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Drimia

Drimia is a genus of African, south European and south Asian flowering plants. In the APG IV classification system, it is placed in the family Asparagaceae, subfamily Scilloideae (formerly the family Hyacinthaceae[2]). When broadly circumscribed, the genus includes a number of other genera previously treated separately, including Litanthus, Rhodocodon, Schizobasis and Urginea.[1]

Drimia
Drimia maritima growing in the Sierra Madrona, Spain.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Asparagaceae
Subfamily: Scilloideae
Genus: Drimia
Jacq. ex Willd.[1]
Synonyms[1]
  • Adenotheca Welw. ex Baker
  • Boosia Speta
  • Charybdis Speta
  • Duthiea Speta
  • Ebertia Speta
  • Geschollia Speta
  • Idothea Kunth
  • Idothearia C.Presl
  • Indurgia Speta
  • Ledurgia Speta
  • Litanthus Harv.
  • Mucinaea M.Pinter
  • Pilasia Raf.
  • Rhadamanthopsis (Oberm.) Speta
  • Rhadamanthus Salisb.
  • Rhodocodon Baker
  • Sagittanthera Mart.-Azorín
  • Schizobasis Baker
  • Sekanama Speta
  • Squilla Steinh.
  • Strepsiphyla Raf.
  • Sypharissa Salisb.
  • Tenicroa Raf.
  • Thuranthos C.H.Wright
  • Urginavia Speta
  • Urginea Steinh.
  • Urgineopsis Compton
Drimia maritima flowering in Khurvat Karta, Israel

One of the best-known species is the sea squill, Drimia maritima (formerly Urginea maritima). Drimia intricata (formerly Schizobasis intricata) is sometimes cultivated as a bulbous or succulent plant.

Description edit

Drimia species are usually deciduous, more rarely evergreen, growing from bulbs. The bulbs may be underground or occur on or near the surface. Each bulb has one to several leaves that are often dry by the time the flowers open. The inflorescence is in the form of a raceme, with one to many flowers. At least the lower inflorescence bracts have spurs (a characteristic of the tribe Urgineeae). The individual flowers generally last for only one to two days and have white to yellowish green or brown tepals that are either free or joined into a basal tube. The tepals often have a darker central keel. After fertilization, an ovoid capsule forms with several seeds in each locule. The seeds are black and winged.[3]

Taxonomy edit

A formal description of genus Drimia first appeared in the fourth edition of Species Plantarum, published in 1799, authored by Carl Ludwig Willdenow. The name was attributed to Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin.[1][4] When describing Drimia elata (the type species of the genus) in a work published in 1797, Jacquin said that he was unable to assign it to one of the known genera, and so constructed a new one. The name is derived from the Greek δριμεῖα drimeia, the feminine form of the adjective δριμύς drimys meaning "bitter" or "acrid", referring to the root.[5][6]

The boundaries between genera within the Scilloideae are not completely settled.[3][7] The situation has been described as being in a "state of flux".[2] As early as 1977, it was suggested that Urginea be merged into Drimia, although other small genera continued to be kept separate. In 2000, Peter Goldblatt and John Charles Manning proposed including other related genera, including Litanthus, Rhadamanthus and Schizobasis, a position supported later by some molecular phylogenetic studies.[3] This broad circumscription of Drimia is accepted by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families.[1] Other sources prefer to maintain a larger number of segregated genera.[8][9] Regardless of whether a broad or strict view is taken of Drimia, it is placed in the tribe Urgineeae of the subfamily Scilloideae (or the subfamily Urgineoideae of the family Hyacinthaceae if this family is separated from Asparagaceae).[3]

Litanthus group edit

The genus Litanthus was for a long time monotypic, with the sole species L. pusillus, before in 2000 Goldblatt and Manning included it in Drimia.[3] A further species, Drimia stenocarpa, was added to the group in 2014. The Litanthus group is characterized by one- or occasionally two-flowered inflorescences with drooping tubular flowers whose tepals are united at the base for more than half their length.[10]

Rhodocodon group edit

The genus Rhodocodon was included in Drimia by Goldblatt and Manning in 2000.[3] The species of Rhodocodon, or the Rhodocodon group within Drimia, including D. cryptopoda, form a well supported clade endemic to Madagascar. They appear to be the product of a single invasion of Madagascar by an African species. A total of 13 species are recognized by those who separate the genus from Drimia.[8]

