taxonID	type	description	language	source
F26687CE2171FFAFFF2EFB0060527D81.taxon	description	Hort. Regii Taur.: 41. 1773 ≡ Achyranthes aspera var. sicula L., Sp. Pl.: 204. 1753. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2014 a: 416): Herb. Linn. No. 287.1 (LINN). = Achyranthes argentea Lam., Encycl. 1: 545. 1785 ≡ Achyranthes aspera var. argentea (Lam.) Boiss., Fl. Orient. 4: 993. 1879. – Lectotype (designated here): Europe, France, H [ortus] R [egius] Parisiensis (SEV SEVH 4073, verified by F. J. Salgueiro & S. Talavera in sched. 1998; image available at https: // plants. jstor. org / stable / 10.5555 / al. ap. specimen. sev-h 4073). Remarks — Lamarck (1785: 545) based the description of Achyranthes argentea on plants cultivated in the Royal Botanic Garden of Paris and seen by him in the living state (“ cultivé au Jardin du Roi, (v. v.) ”). Salgueiro & Talavera (SEVH 4073, in sched., unpubl.) were the first to identify a specimen from the Royal Botanic Garden in Paris now kept in Sevilla as material suitable for lectotypification of the name but failed to formally fulfil the requirements of Shenzhen Code Art. 7.11.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2171FFAFFCA3FE6060827F81.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus albus is native to S North America, in the U. S. A. (California to Virginia) and NE Mexico; it is introduced as an agricultural weed and ruderal alien in Eurasia, N Africa, South America and Australia (Bayón 2015: 303; Palmer 2009). In the Mediterranean area, the earliest records are from the 1720 s (Thellung 1914: 286), whereas the first record in Greece was in the 1850 s (see Table 1); the species is now naturalized all over Greece (Strid & Tan 1997: map 265; Arianoutsou & al. 2010) as well as in Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria and Turkey (Iamonico 2015 a).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2171FFA8FCA3FC6067027E61.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus blitoides is native to C North America (U. S. A.: Michigan to Texas, see Mosyakin & Robertson 2003); it is introduced and naturalized elsewhere in North and South America, Africa and temperate Eurasia (Jalas & Suominen 1980: 94; Bayón 2015: 306). The species is occasionally considered invasive as a strong competitor causing threats in cultivated fields by loss of crop yield, or decreasing the floristic richness of ecosystems by forming cohesive stands (see, e. g., Iamonico 2015 b). It was first recorded in Greece in 1917 (see Table 1). The flowering and fruiting period of A. blitoides may extend to about eight months in Greece, which may be one reason for its successful spread and naturalization (Strid & Tan 1997: map 266; Arianoutsou & al. 2010); regular winter-flowering has been observed in December and January (Gilli 1977; Raus 1994). Naturalized also in Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria and Turkey (Iamonico 2015 a), the species is ranked among the most widespread alien vascular plants in Europe (Pyšek & al. 2009: 50, t. 4.3). Greek material is represented by two varieties, the widespread Amaranthus blitoides var. blitoides and the more scattered A. blitoides var. reverchonii Uline & W. L. Bray. Both varieties are scarcely discernible in autumnal plants with habitat-induced very small and dense, spirally arranged foliage (leaf blades 0.6 – 1.0 cm long), referred to as A. blitoides var. thellungii (Sennen ex Thell.) Thell. or A. blitoides var. densifolius Uline & W. L. Bray in literature (Uline & Bray 1894; Sennen 1912). They merit at most the taxonomic rank of form, which is proposed here. The shape of the leaf blade is usually obovate to elliptic-spathulate and 1.5 – 2 times as long as wide in Amaranthus blitoides f. thellungii vs oblong-lanceolate and at least 2.5 times as long as wide in A. blitoides f. densifolius (Thellung 1914: 292; and pers. obs.).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2176FFA8FF04FD40664478C1.taxon	description	Amaranthus blitoides [var. blitoides] f. thellungii (Sennen ex Thell.) Raus, stat. nov. ≡ Amaranthus blitoides [unranked (“ var. vel forma ”)] thellungii Sennen ex Thell. in Bol. Soc. Aragonesa Ci. Nat. 11: 240. 1912 ≡ Amaranthus blitoides var. thellungii (Sennen ex Thell.) Thell. in Ascherson & Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. 5 (1. Abt.): 292. 1914. – Lectotype (designated by Mestre & al. 2021: 99): Europe, Spain, Catalonia, Barcelone, sables de la voie ferrée vers le Cimetière, 12 Nov 1911, Sennen (BC [Herb. Cadevall] BC 822523). Remarks — This taxon is recorded in all phytogeographic regions of Greece as defined in Dimopoulos & al. (2013: 22). In the Albanian distribution atlas by Vangjeli (2017: 121) Amaranthus blitoides is misleadingly illustrated with a mixed-up picture of A. blitum L.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2176FFA8FF04FB2066467BE1.taxon	description	Amaranthus blitoides [var. reverchonii] f. densifolius (Uline & W. L. Bray) Raus, stat. nov. ≡ Amaranthus blitoides var. densifolius Uline & W. L. Bray in Bot. Gaz. 19: 315. 1894. – Lectotype (designated by Bayón in Bayón & Freire 2011: 173): North America, U. S. A., Arizona, Hackberry, 18 Sep 1883, Rusby 804 (NY NY 00951459). Syntype: North America, U. S. A., Colorado, Pueblo Co., 10 Sep 1873, Greene 614 (NDG NDG 15477, verified by B. J. Hellenthal in sched. 14 Mar 2016). Remarks — Revised material of the narrow-leaved variant has been seen from the Ionian island of Zakinthos, some of the Kyklades (Thira, Thirasia, Tinos), Kriti, the East Aegean islands (Chios, Kos, Rodos) and North Central Greece (Pella, Pieria). The seemingly limited distribution of Amaranthus blitoides var. reverchonii in Greece does not reflect a chorological or ecological focus but may be due to inobservant fieldwork and rather points to random introduction events in the past.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2176FFA9FC86FF0065E37821.taxon	description	(designated by Fillias & al. 1980: 150): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.14, right-hand plant (LINN).