Noisettia

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Noisettia
Noisettia orchidiflora.jpg
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Violaceae
Subfamily: Violoideae
Tribe: Violeae
Genus: Noisettia
Kunth [1]
Species:
N. orchidiflora
Binomial name
Noisettia orchidiflora
Synonyms [2]
Noisettia frangulaefolia
Original illustration by Kunth, 1821 Noisettia frangulaefolia.png
Noisettia frangulaefolia
Original illustration by Kunth, 1821

Noisettia is a genus of flowering plants in the violet family Violaceae, with a single known species.

Contents

Description

Shrubs, with oblanceolate (wider near tip) leaves. White flowers strongly zygomorphic (bilaterally symmetrical), in axillary fascicles. The corolla, which persists to cover the fruit is orange in colour with a yellow throat and with the bottom petal longer than the others and clawed with a very long spur. The stamens have free filaments, with the lowest two being calcarate (spurred) and possessing a large dorsal connective appendage that is entire and oblong-ovate. In the gynoecium, the style is rostellate (beaked). The fruit is a thick-walled capsule with 3–4 obovoid or papillate seeds per carpel. [3] [4] [5]

Taxonomy

The genus Noisettia was first described by Kunth in 1821, [6] with two species Noisetia frangulaefolia and N. orinocensis, placing it in the family Violeae, with five other genera. [7] de Candolle included Noisettia in his Violarieae in 1824, with three species [8] and at the same time Martius was describing N. pyrifolia, [9] although this species was later transferred to the related genus, Anchietea . [10] In 1846, Lindley classified it in Violaceae, within the Violales, [11] although Bentham and Hooker (1862) called the family Violarieae. [12]

Historically Noisettia was placed within Violaceae in subfamily Violoideae, tribe Violeae, subtribe Violinae, together with Anchietea , Calyptrion , Schweiggeria and Viola , following Lindley's description of Tribe Violeae. [11] [3] But these divisions have been shown to be artificial and not monophyletic. Molecular phylogenetic studies show that Violaceae is best considered as four clades rather than taxonomic ranks. Noisettia occurs in Clade I of the family, consisting of Viola, Schweiggeria, Noisettia and Allexis , in which Schweiggeria and Noisettia are monotypic and form a sister group to Viola. Clade 1 represents a subset of the original Violinae, together with the West African Allexis, previously included in tribe Rinoreeae subtribe Rinoreinae. [5] [13] [14]

Etymology

Kunth named the genus in honour of the horticulturalist Louis Claude Noisette (1772–1849). [6] [15]

Subdivision

Candolle (1824) recognised three species, considering Kunth's N. frangulaefolia to be a synonym of N. longifolia;

of which N. longifolia is considered a synonym of N. orchidiflora, [16] and only the latter is accepted by Plants of the World Online, [2] while N. acuminata is classified as "ambiguous" (unable to reliably identify taxon). [1] Most authors consider Noisettia to be monotypic for N. orchidiflora. [3] [5] [4] [17] N. orchidiflora has a large number of other synonyms. [2]

Species

Noisettia orchidoflora was first described by Rudge in 1805. Rudge believing it to be a species of Viola, gave it the name of Viola orchidoflora, observing that the enlarged lower petal resembled that of an orchid. [18] With the separation of Noisettia from Viola by Kunth in 1821, Gingins (1823) considered Kunth's original N. frangulaefolia, as N. longifolia.

Distribution and habitat

Humid coastal forests of Northern and eastern South America, including North, Northeast, South and Southeast Brazil, French Guiana, Peru, and Suriname. [5] [3] (see Map, at Plants of The World Online). [2]

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References

  1. 1 2 WFO 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 POTWO 2020.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Ballard et al 2013.
  4. 1 2 Byng 2014.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Wahlert et al 2014.
  6. 1 2 Kunth 1821.
  7. IPNI 2020.
  8. Candolle 1824.
  9. Martius 1824.
  10. Paula-Souza et al 2013.
  11. 1 2 Lindley 1846.
  12. Bentham & Hooker 1862.
  13. Yockteng et al 2003.
  14. Ballard et al 1998.
  15. Quattrocchi 2000.
  16. Tropicos 2020.
  17. Christenhusz et al 2017.
  18. INPN 2020.

Bibliography

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