Home Flora of Pakistan
Home
Name Search
Families
Genera
Species
District Map
Grid Map
Inventory Project
!Berberis L. Search in The Plant ListSearch in IPNISearch in Australian Plant Name IndexSearch in Index Nominum Genericorum (ING)Search in NYBG Virtual HerbariumSearch in JSTOR Plant ScienceSearch in SEINetSearch in African Plants Database at Geneva Botanical GardenAfrican Plants, Senckenberg Photo GallerySearch in Flora do Brasil 2020Search in Reflora - Virtual HerbariumSearch in Living Collections Decrease font Increase font Restore font
 

Published In: Species Plantarum 1: 330. 1753. (1 May 1753) (Sp. Pl.) Name publication detailView in BotanicusView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/2/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 6/3/2011)
General/Distribution: A large genus with nearly 400 species, mostly in Asia, America and the Mediterranean region; represented in Pakistan by 20 species, distributed in the mountainous parts. Several species are well-known as alternate hosts for Rust fungi, especially of wheat and some other cereals.
Comment/Acknowledgements: A difficult genus due to variable nature of its many species, probably affected by environment and hybridization. Overlapping of characters, especially in leaves, stem colour, flower and berry size etc. are not lacking in our several closely related species. Leaf texture, serrations etc. are said to vary from season to season and with the age of the plant in some of our species (Parker, l.c.). Fruits may be red when immature but turn black or dark-blue with maturity. Gregarious or sporadic distribution, evergreen or deciduous habit, fruit colour etc. cannot be ascertained from a dried herbarium specimen unless a comprehensive field note is provided. Among our species, many closely related groups of species, such as, Berberis lyceum Royle, Berberis parkeriana Schneid. Berberis huegeliane Schneid., Berberis afghanica Schneid and Berberis brevissima Jafri with pale stem, often minutely puberulous or glandulose young stems, pruinose or green undersurface of leaves, red or blue berries, need experimental studies. Same is the case with the polymorphic Berberis calliobotrys Aitch. ex Koehne. Ahrendt made comprehensive studies on the genus in several cases but he had very few specimens from our area. No doubt he compared herbarium specimens and living ones grown at Kew and other places, but still some of our species, described by him, are based just on a single specimen. From the small number of herbarium specimens at my disposal, I find quite a number of integrading forms between some of the species. Looking into the range of variation the descriptions provided by Ahrendt for some of our species are quite inadequate.

 

Export To PDF Export To Word
Shrubs, often evergreen and armed, gregarious or sporadic, usually with yellow wood; stem or branches red-brown to pale or whitish, sulcate to almost smooth. Leaves on long shoots usually modified into 1-3(-7)-partite spines; those on the short (dwarf) shoots (in the axils of spines) normal, usually obovate to oblong-elliptic, often crowded, margin denticulate-spinulose to entire, petiolate to sessile. Inflorescence short, on lateral branches, racemiform, umbellate, fascicled or panicled, rarely 1 or few-flowered, often deflexed or hanging (especially in fruit). Prophylls (bracteoles) often present, 3, appressed to the calyx, lanceolate. Flowers yellow to orange, 3-merous pedicellate. Perianth segments usually in 3 whorls subequal to unequal; outer 2 whorls forming the sepals; inner whorl forming the petals, each beset with 2 basal glands. Stamens (4-) 6, usually shorter than petals, sensitive (and springing inwards when touched); anthers dehiscing by ascending, upcurved valves, connectives produced or not. Ovary 1-carpellate, oblong to ellipsoid, 1-locular, (1-)2-6(-15, very rarely more)-ovuled on basal placenta; ovules anatropous; stigma usually broad or peltate, sessile or subsessile, sometimes on distinct style. Berry ellipsoid, subglobose, ovoid, obovoid to oblong, usually red or bluish-black, with or without bloom (bloom white or blue), usually 2-4 seeded (in our species), juicy, pulpy juicy or pithy; style present (persistent) or absent, not more than 1.5 mm long (in our species); seeds mostly oblong-ellipsoid, pale to dark coloured, usually with angular apices and truncate bases, copiously albuminous with straight embryo.
 

