Biology:Thrinax

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Short description: Genus of palms

Thrinax
Thrinax radiata0.jpg
Thrinax radiata
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Arecales
Family: Arecaceae
Subfamily: Coryphoideae
Tribe: Cryosophileae
Genus: Thrinax
L.f. ex Sw.
Species

Thrinax excelsa
Thrinax parviflora
Thrinax radiata

Synonyms[1]

Porothrinax H.Wendl. ex Griseb.

Thrinax is a genus in the palm family, native to the Caribbean. It is closely related to the genera Coccothrinax, Hemithrinax and Zombia.[2] Flowers are small, bisexual and are borne on small stalks.

Taxonomy

Cryosophileae  

Trithrinax

Itaya

Sabinaria

Chelyocarpus

Cryosophila

Schippia

Thrinax

Leucothrinax

Hemithrinax

Zombia

Coccothrinax

Simplified phylogeny of the Cryosophileae based on four nuclear genes and the matK plastid gene.[3]

In the first edition of Genera Palmarum (1987), Natalie Uhl and John Dransfield placed the genus Thrinax in subfamily Coryphoideae, tribe Corypheae and subtribe Thrinacinae.[4] Subsequent phylogenetic analyses showed that the Old World and New World members of Thrinacinae are not closely related and as a consequence, Thrinax and related genera were transferred into their own tribe, Cryosophileae.[5] In 2008, Leucothrinax morrisii (formerly T. morrisii) was split from Thrinax after phylogenetic studies showed that its inclusion in Thrinax would render that genus paraphyletic.[6]

Species

Thrinax consists of three species.

Image Scientific name Distribution
Thrinax excelsa1.jpg Thrinax excelsa Jamaica
Thrinax-paviflora-var-paviflora.jpg Thrinax parviflora Jamaica
Thrinax Radiata.JPG Thrinax radiata Greater Antilles, the Bahamas, south Florida, Mexico and Central America.

References

  1. "Thrinax". World Checklist of Selected Plant Species. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/synonomy.do?accepted_id=203942&repSynonym_id=-9998&name_id=203942&status=true. Retrieved 10 April 2010. 
  2. Henderson, Andrew; Gloria Galeano; Rodrigo Bernal (1995). Field Guide to the Palms of the Americas. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08537-1. 
  3. Cano, Ángela; Bacon, Christine D.; Stauffer, Fred W.; Antonelli, Alexandre; Serrano‐Serrano, Martha L.; Perret, Mathieu (2018). "The roles of dispersal and mass extinction in shaping palm diversity across the Caribbean" (in en). Journal of Biogeography 45 (6): 1432–1443. doi:10.1111/jbi.13225. ISSN 1365-2699. 
  4. Uhl, Natalie E.; John Dransfield (1987). Genera Palmarum: a classification of palms based on the work of Harold E. Moore Jr. Lawrence, Kansas: The L. H. Bailey Hortorium and the International Palm Society. 
  5. Dransfield, John; Natalie W. Uhl; Conny B. Asmussen; William J. Baker; Madeline M. Harley; Carl E. Lewis (2005). "A New Phylogenetic Classification of the Palm Family, Arecaceae". Kew Bulletin 60 (4): 559–69. 
  6. Lewis, Carl E.; Scott Zona (2008). "Leucothrinax morrisii, a new name for a familiar Caribbean palm". Palms 52 (2): 84–88. 

Wikidata ☰ Q142326 entry