4 resultados para biogeografia

em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde


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Many species of Apiaceae are found in the Macaronesien Region. Several have been introduccd by human activities, but a number of taxa is endemic to the different archipelagos or even rrstrictcd to a single island. The following enumeration is based mainly on HANSEN & SUNDING ( 1993). In the Arores 28 different taxa of Apiaceae occur; among them four endemic species [AUIMI; hrrrrii WATSON, A. trifoliatum (WATSON) TKEL., Clrtrc~,y~l~~ll~r~~~ cl:oricrm TREL.. SOErich trwrictr GUTIINICK ex SEUB.]. In Madeira the Apiaceae are very diverse and consist ol’ 29 species and subspecies. From the archipelago two monotypic genera, rC/c/trtio. velitru~rr t/ccipicvr.s (SCHRAD. & J. C. WENDL.) Ho~+hl. md kJorli:ia edu[is LOWE and ~hrcc cndcmic species [Oemmrlre diwricore (R. BR.) MABB.. I/nperrr/orio lotvei COSS. and Burrirr~r hre~$~lirrnr LOWE] are described. The Canary Islands have the highest numbcr of plant-species and a high level of endemism. 5-l taxa of Apiaceae are recorded including three endemic genera (Rtrrheopsis A. HANSEX & KUNKEL, Todm-oa PARL. and Tiqyrmm PARL.) and further I5 endemic taxa. The Apiaceae are represented in the Cape Verde Islands by I2 species. Most of the taxa have been introduced by human activities (LOBIN & ZIZKA 1957) like Amvhm grm’eo- 1efr.s L., Apirm grmvolerrs L, Foerricrrhrr urlgore MILL.. Corimrtlru~t~ srrtirvrrrr L. or Petrosilerrm crisprrm (FRILL.) A.W.HILL. These species are cultivated and some of them later became \\esdy. Other species like Ciclosper- UWL /e/~fo/~/l~ll~rrtr (PER%) SPRAGUE (= Apimr leproplr~llrr~rr) are weeds of cultivated grounds or wasted lands. All these species are today widespread in temperate. subtropical or tropical regions all over the world. The only native species are to be found in the endemic genus To~wI~~I~~~ PARL.

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The African Republic of Cape Verde consists of nine inhabited and several uninhabited volcanic islands set out in the Atlantic Ocean, about 500 km off the most westerly point of the African mainland and 1500 km south of the Canary Islands @g. 2). Most are rugged and mountainous; three (Sal, Maio, and Boavista) are flat, desert islands with sand beaches. Precipitation is meagre and very erratic; indeed Cape Verde can be seen as an island extension of the arid Sahel zone. Three species of the genus Phoenix are recorded from the Cape Verde Islands, P. akzctyli&a L., P. canariensis Chabaud and P. atlantica A. Chev. While the former two species have almost certainly been introduced by man, the latter is said to be endemic to the islands. Perhaps because the Cape Verdes are a particularly isolated set of islands or because palms are notoriously awkward to collect, little is known about the taxonomy, origins and natural history of this species. Phoenix atlantica was described by the French botanist Auguste Chevalier (1935a) following field exploration in the Cape Verdes in 1934 (Chevalier 1934: 1153). Chevalier provided limited diagnostic characters, defining the species as a clustering palm with 2-6 trunks, 5-15 m in height with dark green leaves 2-3 m in length. He considered it to be most similar in form to P. &ctyZzjkra and P. canariensis, possessing characters of both (Chevalier 1935a). Chevalier’s description indicates that Phoenix atlantica can be distinguished easily from P. canariensis by its clustering growth form (P. canariensis always has a single, stout trunk) and its shorter, straighter leaves. However, the differences between P. atlantica and P. dactylzjkra appear much more subtle. For example, while P. dacfylifera is usually observed as single-stemmed, when left undisturbed for a number of years it becomes clustering like the Cape Verde Phoenix, so this character on its own is unreliable. Further alleged distinctions include acuminate (P. atlantica) versus rounded (P. dactylzjkra) petals in the male flowers (Chevalier 1935a, b, Greuter 1967: 249, and Brochmann et al. 1997), fruit 2 cm long (P. atlantica) versus fruit more than 2.5 cm long (P. dactyl&a) (Brochmann et al.

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Er-vas frequentemente com cau!es sukados, muito raramente arbustos ou pequenasá rvores. Caulese m regra ocos ou com medulab em desenvolvida. Folhas alternas,e m regra muito divididas, ocasionalmentes implese , muito raramente, peltadas. Flores em umbelas simples ou mais frequentemente compostasr,a ramentev erticiladaso u capitadas,e m regra bissexuadams asp or vezes unissexuadapso r redu@o. Tubo do cálice unido ao ovário; limbo de 5 dentes em regra minúsculos ou ausentes. Pétalas 5, valvadas, epigínicas, brancas ou, raramente, amareladase, sverdeadaso u rosadaso u, muito raramente, azuis. Estames 5, livres, alternando com as pétalas; anteras 2-loculares, deiscentesp or fendas longitudinais. Estiletes 2, em regra divergentes, muitas vezes parcialmente unidos e frequentcmente com estilopódio bem desenvolvido. Ovario ínfero, Zlocular, com 1 óvulo pêndulo em cada lóculo. Fruto seco, em regra dividindo-se na maturacão em 2 mericarpos ligados a um carpóforo central resultante dos feixes vasculares principais do fruto. Os carpelosa presentamfr equentementec ostasb em desenvolvidase as paredes são providas em regra de canais oleíferos característicos. 0 fruto pode ser lateral- ou dorsahnentec omprimidoe ter asasla terais bem desenvolvidas ou apresentar espinhos ou ganchos. Sementes providas de endosperma oleoso abundante e com embriões muito pequenos. Familia com cerca de 418 génerose 3100e speciese, ssencialmentcea racterística dasr egiõest emperadamentqe uentesd o Globo. Facilmenter econhecível pelo hábito geralmente herbáceo, a disposicão característica das flores em umbelas e principalmente pelo fruto em regra divisivel em 2 mericarpos

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clorofila, de cores variadas, mas nunca verdes. Caules erectos, com folhas escamiformes, geralmente carnudos, simples ou ramificados, glabros a piloso- -glandulares. Inflorescência um racemo terminal ou espiga, raramente solitaria ou pauciflora. Flores hermafroditas, zigomórticas; brácteas escamiformes, com ‘ou sem bractt!olas. Cálice tubuloso, sinsépalo 2-Slobado, as vezes fencíido anterior e .posteriormente em duas partes livres. Corola simpétala, hipogínica, pentâmera, bilabiada, de pieíloracão imbricativa. Estames geralmente 4, didinâmicos, inseridos no tubo da corola, anteras com Ibculos aos pares, dorsifixas, com deiscência longitudinal, glabras a densamente lanosas. Ovario súpero, 1-locular, 2 (3)carpelar; óvulos numerosos; estilete simples, terminal, estigma capitado ou peltado, lobado ou não. Cápsula gcraimente 2-valve, globosa ou ovoide-elipsoidal com deiscência loculicída; sementes pequenas, numerosas, com albúmen carnudo e embrião não diferenciado. Familia com c. 17 generos e aproximadamente 150 especies, amplamente distribuidas no hemisferio norte, particularmente nas regides temperadas e subtropicais do Velho Mundo.