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2176FFA9FC86FF0065E37821.taxon	discussion	Remarks — The species is native to W, C and S Europe (Jalas & Suominen 1980: 97, map 634, under Amaranthus lividus), N and tropical Africa, and SW Asia (Bayón 2015: 309 – 310). In Greece it has been reported from nearly all phytogeographical regions except Northern Pindos and East Central as defined in Dimopoulos & al. (2013). It was introduced to North and South America, Australia, New Zealand and Japan and is widely cultivated in SW and E Asia as a vegetable crop, formerly likewise in Greece (βλίτα, see Heldreich 1862), gradually replaced by spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) from the 20 th century onward. Erect cultigens with robust stems and leaf blades up to 8 × 9 cm, treated by Linnaeus at specific rank, vary in overall colour from red (A. lividus) to green (A. oleraceus); A. blitum var. oleraceus is mentioned as formerly cultivated in Thrace (sensu Hayek 1924 – 1927, covering parts of Bulgaria, Greece and Turkey-in-Europe). Unfortunately, the name A. viridis has been misapplied to A. blitum in influential Greek floras (Halácsy 1904; Rechinger 1944), which makes previous floristic records questionable unless cited specimens are revised. The combination A. lividus var. ascendens published in Hayek’s Prodromus florae peninsulae balcanicae (Hayek 1924: 162) is a later isonym (which may be nomenclaturally disregarded, see Shenzhen Code Art. 6 Note 2).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2177FFA9FF2EFB8060C87881.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Hügin’s effective lectotypification of the name Amaranthus bouchonii (Hügin 1987: 466, 473) makes Iamonico’s subsequent designation of the identical lectotype superfluous (Iamonico 2016 a: 520). The type was definitely accepted as such by the prior typifying author, and the type element was clearly indicated by direct citation including the term “ Typus (lecto) ”; the phrase “ designated here ” (hic designatus) or an equivalent is mandatory only on or after 1 Jan 2001 (Shenzhen Code Art. 7.11.) but is literally published in Hügin (1987: 473, “ als Lectotypus wird daher die Pflanze in Basel (BAS) gewählt [therefore the sheet kept in Basel (BAS) is chosen as the lectotype] ”). Bouchon’s original specimen is kept in BAS (Herbarium generale adventivum); a barcode will be available after completion of the digitization of the collection (currently under preparation, see https: // herbarium. unibas. ch / de / sammlungen / digitalisierung /). Fragments in US and Z are annotated as duplicates by the monographer Thellung; no type material is found in Bouchon’s personal herbarium at LA and P (see Hügin 1987).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2177FFABFCA3FB6064E57D41.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Unknown in the wild state (“ homeless cultigen ”), this species probably evolved in Andean South America from its assumed wild progenitor Amaranthus quitensis (Thellung 1914: 233; Bayón 2015: 278), with which it shares obovate to spathulate perianth segments of the female flowers, distinctly obtuse at apex and with marked midrib continued into an apical mucro. Amaranthus caudatus is an economically important pseudocereal crop in N Argentina, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador, after 1492 AD likewise produced in tropical to warm-temperate parts of the Old World. In Greece it is cultivated as a garden ornamental; occasional escapes from cultivation, found scattered as an ephemeral weed near places of cultivation, are not naturalized (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). The species is not listed for the Balkan countries adjacent to Greece (Iamonico 2015 a), possibly because ornamental garden plants are, as a matter of principle, not covered by the relevant regional floras and checklists (Assyov & al. 2012; Barina & al. 2018; Micevski 1995). A single 19 th century record was published from Turkey-in-Europe (Aellen 1967: 341), but recent collections or observations from there are lacking. Records of A. caudatus determined on the basis of Greuter & al. (1984: 46) are questionable unless corroborated by revised herbarium specimens; they may refer to A. cruentus or A. quitensis.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2175FFABFF2EFEA0669C7B41.taxon	discussion	Remarks — As already mentioned under Amaranthus blitum above, A. commutatus is a designation with no nomenclatural value, referring to a non-existent taxon. Its concept was investigated by the monographer Thellung on authentic material collected by Anton Kerner von Marilaun in Hungary and deposited in WU. Thellung (1914: 326) revealed the protologue as referring to a fictitious species, namely a taxonomic chimaera of A. graecizans (“ A. angustifolius silvester ” sensu Thellung) and A. blitum (“ A. lividus ascendens ” sensu Thellung). Kerner’s original collections, seen by Thellung (1914: 326), turned out to undoubtedly represent A. blitum, and the character of irregularly rupturing fruits (not truly circumscissile), pointing toward A. graecizans, was identified by Thellung as an artefact due to improper plant pressing. The name A. commutatus A. Kern. ex Hayek (Hayek 1924: 162) is utilizable as a synonym of A. blitum (see above). However, there is no existing taxon behind “ A. commutatus A. Kern. ” that would be available for any kind of typifying action. Iamonico (2020) arrived at the same conclusion, and his idea to substantiate the name A. commutatus as a “ species incertae sedis ” is not feasible because this would require an existing taxon behind it, which is not the case. The name A. commutatus was rightly not in use, after 1875, in subsequent basic sources on European vascular plants. Surprisingly, “ A. commutatus A. Kern. ” survived and is currently preliminarily accepted in the Euro + Med PlantBase (Iamonico 