Psiadia

Psiadia
Psiadia callocephala
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Subfamily: Asteroideae
Tribe: Astereae
Subtribe: Eschenbachiinae
Genus: Psiadia
Jacq.
Type species
Psiadia glutinosa
Synonyms[1]
  • Alix Comm. ex DC.
  • Elphegea Less.
  • Frappieria Cordem.
  • Glycyderas Cass.
  • Glyphia Cass.
  • Henricia Cass.
  • Psiadiella Humbert

Psiadia, commonly known as daisy trees, is a genus of mostly woody Asian and African plants in the tribe Astereae within the family Asteraceae.[2][3] The genus is distributed throughout the Western Indian Ocean, with species reported from continental Eastern Africa, Madagascar, Mauritius, La Reunion, Rodrigues, the Comoro islands, as well as several of the smaller, uninhabited islands in the Mozambique Channel. Additional species are suspected on Socotra and Sri Lanka, but these have not been confirmed. Phylogenetic studies using DNA sequence data and biogeographic reconstruction using molecular dating have shown that the genus originated on the African mainland, and colonized Madagascar and the outlying islands in the Indian Ocean in several independent instances of overwater dispersal in the Miocene.[4]

Species[1]
  • Psiadia agathaeoides (Cass.) Humbert
  • Psiadia ageratoides (DC.) G.L.Nesom
  • Psiadia alticola Humbert
  • Psiadia altissima (DC.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex B.D.Jacks.
  • Psiadia amygdalina Cordem.
  • Psiadia anchusifolia Cordem.
  • Psiadia angustifolia (Humbert) Humbert
  • Psiadia argentea Cordem.
  • Psiadia arguta Voigt
  • Psiadia aspera Cordem.
  • Psiadia boivinii B.L.Rob.
  • Psiadia cacuminum (Humbert) Humbert
  • Psiadia callocephala Cordem.
  • Psiadia canescens A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia cataractae A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia ceylanica (Arn.) Grierson
  • Psiadia coarctata (Humbert) Humbert
  • Psiadia coursii Humbert
  • Psiadia decaryi Humbert
  • Psiadia dentata (Cass.) DC.
  • Psiadia depauperata Humbert
  • Psiadia dimorpha Humbert
  • Psiadia dracaenifolia Humbert
  • Psiadia flavocinerea Humbert
  • Psiadia glutinosa Jacq.
  • Psiadia godotiana Humbert
  • Psiadia grandidentata Steetz
  • Psiadia hendersoniae S.Moore
  • Psiadia hispida Benth. & Hook.f.
  • Psiadia humilis (Humbert) G.L.Nesom
  • Psiadia inaequidentata Humbert
  • Psiadia incana Oliv. & Hiern
  • Psiadia insignis Cordem.
  • Psiadia laurifolia Cordem.
  • Psiadia leucophylla Humbert
  • Psiadia lithospermifolia Cordem.
  • Psiadia lucida (Cass.) Drake
  • Psiadia marojejyensis (Humbert) Humbert
  • Psiadia mauritiana A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia melastomoides (Lam.) A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia minor Steetz
  • Psiadia mollissima O.Hoffm.
  • Psiadia montana (Cordem.) Cordem.
  • Psiadia nigrescens Humbert
  • Psiadia pascalii Labat & Beentje
  • Psiadia penninervia DC.
  • Psiadia pollicina A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia pseudonigrescens Buscal. & Muschl.
  • Psiadia punctulata Vatke
  • Psiadia quartziticola Humbert
  • Psiadia retusa DC.
  • Psiadia rivalsii A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia rodriguesiana Balf.f.
  • Psiadia salaziana Cordem.
  • Psiadia salviifolia Baker
  • Psiadia schweinfurthii Balf.f.
  • Psiadia sericea Cordem.
  • Psiadia serrata (Humbert) Humbert
  • Psiadia tanala Humbert
  • Psiadia tardieuana Humbert
  • Psiadia terebinthina A.J.Scott
  • Psiadia tsaratananensis Humbert
  • Psiadia vestita Humbert
  • Psiadia viscosa (Lam.) A.J.Scott
Formerly included[5]

see: Conyza Microglossa Pluchea

  • Psiadia cuspidifera - Conyza ageratoides
  • Psiadia gnaphaliopsis - Conyza boranensis
  • Psiadia grevei - Pluchea grevei
  • Psiadia inuloides - Conyza vernonioides
  • Psiadia lyciodes - Pluchea lycioides
  • Psiadia modesta - Pluchea bojeri
  • Psiadia urticifolia - Conyza urticifolia
  • Psiadia volubilis - Microglossa pyrifolia

References

  1. ^ a b "Psiadia Jacq". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  2. ^ Jacquin NJ (1797). "plate 152: color illustration of Psiadia glutinosa". Plantarum Rariorum Horti Caesarei Schoenbrunnensis [Iconographia Imperial Garden Schoenbrunnensis] (in Latin). Vol. 2. pp. 13–14.
  3. ^ Jacquin NJ (1797). "Psiadia Jacq". Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden.
  4. ^ Strijk JS, Noyes RD, Strasberg D, Cruaud C, Gavory F, Chase MW, et al. (2012-08-10). "In and out of Madagascar: dispersal to peripheral islands, insular speciation and diversification of Indian Ocean daisy trees (Psiadia, Asteraceae)". PLOS ONE. 7 (8): e42932. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...742932S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0042932. PMC 3416790. PMID 22900068.
  5. ^ "Psiadia". Global Compositae Database. The International Compositae Alliance (TICA). 16 July 2021.


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Psiadia&oldid=1219154874"