Xiphidium Loefl., Iter Hispan.: 179. 1758.

Pellegrini, Marco O. O., Hickman, Ellen J., Guttierrez, Jorge E., Smith, Rhian J. & Hopper, Stephen D., 2020, Revisiting the taxonomy of the Neotropical Haemodoraceae (Commelinales), PhytoKeys 169, pp. 1-59 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.169.57996

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4E426498-CDA3-5E91-800F-5DA7C79D5FAF

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Xiphidium Loefl., Iter Hispan.: 179. 1758.
status

 

5. Xiphidium Loefl., Iter Hispan.: 179. 1758. Figs 22 View Figure 22 , 23 View Figure 23 , 24 View Figure 24 , 26 View Figure 26

Tonduzia Boeckeler ex Tonduz, Bull. Herb. Boissier 3: 464. 1895, nom. nud.

Durandia Boeckeler, Allg. Bot. Z. Syst. 2: 160, 173. 1896, Syn. nov. Type species. Durandia macrophylla Boeckeler (= Xiphidium caeruleum Aubl.).

Type species.

Xiphidium caeruleum Aubl.

Nomenclatural history.

It has been widely accepted that the original place of publication of the generic name Xiphidium is "Histoire des Plantes de la Guiane Françoise” by Aublet (1775). Nonetheless, Aublet never clearly states to be proposing a new genus. This seems to follow his publication’s formatting, where none of the new taxa present any explicit statement indicating that they are newly proposed. At the end of the Latin diagnosis and French comments, Aublet (1775: 35) mentions that his new species differs from the one described by Loefling (1758) due to its "fine stems and leaves furnished with hairs, blue flowers, and oval and acute petals". This statement makes it clear that Aublet had access to Loefling’s publication (1758) and knew of the description of his new genus Xiphidium . Finally, Dorr and Wiersema (2010) give the final support to our interpretation when they explain that in several instances, Loefling (1758) cited a genus published earlier by Linnaeus or P. Browne, followed by a full stop, (an) alternative generic name(s) and a description. The authors also point out that, on some occasions, this formatting has been misinterpreted as the proposal of species’ names (i.e., binary combinations), which they are not. That was the case of Xiphidium Loefl., which was misinterpreted as representing a new species, Ixia xiphidium Loefl. (e.g., Maas and Maas-van de Kamer 1993), instead of the publication of a new genus. Thus, the genus Xiphidium was originally described by Loefling (1758), without the inclusion of any species. The proposal of Xiphidium by Loefling (1758) is based on the author not agreeing on the inclusion of all elements/species by Linnaeus in his Ixia L.

The first species name to be validly published in Xiphidium was only proposed almost 20 years later, by Aublet (1775), as X. caeruleum Aubl. The publication of the generic name Xiphidium by Loefling (1758) makes it clear that the author recognised a sole species for that genus. The practice of not providing a specific epithet when describing monospecific new genera was common practice at the time. A similar situation, with the description of the type genus of Haemodoraceae - Haemodorum ( Smith 1798) -, supports this interpretation. When first described, Haemodorum was considered monospecific and, therefore, was not given a specific epithet, according to the standard practice of J.E. Smith (1798). Only seven years later, another author ( Vahl 1805) provided an epithet for Smith’s plant, as H. corymbosum Vahl. Thus, as the first species formally published and associated with Xiphidium , X. caeruleum automatically typifies this generic name.

Comments.

Xiphidium has traditionally been considered an ill-circumscribed genus, lacking any obvious synapomorphy ( Simpson 1990, 1993, 1998b). However, with the transfer of X. xanthorrhizon to Cubanicula , Xiphidium s.str. can be easily defined by its introrsely rimose, but functionally poricidal anthers (an adaptation to buzz-pollination; Buchmann 1980), the complete loss of septal nectaries (also an adaptation to buzz-pollination), capsules bright-coloured, indehiscent, lacking thickened septal ridges and somewhat fleshy at maturity (a possible adaptation to endozoochory) and cuboid seeds ( Hickman 2019; Pellegrini 2019). All these characters are unique in the family and observed on the two species of Xiphidium accepted by us in the present study. The anther morphology of Xiphidium and its floral biology are reminiscent of some species of Dichorisandra J.C. Mikan ( Commelinaceae , Commelinales ) that also possess introrsely rimose but functionally poricidal anthers ( Pellegrini and Faden 2017). However, studies on the reproductive biology of Xiphidium are non-existent, save that by Buchmann (1980). Further studies focusing on effective pollination and seed dispersal are necessary. The genus is well-documented as medicine for snakebite ( Odonne et al. 2013) and has antimalarial and leishmanicidal properties ( Valadeau et al. 2009). Xiphidium caeruleum also shows the most significant genetic divergence levels for any species of Haemodoraceae amongst populations across its wide Neotropical range ( Hopper et al., in prep.). A further detailed taxonomic study is recommended, combining extensive fieldwork, molecular data, and traditional taxonomy.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Commelinales

Family

Haemodoraceae

Loc

Xiphidium Loefl., Iter Hispan.: 179. 1758.

Pellegrini, Marco O. O., Hickman, Ellen J., Guttierrez, Jorge E., Smith, Rhian J. & Hopper, Stephen D. 2020
2020
Loc

Durandia macrophylla

Boeckeler 1896
1896