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Utricularia resupinata B. D. Greene ex Hitchcock

Utricularia resupinata ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Utricularia resupinata, popularly known as lavender bladderwort or northeastern bladderwort,[1][2] is a small perennial subaquatic carnivorous plant that belongs to the genus Utricularia (family Lentibulariaceae). It is native to eastern Canada, the United States, and Central America. This plant species has an interesting etymology, growth pattern, ecology, and research history. As a plant that is threatened or endangered in many of the States where it is found, it is a candidate for sound conservation efforts.

Botanical description and etymology

Botanical publications of this species will often describe it as "Utricularia resupinata B. D. Greene ex Bigelow," identifying its scientific name (Utricularia resupinata), its genus (Utricularia), its specific epithet (resupinata), the original discoverer (Benjamin Daniel Greene), and the publisher of the first information about the species (Jacob Bigelow). Scientific names in botany are defined by what is called a plant's binomial nomenclature or the use of two names for a species, genus and epithet. The person who describes and publishes a new species cannot name it for him or herself. A plant may be named after the person who first collected it, or for a location, a plant feature, much more. In this case, the epithet is derived from the Latin word resupinata. Etymology for Utricularia resupinata comes from two Latin words – utriculus which means “a small bottle” and refers to its insect-trapping bladders, and the word resupinata which means “bent or thrown back,” for the top part of the bladderwort’s flower.[3]

Plant form

The 1913 botanical illustration of this bladderwort species depicts a delicate 2 to 12-inch stem growing along or just below the surface in very shallow water on a slender root or basal system; leaves are tiny or absent, often buried in the sand or mud; the showy blue to purple flower blooms from August to September with a two-lipped petal held up by a thin stem, the upper lips facing upwards and the three-lobed lower lip having a projection or sac extending from the petal base; fruit forms in a two-valved sac holding small seeds, on a separate stem emerging from a bract just above the base of the plant, as if its stem is sitting on a couch or in a flower pot, the fruit being dry and splitting open when ripe; and bladderwort reproduces both sexually by seed and asexually by producing compact buds or turions which break free from the parent plant and spread out nearby to start new plants. Native Plant Trust’s "Go Botany" lists Utricularia resupinata’s characteristics in minute detail, stating that the plant has a lifespan of two-years or more.[4] The attribute of this carnivorous plant for capturing and digesting animal life is the main factor placing it in the Lentibulariaceae or bladderwort family – with a typical plant system holding from a dozen to a hundred 1 to 6 mm bladders or “traps” for minute animal life.[5] The flower pictured here is a good illustration of this bladderwort's showy lavender flower with its lower projecting sac.[6]

Plant growth and ecology

Utricularia resupinata grows on the edges of wetlands or along the shore or in the shallow water of ponds, lakes, or rivers. It can be found in the moist sandy soil of recently built roads. Ideal growing conditions consist of a sandy substrate covered over by a thin layer of mud or muck. In its northern range it appears to only flower when low water levels occur at the same time as higher than average temperatures exist.[7] It was thought to be extirpated in Indiana until it was rediscovered in 2005.[2]

The specimen of Utricularia resupinata depicted below was collected by George R. Cooley, R. J. Easton, Carroll E. Wood, Jr., and C. Earle Smith, Jr. in May, 1961 on the shore of Lake Tsala Apopka, Florida, in a half inch of water. This specimen is part of the University of South Florida herbarium, and it shows this specimen in the flowering stage, with its thick network of stems and base runners, dried flowers and tiny leaves and bladders, and stems with seeds.[8]

Geographical distribution

Professor Asa Gray published the first of eight editions of his Manual of Botany in 1848, with a limited range noted for collected specimens of Utricularia resupinata, “at sandy margins of ponds, East Maine to Rhode Island.”[9] The "Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Society" – published in New York City by the first such club in the Americas – was quick to announce that a member of the Syracuse Botanical Club had found it beyond this limited zone “in the North Woods, Fenton’s No. 4, Lewis Co., New York, Aug., 1879, on the marshy shores of a lake, as we are informed.”[10]

Frank Tweedy had been hired in 1876 to survey and map the Beaver River basin for Verplanck Colvin's Adirondack Survey in New York (state), pursuing his passion of plant collecting each Sunday, and he responded to that announcement in the Torrey Bulletin with his own discovery of Utricularia resupinata in several more locations. This was the first of the more than 6,000 officially reported specimens Tweedy collected, most of them in the Rocky Mountains:

I collected that plant in August, 1875, at the same locality…namely, muddy shore of Beaver Lake, No. 4, Lewis Co., N.Y. During the past season I collected quite a number of the same plant on the shore of Big Moose Lake, Herkimer Co., N.Y., and at Twitchell Lake, in the same county. I do not think it is uncommon through Northern New York.[11]

Since Tweedy’s finds deep in the Adirondack Mountains, Utricularia resupinata has been found in Canada, the eastern US as far as the Great Lakes states, and in Central America. A Range Map created by “The Floristic Synthesis of North America (BONAP)” shows the wider range for this species, though it is increasingly threatened or endangered in many States.[12]