2015 a), confined to Bulgaria as “ alien with unknown status ”, not native, although described from Hungary and recorded by distributed exsiccata from adjacent W Romania (Beck 1909: 181). In parallel, it is given as native to Australia (Govaerts 1995: 203), more precisely Queensland (“ This species is accepted, and its native range is Australia. Native to: Queensland ”; POWO 2022). Iamonico (2020: 193) conjectured the similarity of the Australian A. rhombeus R. Br. (3 - tepaled flower, circumscissile fruit) as the reason for this but at the same time excluded A. commutatus as a possible synonym of A. rhombeus. The critical Australian Plant Name Index (Chapman 1991) does not at all include or synonymize the name “ A. commutatus ”. In short, it is a rare oddity in botanical literature: monographers and compilers of online checklists and atlases argue on the internet about the imaginary native range of an imaginary taxon!	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2175FFABFF2EF8A067FC7B21.taxon	description	(Lesp. & Théveneau) Asch. ex Hausskn. in Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 8: (121). 1890. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2016 a: 527): Europe, France, Lavoire a laine de Bessan, 12 Oct 1858, Théveneau (P P 00572004, plant on the left).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2175FFABFF2EF8A067FC7B21.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus crispus resembles A. blitoides with respect to the usually prostrate habit, axillary flower clusters and the number of perianth segments, (4 or) 5, but differs on its undulate-crenate leaves and indehiscent, muricate fruits. Native to Argentina, Chile and Uruguay (Pedersen 1999: 23; Bayón 2015: 321), this casual alien has been known to occur in the Vardar valley of North Macedonia since 1958 (Micevski 1995: 404) and in the Strumitza valley of SW Bulgaria (Assyov & al. 2012: 65). From both areas it can be expected to invade suitable habitats along the rivers Axios and Strymonas in N Greece (Raus 1997: 144). The species holds the 61 st rank among the 150 most widespread alien plant species in Europe (Lambdon & al. 2008) but has not settled in Greek localities so far. The nomenclatural authorship given by Aellen (1959: 491) with N. Terracciano as combining author of the name A. crispus is incorrect but widely used in subsequent basic floras and checklists covering Balkan countries (Aellen 1964; Greuter & al. 1984; Akeroyd 1993; Micevski 1995; Strid & Tan 1997; Assyov & al. 2012). As already pointed out by Fiori (1896), Terracciano (1890 a, 1890 b) intended to describe a species endemic to Italy and at the same time new to science, not being aware of the nomenclaturally competing Euxolus crispus of 31 years earlier (Lespinasse & Théveneau 1859). Therefore, A. crispus N. Terracc. was from the start both a later homonym and a heterotypic synonym of A. crispus (Lesp. & Théveneau) A. Braun ex J. M. Coult. & S. Watson (for details, see Iamonico 2016 a: 521 – 522). There is much uncertainty in herbaria and printed sources regarding the authors of the basionym of the latter, with “ Euxolus crispus Lessing & Thévenau ” one example distributed by the research and teaching platform JSTOR (2022). However, the German botanist Christian Friedrich Lessing, grandson of the poet Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, was settled far away in Krasnojarsk (Siberia) when his French colleagues published the protologue of Euxolus crispus, and Lespinasse’s co-author is correctly spelled Théveneau.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2175FFA4FCA3F880652579C1.taxon	description	= =	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2175FFA4FCA3F880652579C1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — The species most likely evolved in Central America (Mexico, Guatemala) by domestication from Amaranthus hybridus. It is cultivated as a pseudocereal (grain amaranth) in tropical to warm-temperate regions of both hemispheres (Bayón 2015: 279). Produced commercially in hot and dry areas of the United States, Argentina and China, its quick growth and high nutritional value (with a much higher protein content than in most other cereals) make it an ideal crop for developing countries (Ventosa-Febles 2015). It is also a traditional leaf vegetable in countries of tropical Africa and S and SE Asia (Costea & al. 2003). In Greece it is a popular pot herb and garden vegetable, occasionally escaping from cultivation and scattered all over Greece (Strid & Tan 1997: map 258) but not truly naturalized (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). Some cultigens with differently coloured inflorescences were formerly described as separate species (A. flavus, A. sanguineus). Amaranthus cruentus can be confused with some forms of A. hypochondriacus but differs in the constantly shorter floral bracts and the slender, usually patent lateral inflorescence branches (not thick and stiffly ascending-erect as in A. hypochondriacus). The species is given for Albania as a casual alien (Barina & al. 2018) but has not been mentioned so far for North Macedonia (Iamonico 2015 a). In Bulgaria it is considered naturalized (Greuter & al. 1984; Iamonico 2015 a) but was not listed or mapped in Assyov & al. (2012), perhaps due to the taxonomically and floristically misleading inclusion in A. hybridus (as, unfortunately, advocated by Greuter & al. 1984).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217AFFA4FF04FA2060EC7E21.taxon	description	Euxolus deflexus (L.) Raf., Fl. Tellur. 3: 42. 1837 ≡ Albersia deflexa (L.) Fourr. in Ann. Soc. Linn. Lyon, sér. 2, 17: 142. 1869. – Lectotype (designated by Aellen 1972: 7): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.18 (LINN).