Regional Studies with
Araceae
Asia
Among the earliest who
described and often illustrated Araceae in Asia were the Dutchmen,
H. A. van Rheede tot Drakestein (1688, 1692), who did massive
studies of the Malabar coast of India; P. Hermann (1689), who
produced the Paradisus Batavus; and G. E. Rumphius (1747),
who studied the flora of the island of Amboina [one of the Mollucas
Islands, now Maluku in Indonesia]. Another Dutch botanist, N.
L. Burmann (1768), published Araceae in his Flora Indica,
and C. L. Blume dealt extensively with Malesian Araceae (Blume,
1836-1837). Another early botanist who described and illustrated
Araceae in Malesia was the Italian, Odoardo Beccari (Beccari,
1879, 1882, 1889; Engler, 1879b).
Many of the species in
Asia were described by regional workers doing floristic studies
on particular regions. Except for Japan the earliest workers with
aroids in Asia were generally not natives but were primarily botanists
from colonial powers working in their own sphere of influence.
In the Dutch East Indies it was primarily the Dutch. Other botanists
who were describing Araceae from the Dutch East Indies included
the Britian, R. Brown (1810), the German, J. C. Hasskarl (Hasskarl,
1842), and Dutch botanists, J. E. Teijsmann (Teijsmann & Binnendijk,
1862), F. A. W. Miquel (Miquel, 1855-1856, 1856, 1860, 1864, 1867),
Hans Hallier (1898, 1901, 1915), C. R. W. K. van Alderwerelt van
Rosenburgh, thankfully abbreviated "Alderw." (Alderwerelt
van Rosenburgh, 1920, 1922a, 1922b), and C. A. Backer (Backer,
1913a, 1913b, 1913c, 1914, 1920, 1928).
In Indochina, it was
a Portuguese naturalist Joao Loureiro who published his Flora
Cochinchinensis (1790) and the Frenchman, F. R. Gagnepain,
who wrote the Araceae treatment for Lecomte's "Flore général
de l'Indochine" (Gagnepain, 1942a) and other works describing
new genera and species (Gagnepain, 1941a-c).
In the Malay Peninsula
it was H. N. Ridley, Director of the Singapore Botanical Garden
from 1888 to 1912 (Ridley, 1908, 1916, 1922, 1938), and C. X.
Furtado (Furtado, 1930, 1935, 1939, 1941, 1958, 1964a, 1964b),
also from Singapore who described Araceae in the area.
In the Philippines it
was the Spaniard, F. M. Blanco (1837) and Americans, E. D. Merrill
(1912, 1915, 1916a, 1916b, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1921b, 1923, 1924,
1925, 1926, 1932, 1935b, 1937, 1948, 1949, 1952) and A. D. E.
Elmer (1919, 1938, 1939). Merrill also described species from
Guam (Merrill, 1914), Borneo (Merrill, 1921a, 1922a, 1929); Sarawak
(Merrill, 1922b, 1928, 1934a) and Hainan in China (Merrill, 1927,
1930a, 1930b; Merrill & Metcalf, 1945), Sumatra (Merrill,
1933) and Vietnam (Merrill, 1942).
In Malesia, much of the
recent work with the flora was organized by C. G. G. J. van Steenis
who began the Flora Malesiana project as a resident in
Asia for much of his lifetime. Most of his studies were carried
out on Java (van Steenis, 1948a, 1948c, 1949, 1965a, 1965b, 1972,
1975). Despite the fact that some of the earlier European workers,
including Ridley and van Steenis, spent considerable portions
of their lives in Asia the majority of the Asian species were
described in the European centers of botany, in Paris, Brussels,
Leiden, Berlin, and Kew.
At Kew the role of describing
Araceae was first played by William J. Hooker and his son Joseph
D. Hooker (J. Hooker, 1883, 1904), the first two directors, and
later by N. E. Brown (Brown, 1901) and to a lesser extent by M.
T. Masters (1873, 1876, 1878, 1884, 1893a, 1893b, 1898). The elder
Hooker played only a minor role dealing directly with Araceae
but did publish a number of short papers in Curtis's Botanical
Magazine. These dealt with Alocasia (W. Hooker, 1860b,
1863), Amorphophallus (W. Hooker, 1860a), Arum (W.