Plant taxonomy

At the top of the taxonomy or scientific classification offered here is the kingdom of plants (Plantae), followed by a number of “clades” or monophyletic groups composed of a common ancestor and all its lineal descendants: The clade of vascular plants (Tracheophytes); the clade of flowering plants (Angiosperms); the clade of flowering plants with two seeds on germination (Eudicots); the clade of flowering plants with only one common ancestor (Asterids); and the order of flowering plants as a subgroup of the Asterids with specific characteristics such as opposite leaves (Lamiales). This huge order of Lamiales includes 23,810 species, 1,059 genera, and is divided into 24 families of plants.[13]

Utricularia resupinata fits into all of these larger plant categories, with its family (biology)—the next category in the scientific classification—including only carnivorous plants (Lentibulariaceae). This family is made up of three genera—corkscrew plants (Genlisea), the butterworts (Pinguicula), and the bladderworts (Utricularia). Within this last group or genus of 240 species we find Utricularia resupinata, with its “synonyms” or taxon of plants that experienced a name change. Listed here is Lecticular resupinata, the name given to Ultricularia resupinata by Barnhart in 1913 and Utricularia greenei, the name given it by Oakes in 1841. Lecticular is Latin for “couch” or “cubicle” and was chosen because of the unique bract on this plant’s lower stem.[14]

The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) -- named for the clade of flowering plants—is an international group of botanists who are working to establish a standard plant taxonomy for all flowering plants. Earlier taxonomies tended to be set by a given nation or botanical school, hence a multitude of differences. The first APG system for categorizing plants was set up in 1998 with updates in 2003 (APG II), 2009 (APG III), and 2016 (APG IV).[15] The scientific classification or taxonomy offered in this article is based on the more recent work of APG III and IV.

The list offered on the US Department of Agriculture's website reveals just how immense the earth’s “Tree of Life” really is, and this eight-page list covers just the main divisions, families, orders, and classes for flowering plants in the much larger kingdom of plants.[16] A search of this listing finds the kingdom, order, and family for Utricularia resupinata.

Research history

Discovery

Utricularia resupinata B.D. Greene ex Bigelow” identifies the species’ scientific name with the first person to discover this flowering plant—a Massachusetts lawyer named Benjamin Daniel Greene (1793–1862), whose finding was reported in what became the standard botanical resource for that time period, with the following brief note: “Greene, M.S. Greene’s bladder wort…A small delicate species with purple flowers, discovered by B. D. Greene, Esq. at [a pond in] Tewksbury. Middlesex Co, MA.”[17]: 10  American botanist, physician, and botanical illustrator Jacob Bigelow (1787–1879) published his first edition of Florula Bostoniensis in 1814 – a detailed survey of flora in the greater Boston region, adding neighboring New England states in later editions.

Specimens in herbaria collections

Two of Frank Tweedy’s bladderwort finds are currently in New England herbaria, one at Harvard University and the other at the University of Vermont, both collected in 1879 on the shore of Big Moose Lake, Herkimer County, NY.[18] A herbarium (plural herbaria) is a collection of plant specimens that have been preserved for scientific study.[19] A search of all herbaria for this species in the Mid-Atlantic Herbaria Consortium yields 609 finds, beginning with B.D. Greene’s specimen now displayed in the New York Botanical Garden, included on this list with his date of discovery, 1829. The rest of the collection ranges from then to the most recent specimen found at Lake Hartwell, S.C. on October 9, 2019, with this description: “A Colony growing en masse, on bank in area where lake waters have receded. Proliferous colony stretching far up the shore and in the turn of the cove. Leaves matted in mud, some plants producing early fruits. Flowers very pale pink.”[20]

Early plant bladder study

One of the early students of Utricularia resupinata and its carnivorous family (Lentibulariaceae) was Mary Treat (1830-1923), a naturalist who made major contributions in botany and entomology. She spent many hours over her microscope observing the bladders or traps along its supporting system of stems, trying to discover how “these little bladders” trapped and digested their animal prey. It was originally believed that the series of bladders on the stems and roots “floated the plant.” Mary Treat was “one of the first scientists to suspect that the bladders were actually traps for tiny creatures rather than air floatation devices.”[21]

In a book titled Through a Microscope, Mary Treat contributed a whole chapter on the Utricularia genus, puzzling over the “wonderful” process by which these bladders worked:

I have found almost every swimming animalculæ with which I am acquainted, caught in these vegetable traps; and when caught they never escape. Their entrance is easy enough; there is a sensitive valve at the mouth of the bladder, which, if they touch it, flies open and draws them in as quick as a flash. These downward-opening bladders not only entrap animalculæ, but, more wonderful still, the strong larvæ of insects.[22]: 62–63 

Correspondence between Charles Darwin and Mary Treat

Mary also held a five-year correspondence with biologist Charles Darwin as he was researching carnivorous plants, debating the question of how insects entered these bladders, finally convincing him of her theory. She recounted this in the same chapter, and it is worth quoting at length for this back story from the early history of botany:

Those who have read Mr. Darwin’s very interesting book on Insectivorous Plants, will have noticed that he says the valve of Utricularia is not in the least sensitive, and that the little creatures force their way into the bladders -- their heads acting like a wedge. But this is not the case, as Mr. Darwin himself was convinced some years before his death. In his usual kind, gracious manner he admitted that he was wrong, and gracefully says the valve must be sensitive, although he could never excite any movement. In a letter to me bearing date June 1st, 1875, he says: "I have read your article (in Harper’s Magazine) with the greatest interest. It certainly appears from your excellent observations that the valve is sensitive...I cannot understand why I could never with all my pains excite any movement. It is pretty clear I am quite wrong about the head acting like a wedge. The indraught of the living larva is astonishing.”[22]: 69 