Schizobasis group edit

The genus Schizobasis was included in Drimia by Goldblatt and Manning in 2000.[3] As many as eight species have been described, but in 2014 these were reduced to two: Drimia intricata, including all the previously described species, and the new species Drimia sigmoidea. The Schizobasis group is distinguished by its well branched, thin-stemmed inflorescence and small, filiform leaves that are found only in seedlings, disappearing in mature plants.[11]

Species edit

As of August 2017, the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families accepted 100 species:[12]

  • Drimia acarophylla E.Brink & A.P.Dold
  • Drimia albiflora (B.Nord.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia altissima (L.f.) Ker Gawl.
  • Drimia anomala (Baker) Baker
  • Drimia aphylla (Forssk.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia arenicola (B.Nord.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia aurantiaca (H.Lindb.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia barkerae Oberm. ex J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia basutica (E.Phillips) ined.
  • Drimia brachystachys (Baker) Stedje
  • Drimia calcarata (Baker) Stedje
  • Drimia capensis (Burm.f.) Wijnands
  • Drimia chalumnensis A.P.Dold & E.Brink
  • Drimia ciliata (L.f.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia cochlearis Mart.-Azorín
  • Drimia congesta Bullock
  • Drimia convallarioides (L.f.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia cremnophila van Jaarsv.
  • Drimia cryptopoda (Baker) Pfosser
  • Drimia cyanelloides (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia delagoensis (Baker) Jessop
  • Drimia dregei (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia duthieae (Adamson) Jessop
  • Drimia echinostachya (Baker) Eggli & N.R.Crouch
  • Drimia edwardsii N.R.Crouch & Mart.-Azorín
  • Drimia elata Jacq.
  • Drimia excelsa J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia exigua Stedje
  • Drimia exuviata (Jacq.) Jessop
  • Drimia fasciata (B.Nord.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia filifolia (Poir.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia fimbrimarginata Snijman
  • Drimia flagellaris T.J.Edwards
  • Drimia fragrans (Jacq.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia fugax (Moris) Stearn
  • Drimia glaucescens (Engl. & K.Krause) H.Scholz
  • Drimia guineensis (Speta) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia haworthioides Baker
  • Drimia hesperantha J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia hesperia (Webb & Berthel.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia hockii De Wild.
  • Drimia hyacinthoides Baker
  • Drimia incerta A.Chev. ex Hutch.
  • Drimia indica (Roxb.) Jessop
  • Drimia intricata (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia involuta (J.C.Manning & Snijman) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia johnstonii (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia kniphofioides (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia laxiflora Baker
  • Drimia ledermannii K.Krause
  • Drimia ligulata J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia loedolffiae van Jaarsv.
  • Drimia macrantha (Baker) Baker
  • Drimia macrocarpa Stedje
  • Drimia macrocentra (Baker) Jessop
  • Drimia marginata (Thunb.) Jessop
  • Drimia maritima (L.) Stearn
  • Drimia mascarenensis (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia maura (Maire) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia media Jacq. ex Willd.
  • Drimia minuta Goldblatt & J.C.Manning
  • Drimia multifolia (G.J.Lewis) Jessop
  • Drimia multisetosa (Baker) Jessop
  • Drimia mzimvubuensis van Jaarsv.
  • Drimia nagarjunae (Hemadri & Swahari) Anand Kumar
  • Drimia nana (Snijman) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia noctiflora (Batt. & Trab.) Stearn
  • Drimia numidica (Jord. & Fourr.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia occultans G.Will.
  • Drimia oliverorum J.C.Manning
  • Drimia ollivieri (Maire) Stearn
  • Drimia pancration (Steinh.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia polyantha (Blatt. & McCann) Stearn
  • Drimia polyphylla (Hook.f.) Ansari & Sundararagh.
  • Drimia porphyrantha (Bullock) Stedje
  • Drimia psilostachya (Welw. ex Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia pulchromarginata J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia pusilla Jacq. ex Willd.
  • Drimia razii Ansari
  • Drimia rupicola (Trimen) Dassan. in M.D.Daddanayake & al. (eds.)
  • Drimia salteri (Compton) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia sanguinea (Schinz) Jessop
  • Drimia saniensis (Hilliard & B.L.Burtt) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia sclerophylla J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia secunda (B.Nord.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia senegalensis (Kunth) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia sigmoidea J.C.Manning & J.M.J.Deacon
  • Drimia simensis (Hochst. ex A.Rich.) Stedje
  • Drimia sphaerocephala Baker in W.H.Harvey & auct. suc. (eds.)
  • Drimia stenocarpa J.C.Manning & J.M.J.Deacon
  • Drimia sudanica Friis & Vollesen
  • Drimia tazensis (Batt. & Maire) Stearn
  • Drimia undata Stearn
  • Drimia uniflora J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia uranthera (R.A.Dyer) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia urgineoides (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia vermiformis J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia virens (Schltr.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia viridula (Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
  • Drimia wightii Lakshmin.

