Octotropideae
Octotropideae | |
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Kraussia floribunda | |
Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Gentianales |
Family: | Rubiaceae |
Subfamily: | Ixoroideae |
Tribe: | Octotropideae Bedd. |
Type genus | |
Octotropis Bedd. |
Octotropideae is a tribe of flowering plants in the Rubiaceae family and contains about 96 species in 16 genera. Its representatives are found in the paleotropics.[1]
Genera
Currently accepted names[1][2][3][4]
- Canephora Juss. (5 sp) - Madagascar
- Didymosalpinx Keay (5 sp) - Tropical Africa
- Feretia Delile (4 sp) - Tropical and Southern Africa
- Fernelia Comm. ex Lam. (4 sp) - Mascarene Islands
- Galiniera Delile (2 sp) - Tropical Africa, Madagascar
- Hypobathrum Blume (31 sp) - Tropical Asia
- Jovetia Guédès (1 sp) - Madagascar
- Kraussia Harv. (4 sp) - Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa, Socotra
- Lamprothamnus Hiern (1 sp) - Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania
- Lemyrea (A.Chev.) A.Chev. & Beille (4 sp) - Madagascar
- Octotropis Bedd. (1 sp) - India
- Paragenipa Baill. (1 sp) - Seychelles
- Polysphaeria Hook.f. (22 sp) - Tropical Africa, Madagascar
- Pouchetia A.Rich. ex DC. (4 sp) - Western Tropical Africa to Sudan and Northern Angola
- Ramosmania Tirveng. & Verdc. (2 sp) - Rodrigues
- Villaria Rolfe (5 sp) - Philippines
Synonyms
References
- 1 2 "World Checklist of Rubiaceae". Retrieved April 2016.
- ↑ Robbrecht E, Manen J-F (2006). "The major evolutionary lineages of the coffee family (Rubiaceae, angiosperms). Combined analysis (nDNA and cpDNA) to infer the position of Coptosapelta and Luculia, and supertree construction based on rbcL, rps16, trnL-trnF and atpB-rbcL data. A new classification in two subfamilies, Cinchonoideae and Rubioideae". Systematic Geography of Plants 76: 85–146.
- ↑ Bremer B (2009). "A review of molecular phylogenetic studies of Rubiaceae". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 96: 4–26. doi:10.3417/2006197.
- ↑ Bremer B, Eriksson E (2009). "Time tree of Rubiaceae: phylogeny and dating the family, subfamilies, and tribes". International Journal of Plant Sciences 170: 766–793. doi:10.1086/599077.
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