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History and current status of systematic research with araceae


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Other NSF sponsored projects have been completed or are being carried out, including a revision of Philodendron subg. Philodendron of Central America (Croat, 1997b), a revision of Rhodospatha (Croat, in prep.), and a revision of Dieffenbachia of Central America (Croat, 2004, in press.). In addition, Anthurium sect. Semaeophyllium has being revised with the help of Monica Carlson, University of Missouri-St. Louis, (Croat & Carlson, in prep.) and Anthurium sect. Calomystrium ser. Rupicola ser. nov. is being revised with the assistance of Jane Whitehill (Croat & Whitehill, in prep). These five revisions resulted in a total of 96, 67, 30, 22 and 8 species respectively with a total of 139 taxa (65, 52, 22, 6 and 3 species respectively) new to science. Additional new, as yet unpublished taxa have resulted from floristic studies. For example, 20 of the 50 species for Reserva La Planada in Colombia are believed to be new; 84 of 150 for the Flora of La Planada (Nariño); and 11 of the 31 taxa at the Reserva ENDESA in Ecuador. Many additional new species are being described in the Araceae treatment for the Flora of Lita-San Lorenzo (Esmeraldas), the Flora of Shell-Mera (Pastaza), the Flora of Parque Nacional Sangay and the Flora of the Cordillera del Condor. To this date, Croat has published or has in press a total of 671 taxa. The resources that have been built up for aroid research at the Missouri Botanical Garden include one of the largest living collections of aroids and the largest collection of herbarium specimens of neotropical aroids. The living and dried collections include a large percentage of Croat's more than 94,000 personal collections. Finally, Croat organized a three day International Aroid Conference that followed the XVI International Botanical Congress in St. Louis in 1999.
Dorothy Shaw has published a series of mostly technical, experimental or ecological papers concerning the Araceae of Australia and Papua New Guinea. These include observations on the behavior of Colocasia esculenta (Shaw, 1975, 1982; Shaw et al., 1979), pollination in Alocasia macrorrhizos (L.) G. Don [A. brisbanensis] (Shaw et al., 1982; Shaw & Cantrell, 1983a, 1983b), fruit dispersal in Alocasia macrorrhizos (Shaw et al., 1985), plant damage and fruit ingestion of seeds of Alocasia brisbanensis by birds (Shaw, 1998a) and lizards (Sha2, 2998b), stomata of Monstera deliciosa Liebm. (Shaw, 1992c), aroids of botanical gardens in Brisbane (Shaw, 1987), germination of Typhonodorum seeds in cultivation (Shaw, 1990) and the occurrance of the fungus Puccinia on Monstera (Shaw, 1991, 1992a, 1992b, 1993a, 1994, 1995a, 1995b). She published several papers on the endemic, monotypic Gymnostachys anceps including a paper dealing with, habitat (Shaw et al., 1997), fruit dispersal (Shaw et al., 1997) and the seedling root and rhizome system with special reference to contractile roots (Shaw, 2002). Other papers dealt with postage stamps that exhibit plants of the family (Shaw, 1993, 1999), and phenology of Alocasia brisbanensis at Indooroopily, Queensland (Shaw, 2004). With R. Greber she reported on the dasheen mosaic virus in Queensland (Greber & Shaw, 1986).
S. Serizawa published on Japanese Arisaema during the late 1970s and mid-1980s (Serizawa, 1975, 1980a, 1980b, 1981a, 1981b, 1982a, 1982b, 1986). These works, published only in Japanese, meant that he was not widely recognized internationally.
A brief research effort was made by Richard Baker at the Field Museum in Chicago. His efforts, before embarking on a new career in the early 1980's, were entirely in Costa Rica. With W. C. Burger, in charge of the Flora Costaricensis project at the Field Museum, Baker revised Spathiphyllum for Costa Rica (Baker & Burger, 1976). A few years later he collaborated with Tom Croat in the revision of Anthurium for Costa Rica (Croat & Baker, 1979).
Mike Madison played an important role in the late 1970s and early 1980s before changing careers. He began with a flurrish, publishing five papers the first year; two (Madison, 1976b, 1976c), dealing with new species (Rhodospatha and Asterostigma repectively), another comparing Alloschemone and Scindapsus (Madison, 1976a), and another comparing Caladium and Xanthosoma (Madison, 1976d), and finally a paper dealing with the seeds of Monstereae (Madison & Tiffney, 1976). His Ph.D. thesis, a revision of Monstera, was published the following year (Madison, 1977a). Though Madison did make an expedition to Brazil (Madison, 1979a), his principal fieldwork was in Ecuador where he collected widely, describing species in Caladium (Madison, 1981a), Philodendron (Madison, 1977b), Stenospermation (Madison, 1977c) and Xanthosoma (Madison, 1978e). In addition, he described a plant from Brazil as a new Ulearum (Madison, 1980). This later proved to be the new genus Bognera. Aside from his revision of Monstera, other major papers included a revision of the palmately-lobed Anthurium species (Madison, 1978g), a major paper discussing the ecology of the genera of Araceae of the northern Andes (Madison, 1978f), and a partial revision of the Caladieae (Madison, 1981a).
