremer B K Bremer M W Chase J L Reveal D E Soltis P S Soltis amp P F Stevens 399 436 doi 10 1046 j 1095 8339 2003 t01 1 00158 x Angiosperm Phylogeny Group III 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 Bremer B K Bremer M W Chase M F Fay J L Reveal D E Soltis P S Soltis amp P F Stevens 105 121 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 00996 x hdl 10654 18083 Angiosperm Phylogeny Group IV 2016 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG IV Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 181 1 1 20 doi 10 1111 boj 12385 Aymard Gerardo A Arellano Henry June 2018 First Report of Peridiscaceae for the Vascular Flora of Colombia Harvard Papers in Botany 23 1 109 121 doi 10 3100 hpib v23iss1 2018 n12 S2CID 198149581 Soltis Douglas E Clayton Joshua W Davis Charles C Gitzendanner Matthew A Cheek Martin Savolainen Vincent Amorim Andre M Soltis Pamela S 2007 Monophyly and Relationships of the Enigmatic Family Peridiscaceae PDF Taxon 56 1 65 73 doi 10 2307 25065736 ISSN 0040 0262 JSTOR 25065736 S2CID 10606740 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 18 Websites Peridiscaceae At Angiosperm Phylogeny Website At Missoure Botanical Garden Website CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names M Q At Hooker s Icones Plantarum Peridiscaceae in L Watson and M J Dallwitz 1992 onwards The families of flowering plants descriptions illustrations identification information retrieval WFO 2019 Peridiscaceae Kuhlm World Flora Online Retrieved 1 November 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peridiscaceae amp oldid 1217830683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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