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217AFFA4FF04FA2060EC7E21.taxon	discussion	Remarks — A short-lived perennial with a tap root, Amaranthus deflexus is native to temperate South America (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru, Uruguay); it is introduced as a ruderal weed in North America, Europe, SW Asia, N and S Africa, Korea, Japan, Tasmania and New Zealand (Pedersen 1999: 23; Bayón 2015: 324; POWO 2022). Established in the Mediterranean area since the early 19 th century, it was first mentioned from Greece (North East, Kavala) under its synonym A. prostratus (Grisebach 1846); it now occurs countrywide (Strid & Tan 1997: map 270) and is considered fully naturalized (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). The same is true for adjacent countries N of Greece (Iamonico 2015 a).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217BFFA5FF2EFA20609B7E01.taxon	discussion	Remarks — This subspecies is native to the tropics of both hemispheres, locally introduced to warm-temperate parts of Europe and North America (Bayón 2020: 51). In Greece it is a fully established element of annual pioneer vegetation on muddy ground of autumnally dried-up rivers and lakes (abundantly so in North East, Lake Kerkini), annually resprouting from the local seedbank; it is expected to colonize frequently irrigated garden land as well. The prostrate, mat-forming growth is not caused by environmental factors but is genetically fixed according to Hügin (1987). Decumbent forms of Amaranthus blitum, referred to as A. blitum f. microphyllus (Opiz) Thell. or A. blitum f. repens (Spenner) Thell., differ clearly in their constantly larger fruits and seeds and usually variously speckled, somewhat fleshy leaves (Thellung 1914: 328 – 329; Hügin 1987: 458 – 460).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217BFFA6FCA3FDE0668C7D41.taxon	discussion	Remarks — This is a pantropical element, introduced to North America and Europe (Bayón 2015: 312, 2020: 51). The subspecies is a casual alien of irrigated gardens and vegetable fields (of melons, cucurbits etc.) as well as moist ruderal places in Greece, with a status of naturalization unknown so far (Raus & Svensson 2017). Recently found as common in Chalandri, a suburban area of Athens (Polymenakos & Tan 2016), it is certainly undercollected, and the actual distribution may be much wider than the present data indicate. The epithet pseudogracilis refers to the usually well-developed lateral and terminal, spike-like inflorescences, which resemble those of Amaranthus viridis L. The latter species was traditionally treated under its unresolved synonym A. gracilis in previous floristic sources (Iamonico 2016 b) but clearly differs on its apically obtuse, not or scarcely emarginate leaves and strongly wrinkled fruits. It should be noted that Iamonico (2016 a: 523) allocated a wrong type locality (“ Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Strasburg ”) to the lectotype, designated by him, of A. emarginatus var. pseudogracilis, induced by Costea & al. (2001 b: 981), who unfortunately copied the type locality from the label of the holotype in B with the incomplete spelling “ Strasburg ” (instead of Strassburg); the mistake was further distributed in literature (Iamonico 2015 b: 32; Bayón 2015: 312, 2020: 51). The collector of the type material, the German botanist Alfred Ludwig (see Schumacher 1967), lived and collected from 1899 to 1906 in Strassburg (Strassburg) im Elsass (what is today Strasbourg, Bas-Rhin, France) but not in Strasburg in der Uckermark (Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany) where a Botanic Garden was never situated.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA6FF04FEA061877D81.taxon	description	– “ Amaranthus blitum ” sensu Smith (1809: 235); Halácsy (1904: 36) [non Amaranthus blitum L., Sp. Pl.: 990. 1753]. Remarks — Amaranthus graecizans is native to the Mediterranean basin and beyond, extending to tropical Africa, India, C Asia and C Europe (Jalas & Suominen 1980: 96 – 97; Bayón 2015: 330); it is scattered all over Greece (Strid & Tan 1997: map 267) and in adjacent countries (Iamonico 2015 a). The species is sometimes similar in habit to and therefore confused with A. blitoides but is always distinguished on the 3 perianth segments, which usually become papery at maturity (vs 4 or 5 in A. blitoides, which tend to become cartilaginous). Confusion of the two taxa is demonstrated, for instance, in selected Albanian sources (see Raus 2018): A. graecizans is incorrectly keyed-out in the group of taxa with more than 3 perianth segments in an excursion flora (Vangjeli 2015); and it is erroneously illustrated with a picture of typical A. blitoides with white-margined leaves in a distribution atlas (Vangjeli 2017: 123). Unfortunately, the name A. blitum has been misapplied to A. graecizans in some basic Greek floras (Smith 1809; Halácsy 1904), which makes previous floristic records questionable unless specimens are revised. In its native Old-World range, A. graecizans varies with respect to leaf, bract, perianth and fruit characters; four subspecies are currently geographically defined (though rather weakly so), two of them restricted to Africa and Asia (Bayón 2015). Subspecific rank, howev- er, seems overrated because the taxa do not exhibit either satisfactory chorological discreteness or are otherwise based on inconstant carpological characters of little taxonomic value (Thellung 1914: 310 – 311); hence Aellen (1967; 1972), Raus (1997) and Stace (2010) advocated varietal rank. To achieve accordance with the Euro + Med PlantBase (Iamonico 2015 a) and Flora of Cyprus (Hand & al. 2011 +), Greek material is allocated here to the two accepted subspecies confined to Europe, namely subsp. graecizans and subsp. silvestris.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA6FCF9FE6060117FA1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — The narrow-leaved, nominate subspecies is said to be dominant in the warmer parts of SW Asia (Townsend 1985) and is accordingly encountered in the Aegean coastal area of Anatolia (Aellen 1967). In Attiki and on some of the Kyklades it is found growing sympatrically with Amaranthus graecizans subsp. silvestris; its limited distribution in Greece does not appear ecologybased but may merely reflect random introduction events in the past. The species name A. angustifolius Lam., alluding to the key character, is illegitimate because the earlier, legitimate species name A. graecizans L. was cited in synonymy.