A name change

Utricularia resupinata was moved to a new genus as the science of botany progressed, and New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) leader John Hendley Barnhart (1871-1949) categorized this species in 1913 under “Lecticula,” a section of the genus Ultricularia. He based this taxonomy change on its unusual stem bracts noted above: “Utricularia sect. Lecticula is a section in the genus Utricularia that was originally described as genus Lecticula in 1913 by John Hendley Barnhart. The two species in this section are small subaquatic carnivorous plants that are distinguished by the unique bracts, which are basifixed and tubular. Both species are native to North and South America.”[23] Botanist Norman Taylor (1900-1975) in association with the NYBG published Flora in the Vicinity of New York in 1915, reporting on Barnhart’s new category (and name) for Utricularia resupinata. Under the Lentibulariaceae or bladderwort family of plants, he identified three genera -- Vesiculina Raf., Utricularia L., and Lecticula Barnhart, with Utricularia resupinata printed with its new name in this third genus. The following comment described this section of the genus: “L. [Lecticula] resupinata (B.D. Greene) Barnhart. In sandy bogs and borders of ponds: Me. to Fla., west to Mish. Rare.”[24] Lecticula resupinata is thus a plant synonym for Utricularia resupinata.

Systematic study of the Utricularia genus

Peter Geoffrey Taylor (1926-2011) put in 41 years of research and observation on the genus Utricularia. In 1989 he published The Genus Utricularia: A Taxonomic Monograph with Utricularia resupinata one of the 240 species in this genus, and now under its original name. Taylor illustrated 214 of these species in his book, considered to be ground breaking with its in-depth study of an entire genus: “Taylor's species list and classification are now generally accepted with some additions of newly described taxa and modifications based on phylogenetic studies.[25]

Continuing interest in the plant bladder

Mary Treat repeatedly observed the tiny bladders of the Utricularia genus under her microscope trap minute animal life as a mosquito larva, for example, triggered sensitive filaments at the mouth of the bladder, snapping it shut. But one mystery baffled her: “I soon became satisfied that the valve was very sensitive when touched at the right point, but to this day I cannot tell what the power is that so quickly draws the creatures within.”[22]: 68–69  Recent research based on phylogenetics has answered some questions and raised others. The Utricularia bladder has long fascinated scientists. “Although the Utricularia traps are the smallest among those of carnivorous plants, they are arguably the most sophisticated and intricate ones.”[5]: 640 

Three observations from recent research

Czech Republic botanist Lubomir Adamec has summarized the extensive research that has recently been done with species in the Utricularia genus – with a focus on its carnivorous bladder. Three things are clear. This plant expends a tremendous output of energy through its string of bladders. “When a prey species touches sensory hairs situated on the trap door it opens, the small animal is aspirated into the trap and the door closes again. This process of firing is complete within 10 -- 15 ms [milliseconds] and is the most rapid plant movement known.”[5] The source of this ATP energy -- Adenosine triphosphate, the molecule for storing and transferring energy in cells—is still an open research question. This Utricularia resupinata picture of two bladders on the plant's stem captures the luminescence of these bladders with their "trap door" and trigger filaments branching out.[26]

Second, not all of the minute animals sucked into the Utricularia traps are digested, because it has been found that some of the organisms in this “bladder soup” actually assist in prey decomposition, a process similar to what happens in an efficient septic system. “In spite of its tiny volume, the trap fluid in Utricularia plants is inhabited permanently by various commensal microorganisms -- bacteria, cyanobacteria, microfungi, algae, euglena, dinophytes, protozoa (ciliates) and rotifers -- which live in a mutualistic interaction with the plant.”[5] This “miniature food web” offers many ecological possibilities, with potential applications pending further research.

And third, the presence or absence of oxygen inside the bladder is a key part of this “sophisticated and intricate” process. “Therefore, captured organisms either die of O2 deprivation and are prey, or are able to tolerate anoxia and are commensals. Utricularia traps likely kill their prey by suffocation.”[5] Lubomir Adamec's research summary while technical, invites the reader to draw on a knowledge of all the physical and life sciences.[5] An intricate collection of valves inside the bladder help govern this complex organ—inviting the reader to appreciate its mechanics, the pumping of water in and out at high speed and pressure; its electro-chemistry, transferring enough voltage when triggered to perpetuate the process; and learning of the symbiosis of minute animal species inside this botanical bladder, either facilitating or becoming food for digestion.

Conservation status

There are substantial concerns over the conservation status of Utricularia resupinata throughout its geographical distribution, with the following list offered by the US Department of Agriculture’s source on “Threatened and Endangered Information:” “Of Special Concern” are Rhode Island and Tennessee; listed as “Threatened” are Massachusetts and Vermont; “Endangered” include Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, and New Jersey; and labeled as “Extirpated” are Indiana and Pennsylvania, with a recent discovery of a species community in the former.[27] Three reasons are offered for this species being of special concern, threatened, endangered, or extirpated—heavy recreational use of waterways; high nutrient levels from lawn fertilizers or faulty septic systems; and competition from native or non-native invasive species.[28] A conservation plan is needed for the protection and proliferation of this delicate but important species which so fascinated Frank Tweedy, Mary Treat, Charles Darwin, and generations of botanists and biologists.