In addition, 10 species described in 2015, and placed by the authors in Rhodocodon,[9] are, as of August 2017, treated as "unplaced" in the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, which does not recognize the genus; none have names in Drimia:[13]

  • Rhodocodon apiculatus H.Perrier ex Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon calcicola Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon campanulatus Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon cyathiformis H.Perrier ex Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon floribundus H.Perrier ex Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon graciliscapus Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon intermedius H.Perrier ex Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon linearifolius Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon monophyllus Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig
  • Rhodocodon rotundus H.Perrier ex Knirsch, Mart.-Azorín & Wetschnig

Distribution and habitat edit

The broadly defined genus has about 100 species found in Africa, including Madagascar, the Mediterranean area and Asia. About half of all the species occur in southern Africa, where species diversity is greatest in semi-arid regions with winter rainfall. Drimia generally is found in regions with seasonal dryness.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Drimia Jacq. ex Willd.", World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2017-08-03
  2. ^ a b Chase, M.W.; Reveal, J.L. & Fay, M.F. (2009), "A subfamilial classification for the expanded asparagalean families Amaryllidaceae, Asparagaceae and Xanthorrhoeaceae", Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 161 (2): 132–136, doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00999.x
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Manning, J.C.; Goldblatt, P.; Fay, M.F. (2004). "A revised generic synopsis of Hyacintheaceae in sub-Saharan Africa, based on molecular evidence, including new combinations and the new tribe Pseudoprospereae". Edinburgh Journal of Botany. 60 (3): 533–568. doi:10.1017/S0960428603000404.
  4. ^ Willdenow, C.L. (1799), "651 Drimia", Species Plantarum : Editio Quarta (in Latin), vol. 2, Berlin, pp. 165–166, retrieved 2017-08-03
  5. ^ Jacquin, N.J. (1797) [title page 1796], "Drimia elata", Collectaneorum Supplementum (in Latin), Vienna (Vindobona), pp. 38–39, retrieved 2017-08-03
  6. ^ δριμύς. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  7. ^ Wetschnig, W.; Pfosser, M. (2003). "The Scilla plumbea puzzle – present status of the genus Scilla sensu lato in southern Africa and description of Spetaea lachenaliiflora, a new genus and species of Massonieae (Hyacinthaceae)". Taxon. 52 (1): 75–91. doi:10.2307/3647303. JSTOR 3647303.
  8. ^ a b Pfosser, Martin; Knirsch, Walter; Pinter, Michael; Ali, Syed Shujait; Dutta, Suchandra & Wetschnig, Wolfgang (2012), "Phylogenetic relationships of Malagasy Hyacinthaceae", Plant Ecology and Evolution, 145 (1): 65–72, doi:10.5091/plecevo.2012.590
  9. ^ a b Knirsch, Walter; Martínez Azorín, Mario; Pfosser, Martin & Wetschnig, Wolfgang (2015-01-23), "The reinstatement and rediagnosis of the madagascan genus Rhodocodon (Asparagaceae, Scilloideae), with validation and remarks on H. Perrier's taxa", Phytotaxa, 195 (2): 101–134, doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.195.2.1
  10. ^ Manning, J.C.; Deacon, J. & Goldblatt, P. (2014), "A review of the Litanthus group of Drimia Jacq. (Hyacinthaceae: Urgineoideae) with the description of a second species, Drimia stenocarpa, from Western Cape", South African Journal of Botany, 90: 96–100, doi:10.1016/j.sajb.2013.10.006
  11. ^ Manning, John; Deacon, James & Goldblatt, Peter (2014), "A review of the Schizobasis group of Drimia Jacq. (Hyacinthaceae: Urgineoideae), and the new species D. sigmoidea from Western Cape, South Africa", South African Journal of Botany, 94: 263–269, doi:10.1016/j.sajb.2014.07.011
  12. ^ Search for "Drimia", World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2017-08-04
  13. ^ "Search for Rhodocodon", World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2017-08-05