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA6FCF9FC0067DA7A61.taxon	discussion	Remarks — This subspecies is the commonest form of Amaranthus graecizans in Europe (Townsend 1985), also reported from Albania, Bulgaria, Greece (all regions), North Macedonia and Turkey-in-Europe (Iamonico 2015 a). It is introduced as an agricultural weed and ruderal alien to other parts of the world, e. g. NE North America (U. S. A.: New Jersey, see Mosyakin & Robertson 2003: 434) and Australia (Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, see Palmer 2009: 116). It was formerly cultivated as a vegetable crop in Greece (βλίτα, see Heldreich 1862).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA7FCF9F94064E77961.taxon	description	No. 1117.19 (LINN).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA7FCF9F94064E77961.taxon	description	– 1979. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2016 a: 525): Europe, Italy, Campania, Napoli al Pasconcello, Sep 1834, Bertoloni (BOLO).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2178FFA7FCF9F94064E77961.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus hybridus is native to temperate North America and C and N South America and is introduced as a segetal and ruderal weed in warm-temperate regions worldwide (Bayón 2015: 285). It is recorded in all parts of Greece, where it is considered naturalized (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). The distribution map in Strid & Tan (1997: map 259) is rather outdated by recent fieldwork (see, e. g., Willing & Willing 2006: 38). In Mediterranean basic floristic literature, the name A. hybridus has repeatedly been misapplied to A. powellii, the related weedy amaranth with longer floral bracts (2.3 – 3.7 times as long as perianth vs 1.3 – 1.5 (– 2.0) times longer in A. hybridus) and stiffly erect, compact inflorescence branches (vs slender, ± patent ones in A. hybridus). It is also similar to A. quitensis but all perianth segments are acute (never spathulate and apically obtuse as in A. quitensis) and the inflorescence is green (not pale brownish green and without protuberant, membranous perianths in the male flowers as in A. quitensis). Literature records of A. cruentus and A. hypochondriacus based on the taxonomy adopted by Greuter & al. (1984: 46, 47) may largely refer to A. hybridus and need to be verified by revised herbarium specimens. Rejection of the name A. hybridus L. as ambiguous (in favour of A. patulus Bertol.; see Hügin 1987) is not advisable because it is clearly typified (Brenan 1961; Sauer 1967; Townsend 1974) and has been used in the correct sense in recent basic floras.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2179FFA7FF2EFA4060AD7DE1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — This species evolved by domestication in SW North America within the native range of its presumed wild progenitor Amaranthus powellii. It is widely cultivated as an ornamental plant, pseudocereal and fod- der crop in tropical to warm-temperate regions worldwide (Bayón 2015: 289). In most parts of continental and insular Greece it is observed as a casual escape near its places of cultivation; although it was given as naturalized by Arianoutsou & al. (2010), there is no reliable evidence for this. It is also known to occur in Albania (Pils 2016: 21, P 11) and Bulgaria (Assyov & al. 2012: 66). Records taken from floristic literature with determinations based on the taxonomic concept of Greuter & al. (1984: 47) are considered doubtful unless corroborated by revised herbarium specimens, in order to exclude confusion with A. cruentus, A. hybridus, A. powellii or A. quitensis. Rejection of the name A. hybridus as ambiguous in favour of A. hypochondriacus (Greuter 1981; Greuter & al. 1984) is not advisable because both names are clearly typified (Townsend 1974; 1985) and have been used in the correct sense in recent basic floras and monographs (Raus 1997; Bayón 2015; Iamonico 2015 a, 2015 b).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2179FFA7FCA3FDC060997941.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus muricatus is a perennial with a stout rootstock native to Bolivia, N Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay (Pedersen 1999: 24); it is an invasive species in Africa, S Europe and Australia and to a lesser degree in North America and Asia (Mosyakin & Robertson 2003: 431; Bayón 2015: 341, 2020: 58), doing well in arid climates. It is naturalized in Greece (Arianoutsou & al. 2010), preferring secondary, stony habitats such as crevices of walls, and has been established on Syros (C Kyklades) since 1968. On the Greek mainland it was first recorded in 1999 from urban areas of Thessaloniki (Krigas & al. 1999) and is rapidly spreading there (Krigas & Kokkini 2004). The first record from the East Aegean Islands (Kalymnos) was in 2008 (Zervou & al. 2009) and from Attiki near Athens in 2016 (Polymenakos & Tan 2016). The species has not been reported so far from countries N of the Greek border, but it is known as an established alien in the W Mediterranean basin from Italy W to Morocco (Iamonico 2015 a).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE2179FFA0FCA3FAA065B57D81.