Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Establishing the state of the art – the role of morphology in plant systematics
- 2 Spatial separation and developmental divergence of male and female reproductive units in gymnosperms, and their relevance to the origin of the angiosperm flower
- 3 New flowers of Laurales from the Early Cretaceous (Early to Middle Albian) of eastern North America
- 4 Tracing the early evolutionary diversification of the angiosperm flower
- 5 Changing views of flower evolution and new questions
- 6 Centrifugal stamens in a modern phylogenetic context: was Corner right?
- 7 Evolution of the palm androecium as revealed by character mapping on a supertree
- 8 Comparative floral structure and development of Nitrariaceae (Sapindales) and systematic implications
- 9 Multiplications of floral organs in flowers: a case study in Conostegia (Melastomataceae, Myrtales)
- 10 Ontogenetic and phylogenetic diversification in Marantaceae
- 11 Floral ontogeny of Acacia celastrifolia: an enigmatic mimosoid legume with pronounced polyandry and multiple carpels
- 12 Floral development of Napoleonaea (Lecythidaceae), a deceptively complex flower
- Taxon index
- Subject index
- Plate section
9 - Multiplications of floral organs in flowers: a case study in Conostegia (Melastomataceae, Myrtales)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Establishing the state of the art – the role of morphology in plant systematics
- 2 Spatial separation and developmental divergence of male and female reproductive units in gymnosperms, and their relevance to the origin of the angiosperm flower
- 3 New flowers of Laurales from the Early Cretaceous (Early to Middle Albian) of eastern North America
- 4 Tracing the early evolutionary diversification of the angiosperm flower
- 5 Changing views of flower evolution and new questions
- 6 Centrifugal stamens in a modern phylogenetic context: was Corner right?
- 7 Evolution of the palm androecium as revealed by character mapping on a supertree
- 8 Comparative floral structure and development of Nitrariaceae (Sapindales) and systematic implications
- 9 Multiplications of floral organs in flowers: a case study in Conostegia (Melastomataceae, Myrtales)
- 10 Ontogenetic and phylogenetic diversification in Marantaceae
- 11 Floral ontogeny of Acacia celastrifolia: an enigmatic mimosoid legume with pronounced polyandry and multiple carpels
- 12 Floral development of Napoleonaea (Lecythidaceae), a deceptively complex flower
- Taxon index
- Subject index
- Plate section
Summary
Introduction
The genus Conostegia (Miconieae, Melastomataceae) includes shrubs and trees distributed in the Caribbean, Mexico, Central America, N Andes and Brazil (Schnell, 1996). At present, Conostegia contains about 40 species (Schnell, 1996; Mabberley, 1997), although over 100 names have been applied to the genus in the past. However, the elevated number of species has been explained as a probable misinterpretation of the intraspecific variation that occurs in some species (Schnell, 1996).
The name Conostegia, which is derived from the Greek words κονοσ = cone and στεγοσ = roof, was chosen by D. Don (1823) for grouping species characterized by flowers having their sepals fused into a cone-shaped calyptra (Fig 9.1 A–D). Despite the fact that a calyptrate calyx is present in other genera of the Melastomataceae, such as Bellucia, Blakea, Centronia, Henriettea, Llewellynia, Miconia and Pternandra (Schnell, 1996; Penneys et al., 2010), the peculiar calyx of Conostegia has long been regarded as a useful character for segregating Conostegia from other non-calyptrate species of Melastomataceae (Don, 1823). Species of Conostegia are immediately recognizable by the character combination of terminal inflorescences, flowers often multistaminate, calyx clearly circumscissily dehiscent at anthesis, anthers isomorphic and unappendaged, ovary inferior and berry fruits (Almeda, 2008).
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- Flowers on the Tree of Life , pp. 218 - 235Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
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