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This is a continuously updated archive of the Aroid-L mailing list in a forum format - not an actual Forum. If you want to post, you will still need to register for the Aroid-L mailing list and send your postings by e-mail for moderation in the normal way.
Re: [Aroid-l] Fenestratarum culum P.C.Boyce & S.Y.Wong
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From: Jason Hernandez <jason.hernandez74 at yahoo.com>
on 2015.05.16 at 05:00:05(23354)
Thank you, Tom! That does look right; this image of Dicranopygium yacu-sisa (there is no "h" in it) looks very much like what I saw in Ecuador. (Not to say mine was the same species, but the genus seems right.)
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:14880-Dicranopygium_yacu-sisa-Tabaro.jpg
Jason Hernandez
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Naturalist-at-Large
Date: Thu, 14 May 2015 22:11:53 +0000 From: Tom Croat Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Fenestratarum culum P.C.Boyce & S.Y.Wong To: 'Discussion of aroids' Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear
Jason: Actually there appear to be several species that at rheophytes.
I have always called them Dichranopygium but I could be wrong.
Tom
From: aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com [mailto:aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Jason Hernandez Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2015 11:31 PM To: aroid-l@www.gizmoworks.com Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Fenestratarum culum P.C.Boyce & S.Y.Wong
Speaking of Rheophytes: I
have not yet had the opportunity to look up that key to the Cyclanthaceae (thank you for providing the citation), but one of the reasons I asked was because I remember seeing a rheophytic cyclanth in Ecuador, but was not able to determine, from online sources, what genus it could be. Anyone familiar with this? It was on the Pacific slope, about 10-12 cm in height when full grown, white inflorescences, and grew
over emersed rocks with roots trailing in the water.
Jason Hernandez Naturalist-at-Large
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 11:10:22 +0800 From: Peter Boyce Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Fenestratarum culum P.C.Boyce & S.Y.Wong To: Discussion of aroids Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hi Cory,
Streamlined leaf blades are widely associated rheophytism and with aquatic plants - indeed before the term 'rheophytism' was coined by van Steenis, Ridley, who termed it ?stenophylly?, mentioned the ecological nice and its adaptations in "On the Flora of the Eastern Coast of the Malay Peninsula - [Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 2nd series, Botany 3(10), 267-408].
By the way, the "wider" leaf blade in the image is an undescribed *Aridarum*, also a rheophyte, and these blades still classify as narrow.
This is a nice paper dealing with morphological adaptations associated with rheophytism:
http://www.aroid.org/gallery/wong/Rheophytism%20in%20Bornean%20Schismatoglottideae%20-%20%5BSystematic%20Botany%2038%281%29%2032-45%5D%20-%20Wong%202013.pdf
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