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus palmeri is native to SW North America, in the U. S. A. (S California to Texas) and N Mexico (Sauer 1955), and is a successful, invasive species recently spreading in warm-temperate parts of the Old World (Bayón 2020; Mennan & al. 2021). It has been known to occur as an agricultural and horticultural weed in Greece, with male and female plants, since 2005 (Raus & Raabe 2006), possibly starting from citrus orchards, and is meanwhile fully established in Peloponnisos around Mystras and Sparti. It is also recorded from larger islands, viz. Evvia (Willing & Willing 2006: 39 – 40) and Kriti (Gregor & Meierott 2013: 277). It is not yet known from neighbouring Balkan countries (Iamonico 2015 a) but is a recent invader to Anatolia, first found with both sexes in cornfields along the İzmir – Çanakkale main road in 2015 (Eren & al. 2016), and is expected to become one of the most economically troublesome weed species in Turkey in the coming years (Mennan & al. 2021). A similar scenario is predicted for Italy (Milani & al. 2021), owing to various herbicide resistances that have recently evolved in the species.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217EFFA0FF04FE6065397AC1.taxon	description	Acad. Arts 10: 347. 1875 ≡ Amaranthus retroflexus var. powellii (S. Watson) B. Boivin in Naturaliste Canad. 93: 641. 1966 ≡ Amaranthus hypochondriacus var. powellii (S. Watson) Pedersen in Monogr. Syst. Bot. Missouri Bot. Gard. 74: 24. 1999 ≡ Amaranthus hybridus subsp. powellii (S. Watson) Karlsson in Nordic J. Bot. 20: 519. 2001. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2016 a: 525): North America, U. S. A., Arizona, “ from Powell’s Arizona seeds ”, 1874, Powell (US US 00106256). – “ Amaranthus chlorostachys ” auct. [non Amaranthus chlorostachys Willd., Hist. Amaranth.: 34. 1790]. – “ Amaranthus hybridus ” sensu Tutin & al. (1964: 109) [non Amaranthus hybridus L., Sp. Pl.: 990. 1753]. – “ Amaranthus hypochondriacus ” sensu Greuter & al. (1984: 47), pro parte [non Amaranthus hypochondriacus L., Sp. Pl.: 991. 1753]. Remarks — Native to SW North America, in the U. S. A. and adjacent regions of Mexico, this species is introduced as a segetal and ruderal weed in warm-temperate regions worldwide (Bayón 2015: 291). It is at least locally naturalized in Greece, according to Arianoutsou & al. (2010). Considered the putative wild progenitor of its domesticated descendant Amaranthus hypochondriacus, A. powellii has been reported from North and South Pindos, Peloponnisos, Sterea Ellas, North Central, North East and from the Aegean islands of Amorgos, Evvia, Karpathos, Kriti and Samothraki, but the actual distribution may be wider than the present data indicate. That the name A. powellii (and the taxon behind it) does not appear in the Euro + Med PlantBase for Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria and Turkey-in-Europe (Iamonico 2015 a) is certainly due to its misleading synonymization with A. hybridus (Tutin & al. 1964) or A. hypochondriacus (Greuter & al. 1984). The name A. hybridus has been repeatedly misapplied to A. powellii in Mediterranean basic floras; A. hybridus, however, is generally distinguished by its usually slender, ± patent lateral branches of the inflorescence (vs compact and stiffly erect in A. powellii).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217EFFA1FF04F920650D7E81.taxon	description	46), pro parte [non Amaranthus caudatus L., Sp. Pl.: 990. 1753]. Remarks — This species is native to subtropical and temperate South America, from Ecuador and S Brazil to S Argentina (Patagonia); it is introduced as a casual weed in Canada and in parts of W, C and N Europe (Hügin 1986, 1987; Karlsson 2001; Hand & al. 2022), where it is mostly ephemeral due to lack of frost resistance. Amaranthus quitensis is a river-bank pioneer in its native range and the supposed wild ancestor of A. caudatus. It is naturalized in the Azores and Balearic Islands (Bayón 2015: 286) and in Greece (Raus 1997; Iamonico 2015 a); localities of collect- ed specimens are known from all over Greece except the North Aegean islands. The flowering and fruiting period of A. quitensis extends to about seven months in Greece, from early summer to late autumn, which may be one reason for its rapid spread and naturalization (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). The species is clearly distant and chiefly distinguished from A. hybridus by the obovate to narrowly spathulate, apically obtuse inner perianth segments of the female flowers and by the usually numerous patent, pale brownish green, often sausage-shaped, apically obtuse lateral inflorescence branches, a diagnostic feature that is explicitly corroborated by Karlsson (2001: 60, fig. 25). A photograph in Vangjeli (2017: 120, under A. hybridus) shows exactly these characters and may be interpreted as the first record of A. quitensis for Albania. In A. hybridus, on the contrary, all perianth segments are acute or acuminate, and the lateral inflorescence branches are erectopatent and thinning toward the apex. More similar is A. retroflexus on the basis of its obtuse to truncate-emarginate perianth segments of the female flowers, but that species differs in its markedly pubescent stem indumentum and few, erect, stout, usually pale to silvery green inflorescence branches usually appressed to the main axis (not brownish green and horizontally patent as in A. quitensis). The two taxa are likewise appropriately treated as separate species in accordance with Aellen (1959), Hügin (1987), Raus (1997), Karlsson (2001) and Iamonico (2015 a). Unfortunately, A. quitensis fell into early oblivion, only c. 30 years after its publication as a species new to science, when Moquin-Tandon (1849: 265) categorized it as an insufficiently known taxon (“ species non satis nota ”) by misjudgement of its bract characters (“ calyce bracteis duplo longiore ” instead of “ bracteis subulatis, calyce duplo longioribus ” as correctly stated in the protologue by Kunth in Humboldt & al. 1818). This is the reason why A. quitensis is not treated in any of the classical basic floras covering Greece (see Table 1) and adjacent countries (Iamonico 2015 a). Its rehabilitation as an accepted species happened only in the early 20 th century (Zobel 1909; Höck 1910; Thellung 1912; Zimmermann 1913) on the basis of correctly determined specimens of adventive casuals in C and S Europe. The name was reintroduced into current use by Thellung (1914), Aellen (1959), Soó (1980: 460), Hügin (1987), Raus (1997, see Table 1) and Pedersen (1999). There is, however, much disagreement among flora-writers on the taxonomic rank of A. quitensis and A. hybridus (summarized in Bayón 2015: 284 – 285), and it seems floristically rather unhelpful to again hide away the former in the latter, either as a plain synonym (Coons 1977) or at any infraspecific rank (Covas 1941; Costea & al. 2001 a; Bayón 2015). Amaranthus quitensis may yet also be found in Albania (see above), Bulgaria and North Macedonia, where to date it simply has not been keyed out and distinguished from A. hybridus.