Bibliography edit

  • Steinheil, Adolph (1834). "Matériaux pour servir a la flore de barbarie III: Note sur le genre Urginea nouvellement formé dans la famille Liliacées". Annales des sciences naturelles Botanique (in French). Second series 1: 321–332.

drimia, genus, african, south, european, south, asian, flowering, plants, classification, system, placed, family, asparagaceae, subfamily, scilloideae, formerly, family, hyacinthaceae, when, broadly, circumscribed, genus, includes, number, other, genera, previ. Drimia is a genus of African south European and south Asian flowering plants In the APG IV classification system it is placed in the family Asparagaceae subfamily Scilloideae formerly the family Hyacinthaceae 2 When broadly circumscribed the genus includes a number of other genera previously treated separately including Litanthus Rhodocodon Schizobasis and Urginea 1 Drimia Drimia maritima growing in the Sierra Madrona Spain Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Monocots Order Asparagales Family Asparagaceae Subfamily Scilloideae Genus DrimiaJacq ex Willd 1 Synonyms 1 Adenotheca Welw ex BakerBoosia SpetaCharybdis SpetaDuthiea SpetaEbertia SpetaGeschollia SpetaIdothea KunthIdothearia C PreslIndurgia SpetaLedurgia SpetaLitanthus Harv Mucinaea M PinterPilasia Raf Rhadamanthopsis Oberm SpetaRhadamanthus Salisb Rhodocodon BakerSagittanthera Mart AzorinSchizobasis BakerSekanama SpetaSquilla Steinh Strepsiphyla Raf Sypharissa Salisb Tenicroa Raf Thuranthos C H WrightUrginavia SpetaUrginea Steinh Urgineopsis Compton Drimia maritima flowering in Khurvat Karta Israel One of the best known species is the sea squill Drimia maritima formerly Urginea maritima Drimia intricata formerly Schizobasis intricata is sometimes cultivated as a bulbous or succulent plant Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Litanthus group 2 2 Rhodocodon group 2 3 Schizobasis group 2 4 Species 3 Distribution and habitat 4 References 5 BibliographyDescription editDrimia species are usually deciduous more rarely evergreen growing from bulbs The bulbs may be underground or occur on or near the surface Each bulb has one to several leaves that are often dry by the time the flowers open The inflorescence is in the form of a raceme with one to many flowers At least the lower inflorescence bracts have spurs a characteristic of the tribe Urgineeae The individual flowers generally last for only one to two days and have white to yellowish green or brown tepals that are either free or joined into a basal tube The tepals often have a darker central keel After fertilization an ovoid capsule forms with several seeds in each locule The seeds are black and winged 3 Taxonomy editA formal description of genus Drimia first appeared in the fourth edition of Species Plantarum published in 1799 authored by Carl Ludwig Willdenow The name was attributed to Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin 1 4 When describing Drimia elata the type species of the genus in a work published in 1797 Jacquin said that he was unable to assign it to one of the known genera and so constructed a new one The name is derived from the Greek drimeῖa drimeia the feminine form of the adjective drimys drimys meaning bitter or acrid referring to the root 5 6 The boundaries between genera within the Scilloideae are not completely settled 3 7 The situation has been described as being in a state of flux 2 As early as 1977 it was suggested that Urginea be merged into Drimia although other small genera continued to be kept separate In 2000 Peter Goldblatt and John Charles Manning proposed including other related genera including Litanthus Rhadamanthus and Schizobasis a position supported later by some molecular phylogenetic studies 3 This broad circumscription of Drimia is accepted by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 1 Other sources prefer to maintain a larger number of segregated genera 8 9 Regardless of whether a broad or strict view is taken of Drimia it is placed in the tribe Urgineeae of the subfamily Scilloideae or the subfamily Urgineoideae of the family Hyacinthaceae if this family is separated from Asparagaceae 3 Litanthus group edit The genus Litanthus was for a long time monotypic with the sole species L pusillus before in 2000 Goldblatt and Manning included it in Drimia 3 A further species Drimia stenocarpa was added to the group in 2014 The Litanthus group is characterized by one or occasionally two flowered inflorescences with drooping tubular flowers whose tepals are united at the base for more than half their length 10 Rhodocodon group edit The genus Rhodocodon was included in Drimia by Goldblatt and Manning in 2000 3 The species of Rhodocodon or the Rhodocodon group within Drimia including D cryptopoda form a well supported clade endemic to Madagascar They appear to be the product of a single invasion of Madagascar by an African species A total