Mycopteris Sundue, Brittonia
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.354.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B6DA7F-7B55-1924-E9AD-021AFE09FE90 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
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Mycopteris Sundue, Brittonia |
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Mycopteris Sundue, Brittonia View in CoL 66(2): 183. 2014.
Mycopteris is more or less equivalent to Terpsichore , Group 2, of Smith (1993), and comprises 17 species, all neotropical, ranging from southern Mexico to Panama, the Antilles, Colombia and Venezuela to Bolivia, and southeastern Brazil (Sundue 2014); six species occur in Bolivia. Rhizome scales are castaneous, clathrate, with turgid cells; the blades are pectinate, with reddish setae and often with black, clavate fungi ( Acrospermum ascomes; however, ascomes have not yet been seen on A. praeceps ); the costae and often veins are black or dark brown and conspicuous; hydathodes are often with lime dots (cretaceous) adaxially; and sporangia are glabrous (Sundue 2014). Species of this group resemble some members of subfamily Polypodioideae , especially Pecluma , which differs by having short phyllopodia, often comose rhizome scales, lacking stout reddish brown setae, lacking black clavate fungi, and with bilateral, non-chlorophyllous spores.
Phylogenetic analyses show Mycopteris to be monophyletic and sister to a much larger clade of mainly neotropical- African/Madagascan grammitid genera: Galactodenia + Melpomene + Stenogrammitis + Lellingeria ( Labiak et al. 2010 a, Sundue 2010b).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Mycopteris Sundue, Brittonia
Smith, Alan R., Kessler, Michael, León, Blanca, Almeida, Thaís Elias, Jiménez-Pérez, Iván & Lehnert, Marcus 2018 |
Mycopteris
Mycopteris Sundue 2014: 183 |