Article

A revision of the Solanum elaeagnifolium clade (Elaeagnifolium clade; subgenus Leptostemonum, Solanaceae)

Details

Citation

Knapp S, Sagona E, Carbonell AKZ & Chiarini F (2017) A revision of the Solanum elaeagnifolium clade (Elaeagnifolium clade; subgenus Leptostemonum, Solanaceae). PhytoKeys, (84), pp. 1-104. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.84.12695

Abstract
The Solanum elaeagnifolium clade (Elaeagnifolium clade) contains five species of small, often rhizomatous, shrubs from deserts and dry forests in North and South America. Members of the clade were previously classified in sections Leprophora, Nycterium and Lathyrocarpum, and were not thought to be closely related. The group is sister to the species-rich monophyletic Old World clade of spiny solanums. The species of the group have an amphitropical distribution, with three species in Mexico and the southwestern United States and three species in Argentina. Solanum elaeagnifolium occurs in both North and South America, and is a noxious invasive weed in dry areas worldwide. Members of the group are highly variable morphologically, and this variability has led to much synonymy, particularly in the widespread S.elaeagnifolium. We here review the taxonomic history, morphology, relationships and ecology of these species and provide keys for their identification, descriptions, full synonymy (including designations of lectotypes) and nomenclatural notes. Illustrations, distribution maps and preliminary conservation assessments are provided for all species.

Keywords
amphitropical; conservation status; invasive species; lectotypification; Leptostemonum; New World; preliminary conservation status; Solanaceae; spiny solanums; weeds

Journal
PhytoKeys, Issue 84

StatusPublished
Publication date07/08/2017
Publication date online07/08/2017
Date accepted by journal03/07/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25813
PublisherPensoft Publishers
ISSN1314-2011

People (1)

People

Miss Anna Karen Zapata Carbonell

Miss Anna Karen Zapata Carbonell

PhD Researcher, Biological and Environmental Sciences