Hooker, 1828), and Pistia (W. Hooker, 1851). J. D. Hooker
dealt more extensively with Araceae. He was responsible for the
treatment of the Araceae in Bentham & Hooker's Genera Plantarum
(J. Hooker, 1883c), a treatment largely based on that of Schott.
He also described many species of Araceae as well as the genus
Gonatopus. Many of his new species were described in his
Flora of British India (J. Hooker, 1893). J. D. Hooker
also treated many species in great detail in Curtis's Botanical
Magazine, including Aglaonema (J. Hooker, 1865b), Alocasia
(J. Hooker, 1865a, 1896), Amorphophallus (J. Hooker, 1888,
1891a, 1893b), Arisaema (J. Hooker, 1890a, 1890b, 1891b),
Colocasia (J. Hooker, 1894), Cryptocoryne (J. Hooker,
1900), Culcasia (J. Hooker, 1869 [described as Aglaonema]),
Hapaline (J. Hooker, 1893a), Lysichiton (J. Hooker,
1904), Piptospatha (J. Hooker, 1881b, 1895), Schismatoglottis
(J. Hooker, 1881a), and Typhonium (J. Hooker, 1875).
Many other floristic
studies, both regional and general, throughout many years have
contributed to the generally high levels of knowledge about Asian
plants. Owing to the early English involvement, many of the early
floristic studies were made on the Indian subcontinent, including
those in W. Roxburgh's Flora Indica (Roxburgh, 1820b, 1832)
and in Hortus Bengalensis (Roxburgh, 1814) which cataloged
the holdings of the East India Company's living collection in
Calcutta. Others early works include those by the German A. W.
Roth (1821) and the Dane N. Wallich (1830, 1831). Still other
general works on India include those by Burkill (1925), Suresh
et al. (1983) and Zhongguo (1994). Works dealing with specific
parts of India include that for the Coromandel Coast [SE India]
(Roxburgh, 1820a); Assam, South India (Rao & Verma, 1968,
1976; Barnes & Fischer, 1936a); the Calicut area (western
sectors of Calicut and Malappuram Districts) (Manilal & Sivarajan,
1982); the Presidency of Madras (Fischer, 1931); the Howrah District
(Bennet, 1979); the Presidency of Bombay (Cooke, 1906; Blatter
& McCann, 1931); Nainital in Uttar Pradesh (Gupta, 1968),
the Bashahr Himalayas (Nair, 1977); Manipur State [NE India] (H.
Singh, 1993), the Chikihagular District, Karnataka, India (Bhat,
1993; Yoganarasimhan et al., 1981); as well as of Majuli
(Islam, 1990); Punjab (Sharma, 1990), Andaman and Nicobar Islands
(Kurz, 1893; Srivastava & Kumar, 1993) and Barren Island (Prain,
1893). C. Fischer published a series of papers during the 1930s
dealing with Indian Araceae (Fischer, 1931, 1933, 1934, 1936a,
1936b, 1939) and F. Baius (1936) wrote on the medicinal and poisonous
aroids of India. New species of Arisaema (Rao & Srivastava,
1991; Yadav et al. 1993) have been recently described from
India (see also Sivadasan below).
Studies of Araceae in
non-Indian areas on the Indian subcontinent include those in West
Pakistan (Nasir, 1978); Bangladesh (Khan & Halim, 1987); Bhutan
(Noltie, 1994); Nepal (Wallich, 1824); Hara, 1978); Himalayas
(Polunin & Stainton, 1984) and Eastern Himalaya (Hara, 1966).
Araceae studies in areas adjacent to India include those in Ceylon
(Thwaites, 1864; Trimen, 1898; Alston, 1931) and Burma (Kurz,
1873).
Elsewhere in Southeast
Asia studies were made in Thailand (Ridley, 1911a; Craib, 1912,
1913; Hu, 1968; Suvatti, 1978) and the Malay Peninsula including
West Malesia (Jack, 1820; Burkill & Holttum, 1923; Ridley,
1885, 1893, 1902, 1904, 1907a, 1907b, 1909, 1910; 1911a, 1911b,
1912, 1925a; Rendle, 1924-1925; Henderson, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1939,
1954; Merrill, 1952; Chin, 1982; van Steenis-Kruseman, 1963, 1966,
1975); Malaya [Perak] (Hemsley, 1887); Malaya (Johore) & Singapore
(Corner, 1978); [Pahang, Gunung Ulu Kali] (Stone, 1981); Singapore
(Ridley, 1900). Studies in Indochina were those by Gagnepain (1942a)
and by Merrill (1935a); others were in Vietnam (Pham Hoàng
Hô, 1960; Thin, 1997). Other studies were made in Borneo
(Rendle, 1901; Ridley, 1905, 1913, 1914; Gibbs, 1914; Masamune,
1942); Sabah (Stapf, 1894); and Sarawak and Brunei (Anderson,
1963; Wong, 1990).
