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Lellingeria

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Order
  
Polypodiales

Subfamily
  
Polypodioideae

Division
  
Pteridophyta

Family
  
Polypodiaceae

Rank
  
Genus

Lellingeria httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Class
  
Polypodiopsida/Pteridopsida (disputed)

Similar
  
Grammitid, Grammitis, Adenophorus, Pecluma, Campyloneurum

Lellingeria is a genus of ferns in the family Polypodiaceae. It is one of the grammitids, a clade within Polypodiaceae that has not been ranked as a subfamily or tribe because the phylogeny of Polypodiaceae is not well understood.

Contents

Approximately 70 species of Lellingeria are known. They are native to tropical areas of Madagascar, Africa, the Americas, and Pacific Islands. None are known in cultivation. Lellingeria was named for the American pteridologist David Lellinger.

Species

The following is a list of those species that were sampled in a study published in 2010. These authors do not recognize some of the species that were included in the 1991 paper in which Lellingeria was established.

Description

Mostly epiphytes. Rhizome radially symmetrical or dorsiventral, with clathrate, usually blackish scales that are attached across their entire base. Petiole absent or much shorter than the lamina. Sterile portion of frond shallowly to deeply pinnately divided. Fertile portion entire to deeply pinnately divided. (A few species with fronds pinnate-pinnatifid). Veins simple, free (not anastomosing). Hydathodes present. Sori round or elliptic, often slightly sunken, without paraphyses.

History

The genus Lellingeria was erected in 1991. At that time, it consisted of 52 species, three newly described, and 49 transferred from the artificial (unnatural) genus Grammitis. In 2004, a phylogenetic study of DNA sequences of two chloroplast genes showed that Lellingeria, as defined in 1991, was polyphyletic. This was confirmed six years later. In 2010, four species were removed from Lellingeria and combined with one species from the defunct genus Xiphopteris to form the new genus Leucotrichum. The remaining species of Lellingeria form a monophyletic genus that is sister to the genus Melpomene.

Taxonomy

When Lellingeria was established in 1991, thirty-five of its species were assigned to four species groups. This infra-generic classification did not hold up, because one of these groups had to be separated as Leucotrichum, and because another two of these groups were not truly distinct, but intermixed. Lellingeria, as currently circumscribed consists of two groups, one with about 20 species, and another with about 50. The smaller group is easily distinguished by morphological characters, but the larger group is more diverse. These two groups have not been formally named as subgenera or sections within Lellingeria.

Lellingeria can be distinguished from Melpomene by the lack of setae, the presence of hairs on the rhizome, the sparse covering of very short hair on the upper surface of the rachis or midrib, and by the sori, which are slightly sunken into the lamina.

When Lellingeria was first described in 1991, it was thought to always have a radially symmetrical rhizome, but it has since been learned that some of the species that belong in Lellingeria have a dorsiventral rhizome. The unequally forked hairs are almost always present, but they are not a synapomorphy for Lellingeria.

References

Lellingeria Wikipedia