Register      Login
Australian Systematic Botany Australian Systematic Botany Society
Taxonomy, biogeography and evolution of plants
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The misapplication of the name Croton urticoides, the reinstatement of the name Adriana tomentosa, and Allan Cunningham’s book herbarium at Chelsea Physic Garden

A. E. Orchard A and C. L. Gross B C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A PO Box 3427, Weston Creek, ACT 2611, Australia.

B Ecosystem Management and the N.C.W. Beadle Herbarium, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: cgross@une.edu.au

Australian Systematic Botany 22(5) 377-383 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB09031
Submitted: 9 July 2009  Accepted: 11 August 2009   Published: 28 October 2009

Abstract

Adriana Gaudich. is a small genus in the Euphorbiaceae that is endemic to Australia. Recently, new combinations were made by others for Adriana on the premise that Croton urticoides A.Cunn. is an earlier name for A. tomentosa. The type was not seen, although it was suggested that it resided in Robert Heward’s book herbarium of assembled Allan Cunningham specimens held at the Chelsea Physic Garden. This mini-herbarium has not been rediscovered, but true type material has been found at the herbarium, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. An inspection of the type of C. urticoides held at Kew revealed that the material is Gynatrix pulchella (Willd.) Alef in the Malvaceae and its epithet predates that of C. urticoides by several years. We discuss the amplification of errors that have occurred for an incorrect name that has become accepted by several herbaria in Australia. This book herbarium cannot be located at present, and is presumed lost, although it is likely that type materials of most if not all Cunningham’s (1825) names still exist elsewhere. There is little or no evidence that the book herbarium at Chelsea Physic Garden contained type material of species described by Cunningham (1825) in Field’s Geographical Memoirs. Instead, it is likely that it consisted of material assembled many years later by Heward from Cunningham’s collections, to illustrate the taxa in Cunningham’s publications. The type of C. urticoides is fixed herein by lectotypification. We provide a summary of the nomenclature for the taxa under discussion.




1 The date of publication of this work is slightly uncertain. Internal evidence from the Preface, Frontispiece and plates, cited in Dorr and Nicolson (2008), suggest publication on or after February–April 1825, whereas J. D. Hooker’s copy of the work in the library at Kew is annotated May 1825 fide John Murray on the title page.

Acknowledgements

C. L. G. thanks the Director of Kew for permission to view specimens, Jeremy Bruhl, who as Australian Botanical Liaison Officer in Kew in 2008 assisted her in gaining access to the Chelsea Physic Garden mini-herbarium, Louisa Murray for help at NSW, I. Telford and D. Mackay for comments. Both authors thank the staff of Chelsea Physic Garden, particularly David Frodin and Liz Thornton, for facilitating their examination of Cunningham material in that institution, and A. E. O. thanks the curators of numerous herbaria (mentioned above) who provided access to their collections as part of his Allan Cunningham research.


References


Aplin TEH, Cannon JR (1971) Distribution of alkaloids in some Western Australian plants. Economic Botany 25, 366–380. open url image1

Bentham G (1873) Flora Australiensis: a description of the plants of the Australian territory. Order CVIII Euphorbiaceae [L. Reeve & Co.: London] 6, 41–153. open url image1

Bortolus A (2008) Error cascades in the biological sciences: the unwanted consequences of using bad taxonomy in ecology. AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 37, 114–118.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Bostock PD , Holland AE (2007) ‘Census of the Queensland flora.’ (Queensland Herbarium, Environmental Protection Agency: Brisbane)

Cunningham A (1825) A specimen of the indigenous botany of the mountainous country, between the colony round Port Jackson and the settlement of Bathurst; being a portion of the result of observation made in the months of October, November and December, 1822, disposed according to the natural orders. In ‘Geographical memoirs on New South Wales by various hands’. (Ed. B. Field) pp. 325–365. (John Murray: London)

Dixon KW, Roche S, Pate JS (1995) The promotive effect of smoke derived from burnt native vegetation on seed germination of Western Australian plants. Oecologia 101, 185–192.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Dorr LJ , Nicholson DH (2008) ‘Taxonomic literature. A selective guide to botanical publications and collections with dates, commentaries and types. Supplement VII: F–Frer.’ (ARG Gantner: Ruggell, Liechtenstein)

Downey PO (2006) The weed impact to native species (WINS) assessment tool – results from a trial for bridal creeper (Asparagus asparagoides L.) Druce and ground asparagus (Asparagus aethiopicus L.) in southern New South Wales. Plant Protection Quarterly 21, 109–116. open url image1

Forster PI (2003) A taxonomic revision of Croton L. (Euphorbiaceae) in Australia. Austrobaileya 6, 349–436. open url image1

Gaudichaud-Beaupré C (1825) Adriana, nouveau genre de plante dans la famille des Euphorbiacees. Annales des Sciences Naturelles 1(5), 221–223. open url image1