Additional works from
the Dutch East Indies and vicinity included works by the following:
de Vriese (1851); Miquel (1855-1856, 1956a, 1956b, 1860, 1864,
1867); Zollinger (1845, 1854, 1857); Soepadmo (1977); van Steenis
(1949); other areas mostly Indonesia (Java, Sumatra, Celebes,
Borneo, New Guinea and rarely the Philippines) by Alderwerelt
van Rosenburgh (1920, 1922a, 1922b); Java (Thunberg, 1825; Hasskarl,
1842a, 1842b, 1844, 1848; Koorders, 1901a, 1901b, 1911, 1918a,
1918b, 1923; Backer, 1913a-c, 1914, 1920, 1928; Backer & Bakhuizen,
1968; Backer et al., 1950; Bakhuizen v.d. Brink, 1957,
1963); Sumatra (Hotta, 1984; Ridley, 1917, 1923, 1925a, 1925b);
Celebes (Koorders, 1898, 1922b; Kawakami, 1912); Tjibodas [Indonesia]
(Koorders, 1922); Amboina [Indonesia] (Rumphius, 1747, 1750);
Bangka (Kurz, 1864); Talaud Islands [Indonesia] (Holthuis &
Lam, 1942) and Mentawi Islands [Indonesia] (Ridley, 1926), and
finally Christmas Island [a British island south and west end
of Java] (Rendle, 1900; Ridley, 1906).
Works in New Guinea included:
(Ridley, 1886; Schumann & Hollrung, 1889; Schumann & Lauterbach,
1905; Engler, 1907, 1911; Engler & Krause, 1911; Rechinger,
1913; Ridley, 1916; Rendle, 1923; Borrell, 1989); Papua New Guinea
(Gilli, 1980; Lane-Poole, 1925; Mueller, 1876b; Schumann, 1887;
Warburg, 1891; White, 1922; White & Francis, 1927); Dutch
New Guinea (Gibbs, 1917); Bismarck Archipelago [Papua New Guinea]
(Peekel, 1984) including New Ireland (Lauterbach, 1911) and New
Britain (Schumann, 1898), and Kairiru Island [New Guinea] (Borrell,
1989).
In the Philippines works
included are those by: Usteri (1905); Brown (1919); Quisumbing
& Merrill (1928); Pancho (1959); and Hatusima (1966). [See
also papers by E. D. Merrill and A. Elmer cited above].
In northern Asia studies
were made in China (Li et al., 1977); southwestern China
(Handel-Mazzetti, 1936; Wu & Li, 1979); Hainan Province (Chun
et al., 1977), the Dulongjian region (Li, 1993b); Taiwan
(Hayata, 1915, 1916, 1919, 1920; Liu & Chen, 1984; Liu &
Huang, 1963, 1977; Huang, 1960, 1979, 1982; Masamune, 1943); and
Korea (Lee, 1976; Lee, 1985). [See also the contributions by Merrill
elsewhere.] In Japan most species of Araceae were described by
T. Makino (1892, 1893, 1901a, 1901b, 1910a, 1910b, 1911, 1913,
1918a, 1918b, 1928, 1931, 1932, 1960, 1961) and T. Nakai (1917,
1918, 1928, 1929, 1931, 1934, 1935a-d, 1937a, 1937b, 1938, 1939a-c,
1940a-d, 1943). Other works from Japan included those by M. Honda
(1939), S. Kitamura et al. (1977); G. Koidzumi (1928),
T. Koyama (1965), J. Ohwi (1953, 1965), and J. Ohashi (1982).
Another dealt with Okinawa and the southern Ryukyu Islands (Walker
et al., 1976).
