Reynoldsia is a formerly recognised genus of plants in the ivy family, Araliaceae. In 2003, Kew Gardens published a checklist for Araliaceae, in which eight species were recognized for Reynoldsia: four from Samoa, two from Tahiti, one from the Marquesas, and one from Hawaii.[1] In 2010, a phylogeneticcomparison of DNA data showed that Reynoldsia was polyphyletic, consisting of two groups that are not each other's closest relatives.[2] In a companion paper, three of the species were "sunk" into synonymy with others, reducing the number of species to five.[3] All species that were formerly in Reynoldsia are now in Polyscias subgenus Tetraplasandra, a subgenus of 21 species indigenous to Malesia and the Pacific islands.[3]
Polyscias sandwicensis (formerly Reynoldsia sandwicensis) is cultivated, albeit rarely, in Hawaii.[6] Instructions for its cultivation are available.[7]
Species
Eight species were listed by Frodin and Govaerts (2003) for Reynoldsia.[1] Lowry and Plunkett (2010) recognized only five of these, and placed them in Polyscias subgenus Tetraplasandra.[3] The synonyms given below are the species recognized by Frodin and Govaerts (2003).
In 1925, Bénédict P.G. Hochreutiner named a second species from Samoa, Reynoldsia lanutoensis.[15] In 1935, a third species from Samoa, Reynoldsia grayana was named by Erling Christophersen.[16] Christophersen suggested that some plants from a place called Tau might be a fourth species of Reynoldsia in Samoa. Also in 1935, Reynoldsia marchionensis, a species from the Marquesas, was named by Forest B.H. Brown.[17] The rare Samoan endemic, Reynoldsia tauensis, was finally published as a separate species in 1968 by Albert C. Smith and Benjamin Clemens Stone.[18]
Some sources state that there are two species of Reynoldsia in the Society Islands, and this error has been copied from one source to another.[19] An examination of the references cited here shows that R. marchionensis is the only species name in Reynoldsia that was ever published for a plant from the Society Islands.
In an accompanying paper in Plant Diversity and Evolution, all of the pinnate Araliaceae were placed in the large genus Polyscias, thus raising the number of species in that genus from about 100 to 159, not counting about 90 species that will be published in forthcoming papers.[3] Six of the genera that were recognized in the 2003 checklist (Arthrophyllum, Cuphocarpus, Gastonia, Reynoldsia, Munroidendron, and Tetraplasandra) were subsumed into Polyscias.
When Polyscias was recircumscribed in 2010, the authors did not recognize all of the eight species that had been recognized in 2003. They placed R. grayana and R. tauensis into synonymy under R. lanutoensis. They likewise subsumed R. tahitiensis into R. verrucosa. The resulting five species were transferred to Polyscias as P. lanutoensis, P. pleiosperma, P. marchionensis, P. verrucosa, and P. sandwicensis.[3]
References
^ abcDavid G. Frodin and Rafaël Govaerts. 2003. World Checklist and Bibliography of Araliaceae. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN978-1-84246-048-1. (See External links below).
^ abGregory M. Plunkett and Porter P. Lowry II. 2010. "Paraphyly and polyphyly in Polyscias sensu lato: molecular evidence and the case for recircumscribing the "pinnate genera" of Araliaceae". Plant Diversity and Evolution (formerly Botanische Jahrbucher) 128(1-2):23-54. doi:10.1127/1869-6155/2010/0128-0002.
^ abcdefgPorter P. Lowry II and Gregory M. Plunkett. 2010. "Recircumscription of Polyscias (Araliaceae) to include six related genera, with a new infrageneric classification and a synopsis of species". Plant Diversity and Evolution (formerly Botanische Jahrbucher) 128(1-2):55-84. doi:10.1127/1869-6155/2010/0128-0003. (See External links below).
^ abWilliam R. Philipson. 1970. "A redefinition of Gastonia and related genera (Araliaceae)". Blumea18(2):497-505.
^Porter P. Lowry II. 1990. "Araliaceae", pages 224-237. In: Warren L. Wagner, Derral R. Herbst, and Sy H. Sohmer. Manual of the Flowering Plants of Hawaii, Revised Edition, 1999. Bishop Museum Press: Hololulu
^John L. Culliney and Bruce P. Koebele. 1999. A Native Hawaiian Garden. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN978-0-8248-2176-0.
^Asa Gray. 1854. Series: United States Exploring Expedition (1838-1842); Volume 15: Botany. Phanerogamia.:723. (See External links below).
^Umberto Quattrocchi. 2000. CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names volume IV. CRC Press: Boca Raton; New York; Washington, DC;, USA. London, UK. ISBN978-0-8493-2673-8 (set). (see External links below).
^Reynoldsia In: Index Nominum Genericorum. In: Regnum Vegetabile (see External links below).
^Berthold Carl Seemann. 1864. page 245. In: "Revision of the natural order Hederaceae" pages 235-309. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign volume 2 (1864). (See External links below).
^Jean Nadeaud. 1873. Énumeration des Plantes Indigènes de l'Île de Tahiti recueillies et classées / par J. Nadeaud. Paris:63. F. Savy. (See External links below).
^Erling Christophersen. 1935. "Flowering Plants of Samoa". Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin no. 128:161.
^Forest B.H. Brown. 1935. "Flora of Southeastern Polynesia. III. Dicotyledons". Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin no. 130:209.
^Albert C. Smith and Benjamin C. Stone. 1968. page 465. In: "Studies of Pacific Island Plants, XIX. The Araliaceae of the New Hebrides, Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga". Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 49(4):431-501. (See External links below).
^David J. Mabberley. 2008. Mabberley's Plant-Book third edition (2008). Cambridge University Press: UK. ISBN978-0-521-82071-4. (See External links below).
^Earl Edward Sherff. 1952. "Further studies of Hawaiian Araliaceae: Additions to Cheirodendron helleri Sherff and a preliminary treatment of the endemic species of Reynoldsia A. Gray". Botanical Leaflets 6(section II):6-19.
^ abAnnemarie Costello and Timothy J. Motley. 2007. "Phylogenetics of the Tetraplasandra Group (Araliaceae) Inferred from ITS, 5S-NTS, and Morphology". Systematic Botany32(2):464-477.
^William R. Philipson. 1979. "Araliaceae" In: Flora Malesiana, series 1, volume 9, part 1: 1-105. ISBN978-90-286-0629-6 (part 1). (See External links below).
^William R. Philipson. 1970. "The Malesian species of Gastonia (Araliaceae)". Blumea18(2):491-495.
Sources
Gregory M. Plunkett, Jun Wen, Porter P. Lowry II, Murray J. Henwood, Pedro Fiaschi, and Anthony D. Mitchell. accepted, undated. Araliaceae, pages ??. In: Klaus Kubitzki (editor); ?? (volume editor). The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants volume ??. Springer-Verlag: Berlin; Heidelberg, Germany. ISBN ??