Gaudichaud-Beaupré C (1826) ‘Voyage autour du monde, enterpris par orde du roi, … exécuté sur les corvettes de S. M. l’Uranie et la Physicienne, pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820.’ (Louis de Freycinet: Paris)

Gross CL, Whalen MA (1996) A revision of Adriana (Euphorbiaceae). Australian Systematic Botany 9, 749–771.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Halford DA, Henderson RJF (2002) Studies in Euphorbiaceae A.L.Juss. sens. lat. 3. A revision of Bertya Planch. (Ricinocarpeae Müll. Arg., Bertyinae Müll. Arg.). Austrobaileya 6, 187–245. open url image1

Hosking JR, James TA (1998) Native and exotic flora of the North Western Slopes upstream of the junction of the Peel and Namoi Rivers, New South Wales. Cunninghamia 5, 721–766. open url image1

James TA , Harden G (2000) Euphorbiaceae. In ‘Flora of New South Wales. Vol. 1’. (Ed. GJ Harden) pp. 389–430. (University of NSW Press: Sydney)

Jeanes JA (1999) Adriana. In ‘Flora of Victoria. Vol. 4. Dicotyledons. Cornaceae to Asteraceae’. (Eds NG Walsh, TJ Entwisle) pp. 79–82. (Inkata Press: Melbourne)

Mabberley DJ (1978) Herbaria of Allan Cunningham, Robert Heward and others at the Chelsea Physic Garden, London. Taxon 27, 489–491.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Mackay DA, Whalen MA (1998) Associations between ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and Adriana Gaudich. (Euphorbiaceae) in East Gippsland. Australian Journal of Entomology 37, 335–339.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

McNeill J , Barrie FR , Burdet HM , Demoulin V , Hawksworth DL , Marhold K , Nicolson DH , Prado J , Silva PC , Skog JE , Wiersma JH , Turland NJ (2006) ‘International code of botanical nomenclature (Vienna code) (Regnum Vegetabile Vol. 146).’ (A.R.G.Gantner: Ruggell, Liechtenstein)

Melville R (1966) Contributions to the flora of Australia: VII. Generic delimitation in the Plagianthus complex. Kew Bulletin 20, 511–516.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Moore P (2005) ‘A guide to plants of inland Australia.’ (Reed New Holland: Sydney)

Mueller F (1883) ‘The plants indigenous around Sharks Bay and its vicinity, chiefly from collections of the honourable John Forrest.’ (Richard Pether: Perth)

Orchard AE (1999) A history of systematic botany in Australia. In ‘Flora of Australia. Vol. 1. Introduction’. 2nd edn. pp. 11–103. (Australian Biological Resources Study: Canberra; and CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne)

Planchon JE (1845) Description de deux genres nouveaux de la famille des Euphorbiacées. Hookers London. Le Journal de Botanique 4, 471–474. open url image1

Short J, Turner B (1994) A test of the vegetation mosaic hypothesis: a hypothesis to explain the decline and extinction of Australian mammals. Conservation Biology 8, 439–449.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Takahashi M, Nowicke JW, Webster GL, Orli SS, Yankowski S (2000) Pollen morphology, exine structure, and systematics of Acalyphoideae (Euphorbiaceae), part 3 tribes Epiprineae (Epiprinus, Symphyllia, Adenochlaena, Cleidiocarpon, Koilodepas, Cladogynos, Cephalocrotonopsis, Cephalocroton, Cephalomappa), Adelieae (Adelia, Crotonogynopsis, Enriquebeltrania, Lasiocroton, Leucocroton), Alchorneae (Orfilea, Alchornea, Coelebogyne, Aparisthmium, Bocquillonia, Conceveiba, Gavarretia), Acalypheae pro parte (Ricinus, Adriana, Mercurialis, Leidesia, Dysopsis, Wetria, Cleidion, Sampantaea, Macaranga). Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 110, 1–66.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Vallance TG , Moore DT , Groves EW (2001) ‘Natures investigator: the diary of Robert Brown in Australia, 1801–1805.’ (Australian Biological Resources Study: Canberra)

Whalen MA, Mackay DA (2007) Geographic variation in extra-floral nectaries in the ant-associated plant genus Adriana (Euphorbiaceae) and its relationship to water availability. Australian Journal of Botany 55, 568–575.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Wheeler JR , Rye BL , Koch BL , Wilson AJG (1992) ‘Flora of the Kimberley region.’ (Western Australian Herbarium: Perth)

Wurdack KJ, Hoffmann P, Chase MW (2005) Molecular phylogenetic analysis of uniovulate Euphorbiaceae (Euphorbiaceae sensu stricto) using plastid RBCL and TRNL-F DNA sequences. American Journal of Botany 92, 1397–1420.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1