Floristic works and miscellaneous
papers on Araceae in Australia include: general areas (Brown,
1810; Mueller, 1858, 1874, 1876a, Bentham, 1878; Maiden, 1889,
1905; Domin, 1911, 1915; Green et al., 1994; Jones et
al., 1977; Pate & Dixon, 1982; Elliot & Jones, 1982,
1984, 1990; Morley, 1983; Jones et al., 1977; Jones &
Gray, 1988, Briggs & Leigh, 1988; Hnatiuk, 1990; Hay, 1989,
1992a, 1993a, 1993b, 1995); Queensland (Bailey, 1883, 1891, 1897,
1902, 1913, 1914; Orsino & Dameri, 1992; Williams, 1979);
New South Wales (Moore & Betchie, 1893; Dixon, 1908; Evans,
1961, 1962; Hay, 1993c), Lord Howe Island (Oliver, 1916), Sydney
region of New South Wales (Beadle et al., 1963, 1982; Beadle,
1987); Carolin & Tindale, (1993); Victoria (Ewart, 1930; Willis,
1962); Central Australia (Jessop, 1981); South Australia (Black,
1909, 1943, 1978, 1986; Eichler, 1965; Jessop, 1986); Western
Australia (Gardner, 1931); Kimberley region [Western Australia]
(Rye, 1992); Northern Territory (Ewart & Davies, 1917; Blake,
1954; Lazarides et al., 1988); Cocos Islands [north of
Australia] (Prain, 1891); and Norfolk Island (Maiden, 1903).
The region of Oceania,
though not rich in Araceae, has been well studied from the standpoint
of aroid floristics. Among the earliest studies made in the region
was that by J. G. A. Forster (1786) who made a floristic study
of the so called Australian Islands (Southern Islands, i.e. New
Zealand, New Caledonia, and many of the smaller Oceanic islands.
Still another early study was that by B. C. Seemann (1868, 1869a,
1869b) on Fiji. Other studies in the Oceanic region included that
on the Samoan Islands (Christophersen, 1935; Reinecke, 1898);
Rarotonga [Cook Islands] (Wilder, 1931); the southeastern Moluccas
(Hemsley, 1885b); Ryukyu Islands (Hatusima, 1962); Micronesian
Islands (Koidzumi, 1916; Hosokawa, 1937; Hatusima, 1939; Kanehira,
1933, 1935); Makatea (Wilder, 1934); Guam (Safford, 1905; Stone,
1964); Tonga Islands (Hemsley, 1893; Yuncker, 1959; Hotta, 1963a;
Whistler, 1991); Christmas Island (Rendle, 1900; Ridley, 1906);
Niue [New Zealand] (Yuncker, 1943; Sykes, 1970); Kermadec [New
Zealand] (Sykes, 1977; Parham, 1972), Ponape [Caroline Islands]
(Glassman, 1952), New Hebrides (Guillaumin, 1932, 1938), and New
Caledonia (Guillaumin, 1937, 1943, 1947, 1948, 1962; Rendle, 1921).
In contrast to much of
Asia the Japanese have largely studied their own flora. Local
Japanese botanists who made great contributions to the understanding
of the Araceae include Tomitaro Makino (1862-1957) and Takenoshin
Nakai (1882-1952) from the University of Tokyo and Director of
the National Science Museum. Nakai described most species, mostly
species of Arisaema and he also published a new system
of classification (Nakai, 1943) which excluded a few long-standing
genera of Araceae, incorporating them into their own families,
Pistiaceae, Cryptocorynaceae, and Acoraceae (only the latter is
still excluded from the Araceae). Nakai's students, Fumio Maekawa
and Hiroshi Hara, were also very much interested in Araceae, especially
Arisaema. Maekawa (1924, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1937) described
new species from Japan. Hara described new species of Arisaema
(Hara, 1935a, 1935b, 1961, 1965; Hara & Ohashi, 1973) and
made critical revisions for the Flora of the Eastern Himalaya
(Hara, 1966, 1971a). Later he proposed an infrageneric system
of classification for the genus Arisaema (Hara, 1971b),
a system since adopted by Wu Cheng Yih and Li Heng (1979) and
recently revised by Jin Murata (1984). A later paper described
additional species from Himalaya (Hara, 1973).
Another Japanese botanist,
Shiro Kitamura, working about the same time as Hara, published
several significant papers on Araceae of Japan (Kitamura, 1941,
1949; and compiled Coloured Illustrations of Herbaceous Plants
of Japan (Kitamura et al., 1977) that contains line
drawings and paintings of Araceae.
