| Literature DB >> 29045488 |
Yue-Qing Mo1,2, Lang Li1, Jian-Wu Li3, Jens G Rohwer4, Hsi-Wen Li5, Jie Li1.
Abstract
An investigation of a questionable species of the genus Alseodaphne led to the discovery of a new genus Alseodaphnopsis H. W. Li & J. Li, gen. nov., separated from Alseodaphne Nees, and a new species Alseodaphnopsis ximengensis H. W. Li & J. Li, sp. nov., endemic to Yunnan province, China. This new species is characterized by having big, axillary, paniculate inflorescences, as well as large, subglobose fruits. Based on DNA sequence data from two gene regions (nuclear ribosomal ITS and LEAFY intron II), we investigate its phylogenetic position within the Persea group. Phylogenies using maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian inference (BI) support the recognition of Alseodaphnopsis as a distinct genus but do not resolve well its relationship within the Persea group. The new genus is circumscribed, eight new combinations for its species are made, and a description and illustration of the new species are provided.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29045488 PMCID: PMC5646853 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Morphological differences between group 1 and group 2.
| Group 1 | Group 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Petiole | Thin, 1–1.5 mm | Thick, 2-4mm |
| Twig | Thin, 2.5–4.5 mm; obviously whitish in color | Thick, 4–11 mm; not obviously not whitish in color |
| Terminal bud | Not or rarely perulate | Usually perulate, rarely not perulate |
| Leaf texture | Variable (thinly chartaceous, chartaceous, thinly coriaceous or coriaceous) | Usually coriaceous, rarely chartaceous |
| Midrib upper surface | Raised or sunken | Usually sunken, sometimes flat |
| Inflorescences | Relatively small, 3–20 cm long; few-branched, 1–2 orders; few-flowered | Relatively large, 8.5–35 cm long; many-branched, 3–4 orders; many-flowered |
| Perianth lobes | Deciduous already in young fruit | ± Persistent at least in young fruit |
| Fruit | Small to medium size, 0.7–3.5.cm; some with ribs | Medium to big size, (1.3) 3–5 cm; without ribs |
Fig 1Error bar charts of the inflorescence size and fruit size between group 1 and group 2.
Fig 2Bayesian consensus tree based on ITS + LEAFY intron II combined sequence dataset.
Bootstrap values (≥ 50%) / Bayesian posterior probabilities (≥ 95%) are shown above branches. ● = both bootstrap value and Bayesian posterior probability 100%.
Fig 3Alseodaphnopsis ximengensis H. W. Li & J. Li sp. nov.
A. Flowering branch; B. Flower, lateral view; C. Outer perianth lobes, outside view; D. Inner perianth lobes, inside view; E. A staminode; F. A fertile stamen of the 1st or 2nd whorl; G. A stamen of the third whorl; H. Fruit; I. Pistil. (drawn by L. Wang based on J. W. Li 1235 sampled from Ximeng County, Yunnan).
Fig 4Alseodaphnopsis ximengensis H. W. Li & J. Li sp. nov.
A. Branchlet with inflorescences; B. Branchlet with immature infructescences; C. Branchlet with mature fruits; D-F. Mature fruits; G-H. Flowers. (Photos by J.W. Li).