See also

References

  1. ^ USDA, NRCS (n.d.). "Utricularia resupinata". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 2008-12-28.
  2. ^ a b Scribailo, Robin W.; Alix, Mitchell S.; Namestnik, Scott A. (2011). "Historical Notes and New Records for the Rare Atlantic Coastal Plain Species Utricularia resupinata (Lentibulariaceae) in Indiana". Rhodora. 113 (953): 32–46. doi:10.3119/09-24.1. S2CID 85387706.
  3. ^ ""Utricularia resupinata B. D. Greene ex Bigelow"". SEINet Arizona-New Mexico Chapter. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  4. ^ "Utricularia resupinate B.D. Greene ex. Bigelow". Native Plant Trust GO BOTANY. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Adamec, Lubomir (May 1, 2011). "The Smallest But Fastest". Plant Signaling & Behavior. 6 (5): 640–646. doi:10.4161/psb.6.5.14980. PMC 3172828. PMID 21499028.
  6. ^ "Lavender Bladderwort Flower". Encyclopedia of Life. 2010. Retrieved December 1, 2020. Barry Rice captured this picture of Lavender Bladderwort flower, scientific name Utricularia resupinate in 2010
  7. ^ Taylor, Peter. 1989. The genus Utricularia - a taxonomic monograph. Kew Bulletin Additional Series XIV: London.
  8. ^ "Specimen of Utricularia resupinata D.B. Greene ex Bigelo". University of South Florida Herbarium. May 2, 1961. Retrieved December 1, 2020. This specimen is Catalog #43122
  9. ^ Gray, Asa (1848). Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States from New England to Wisconsin and South to Ohio and Pennsylvania Inclusive.
  10. ^ "Utricularia resupinata". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 6 (58): 352. October 1, 1879. JSTOR 2476843. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  11. ^ Tweedy, Frank (February 1, 1880). "Utricularia resupinata, Greene". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 7 (2): 19. JSTOR 2477552. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  12. ^ "Range Map". Minnesota Wild Flowers. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  13. ^ Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (2009). "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 161 (2): 105–121. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00996.x.
  14. ^ "Atlas of Florida Plants, Institute for Systematic Botany". Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  15. ^ Angiosperm Phylogeny Group IV (2016). "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG IV". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 181 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1111/boj.12385.
  16. ^ "About the PLANTS Classification Report". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved December 1, 2020. This list includes classifications and principal scholarly source for each, including a main outline of a fossil record for the plant kingdom; this web page includes a link to the "Tree of Life" for the Green Plant BAC Library Project maintained by the Arizona Genomics Institute.
  17. ^ Bigelow, Jacob (January 1, 1840). Florula Bostoniensis. A collection of Plants of Boston and Its Vicinity with their Generic and Specific Characters, Principal Synonyms, Descriptions, Places of Growth, and Time of Flowering and Occasional Remarks, 3rd Ed.
  18. ^ "Utricularia resupinata specimens". Mid-Atlantic Herbaria Consortium. January 1, 1879. Retrieved December 1, 2020. Entering the species scientific name and the collector Frank Tweedy, brings up his two finds; entering just the scientific name reports all specimen finds.
  19. ^ "What is a herbarium?". Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Retrieved December 1, 2020. A leading botanical collection of approximately 3 million specimens, representing half to two thirds of the world's flora
  20. ^ "Utricularia resupinata Specimen". A.C. Moore Herbarium at University of South Carolina. October 9, 2019. Retrieved December 1, 2020. This specimen was collected by D.Z. Damrel and K.J. Alford
  21. ^ "Utricularia resupinata". Plants of Southern New Jersey--CUMaurice River. Retrieved December 1, 2020. Plant Profile Utricularia resupinata, Reversed Bladderwort
  22. ^ a b c Treat, Mary; Wells, Samual; Sargent, Frederick (1886). Through a Microscope: Something of the Science Together with Many Curious Observations Indoor and Out and Directions for a Home-made Microscope.
  23. ^ Taylor, Peter (1989). The Genus Utricularia: A Taxonomic Monograph.
  24. ^ Taylor, Norman (January 30, 1915). Flora in the Vicinity of New York: A Contribution to Plant Geography.
  25. ^ Fleishmann, A. (2012). "The New Utricularia Species Described Since Peter Taylor's Monograph". Carnivorous Plant Newsletter. 41 (2): 67–76.
  26. ^ "Lavender Bladderwort Bladders". Minnesota Wildflowers: A Field Guide to the Flora of Minnesota. 2015. Retrieved December 1, 2020. This picture of the Utricularia resupinate bladders or traps was taken by Peter M. Dziuk in 2015
  27. ^ "USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  28. ^ "Resupinate Bladderwort Utricularia resupinata B.D. Greene ex Bigelow". Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
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Utricularia resupinata: Brief Summary ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Utricularia resupinata, popularly known as lavender bladderwort or northeastern bladderwort, is a small perennial subaquatic carnivorous plant that belongs to the genus Utricularia (family Lentibulariaceae). It is native to eastern Canada, the United States, and Central America. This plant species has an interesting etymology, growth pattern, ecology, and research history. As a plant that is threatened or endangered in many of the States where it is found, it is a candidate for sound conservation efforts.