Africa
Most floristic projects
on the continent were initiated by the colonial powers, including
Belgium and Germany, and especially Britian and France. In general,
the Araceae treatments were completed by botanists who were competent
researchers but not formally trained aroid specialists. One such
botanist was F. N. Hepper, who contributed the Araceae treatment
for the Flora of West Tropical Africa (Hepper, 1968a-c).
Hepper's treatment of the Araceae for that flora [a revision of
an earlier flora by the same name (Hutchinson & Dalziel, 1936)]
is a remarkably good one. His understanding of the genus Culcasia
(Hepper, 1965, 1967), probably the most complex genus in Africa,
was particularly good. An exception to the rule that most flora
writers were non-aroid specialists might be N. E. Brown who prepared
the Araceae treatment for the Flora of Tropical Africa
(Brown, 1901). Other publications that contributed to the generally
high level of knowledge about African flora include some generic
studies for the entire continent (Thonner, 1915), South Africa
(Dyer, 1976), and Central Africa (Bamps, 1982; Malaisse &
Bamps, 1993). Other publications include general floristic studies
in the Mascarene Islands (Mayo, 1983b), German East Africa (or
Tanganyika and now mostly Tanzania) (Mildbraed, 1936; Peter, 1929),
Belgian Congo (Katanga) [until recently Zaire and now Congo] (Wildeman,
1921, 1922), Senegal (Lykke, 1994), as well as Egypt and western
Asia (Boisser, 1884) and Ghana (Beath, 1993). Papers focusing
mainly on African species include those on Zantedeschia
(Letty, 1973; Perry, 1989), Zamioculcas (Obermeyer &
Strey, 1969); Stylochaeton (Malaisse & Bamps, 1994);
Remusatia (Robyns, 1931), and Gonatopus (Obermeyer
1977; Obermeyer & Bogner, 1979). A recent paper ennumerates
species of Araceae in 30 genera (including introduced genera)
from tropical West Africa (Lebrun & Stork, 1995). [See also
Ntépe-Nyame and Knecht, below.]
Madagascar was a special
interest of Samuel Buchet (Bogner, 1980g), a French botanist who
described Arisaema and Pothos species from Asia
(Buchet, 1911a, 1911b) and studied the Arophyteae (Buchet, 1939a,
1942), the dominant element of the Malagasy flora. Josef Bogner
(see below) has had the greatest impact on the study of Araceae
in Madagascar. The Seychelles near Madagascar also have a flora
and the island is important as having the endemic genus Protarum
(Robertson, 1989).
America
In contrast to Africa
and Asia where there were strong botanical interests within the
colonial powers, the neotropics had little early exploration and
very few floristic projects. Neither Spain nor Portugal made much
headway towards the production of floras nor did they even launch
major collecting programs. Exceptions were the expeditions of
Sesse & Moçino, Ruiz & Pavon, and Triana &
Planchon, but they collected few specimens of Araceae.
Regardless of their origin,
most 18th and 19th Century botanists collected and described relatively
few Araceae, though some are worthy of mention. E. F. Poeppig
collected and described a number of important species of Araceae
from Peru and Brazil (Poeppig, 1845). Also important was A. F.
M. Glaziou and H. W. Schott, both working in Brazil. While Glaziou
collected many species described by Schott and others he did not
publish any species himself. F. A. W. Miquel collected important
Araceae in the Guianas as did R. Spruce in the Amazon basin (though
the latter did not publish any new species). Aside from Luis Sodiro
who collected Araceae in Ecuador [see Sodiro above] most of the
other important collectors of Araceae in the 19th Century did
not publish on Araceae. These included F. Lehmann, collecting
in the western Andes of Colombia and Ecuador, E. Ule in the upper
Amazon basin, as well as August Fendler and H. Pittier collecting
in Venezuela.
With the notable exception
of J. M. da Conceiçao Vellozo (1742-1811) who published
Araceae in his Flora Fluminensis (Vellozo, 1825(1829),
1831a, 1831b) few early Portuguese or Spanish described Araceae
[see Stellfeld, 1950 for an account of the work of Vellozo]. With
the minor exceptions of M. S. Bertoni (Paraguay), G. M. Barroso,
specializing on Araceae at the Rio de Janiero Botanical Garden
and P. R. Reitz, also from Brazil and working on the Aráceas
Catarinensis (Reitz, 1957), few Araceae were described by native-born
Latin Americans. In Latin America as in Asia, the new species
were in part described by the flora writers from other countries
or by plant explorers such as Europeans N. J. Jacquin, F. A. W.
