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Published In: Species Plantarum 2: 885. 1753. (1 May 1753) (Sp. Pl.) Name publication detailView in BotanicusView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 12/28/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 12/28/2011)
Contributor Text: M. Qaiser and Rubina Abid
Contributor Institution: Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science & Technology, Karachi.

and

Department of Botany, University of Karachi, Karachi-75270

General/Distribution: A genus with c. 40 species, distributed in Eurasia and Northern Africa, represented in Pakistan by 2 species.
Comment/Acknowledgements:

Excluded Species:

Doronicum altaicum Pallas, Acta Acad. Sci. Imp. Petrop. 2: 271. t. 16. 1779.

Lectotype: E summis montium altaicorum, ex herb. Pallas (BM!); designated by Alvarez Fernández & G. N. Feliner in Taxon 48: 801. 1999.

R. R. Stewart (Ann. Cat. Vasc. Pl. W. Pak. & Kashm. 741. 1972) reported this Central Asian species from Kashmir and cited two specimens, one from Phalgam and the other from Upper Lidder Valley. We could examine one of these specimens cited by Stewart 21839 from Phalgam which is in no way different from D. falconeri C. B. Clarke. This Central Asian species does not extend beyond Kazakistan.

Doronicum pardaliachensis L., Sp. Pl. 885. 1753; R. Mathur in Hajra et al., Fl. Ind. 13: 204, 1995.

R. Mathur in Fl. Ind. 13: 204. 1995 reported this species from Jammu and Kashmir, probably based on misidentification. We had no access to the specimens examined by Mathur. The occurrence of this European species seems to be highly improbable as it does not extend beyond Italy. He has keyed out this species on the basis of pappose ray florets whereas in D. paradalichensis the ray florets are without pappus. He might have confused it with D. briquetii Cavill., which has been described from Kumaun, India, a species closely related to D. kamaonense (DC.) Alvarez Fernandez. However, there is a strong possibility of occurring D. briquette in Kashmir also.


 

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Herbs, shrubs, rarely vines or trees, sometimes cactus-like with succulent leaves or stem. Leaves alternate or sometimes rosulate, rarely opposite, entire, serrate, dentate or lobed. Capitula solitary, cymose or corymbose-paniculate, radiate, disciform or discoid. Phyllaries, mostly 1-seriate, sometimes biseriate then phyllaries unequal, very rarely multi-seriate. Receptacle epaleate mostly naked. Ray florets female, disc florets bisexual, sometimes functionally male, corolla 5-rarely 4-lobed, outer florets in disciform capitula, female, tubular or filiform. Anthers ecalcarate, mostly ecaudate or very shortly to distinctly caudate, apical appendage ovate-lanceolate to oblong-flat, filament collar either dilated with swollen cells (senecioid genera) or the collar slender hardly wider than basal part of the filament (cacalioid genera). Style in bisexual florets with oblong-linear, dorsally glabrous or rarely papillose, branches usually truncate or penicillate, apically sometimes almost glabrous, stigmatic area in two separate bands, sometimes apically fused. Cypsela ± uniform, mostly ellipsoid-oblong and ribbed, pappus bristles scabrid-barbellate, never plumose, sometimes bristles reduced or even absent.
 

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Capitula solitary, rarely 2, terminal.

 

2. D. falconeri

 

Capitula many in terminal corymbs.

1. D. kamaonense

 

 
 
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