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Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visite a fonte
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wikipedia EN

Utricularia resupinata ( Espanhol; Castelhano )

fornecido por wikipedia ES

Utricularia resupinata es una especie perenne, subacuática no fija de planta carnívora, pequeña, del género Utricularia (familia Lentibulariaceae).

Descripción

Es una planta perenne, subacuáticas fijadas. Hojas filiformes, teretes, articuladas, hasta 5 cm de largo y 0.3 mm de grueso. Las inflorescencias en racimos con 1 flor, 4–20 cm de largo, pedicelos 9–25 mm de largo; lobos del cáliz subiguales, elípticos, 2.5–3 mm de largo; corola 6–10 mm de largo, rosada con una mancha crema, espolón ascendente. Cápsula globosa, ca 2.5 mm de diámetro, ventralmente 1-valvada.[1]

Distribución

Es nativa del este de Canadá, EE. UU., América Central. En su área más norteña, solo florece cuando el nivel de agua baja mucho y suben las Tº promedio.[2]

Según PlantList es un sinónimo de Utricularia spruceana.[3]

Taxonomía

Utricularia resupinata fue descrita por Augustin Saint-Hilaire & Frédéric de Girard y publicado en Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de l'Académie des Sciences, 7: 870, 1838.[1]

Etimología

Utricularia: nombre genérico que deriva de la palabra latina utriculus, lo que significa "pequeña botella o frasco de cuero".[4]

resupinata: epíteto

Referencias

  1. a b «Utricularia resupinata». Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. Consultado el 23 de diciembre de 2012.
  2. Taylor, Peter. (1989). El género Utricularia: monografía taxonómica. Kew Bulletin Additional Series XIV: London.
  3. «Utricularia spruceana Benth. ex Oliv.». www.theplantlist.org (en inglés). Consultado el 24 de enero de 2017.
  4. En Epítetos Botánicos

Bibliografía

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Utricularia resupinata: Brief Summary ( Espanhol; Castelhano )

fornecido por wikipedia ES

Utricularia resupinata es una especie perenne, subacuática no fija de planta carnívora, pequeña, del género Utricularia (familia Lentibulariaceae).

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Utricularia resupinata ( Romeno; moldávio; moldavo )

fornecido por wikipedia RO

Utricularia resupinata[1] este o specie de plante carnivore din genul Utricularia, familia Lentibulariaceae, ordinul Lamiales, descrisă de Benjamin Daniel Greene și Hitchcock.[2][3] Conform Catalogue of Life specia Utricularia resupinata nu are subspecii cunoscute.[2]

Referințe

  1. ^ B. D. Greene ex Hitchcock, 1835 In: Cat. Pl. Massach. (1835) 107, nomen; et in Bigel. Fl. Bost. ed. III. 10
  2. ^ a b Roskov Y., Kunze T., Orrell T., Abucay L., Paglinawan L., Culham A., Bailly N., Kirk P., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Decock W., De Wever A., Didžiulis V. (ed) (2014). „Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2014 Annual Checklist”. Species 2000: Reading, UK. Accesat în 26 mai 2014.Mentenanță CS1: Nume multiple: lista autorilor (link) Mentenanță CS1: Text în plus: lista autorilor (link)
  3. ^ World Plants: Synonymic Checklists of the Vascular Plants of the World

Legături externe

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Utricularia listă
Specii

U. adpressa
U. albiflora
U. albocaerulea
U. alpina
U. amethystina
U. andongensis
U. antennifera
U. appendiculata
U. arcuata
U. arenaria
U. arnhemica
U. asplundii
U. aurea
U. aureomaculata
U. australis
U. babui
U. beaugleholei
U. benjaminiana
U. benthamii
U. bifida
U. biloba
U. biovularioides
U. bisquamata
U. blanchetii
U. bosminifera
U. brachiata
U. bracteata
U. bremii
U. breviscapa
U. buntingiana
U. caerulea
U. calycifida
U. campbelliana
U. capilliflora
U. cecilii
U. cheiranthos
U. chiakiana
U. chiribiquitensis
U. choristotheca

U. christopheri
U. chrysantha
U. circumvoluta
U. cochleata
U. cornigera
U. cornuta
U. corynephora
U. costata
U. cucullata
U. cymbantha
U. delicatula
U. delphinioides
U. densiflora
U. determannii
U. dichotoma
U. dimorphantha
U. dunlopii
U. dunstaniae
U. endresii
U. erectiflora
U. fimbriata
U. firmula
U. fistulosa
U. flaccida
U. floridana
U. foliosa
U. forrestii
U. foveolata
U. fulva
U. furcellata
U. garrettii
U. geminiloba
U. geminiscapa
U. geoffrayi
U. georgei
U. gibba
U. graminifolia
U. guyanensis
U. hamiltonii

U. helix
U. heterochroma
U. heterosepala
U. hintonii
U. hirta
U. hispida
U. holtzei
U. humboldtii
U. huntii
U. hydrocarpa
U. inaequalis
U. incisa
U. inflata
U. inflexa
U. intermedia
U. inthanonensis
U. involvens
U. jackii
U. jamesoniana
U. juncea
U. kamienskii
U. kenneallyi
U. kimberleyensis
U. kumaonensis
U. laciniata
U. lasiocaulis
U. lateriflora
U. laxa
U. lazulina
U. leptoplectra
U. leptorhyncha
U. letestui
U. limosa
U. linearis
U. livida
U. lloydii
U. longeciliata
U. longifolia
U. macrocheilos