Miquel, and others. The works of Jacquin (1760, 1763, 1772, 1790a,
1790b, 1797) based on his travels in the West Indies are important
because he was one of the first to describe Araceae from the New
World. His colored paintings in Icones Plantarum
Rariorum (Jacquin, 1790a) are particularly noteworthy.
John G. Baker described and illustrated a number of Araceae, especially
Anthurium in Saunder's Refugium Botanicum (Baker,
1871). S. L. Moore included Araceae in his studies of the plants
of Mato Grosso in Brazil (Moore, 1895).
During the 20th Century,
American institutions began serious studies in Latin America and
authors such as P. C. Standley, who wrote a series of floras in
Central America, and J. F. Macbride, who worked on the Flora
of Peru, described a number of new species. In addition, small
but important collections were described from Colombia by R. E.
Schultes during his ethnobotanical studies of the neotropics and
L. Diels (1937a, 1937b), working at the Berlin Botanical Garden,
described collections made in Ecuador. The Dutch under Pulle also
started a flora in Suriname, then a Dutch territory. Floristic
studies did not play as great a role in the Americas as they did
in Asia and Africa; however, a number were done. For South America
these include: Argentina (Crisci, 1971; Crisci & Katinas,
1999; Hauman & Vanderveken, 1917); Buenos Aires Province (Crisci,
1968a); Bolivia (Rusby, 1910, 1927); Brazil (Stellfeld, 1950),
Amazonas (Smith, 1939), Bahía (Harley & Mayo, 1980);
Rio Grande do Sul State (Rambo, 1950), Rio de Janiero State (Casiri,
1982); Cardoso Island (Olaio & Catharino, 1991); Colombia
(Garcia-Barriga, 1974; Forero & Gentry, 1989; Gines et
al., 1953; Galeano & Bernal, 1993); Ecuador (Dodson &
Gentry, 1978; Dodson et al., 1985); French Guiana (Aublet,
1775; Lemée, 1955; Croat, 1995b); Guyana (British Guiana)
(Gleason, 1929; Graham, 1934); Paraguay (Bertoni, 1916; Chodat
& Hassler, 1903; Chodat & Vischer, 1919; Croat & Mount,
1988); Peru (Macbride, 1936); Surinam [see Jonker-Verhoef &
Jonker below]; Uruguay (Herter, 1943; Marchesi, 1984); and Venezuela
(Pittier et al., 1945; Maguire, 1948; Steyermark, 1951;
Steyermark & Huber, 1978; Bunting, 1995; Gines et al.,
1953).
The earliest effort to
produce a flora from Central America was that by William Botting
Hemsley (Hemsley, 1885a). Other floristic works done later include
those by: L. O. Williams (1981) in Central America; I. Johnston
(1949), F. Liebmann (1849), C. L. Lundell (1937, 1939, 1941),
R. McVaugh (1993), M. Martínez & E. Matuda (1979),
and Espejo Serna & Lopez Ferrari (1993) in Mexico; McVaugh
(1993) and Vásquez et al. (1995) in western Mexico; H.
H. Bartlett (1937) in Petén Province, Guatemala; T. K.
Yuncker (1940) and A. Molina (1975) in Honduras; D. L. Spellman
et al., (1975) in Belize; Engler (1900) in Costa Rica,
and Paul Standley (see Standley below) in various other countries.
In the West Indies, floristic
studies have been numerous and this area was one of the first
to be explored by collectors such as C. Plumier, H. Sloane, N.
J. Jacquin, and others. In fact, many of the earliest names of
New World plants are based on West Indian types. General floristic
accounts include: the Dutch Antilles (Arnoldo, 1971; Boldingh,
1913); Jamaica (Adams, 1972; Proctor, 1982); Cayman Islands (Proctor,
1984); Cuba (Grisebach, 1864, 1866; Sauvelle, 1868; Leon, 1946);
Haiti (Barker & Dardeau, 1930; Liogier, 1981); Dominican Republic
(Moscoso, 1943; Hodge, 1954a); Puerto Rico (Liogier, 1965; Liogier
& Martorell, 1982); Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands (Britton
& Wilson, 1923, 1926; Acevedo-Rodríguez, 1966); the
Windward and the Leeward Islands (Beard, 1949); Barbados (Gooding
et al., 1965); Guadeloupe and Martinique (Heckel, 1897);
and Lesser Antilles (Howard, 1979).