Export To PDF Export To Word Export To SDD
Switch to bracketed key format
1.Spines 3-5(-7)-fid. (Baluchistan)
1.Spines 1-3-fid (occasionally 4-5-fid in the Himalayan B. pachyacantha)
2.Leaves very narrow, with breadth/length ratio 1:5-8, only 1-3 (-4) mm broad. (Berries estylose)
Berberis ulicina
2.Leaves usually broader, with breadth/length Ratio 1(1-) 1.5-4 (-5), more than 3 mm broad Sometimes so narrow in B. brevissima and B. calliobotrys but berries stylose)
3.Berries 3-5 mm long, globose (stylose). Leaves 10-20 mm long, 3-6 mm broad (sometimes so in B. calliobotrys but stems dark-red)
Berberis brevissima
3.Berries (6-) 7-12 mm long, (4-) 5-9 mm broad (stylose or estylose). Leaves (1-) 1.5-5 (-10) cm long (3-) 7-40 mm broad
4.Inflorescence a many flowered, loose regular panicle, (6-)10-15 (-17) cm long, with flowers in groups of threes
Berberis chitria
4.Inflorescence racemose, fascicled, umbellate or subumbellate (occasionally panicled below or irregularly) or a congested, irregular panicle, usually less than 6 cm long (sometimes longer in B. pachyacantha but simple racemose)
5.Style conspicuous or significant, (0.5-)1-1.5 mm long (rarely inconspicuous in B. kashmirana)
6.Stems usually pale or pale yellowish
7.Stems (especially younger) minutely puberulous
8.Ovules 1-2, stipitate. Berries red; style c. 0.5 mm long (in flower)
Berberis huegeliana
8.Ovules 5, sessile, Berries black pruinose; style 1 mm long
9.Leaves conspicuously pruinose-white below. Berries 7-8 mm long, 4.5-5 mm broad, heavily pruinose
Berberis lycium
9.Leaves usually green to brownish or pale (rarely pruinose-white) below. Berries 8-9 mm long, 6-7 mm broad, black-blue
Berberis parkeriana
7.Stems glabrous (sometimes verruculose, slightly rough)
10.Style 1 mm long. Berries black, pruinose-white, c. 7 mm broad oblong-globose. Racemes 15-25-flowered; pedicels 5-10 mm long, stout
Berberis glaucocarpa
10.Style (0.3-) 0.5 mm long, Berries oblong-ellipsoid, dark-red, epruinose, c. 5 mm broad. Racemes 8-10 (-12)- flowered; pedicels 8-17 mm long, not stout
Berberis kashmirana
6.Stems usually dark-red or red-brown
11.Style 1-1.5 mm long (conspicuous in younger fruits also). Racemes 4-8 (-10)-flowered, subfascicled to subumbellate, 1-2.5(-3) cm long (rarely sparsely panicled). Berries black, pruinose-white
Berberis calliobotrys
11.Style 0.5 mm long (usually not prominent in younger fruits). Racemes 10-25-flowered mostly 3-6 cm long (rarely sparsely panicled). Berries black-blue
12.Berries small, c. 6 mm long, 3 mm broad (Baluchistan)
Berberis baluchistanica
12.Berries large, 9-10 mm long, 8-9 mm long, 8-9 mm broad. (Kashmir)
Berberis stewartiana
5.Style inconspicuous or insignificant (rarely up to 0.5 mm long)
13.Stems pale or yellowish (sometimes reddish in B. pacyachantha and B. brandisiana)
14.Stems (especially younger) puberulous. Berries black, heavily pruinose. Ovules stipitate
Berberis huegeliana
14.Stems glabrous. Berries red or dard-red, epruinose or slightly pruinose. Ovules sessile or stipitate
15.Berries dark-red, neither rigid nor firm. Ovules stipitate
Berberis kashmirana
15.Berries red, rigid and firm. Ovules sessile
16.Ovules 2. Berries oblong to ellipsoid, 1-2-seeded
Berberis pachyacantha
16.Ovules 4-5. Berries oblong, ovoid or obovoid, 3-5- seeded
Berberis brandisiana
13.Stems dark-red or brown-red (sometimes pale in B. kunawurensis and B. psedumbellata)
17.Stems (especially younger ones) puberulous
18.Inflorescence panicled (occasionally simple), 15-40- flowered
Berberis kunawurensis
18.Inflorescence subumbellate, 3-5(-8)-flowered
Berberis jaeschkeana
17.Stems glabrous
19.Berries neither rigid nor firm, ovoid, obovoid to subglobose, block, pruinose-blue
20.Berries 6 mm long, 3 mm broad, ovoid
Berberis baluchistanica
20.Berries 9-10 mm long, 8-9 mm broad, globose-obovoid or subglobose
Berberis stewartiana
19.Berries ± rigid to firm or pithy, oblong to ellipsoid, red or black, often pruinose-white
21.Berries red, oblong-ellipsoid
22.Ovules 2. Racemes simple, often longer than leaves, 4-10 cm long. leaves usually 3-6 cm long
Berberis pachyacantha
22.Ovules 3-5. Racemes racemose-subumbellate or racemose-fascicled, usually 1-3 cm long, hardly longer than leaves. Leaves usually 1-2.5 cm long
Berberis orthobotrys
21.Berries black, pruinose grey or white
23.Leaves green, epruinose beneath, usually acute, narrowly oblong-obovate. Pedicels 4-8 mm long. Berries 7 mm long, 4.5 mm broad
Berberis aitchisonii
23.Leaves usually grey-pruinose beneath with rounded apices, broadly obovate-oblong. Pedicels (5-) 7-10(-18) mm long. Berries 8-10 mm long, (5-) 6-9 mm broad
24.Inflorescence umbellate or subumbellate. Berries subglobose, obovoid to ellipsoid. 9-11 (-12) mm long, 6-9 mm broad. Spines 1(-3)-fid
Berberis pseudumbellata
24.Inflorescence subfascicled to racemose. Berries oblong, 8 (-10) mm long, c. 5 mm broad. Spines (1-)3-fid
Berberis royleana
 
 
© 2024 Missouri Botanical Garden - 4344 Shaw Boulevard - Saint Louis, Missouri 63110