U. macrorhiza
U. malabarica
U. mangshanensis
U. mannii
U. menziesii
U. meyeri
U. microcalyx
U. micropetala
U. minor
U. minutissima
U. mirabilis
U. moniliformis
U. muelleri
U. multicaulis
U. multifida
U. myriocista
U. nana
U. naviculata
U. nelumbifolia
U. neottioides
U. nephrophylla
U. nervosa
U. nigrescens
U. ochroleuca
U. odontosepala
U. odorata
U. olivacea
U. oliveriana
U. panamensis
U. parthenopipes
U. paulineae
U. pentadactyla
U. peranomala
U. perversa
U. petersoniae
U. petertaylorii
U. phusoidaoensis
U. physoceras
U. pierrei

U. platensis
U. pobeguinii
U. poconensis
U. podadena
U. polygaloides
U. praelonga
U. praeterita
U. praetermissa
U. prehensilis
U. pubescens
U. pulchra
U. punctata
U. purpurea
U. purpureocaerulea
U. pusilla
U. quelchii
U. quinquedentata
U. radiata
U. ramosissima
U. raynalii
U. recta
U. reflexa
U. regia
U. reniformis
U. resupinata
U. reticulata
U. rhododactylos
U. rigida
U. rostrata
U. salwinensis
U. sandersonii
U. sandwithii
U. scandens
U. schultesii
U. simmonsii
U. simplex
U. simulans
U. singeriana
U. smithiana

U. spinomarginata
U. spiralis
U. spruceana
U. stanfieldii
U. steenisii
U. stellaris
U. steyermarkii
U. striata
U. striatula
U. stygia
U. subramanyamii
U. subulata
U. tenella
U. tenuissima
U. terrae-reginae
U. tetraloba
U. tortilis
U. trichophylla
U. tricolor
U. tridactyla
U. tridentata
U. triflora
U. triloba
U. troupinii
U. tubulata
U. uliginosa
U. uniflora
U. unifolia
U. uxoris
U. violacea
U. viscosa
U. vitellina
U. volubilis
U. vulgaris
U. warburgii
U. warmingii
U. welwitschii
U. westonii
U. wightiana

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Utricularia resupinata: Brief Summary ( Romeno; moldávio; moldavo )

fornecido por wikipedia RO

Utricularia resupinata este o specie de plante carnivore din genul Utricularia, familia Lentibulariaceae, ordinul Lamiales, descrisă de Benjamin Daniel Greene și Hitchcock. Conform Catalogue of Life specia Utricularia resupinata nu are subspecii cunoscute.

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颠倒狸藻 ( Chinês )

fornecido por wikipedia 中文维基百科

二名法 Utricularia resupinata
Greene ex Bigelow


颠倒狸藻學名Utricularia resupinata),又称淡紫狸藻[1]东北狸藻[2],為狸藻屬多年生小型半贴水生食虫植物。其种加词resupinata”来源于拉丁文resupinus”,意为“颠倒、向上翻转”,指其颠倒的花朵。颠倒狸藻为加拿大东部、美国中美洲特有種。分布于北部的种群仅在水位较低且气温高于平均气温时才会开花。[3]

参考文献

  1. ^ Utricularia resupinata. Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. [2008-12-28].
  2. ^ Scribailo RW, MS Alix, and SA Namestnik. 2011. Historical notes and new records for the rare Atlantic coastal plain species Utricularia resupinata (Lentibulariaceae) in Indiana. Rhodora, 113: 32-46.
  3. ^ Taylor, Peter. (1989). The genus Utricularia - a taxonomic monograph. Kew Bulletin Additional Series XIV: London.

外部連結

 src= 維基共享資源中有關颠倒狸藻的多媒體資源  src= 維基物種中有關颠倒狸藻的數據

小作品圖示这是一篇狸藻科小作品。你可以通过编辑或修订扩充其内容。
狸藻属 Utricularia 列表
物种

匍匐狸藻
白花狸藻
白蓝狸藻
高山狸藻
紫水晶狸藻
安东狸藻
触角狸藻
附件狸藻
弓形狸藻
砂石狸藻
阿纳姆狸藻
阿斯普倫德狸藻
黃花狸藻
金斑狸藻
南方狸藻
巴布狸藻
比格霍爾狸藻
本杰明狸藻
本瑟姆狸藻
兩裂狸藻
双瓣狸藻
双卵狸藻
雙鱗片狸藻
布莱克曼狸藻
布兰切特狸藻
水蚤狸藻
分支狸藻
苞片狸藻
布雷密狸藻
短葶狸藻
邦廷狸藻
長距狸藻
雙裂苞狸藻
坎贝尔狸藻
刺花狸藻
塞西尔狸藻
手花狸藻
知昌狸藻
奇里比库特山狸藻
远囊狸藻
克里斯托弗狸藻
金花狸藻
盘绕狸藻
壳形狸藻
角形狸藻
角狀狸藻
有桿狸藻
肋脈狸藻
僧帽狸藻
船花狸藻
優雅狸藻
翠雀狸藻
密花狸藻
德特曼狸藻
雙岔狸藻
雙形花狸藻
邓洛普狸藻
邓斯坦狸藻
恩德雷斯狸藻