of 13 species are recognized by those who separate the genus from Drimia 8 Schizobasis group edit The genus Schizobasis was included in Drimia by Goldblatt and Manning in 2000 3 As many as eight species have been described but in 2014 these were reduced to two Drimia intricata including all the previously described species and the new species Drimia sigmoidea The Schizobasis group is distinguished by its well branched thin stemmed inflorescence and small filiform leaves that are found only in seedlings disappearing in mature plants 11 Species edit As of August 2017 update the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families accepted 100 species 12 Drimia acarophylla E Brink amp A P Dold Drimia albiflora B Nord J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia altissima L f Ker Gawl Drimia anomala Baker Baker Drimia aphylla Forssk J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia arenicola B Nord J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia aurantiaca H Lindb J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia barkerae Oberm ex J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia basutica E Phillips ined Drimia brachystachys Baker Stedje Drimia calcarata Baker Stedje Drimia capensis Burm f Wijnands Drimia chalumnensis A P Dold amp E Brink Drimia ciliata L f J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia cochlearis Mart Azorin Drimia congesta Bullock Drimia convallarioides L f J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia cremnophila van Jaarsv Drimia cryptopoda Baker Pfosser Drimia cyanelloides Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia delagoensis Baker Jessop Drimia dregei Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia duthieae Adamson Jessop Drimia echinostachya Baker Eggli amp N R Crouch Drimia edwardsii N R Crouch amp Mart Azorin Drimia elata Jacq Drimia excelsa J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia exigua Stedje Drimia exuviata Jacq Jessop Drimia fasciata B Nord J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia filifolia Poir J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia fimbrimarginata Snijman Drimia flagellaris T J Edwards Drimia fragrans Jacq J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia fugax Moris Stearn Drimia glaucescens Engl amp K Krause H Scholz Drimia guineensis Speta J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia haworthioides Baker Drimia hesperantha J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia hesperia Webb amp Berthel J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia hockii De Wild Drimia hyacinthoides Baker Drimia incerta A Chev ex Hutch Drimia indica Roxb Jessop Drimia intricata Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia involuta J C Manning amp Snijman J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia johnstonii Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia kniphofioides Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia laxiflora Baker Drimia ledermannii K Krause Drimia ligulata J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia loedolffiae van Jaarsv Drimia macrantha Baker Baker Drimia macrocarpa Stedje Drimia macrocentra Baker Jessop Drimia marginata Thunb Jessop Drimia maritima L Stearn Drimia mascarenensis Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia maura Maire J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia media Jacq ex Willd Drimia minuta Goldblatt amp J C Manning Drimia multifolia G J Lewis Jessop Drimia multisetosa Baker Jessop Drimia mzimvubuensis van Jaarsv Drimia nagarjunae Hemadri amp Swahari Anand Kumar Drimia nana Snijman J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia noctiflora Batt amp Trab Stearn Drimia numidica Jord amp Fourr J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia occultans G Will Drimia oliverorum J C Manning Drimia ollivieri Maire Stearn Drimia pancration Steinh J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia polyantha Blatt amp McCann Stearn Drimia polyphylla Hook f Ansari amp Sundararagh Drimia porphyrantha Bullock Stedje Drimia psilostachya Welw ex Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia pulchromarginata J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia pusilla Jacq ex Willd Drimia razii Ansari Drimia rupicola Trimen Dassan in M D Daddanayake amp al eds Drimia salteri Compton J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia sanguinea Schinz Jessop Drimia saniensis Hilliard amp B L Burtt J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia sclerophylla J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia secunda B Nord J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia senegalensis Kunth J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia sigmoidea J C Manning amp J M J Deacon Drimia simensis Hochst ex A Rich Stedje Drimia sphaerocephala Baker in W H Harvey amp auct suc eds Drimia