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Taxonomic importance of seed macro‐ and micro‐morphology in Abelmoschus (Malvaceae)
Author(s) -
Patil Pravin,
Malik Surendra Kumar,
Sutar Shrikant,
Yadav Shrirang,
John Joseph,
Bhat Kangila Venkataraman
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nordic journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.333
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1756-1051
pISSN - 0107-055X
DOI - 10.1111/njb.00771
Subject(s) - trichome , biology , subspecies , botany , abelmoschus , coat , manihot , intraspecific competition , taxon , malvaceae , taxonomy (biology) , morphology (biology) , zoology , horticulture , ecology
Seed morphology of Abelmoschus is known to be variable, but patterns of variation have never been critically studied. We studied seed macro‐ and micro‐morphological characters, including seed shape/size, seed coat pattern and trichome density/structure in multiple samples to evaluate the taxonomic significance of seed characters. Among the studied characters, seed shape and trichome structure were found to have major taxonomic importance and proved to be valuable characters for separating taxa. Two main seed types were present: seeds with deciduous trichomes and seeds with persistent trichomes. These characters offer significant evidence to the distinctness of certain species ( A. esculentus, A. moschatus subsp. moschatus, A. moschatus subsp. tuberosus, A. crinitus and A. angulosus ). Further, our results indicate that A. moschatus subsp. tuberosus should be maintained as a separate subspecies while A. manihot subsp. tetraphyllus var. pungens may be merged in A. angulosus . No significant intraspecific variation was observed, except in A. esculentus . We conclude that seed coat sculpturing and seed trichomes do indeed provide stable and diagnostic characters for many morphologically closely related taxa of Abelmoschus and that LM/SEM techniques can be useful in solving systematic problems and management of Abelmoschus genetic resources.