Carpodetus

Carpodetus is a genus of flowering plants in the Rousseaceae family. It was formerly considered to lie within the Escalloniaceae. Its species occur in New Guinea, New Zealand, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.[1] The genus is characterised by small trees with alternate, evergreen leaves, bearing small white flowers with few stamens.[2]

Carpodetus
Carpodetus serratus in New Zealand
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Rousseaceae
Subfamily: Carpodetoideae
Genus: Carpodetus
J.R.Forst. & G.Forst.
Species

See text

Species

Described species include:[3]

  • Carpodetus amplus Reeder
  • Carpodetus arboreus (Lauterb. & K.Schum.) Schltr.
  • Carpodetus archboldianus Reeder
  • Carpodetus denticulatus (Ridl.) Reeder
  • Carpodetus flexuosus (Ridl.) Reeder
  • Carpodetus fuscus Reeder
  • Carpodetus grandiflorus Schltr.
  • Carpodetus major Schltr.
  • Carpodetus montanus (Ridl.) Reeder
  • Carpodetus pullei Schltr.
  • Carpodetus serratus J.R.Forst. & G.Forst. New Zealand

Taxonomy

Carpodetus and its type species C. serratus were first described by father and son Forster in 1773 and placed in the Saxifragaceae. In 1934 it was assigned to the newly created Escalloniaceae by Hutchinson in his major revision of the dicotyledon families.[4] In the APG III system, Carpodetus has been referred to the Rousseaceae.

Phylogeny

Carpodetus is the sister to the clade consisting of Abrophyllum and Cuttsia. Roussea is sister to the rest of the family and is geographically most distanced from the other genera. Most related to this family are the Campanulaceae. This results in the following phylogenetic tree.[5]

order Asterales

family Campanulaceae  cosmopolitan)

family Rousseaceae
subfamily Rousseoideae

Roussea (Mauritius)

subfamily Carpodetoideae
(eastern Australia)

Abrophyllum

Cuttsia

Carpodetus (New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Zealand)

other Asterales families

Etymology

Carpodetus is derived from the Greek words καρπός (karpos) (fruit) and detus (bound together), a reference that the seeds are bound together in clusters in the berry.[6]

References

  1. Pillon, Y., H. C. F. Hopkins, L. Barrabe, and E. A. Stacy (2014). A New Record for Carpodetus (Rousseaceae) in Vanuatu. New Zealand Journal of Botany 52: 449–52.
  2. Praglowski, Joseph; Grafström, Elizabeth (1985). "The genus Carpodetus (Escalloniaceae): a pollenmorphological enigma". Grana. 24: 11–21. doi:10.1080/00173138509427419.
  3. "Carpodetus". The Plant List: A working list of all plant species. The Plant List. 2010. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  4. Brook, J.P. (1951). "Vegetative Anatomy of Carpodetus serratus Forst" (PDF). Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand. 79 (2): 276–285.
  5. Michael Heads (2013). Biogeography of Australasia: A Molecular Analysis. Cambridge University Press.
  6. Marie Taylor (2002). Meanings and origins of botanical names of New Zealand plants. Auckland Botanical Society. cited on "Carpodetus serratus". Alter-Natives Nursery & Landscaping. Retrieved 2016-03-15.


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