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Supporting information for: The correct name for an Aquilegia (Ranunculaceae) hybrid of the parentage Aquilegia flavescens × A. formosa Cronk, Quentin
Description
<b>Abstract</b><br/>
<span lang="EN-GB"><em>Aquilegia</em> </span><span lang="EN-GB">x</span><span lang="EN-GB"> <em>miniana</em></span><span lang="EN-GB"> (J.F.Macbr. & Payson) Cronk, hybr. & stat. nov. is the correct name for the hybrid <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>flavescens</em> S.Watson x <em>A</em>. <em>formosa</em> Fisch. ex DC. var. <em>formosa</em>. In 1916, Payson and Macbride, while exploring the mountains of Idaho, found populations of <em>Aquilegia</em> that were pink in flower colour and appeared intermediate between the yellow-flowered <em>A</em>. <em>flavescens</em> and red-flowered <em>A. formosa</em>. They named these plants <em>A. flavescens</em> var. <em>miniana</em> J.F.Macbr. & Payson. There has been uncertainty over whether their type collections (in GH, RM, MO, US, E, CM, CAS, NY) do indeed represent hybrids or pink-flowered morphs of <em>A. flavescens</em>. Using a Wells diagram, the holotype (in the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University) is shown to be intermediate, allowing its identification as a clear hybrid. However, some of the isotype material is indistinguishable from <em>A. flavescens</em>. The holotype matches material from British Columbia that has been determined as being of hybrid origin using molecular and morphological data. <em>A. flavescens</em> var. <em>miniana</em> J.F.Macbr. & Payson is, therefore, an available name for the hybrid, which is here raised to the status of hybrid binomial.</span></p>; <b>Methods</b><br />
A full description of the collection of the dataset is given in previous publications. The morphometric data is taken from herbarium specimens and is previously generated and described by Groh et al. (2019) and Groh and Cronk (2020)</p>
References</p>
Ref: Groh JS, Percy DM, Björk CR, Cronk QC (2019) On the origin of orphan hybrids between <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>formosa</em> and <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>flavescens</em>. AoB Plants 11(1): ply071. </p>
Groh JS, Cronk QCB (2020) Mosaic hybrid zone structure in two species of columbine (<em>Aquilegia</em>). Botany 98 (8): 459–467 doi: 10.1139/cjb-2020-001</p>
---</p>
Analysis: the LDA analysis was conducted in PAST</p>
The Wells diagram was made using Excel (Microsoft Excel for Mac, version 16.63.1)</p>
Item Metadata
Title |
Supporting information for: The correct name for an Aquilegia (Ranunculaceae) hybrid of the parentage Aquilegia flavescens × A. formosa
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Creator | |
Date Issued |
2023-02-23
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Description |
<b>Abstract</b><br/>
<span lang="EN-GB"><em>Aquilegia</em> </span><span lang="EN-GB">x</span><span lang="EN-GB"> <em>miniana</em></span><span lang="EN-GB"> (J.F.Macbr. & Payson) Cronk, hybr. & stat. nov. is the correct name for the hybrid <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>flavescens</em> S.Watson x <em>A</em>. <em>formosa</em> Fisch. ex DC. var. <em>formosa</em>. In 1916, Payson and Macbride, while exploring the mountains of Idaho, found populations of <em>Aquilegia</em> that were pink in flower colour and appeared intermediate between the yellow-flowered <em>A</em>. <em>flavescens</em> and red-flowered <em>A. formosa</em>. They named these plants <em>A. flavescens</em> var. <em>miniana</em> J.F.Macbr. & Payson. There has been uncertainty over whether their type collections (in GH, RM, MO, US, E, CM, CAS, NY) do indeed represent hybrids or pink-flowered morphs of <em>A. flavescens</em>. Using a Wells diagram, the holotype (in the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University) is shown to be intermediate, allowing its identification as a clear hybrid. However, some of the isotype material is indistinguishable from <em>A. flavescens</em>. The holotype matches material from British Columbia that has been determined as being of hybrid origin using molecular and morphological data. <em>A. flavescens</em> var. <em>miniana</em> J.F.Macbr. & Payson is, therefore, an available name for the hybrid, which is here raised to the status of hybrid binomial.</span></p>; <b>Methods</b><br /> A full description of the collection of the dataset is given in previous publications. The morphometric data is taken from herbarium specimens and is previously generated and described by Groh et al. (2019) and Groh and Cronk (2020)</p> References</p> Ref: Groh JS, Percy DM, Björk CR, Cronk QC (2019) On the origin of orphan hybrids between <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>formosa</em> and <em>Aquilegia</em> <em>flavescens</em>. AoB Plants 11(1): ply071. </p> Groh JS, Cronk QCB (2020) Mosaic hybrid zone structure in two species of columbine (<em>Aquilegia</em>). Botany 98 (8): 459–467 doi: 10.1139/cjb-2020-001</p> ---</p> Analysis: the LDA analysis was conducted in PAST</p> The Wells diagram was made using Excel (Microsoft Excel for Mac, version 16.63.1)</p> |
Subject | |
Type | |
Notes |
Dryad version number: 3</p> Version status: submitted</p> Dryad curation status: Published</p> Sharing link: https://datadryad.org/stash/share/VpDqW3Q5RLX-GrTf4-Tuti2bSbzPrrABdLMK0y6l12c</p> Storage size: 65590</p> Visibility: public</p> |
Date Available |
2023-02-17
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Provider |
University of British Columbia Library
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License |
CC0 1.0
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0426597
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URI | |
Publisher DOI | |
Grant Funding Agency |
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
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Aggregated Source Repository |
Dataverse
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Licence
CC0 1.0