| Literature DB >> 26311505 |
Lynn J Gillespie1, Jeffery M Saarela1, Paul C Sokoloff1, Roger D Bull1.
Abstract
The Canadian Arctic Archipelago is a vast region of approximately 1,420,000 km(2), with a flora characterized by low species diversity, low endemicity, and little influence by alien species. New records of vascular plant species are documented here based on recent fieldwork on Victoria and Baffin Islands; additional records based on recent literature sources are mentioned. This paper serves as an update to the 2007 publication Flora of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, and brings the total number of vascular plants for the region to 375 species and infraspecific taxa, an increase of 7.7%. Three families (Amaranthaceae, Juncaginaceae, Pteridaceae) and seven genera (Cherleria L., Cryptogramma R. Br., Platanthera Rich., Sabulina Rchb., Suaeda Forssk. ex J.F. Gmel., Triglochin L., Utricularia L.) are added to the flora, and one genus is deleted (Minuartia L.). Five species are first records for Nunavut (Arenarialongipedunculata Hultén, Cryptogrammastelleri (S.G. Gmel.) Prantl, Puccinelliabanksiensis Consaul, Saxifragaeschscholtzii Sternb., Utriculariaochroleuca R.W. Hartm.).Entities:
Keywords: Amaranthaceae; Baffin Island; Cryptogramma; Floristics; Juncaginaceae; Northwest Territories; Nunavut; Platanthera; Pteridaceae; Suaeda; Triglochin; Utricularia; Victoria Island
Year: 2015 PMID: 26311505 PMCID: PMC4549883 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.52.8721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PhytoKeys ISSN: 1314-2003 Impact factor: 1.635
Figure 1.Map of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago showing 2008, 2010 and 2012 collection sites for new vascular plant records.
Vascular plant species new to the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) since the publication of Aiken et al. (2007). Records are based on field collections and literature sources. Species new to the CAA, western CAA, eastern CAA and Nunavut are given. New records for one adventive species, one species previously known from only one collection in the CAA, one recently described species, and confirmation of three species excluded by Aiken et al. (2007) are also included.
| Family | Species | New to CAA | New to western CAA | New to eastern CAA | New to Nunavut | Other | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X | X | Current study | |||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| Confirmed for eastern CAA | Current study | ||||||
| New records, adventive species | Current study | ||||||
| Confirmed for CAA | |||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | X | New records | |||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | |||||||
| X | |||||||
| X | |||||||
| X | |||||||
| X | |||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | X | Current study | |||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | X | Current study | |||||
| Confirmed for CAA | |||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| X | Current study | ||||||
| Confirmed for CAA | |||||||
| X | New record | Current study | |||||
| X | Current study |
Figure 2.: A habitat B habit, Saarela et al. 2774. Photographs by L.J. Gillespie.
Figure 3.: A habitat B inflorescence, Saarela et al. 9899. Photographs by J.M. Saarela.
Figure 4.: A habit B inflorescence, Saarela et al. 2535. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 5.: A habitat B inflorescence C habit, Gillespie et al. 8093 D habit, Saarela et al. 1970. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 6.: A habitat, Saarela et al. 2197 B inflorescence C habit D old fruits, Saarela et al. 2209. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 7.: A habitat B habit, Saarela et al. 2576. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 8.: habitat, Saarela et al. 2737. Photograph by R.D. Bull.
Figure 9.: A habitat, with Laurie Consaul who described the species B inflorescence C habit, Gillespie et al 8055. Photographs by L.J. Gillespie (A), R.D. Bull (B, C).
Figure 10.: A habitat B habit, Gillespie et al. 8048. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 11.: A habitat B habit, profile C inflorescences, Gillespie et al. 8068 D habit, Gillespie et al. 10243. Photographs by R.D. Bull (A, B, C), L.J. Gillespie (D).
Figure 12.: A habitat B habit C flowers, Gillespie et al. 9882. Photographs by L.J. Gillespie.
Figure 13.: A habitat B habit, Saarela et al. 2186. Photographs by P.C. Sokoloff.
Figure 14.: A fruits B habitat C habit, Gillespie et al. 10129. Photographs by R.D. Bull (A), L.J. Gillespie (B), P.C. Sokoloff (C).
Figure 15.: A habitat, Gillespie et al. 7718 B habit, Gillespie et al. 8983b C leaves, Gillespie et al. 7718 D flower, Gillespie et al. 8983b. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 16.: A habitat B habit C habit showing branches with bladders, Saarela et al. 2464. Photographs by R.D. Bull.
Figure 17.: A habit B inflorescence C habitat, Saarela et al. 2606. Photographs by L.J. Gillespie.
Figure 18.: A habitat B habit C flower, Saarela et al. 2419. Photographs by L.J. Gillespie.
| 1 | Lemmas unawned, 11–20 mm long; glumes tapering from midlength or above, flat or rounded on the back, apices acute | |
| – | Lemmas awned, 7–12 mm long; glumes tapering from the base to the nearly subulate apices |
| 1 | Hypanthium densely covered with long stipitate glandular hairs, 0.3–0.6 mm long; flowering stem glabrous or sparsely hairy | |
| – | Hypanthium sparsely covered with short stipitate glandular hairs, 0.1–0.3 mm long; flowering stem sparsely to densely hairy |
Appendix
| CAN accession number | Taxon, collector and collector no. | URL |
|---|---|---|