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217FFFA1FF2EFD6065B779C1.taxon	description	Lectotype (designated by Townsend 1974: 12): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.22 (LINN).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217FFFA1FF2EFD6065B779C1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus retroflexus is native to North America, from SE Canada to NE Mexico. It is introduced as an agricultural and ruderal weed in warm-temperate regions worldwide (Bayón 2015: 294) and in Europe was already common around 1800 AD (Thellung 1914: 257). Naturalized in Greece (Arianoutsou & al. 2010), it is the most widespread amaranth countrywide, formerly locally cultivated as vegetable crop (βλίτα, see Heldreich 1862). The name A. delilei applies to plants with short, weak (less rigid) floral bracts scarcely exceeding the perianth (Loret 1866); they are hardly distinct from A. retroflexus (Thellung 1912). Putative hybrids with A. cruentus, A. hybridus and A. powellii have been reported from Greece (Krigas & Kokkini 2004).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217FFFA1FF2EFA20678E7F21.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus scleropoides is introduced as a casual alien with unknown status along the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria (Assyov & al. 2012: 66; Iamonico 2015 a) and is not known from Greece so far. In its native range (Texas, NW Mexico; Mosyakin & Robertson 2003), it occupies seasonally wet, disturbed habitats. To raise awareness of this possibly spreading xenophyte, the main characters are given here (based on Mosyakin & Robertson 2003: 433; Bayón 2015: 356 – 357): plant annual, glabrous; stems ascending to prostrate, erect when young, 10 – 60 cm long; leaves petiolate, elliptic to lanceolate, 1.0 – 3.0 × 0.3 – 2.0 cm; inflorescence arranged in axillary clusters from base to apex, with axes thickened and inflated, becoming indurate at maturity (only so in A. scleropoides and A. crassipes); floral bracts keeled (only so in A. scleropoides and A. crassipes), ovate-triangular, minute; perianth segments 5, narrowly spathulate, slightly clawed, claw indurate at maturity; fruit orbicular to compressed obovoid, 1.1 – 1.5 mm long, shorter than perianth, smooth to tuberculate in distal half, transversely dehiscent (circumscissile). Amaranthus crassipes, native to South America and doubtfully reported once from Italy (Iamonico 2011: 208 – 209; 2015 b: 67), differs in its markedly decumbent growth form and conspicuously tuberculate, indehiscent fruits (Iamonico 2011: 213; Bayón 2015: 319).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217FFFA1FCA3FC8067CB7A81.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Native to the lowlands of tropical America, from NE Mexico to N Argentina, Amaranthus spinosus spread as a pantropical weed and is now introduced to warm-temperate regions of North America, Europe (scattered), Africa, E Asia and Australia (Bayón 2015: 295; POWO 2022). It is a valued food plant in Africa and Asia (from India to the Philippines) and can be a noxious weed in rice cultivation. It is a rare casual alien in Greece, not naturalized (Arianoutsou & al. 2010), easily recognized by its paired internodal spines and so far reported from the Nomoi of Attiki, Lakonia, Pieria and Thessaloniki. It is also known to occur in Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria and Turkey (Iamonico 2015 a). According to Song & al. (2000), this taxonomically isolated species, the sole member of A. sect. Centrusa Griseb., occupies an evolutionarily basal position for the clades of A. subg. Amaranthus (A. sect. Amaranthus) and A. subg. Albersia (Kunth) Gren. & Godr. (A. sect. Blitopsis Dumort.); it also shows some degree of morphological transition toward dioecious amaranths of A. subg. Acnida, either indicating a phylogenetic relationship or a parallel evolution (Mosyakin & Robertson 1996).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217FFFA2FCA3F96067017E41.taxon	description	= Amaranthus vulgatissimus Thell. in Ascherson & Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. 5 (1. Abt.): 343. 1914, nom illeg. [non A. vulgatissimus Speg. in Anal. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 7: 135. 1902]. – Holotype: South America, Argentina, Salta, Metán, Spegazzini 167 (Z Z 000000249). Remarks — Amaranthus standleyanus resembles A. crispus with respect to the number of perianth segments, (4 or) 5, and the indehiscent fruit, but differs on its smooth, entire leaf margins (vs undulate-crenate in A. crispus) and the perianth segments being reflexed in fruit (vs connivent in A. crispus). Native to Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay (Pedersen 1999: 25; Bayón 2015: 359), it was erroneously reported as naturalized in Turkey-in-Europe (Greuter & al. 1984: 47) but there is no floristic basis for this, corroborated by herbarium material. Accordingly, the record for European Turkey has to be removed from the Euro + Med PlantBase (Iamonico 2015 a).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217CFFA2FF04FDA066A77B21.taxon	description	No. 1117.7 (LINN). = Amaranthus melancholicus L., Sp. Pl.: 989. 1753 ≡ Amaranthus tricolor var. melancholicus (L.) Lam. & Monnet in Lamarck, Encycl. 1: 115. 1783. – Lectotype (designated by Townsend 1974: 11): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.4 (LINN). = Amaranthus tristis L., Sp. Pl. 2: 989. 