Marsilea
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.329.1.8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F2215E24-795A-5801-FF41-F4F6BC0634E3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Marsilea |
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Marsilea View in CoL L., Sp. Pl. 2: 1099. 1753.
Unmistakeable by its clover-like leaves. Further characters of the genus include generally long-creeping, narrow rhizomes; dichotomously veined leaflets that are pulvinate at the base, the veins anastomosing regularly or near the margin to form a reticulum of elongate polygonal areoles; septate hairs often present on the rhizomes, leaves, and on sporocarps; spores borne in laterally attached, hardened, short-stalked globose or bean-shaped sporocarps that arise along the lower part of the petiole or from the petiole base or rhizome; and sporangia lacking an annulus. Marsilea grows in flooded or seasonally flooded habitats, especially along the edges of pools and marshes. Floating leaves produced during flooding can look quite different from the land leaves produced when the habitat is dry. The plants usually become fertile only when the habitat dries out. Where the habitat remains wet year-round, plants usually remain sterile, multiply through creeping rhizomes, and are often difficult to identify. A subcosmopolitan genus of about 45–60 species, with about 12 species in the Neotropics ( Johnson 1986).
Marsilea View in CoL is likely sister to the clade Regnellidium View in CoL + Pilularia ( Pryer 1999) View in CoL . A molecular phylogeny produced by Schaefer et al. (2011) indicates that the Bolivian species fall within 2 main clades: 1) the M. mollis View in CoL clade, represented by M. mollis View in CoL , with sporocarps borne singly at bases of petioles (other species in this clade primarily in North America); and 2) the M. mutica View in CoL clade, represented by M. crotophora View in CoL and M. polycarpa View in CoL , all largely tropical species with more numerous sporocarps borne along the petioles. Additional molecular studies of plastid genes by Whitten et al. (2012) provided evidence that many of the neotropical species of Marsilea View in CoL may not be monophyletic. They suggested several possible reasons for this result: 1) extensive hybridization of species, which might have led to chloroplast capture of plastid types; 2) the existence of previously unrecognized cryptic species; and 3) a possibly inflated number of species within the sect. Notorhizae clade, which, however, is not represented in Bolivia.
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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Marsilea
Kessler, Michael & Smith, Alan R. 2017 |
Marsilea
1753: 1099 |