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Pappobolus

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Pappobolus is a genus of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae native to the Andes Mountains of Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.[2][3]

Pappobolus is distinguished from closely related genera by its combination of shrubby habit and usually caducous pappus. Within the genus there is considerable variation in the pappus, a structure that has traditionally been considered a key to defining genera in Asteraceae, and this led to earlier confusion in defining the genus. Most of the species of the genus were originally described as members of Helianthus, based on having a pappus of two caducous awns. When it was recognized that they were not part of the exclusively North American Helianthus, they were transferred to a genus called Helianthopsis.[4] The prominent synantherologist S.F.Blake, however, much earlier named the genus Pappobolus based on species that have a pappus of numerous caducous awns.[5] It was only during the work of Panero on the genus that the congeneric nature of plants of the two pappus types was recognized, and this has subsequently been supported by both molecular phylogenetic studies [6] and phytochemical analyses.[7] Subsequent studies have shown that the genus is related to members of the subtribe Helianthinae that occur in Mexico, and it is likely that migration into South America only occurred following the closure of the Panamanian land bridge about 3 million years ago.[8] Thus, the genus has exhibited an amazing burst of radiation in producing the relatively large number of species, a result in part that reflects the highly dissected montane topography of the Andean region.

Species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as of December 2022:[9]

References

  1. ^ Flann, C (ed) 2009+ Global Compositae Checklist Archived 2014-11-06 at archive.today
  2. ^ Panero, J. L. 1992. Systematics of Pappobolus (Asteraceae-Heliantheae). Systematic Botany Monographs 36: 1-195.
  3. ^ Tropicos, Pappobolus S.F. Blake
  4. ^ Robinson, H. 1979. Studies in the Heliantheae (Asteraceae). XVIII. A new genus Helianthopsis. Phytologia 44: 257-269.
  5. ^ S. F. Blake. 1916. Pappobolus macranthus. Hooker's Icones Plantarum 31: plate 3057.
  6. ^ Schilling, E. E. and R. K. Jansen. 1989. Restriction fragment analysis of[chloroplast DNA and the stystemics of Viguiera and related genera (Asteraceae: Heliantheae) American Journal of Botany 76: 1771-1780.
  7. ^ Spring, O., J. L. Panero, and E. E. Schilling. Chemotaxonomic analysis of Pappobolus (Asteraceae: Heliantheae). Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 20: 671-684
  8. ^ Schilling, E. E., J. L. Panero, and U. H. Eliasson. 1994. Evidence from DNA restriction site analysis on the relationships of Scalesia (Asteraceae: Heliantheae). American Journal of Botany 81: 248—254.
  9. ^ "Pappobolus S.F.Blake". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
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Pappobolus: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Pappobolus is a genus of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae native to the Andes Mountains of Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.

Pappobolus is distinguished from closely related genera by its combination of shrubby habit and usually caducous pappus. Within the genus there is considerable variation in the pappus, a structure that has traditionally been considered a key to defining genera in Asteraceae, and this led to earlier confusion in defining the genus. Most of the species of the genus were originally described as members of Helianthus, based on having a pappus of two caducous awns. When it was recognized that they were not part of the exclusively North American Helianthus, they were transferred to a genus called Helianthopsis. The prominent synantherologist S.F.Blake, however, much earlier named the genus Pappobolus based on species that have a pappus of numerous caducous awns. It was only during the work of Panero on the genus that the congeneric nature of plants of the two pappus types was recognized, and this has subsequently been supported by both molecular phylogenetic studies and phytochemical analyses. Subsequent studies have shown that the genus is related to members of the subtribe Helianthinae that occur in Mexico, and it is likely that migration into South America only occurred following the closure of the Panamanian land bridge about 3 million years ago. Thus, the genus has exhibited an amazing burst of radiation in producing the relatively large number of species, a result in part that reflects the highly dissected montane topography of the Andean region.

Species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as of December 2022:

Pappobolus acuminatus (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus acutifolius (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus amoenus Panero Pappobolus andinus Panero Pappobolus argenteus (Humb., Bonpl. & Kunth) Panero Pappobolus cajamarcensis Panero Pappobolus cinerascens S.F.Blake Pappobolus davidii Panero Pappobolus decumbens Panero Pappobolus discolor (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus ecuadoriensis Panero Pappobolus hutchisonii (H.Rob.) Panero Pappobolus hypargyreus (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus imbaburensis (Hieron.) Panero Pappobolus jelskii (Hieron.) Panero Pappobolus juncosae Panero Pappobolus lanatus (Heiser) Panero Pappobolus lehmannii (Hieron.) Panero Pappobolus lodicatus (Cuatrec.) Panero Pappobolus macranthus S.F.Blake Pappobolus matthewsii (Hochr.) Panero Pappobolus microphyllus (Humb., Bonpl. & Kunth) Panero Pappobolus mollicomus S.F.Blake Pappobolus nigrescens (Heiser) Panero Pappobolus robinsonii Panero Pappobolus sagasteguii (H.Rob.) Panero Pappobolus sanchezii Panero Pappobolus schillingii Panero Pappobolus senex (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus smithii (Ferreyra) Panero Pappobolus storkhortonianus Panero Pappobolus stuebelii (Hieron.) Panero Pappobolus subniveus (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus verbesinoides (Kunth) Panero Pappobolus viridior (S.F.Blake) Panero Pappobolus woodsonianus Cuatrec. Pappobolus youngiorum Panero
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