1753 ≡ Amaranthus tricolor var. tristis (L.) Thell. in Ascherson & Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. 5 (1. Abt.): 274. 1914 ≡ Amaranthus tricolor subsp. tristis (L.) Aellen in Hegi, Ill. Fl. Mitt. - Eur. 3 (2): 495. 1959. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2014 b: 149): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.11 (LINN). = Amaranthus mangostanus L., Cent. Pl. I: 32. 1755 ≡ Amaranthus tricolor var. mangostanus (L.) Thell. in Ascherson & Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. 5 (1. Abt.): 274. 1914 ≡ Amaranthus tricolor subsp. mangostanus (L.) Aellen, in Hegi, Ill. Fl. Mitt. - Eur. 3 (2): 495. 1959. – Lectotype (designated by Iamonico 2014 b: 147): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.10 (LINN).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217CFFA2FF04FDA066A77B21.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Amaranthus tricolor was reported as naturalized in European Turkey (Roy & al. 2022; Iamonico 2015 a) but certainly in error; a single 19 th century record is known from Turkey-in-Europe (“ cultivated in gardens, and sometimes escapes ”, Aellen 1967; Baytop & Demiriz 1981). The species, native to Asia from Pakistan E to Japan and Indonesia (Bayón 2015: 367), was never recollected in the area and was accordingly not counted as a member of the Turkish flora by Aellen (1967: 343); there are also no past or present records from Greece.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217CFFA2FF04F88061397F81.taxon	description	Lectotype (designated by Fawcett & Rendle 1914: 131): Herb. Linn. No. 1117.15 (LINN). – “ Amaranthus gracilis ” auct. [non Amaranthus gracilis Desf., Tabl. École Bot.: 43. 1804 nec Poir. in Lam., Encycl. Méthod., Suppl. 1: 312. 1810; see Iamonico 2015 b, 2016 b]. Remarks — Native from SE Mexico to N Argentina, this species is introduced as a ruderal weed in tropical, subtropical and warm-temperate regions worldwide (Bayón 2015: 370). An established xenophyte in Greece (Arianoutsou & al. 2010), it is known from most parts of the country (except North Pindos and North Central, perhaps due to its lacking frost resistance; there are also no records from North Macedonia and Bulgaria, see Iamonico 2015 a). It is also given as naturalized in coastal Albania (Barina & al. 2017; 2018) and European Turkey (Iamonico 2015 a, based on Roy & al. 2022). Unfortunately, the name Amaranthus viridis has been misapplied to A. blitum in influential Greek floras (Halácsy 1904; Rechinger 1944), which makes previous floristic records doubtful unless specimens are revised. Forms of A. emarginatus, showing an elongate terminal spike-like inflorescence similar to that of A. viridis, differ sufficiently by their smaller, apically emarginate to bilobate leaves and constantly smaller fruit and seed dimensions.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217CFFA2FC86FC60608679C1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — This is a dioecious taxon native to sandy and weakly saline coastal and inland areas of SW North America, in the U. S. A. and NW Mexico (Mosyakin & Robertson 2003: 418). In Europe it is reported as a rare casual in Britain (Brenan 1961) and Greece (Arianoutsou & al. 2010). It was found once in Peloponnisos S of Gytheio in 2003 (Raus 2006) but has not been recorded since; the species may have vanished in the country. It differs from Amaranthus palmeri chiefly on its broadly spathulate, obtuse, pubescent perianth segments of the female flowers (Sauer 1955: 38).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217CFFA3FC86FA20664D7D61.taxon	description	= Polycnemum arvense var. minus Döll, Rhein. Fl.: 287. 1843 ≡ Polycnemum minus (Döll) Kitt., Taschenb. Fl. Deutschl., ed. 3: 327. 1853 ≡ Polycnemum arvense subsp. minus (Döll) Čelak., Prodr. Fl. Böhm. 2: 156. 1871. – Type: not designated. Remarks — The species is native to temperate and Mediterranean Europe and W Asia, found in all countries of the S Balkan peninsula (Iamonico 2015 a) and in mainland Greece very scattered N of the Gulf of Korinthos (Ipiros, Thessalia, Makedonia) and on some larger Aegean islands (Evvia, Thasos, Samothraki). A previous record from the Ionian islands (Kerkyra, see Jalas & Suominen 1980: map 479) was already doubted by Tan (1997) and has not been confirmed (Flora Ionica Working Group 2016 +). As an autumnal, easily overlooked species of mostly seminatural habitats, it is probably more widespread than the present data indicate.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217DFFA3FF2EFE4066B17FA1.taxon	discussion	Remarks — Records from Greece (South and North Pindos, Haussknecht 1897: 57) ascribed to Polycnemum heuffelii, a steppe species from subcontinental Europe (Austria to Ukraine, extending to NE Bulgaria, see Assyov & al. 2012: 322), are based on misidentifications of specimens of P. arvense (Tan 1997: 110). The species was mapped for Greece, although in error, in Jalas & Suominen (1980: 11, map 482) and was accepted to occur in Greece by Greuter & al. (1984: 306) and Ball (1993: 110). The record for Greece needs to be removed from the Euro + Med PlantBase (Iamonico 2015 a).	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
F26687CE217DFFBCFF2EFC0066837D61.taxon	discussion	Remarks — The species is native to C, S and E Europe and W Asia, occurring in all Balkan countries (Iamonico 2015 a). It is scattered in N mainland Greece (Strid & Tan (1997: map 204), additionally reported from the N Aegean island of Samothraki (Biel & Tan 2014). Like Polycnemum arvense, it is easily overlooked and probably more widespread in Greece than the present data indicate.	en	Raus, Thomas (2022): Taxonomic, nomenclatural and floristic review of Amaranthaceae of Greece and neighbouring countries. Willdenowia 52 (3): 335-357, DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52304, URL: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.52.52304