stenocarpa J C Manning amp J M J Deacon Drimia sudanica Friis amp Vollesen Drimia tazensis Batt amp Maire Stearn Drimia undata Stearn Drimia uniflora J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia uranthera R A Dyer J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia urgineoides Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia vermiformis J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia virens Schltr J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia viridula Baker J C Manning amp Goldblatt Drimia wightii Lakshmin In addition 10 species described in 2015 and placed by the authors in Rhodocodon 9 are as of August 2017 update treated as unplaced in the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families which does not recognize the genus none have names in Drimia 13 Rhodocodon apiculatus H Perrier ex Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon calcicola Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon campanulatus Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon cyathiformis H Perrier ex Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon floribundus H Perrier ex Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon graciliscapus Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon intermedius H Perrier ex Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon linearifolius Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon monophyllus Knirsch Mart Azorin amp Wetschnig Rhodocodon rotundus H Perrier ex Knirsch Mart Azorin amp WetschnigDistribution and habitat editThe broadly defined genus has about 100 species found in Africa including Madagascar the Mediterranean area and Asia About half of all the species occur in southern Africa where species diversity is greatest in semi arid regions with winter rainfall Drimia generally is found in regions with seasonal dryness 3 References edit a b c d e Drimia Jacq ex Willd World Checklist of Selected Plant Families The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew retrieved 2017 08 03 a b Chase M W Reveal J L amp Fay M F 2009 A subfamilial classification for the expanded asparagalean families Amaryllidaceae Asparagaceae and Xanthorrhoeaceae Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 2 132 136 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 00999 x a b c d e f g h Manning J C Goldblatt P Fay M F 2004 A revised generic synopsis of Hyacintheaceae in sub Saharan Africa based on molecular evidence including new combinations and the new tribe Pseudoprospereae Edinburgh Journal of Botany 60 3 533 568 doi 10 1017 S0960428603000404 Willdenow C L 1799 651 Drimia Species Plantarum Editio Quarta in Latin vol 2 Berlin pp 165 166 retrieved 2017 08 03 Jacquin N J 1797 title page 1796 Drimia elata Collectaneorum Supplementum in Latin Vienna Vindobona pp 38 39 retrieved 2017 08 03 drimys Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Wetschnig W Pfosser M 2003 The Scilla plumbea puzzle present status of the genus Scilla sensu lato in southern Africa and description of Spetaea lachenaliiflora a new genus and species of Massonieae Hyacinthaceae Taxon 52 1 75 91 doi 10 2307 3647303 JSTOR 3647303 a b Pfosser Martin Knirsch Walter Pinter Michael Ali Syed Shujait Dutta Suchandra amp Wetschnig Wolfgang 2012 Phylogenetic relationships of Malagasy Hyacinthaceae Plant Ecology and Evolution 145 1 65 72 doi 10 5091 plecevo 2012 590 a b Knirsch Walter Martinez Azorin Mario Pfosser Martin amp Wetschnig Wolfgang 2015 01 23 The reinstatement and rediagnosis of the madagascan genus Rhodocodon Asparagaceae Scilloideae with validation and remarks on H Perrier s taxa Phytotaxa 195 2 101 134 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 195 2 1 Manning J C Deacon J amp Goldblatt P 2014 A review of the Litanthus group of Drimia Jacq Hyacinthaceae Urgineoideae with the description of a second species Drimia stenocarpa from Western Cape South African Journal of Botany 90 96 100 doi 10 1016 j sajb 2013 10 006 Manning John Deacon James amp Goldblatt Peter 2014 A review of the Schizobasis group of Drimia Jacq Hyacinthaceae Urgineoideae and the new species D sigmoidea from Western Cape South Africa South African Journal of Botany 94 263 269 doi 10 1016 j sajb 2014 07 011 Search for Drimia World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Royal Botanic Gardens Kew retrieved 2017 08 04 Search for Rhodocodon World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Royal Botanic Gardens Kew retrieved 2017 08 05Bibliography editSteinheil Adolph 1834 Materiaux pour servir a la flore de barbarie III Note sur le genre Urginea nouvellement forme dans la famille Liliacees Annales des sciences naturelles Botanique in French Second series 1 321 332 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Drimia amp oldid 1216631069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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