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

Re-evaluating species limits in Uncinia angustifolia, U. caespitosa s.str., U. rupestris, U. viridis and U. zotovii (Cyperaceae)

C. A. Lehnebach
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa, Cable Street, PO Box 467, Wellington, New Zealand. Email: CarlosL@tepapa.govt.nz

Australian Systematic Botany 24(6) 405-420 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB11014
Submitted: 11 March 2011  Accepted: 6 October 2011   Published: 21 December 2011

Abstract

Morphology of New Zealand hook sedges Uncinia angustifolia Hamlin, U. rupestris Raoul and U. zotovii Hamlin overlaps considerably, making species identification difficult. All three species have a complicated taxonomic history. U. angustifolia has been considered a variety of U. rupestris, which, in turn, has been considered a variety of U. caespitosa Boot or included in two other species. As for U. zotovii, this was originally part of U. caespitosa along with the grassland species U. viridis (C.B.Clarke) Edgar. The present study re-examines historical and recently collected material, and re-evaluates species limits for these five species using multivariate statistic analyses of morphological characters. Results confirm the circumscription of U. caespitosa s.str. and the segregation of U. viridis and U. zotovii from U. caespitosa s.lat., but they also indicate that current species descriptions are inaccurate and based on material of mixed identity. Results also suggest that U. angustifolia, U. rupestris and U. zotovii should be considered as three different species. U. viridis and U. rupestris are conspecific; the latter name has priority and should be maintained. An identification key, revised descriptions, new synonymy and distribution maps for the species recognised here are also presented.

Additional keywords: cluster analysis, Cyperaceae, discriminant function analysis, New Zealand flora, sedges, Uncinia, U. angustifolia, U. caespitosa, U. rupestris, U. zotovii, U. viridis.


References

Beuzenberg EJ (1970) Contributions to a chromosome atlas of the New Zealand flora-14 Uncinia (Cyperaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany 8, 260–263.

Callaghan TV (1984) Growth and translocation in a clonal southern hemisphere sedge, Uncinia meridensis. Journal of Ecology 72, 529–546.
Growth and translocation in a clonal southern hemisphere sedge, Uncinia meridensis.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Casgrain P, Legendre P (2001) ‘The R package for multivariate and spatial analysis, Version 4.0. User’s Manual.’ (University of Montreal: Montreal)

Clarke CB (1883) On Hemicarex Benth. and its allies. Journal of the Linnean Society. Botany 20, 374–403.
On Hemicarex Benth. and its allies.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Dahlgren RMT, Clifford HT, Yeo PF (1985) ‘The families of the monocotyledons: structure, evolutions and taxonomy.’ (Springer-Verlag: Berlin)

de Lange PJ, Rolfe JR (2010) ‘New Zealand indigenous vascular plant checklist.’ (New Zealand Plant Conservation Network: Wellington)

Dytham C (2003) ‘Choosing and using statistics: a biologist’s guide.’ (Blackwell Publishing: Malden, MA)

Edgar E (1970) Cyperaceae. In ‘Flora of New Zealand. Vol. II. Indigenous Tracheophyta. Monocotyledones except Gramineae’. (Eds L Moore, E Edgar) pp. 167–285. (Government Printer: Wellington)

Goetghebeur P (1998) Cyperaceae. In ‘The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. IV’. (Ed. K Kubitzki) pp. 141–189. (Springer-Verlag: Berlin)

Hamlin BG (1958) A new classification of Uncinia. Records of the Dominion Museum 3, 85–88.

Hamlin BG (1959) A revision of the genus Uncinia (Cyperaceae–Caricoideae) in New Zealand. Dominion Museum Bulletin 19, 1–106.

Hooker JD (1853) ‘Flora of Novae-Zelandiae.’ (Reeve & Co: London)

Hooker JD (1867) ‘Handbook of the New Zealand Flora.’ (Reeve & Co: London)

Johansen DA (1940). ‘Plant Microtechniques.’ (Book Company, Inc. McGraw-Hill: New York)

Joly S, Bruneau A (2007) Delimiting species boundaries in Rosa sect. Cinnamomeae (Rosaceae) in eastern North America. Systematic Botany 32, 819–836.
Delimiting species boundaries in Rosa sect. Cinnamomeae (Rosaceae) in eastern North America.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Kükenthal G (1909) Cyperaceae–Caricoidea. In ‘Das Pflanzenreich. Heft 38’. (Ed. A Engler) pp. 1–824 (Wilhelm Engelmann: Leipzig)

Lehnebach CA (2010) Range extension of the subantarctic species Uncinia hookeri Boott (Cyperaceae) to Stewart Island. New Zealand Botanical Society Newsletter 99, 11–12.

Nooteboom HP (1978) A taxonomic revision of the Malesian and Australian species of Uncinia (Cyperaceae). Blumea 24, 511–520.

Rohlf FJ (2000) ‘NTSYSpc: numerical taxonomy and multivariate analysis system, version 2.2.’ (Applied Biostatistics Inc.: New York)

Romesburg HC (2004) ‘Cluster analysis for researchers.’ (Lulu Press, Inc.: Morrisville, NC)

Starr JR (2001) Systematics of Uncinia Pers. (Cyperaceae). PhD Dissertation, Oxford University, UK.

Starr JR, Ford BA (2009) Phylogeny and evolution in Cariceae (Cyperaceae): current knowledge and future directions. Botanical Review 75, 110–137.
Phylogeny and evolution in Cariceae (Cyperaceae): current knowledge and future directions.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Starr JR, Harris SA, Simpson DA (2003) Potential of the 5′ and 3′ ends of the intergenic spacer (IGS) of rDNA in the Cyperaceae: new sequences for lower-level phylogenies in sedges with an example from Uncinia Pers. International Journal of Plant Sciences 164, 213–227.
Potential of the 5′ and 3′ ends of the intergenic spacer (IGS) of rDNA in the Cyperaceae: new sequences for lower-level phylogenies in sedges with an example from Uncinia Pers.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:CAS:528:DC%2BD3sXjvVSjsrY%3D&md5=151810ea4eee67279818df71c7961ef8CAS |

Starr JR, Harris SA, Simpson DA (2008) Phylogeny of the unispicate taxa in Cyperaceae tribe Cariceae II: the limits of Uncinia. Monographs in Systematic Botany Missouri Botanical Garden 108, 243–267.

Wheeler GA (2005) A new species of Uncinia (Cyperaceae) from the New World and the first report of U. chilensis from Argentina. Darwiniana 43, 268–276.

Wheeler GA, Goetghebeur P (1997) The Uncinia (Cyperaceae) of Ecuador. Aliso 15, 7–25.

Zomlefer W (1994). ‘Guide to flowering plant families.’ (The University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill and London)