U. adpressa
U. albiflora
U. albocaerulea
U. alpina
U. amethystina
U. andongensis
U. antennifera
U. appendiculata
U. arcuata
U. arenaria
U. arnhemica
U. asplundii
U. aurea
U. aureomaculata
U. australis
U. babui
U. beaugleholei
U. benjaminiana
U. benthamii
U. bifida
U. biloba
U. biovularioides
U. bisquamata
U. blackmanii
U. blanchetii
U. bosminifera
U. brachiata
U. bracteata
U. bremii
U. breviscapa
U. buntingiana
U. caerulea
U. calycifida
U. campbelliana
U. capilliflora
U. cecilii
U. cheiranthos
U. chiakiana
U. chiribiquitensis
U. choristotheca
U. christopheri
U. chrysantha
U. circumvoluta
U. cochleata
U. cornigera
U. cornuta
U. corynephora
U. costata
U. cucullata
U. cymbantha
U. delicatula
U. delphinioides
U. densiflora
U. determannii
U. dichotoma
U. dimorphantha
U. dunlopii
U. dunstaniae
U. endresii

竖花狸藻
流蘇狸藻
坚固狸藻
中空狸藻
軟葉狸藻
佛罗里达狸藻
葉狀狸藻
福里斯特狸藻
陷阱狸藻
杏黃狸藻
叉状狸藻
加勒特狸藻
复裂狸藻
复柄狸藻
杰弗里狸藻
乔治狸藻
絲葉狸藻
禾葉狸藻
圭亚那狸藻
汉密尔顿狸藻
螺旋状狸藻
异色狸藻
异萼狸藻
欣顿狸藻
毛柄狸藻
硬刺狸藻
霍尔策狸藻
洪堡狸藻
亨特狸藻
水果狸藻
不均狸藻
切口狸藻
浮囊狸藻
弯曲狸藻
异枝狸藻
茵他侬山狸藻
包纏狸藻
杰克狸藻
詹姆森狸藻
灯芯草狸藻
卡缅斯基狸藻
肯尼利狸藻
金伯利狸藻
库蒙狸藻
裂叶狸藻
毛茎狸藻
侧花狸藻
疏鬆狸藻
蓝花狸藻
细长距狸藻
细喙狸藻
勒泰斯蒂狸藻
长梗狸藻
线形狸藻
青紫狸藻
劳埃德狸藻
长毛狸藻
長葉狸藻
巨唇狸藻

U. erectiflora
U. fimbriata
U. firmula
U. fistulosa
U. flaccida
U. floridana
U. foliosa
U. forrestii
U. foveolata
U. fulva
U. furcellata
U. garrettii
U. geminiloba
U. geminiscapa
U. geoffrayi
U. georgei
U. gibba
U. graminifolia
U. guyanensis
U. hamiltonii
U. helix
U. heterochroma
U. heterosepala
U. hintonii
U. hirta
U. hispida
U. holtzei
U. humboldtii
U. huntii
U. hydrocarpa
U. inaequalis
U. incisa
U. inflata
U. inflexa
U. intermedia
U. inthanonensis
U. involvens
U. jackii
U. jamesoniana
U. juncea
U. kamienskii
U. kenneallyi
U. kimberleyensis
U. kumaonensis
U. laciniata
U. lasiocaulis
U. lateriflora
U. laxa
U. lazulina
U. leptoplectra
U. leptorhyncha
U. letestui
U. limosa
U. linearis
U. livida
U. lloydii
U. longeciliata
U. longifolia
U. macrocheilos

巨根狸藻
马拉巴尔狸藻
莽山狸藻
曼氏狸藻
孟席斯狸藻
迈耶狸藻
小萼狸藻
小瓣狸藻
细叶狸藻
斜果狸藻
奇异狸藻
念珠狸藻
米勒狸藻
多茎狸藻
多裂狸藻
多囊狸藻
侏儒狸藻
小船狸藻
荷叶狸藻
鸟巢兰狸藻
肾叶狸藻
蓬勃狸藻
黑狸藻
赭白狸藻
牙萼狸藻
香花狸藻
橄欖狸藻
奥利弗狸藻
巴拿马狸藻
海妖女狸藻
保琳狸藻
五指狸藻
靈異狸藻
歪斜狸藻
彼得森狸藻
彼得泰勒狸藻
普岁道山狸藻
膨角狸藻
皮埃尔狸藻
普拉塔狸藻
波贝甘狸藻
波科内狸藻
柄腺狸藻
远志狸藻
延长狸藻
过去狸藻
未及狸藻
紧抱狸藻
绒毛狸藻
美丽狸藻
斑点狸藻
紫狸藻
紫蓝狸藻
微小狸藻
奎尔奇狸藻
五齿狸藻
辐射狸藻
多枝狸藻
雷纳尔狸藻

U. macrorhiza
U. malabarica
U. mangshanensis
U. mannii
U. menziesii
U. meyeri
U. microcalyx
U. micropetala
U. minor
U. minutissima
U. mirabilis
U. moniliformis
U. muelleri
U. multicaulis
U. multifida
U. myriocista
U. nana
U. naviculata
U. nelumbifolia
U. neottioides
U. nephrophylla
U. nervosa
U. nigrescens
U. ochroleuca
U. odontosepala
U. odorata
U. olivacea
U. oliveriana
U. panamensis
U. parthenopipes
U. paulineae
U. pentadactyla
U. peranomala
U. perversa
U. petersoniae
U. petertaylorii
U. phusoidaoensis
U. physoceras
U. pierrei
U. platensis
U. pobeguinii
U. poconensis
U. podadena
U. polygaloides
U. praelonga
U. praeterita
U. praetermissa
U. prehensilis
U. pubescens
U. pulchra
U. punctata
U. purpurea
U. purpureocaerulea
U. pusilla
U. quelchii
U. quinquedentata
U. radiata
U. ramosissima
U. raynalii

直立狸藻
反卷狸藻
帝王狸藻
肾形狸藻
颠倒狸藻
網紋狸藻
瑰指狸藻
硬狸藻
喙萼狸藻
怒江狸藻
桑德森狸藻
桑德威斯狸藻
攀梗狸藻
舒尔特斯狸藻
西蒙斯狸藻
單純狸藻
拟狸藻
辛格狸藻
史密斯狸藻
刺缘狸藻
旋狸藻
斯普鲁斯狸藻
斯坦菲尔德狸藻
斯蒂尼斯狸藻
星形狸藻
斯特耶马克狸藻
条纹狸藻
圓葉狸藻
冥河狸藻
苏布拉马尼亚姆狸藻
尖叶狸藻
柔嫩狸藻
极细狸藻
昆士兰狸藻
四冠狸藻
扭曲狸藻
毛叶狸藻
三色狸藻
三指狸藻
三齒狸藻
三花狸藻
三裂瓣狸藻
特鲁平狸藻
管状狸藻
溼地狸藻
独花狸藻
独叶狸藻
配偶狸藻
紫花狸藻
粘液狸藻
蛋黄狸藻
纏繞狸藻
普通狸藻
沃伯格狸藻
沃明狸藻
威爾維茨狸藻
韋斯頓狸藻
怀特狸藻

U. recta
U. reflexa
U. regia
U. reniformis
U. resupinata
U. reticulata
U. rhododactylos
U. rigida
U. rostrata
U. salwinensis
U. sandersonii
U. sandwithii
U. scandens
U. schultesii
U. simmonsii
U. simplex
U. simulans
U. singeriana
U. smithiana
U. spinomarginata
U. spiralis
U. spruceana
U. stanfieldii
U. steenisii
U. stellaris
U. steyermarkii
U. striata
U. striatula
U. stygia
U. subramanyamii
U. subulata
U. tenella
U. tenuissima
U. terrae-reginae
U. tetraloba
U. tortilis
U. trichophylla
U. tricolor
U. tridactyla
U. tridentata
U. triflora
U. triloba
U. troupinii
U. tubulata
U. uliginosa
U. uniflora
U. unifolia
U. uxoris
U. violacea
U. viscosa
U. vitellina
U. volubilis
U. vulgaris
U. warburgii
U. warmingii
U. welwitschii
U. westonii
U. wightiana

分类群
狸藻亚属
Utricularia

无囊狸藻组
康道尔狸藻组
燕子狸藻组
远囊狸藻组
葉狀狸藻節

Avesicaria
Candollea
Chelidon
Choristothecae
Foliosa

卡緬斯基狸藻節
小床狸藻组
马丁狸藻组
小型狸藻组
奇异狸藻组

Kamienskia
Lecticula
Martinia
Meionula
Mirabiles

无脚狸藻组
奧利弗狸藻组
蘭花狸藻節
毛茎狸藻组
斯普鲁斯狸藻组

Nelipus
Oliveria
Orchidioides
Setiscapella
Sprucea

斯特耶马克狸藻组
柄药狸藻组
狸藻節
囊泡狸藻组

Steyermarkia
Stylotheca
Utricularia
Vesiculina

双瓣狸藻亚属
Bivalvaria

小蛛狸藻節
澳洲狸藻節
似无囊狸藻组

Aranella
Australes
Avesicarioides

本杰明狸藻组
瓮盤狸藻節
斯基迪狸藻節

Benjaminia
Calpidisca
Enskide

劳埃德狸藻组
小狸藻组
龍骨瓣狸藻節

Lloydia
Minutae
Nigrescentes

蚌實狸藻節
圓葉狸藻節
似口狸藻组

Oligocista
Phyllaria
Stomoisia

四萼狸藻亚属
Polypompholyx

多歧聚傘狸藻節

Pleiochasia

四萼狸藻節

Polypompholyx

三叉狸藻组

Tridentaria

 title=
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wikipedia 中文维基百科

颠倒狸藻: Brief Summary ( Chinês )

fornecido por wikipedia 中文维基百科


颠倒狸藻(學名:Utricularia resupinata),又称淡紫狸藻,东北狸藻,為狸藻屬多年生小型半贴水生食虫植物。其种加词“resupinata”来源于拉丁文“resupinus”,意为“颠倒、向上翻转”,指其颠倒的花朵。颠倒狸藻为加拿大东部、美国中美洲特有種。分布于北部的种群仅在水位较低且气温高于平均气温时才会开花。

licença
cc-by-sa-3.0
direitos autorais
维基百科作者和编辑
original
visite a fonte
site do parceiro
wikipedia 中文维基百科