Madison published many miscellaneous short papers, especially while he was editor of Aroideana. These include reports on nomenclature (Madison, 1978a, 1978d), plant culture (Madison, 1978h), the living collections at Selby (Madison, 1978i), packing and shipping aroids (Madison, 1981b), Monstera seeds and the fossil record (Madison & Tiffney, 1976), the rediscovery of Philodendron frits-wentii (Madison, 1978b), and a synopsis of Caladiopsis (Madison, 1978j). Another includes the protection of developing seeds in Araceae (Madison, 1979b). He also wrote illustrative profiles of Monstera deliciosa (Madison, 1978c), Xenophya [= Alocasia] lauterbachiana (Madison, 1979c), Anthurium lilacinum (Madison, 1979d), A. punctatum (Madison, 1979f), and A. superbum (Madison, 1979e).
One of Madison's major accomplishments was the founding of the journal Aroideana with the International Aroid Society [see discussion below] in 1977. Madison began publishing the journal and was its editor for several years when he changed careers. Many of his earlier papers were written specifically for the journal. Madison was also responsible for organizing the first International Aroid Conference at Selby Gardens in Sarasota, Florida on March 28–29, 1980. These conferences have been continued, albeit, irregularly, and they have contributed greatly to the dissemination of knowledge about aroids. With the completion of the conference in St. Louis, Missouri in August 1999, seven such conferences have been held, three of them in conjunction with the International Botanical Congresses. Aroid research was dealt a severe blow with Madison's retirement. This brilliant Harvard-trained researcher left a significant mark in his five short years of work with Araceae.
Wim Crusio, one of H. C. D. de Wit's students, completed a revision of the genus Anubias, and this excellent work was published twice, once in English (Crusio, 1979a) and once in German (Crusio, 1987). Another description of the genus and a discussion of its taxonomy also appeared in German (Crusio, 1980). Crusio has also published short papers on Cryptocoryne (Crusio, 1979b, 1979c). Along with Arie de Graaf he describes a new species of Lagenandra, L. dewitii (Crusio & de Graaf, 1986), and in another redescribes L. ovata Thwaites (Crusio & de Graaf, 1987).
Taking up where de Wit left off, Niels Jacobsen, from the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University in Denmark, did additional work on Cryptocoryne, including extensive fieldwork in Southeast Asia. In a series of general papers he described the biology and ecology of Cryptocoryne. His first paper dealing with Araceae is about the ecology of Cryptocoryne (Jacobsen, 1976) while others deal with its pollination (Jacobsen, 1977a), chromosomes (Jacobsen, 1977b, 1977c; Arends et al., 1982), and flowering behavior (Jacobsen, 1980a), vegetative morphology (Jacobsen et al., 1989a-c) as well as with the description of new species (Jacobsen, 1977d, 1979a, 1980b, 1980e, 1981a, 1982, 1985a), a discussion of C. undulata (Jacobsen, 1981b), C. ferruginea (Jacobsen, 1980d), C. cordata (Jacobsen, 2002) and a revision of the Cryptocoryne albida complex (Jacobsen, 1980c). A 1991 paper (Jacobsen, 1991) treated the small-leaved Cryptocoryne species. A paper co-authored with Marian Ørgaard involved an SEM study of surface features in the spathes of Cryptocoryne and Lagenandra (Ørgaard & Jacobsen, 1998). In a series of papers with Josef Bogner, he revised the Cryptocoryne of the Malay Peninsula (Jacobsen & Bogner, 1986, 1987a-c) then published a complete revision for Borneo (Jacobsen, 1982, 1984, 1985b) and later for Ceylon (Jacobsen, 1988), and Tasek Bera (Jacobsen, 1986). These publications were precursors to his full revision of the genus. The complete revision of Cryptocoryne was published in two versions, one in Danish (Jacobsen, 1979b) and one in German (Jacobsen, 1979c). He will contribute Cryptocoryne for the Flora Malesiana and is a coauthor of a checklist and bibliography for the region (Hay et al., 1995a, 1995b). A paper in German in Aqua-Planta deals with the Cryptocorye complex and includes two new combinations (Jacobsen, 2002) while another in the same issue coauthored with J. D. Bastmeijer and Y. Sasaki describes a new hybrid from Kalimantan (Jacobsen et al. 2002). Finally, Jacobsen published the treatment of the Arales in R. M. J. Dahlgren, H. J. Clifford & P. F. Yeo's, The Families of Monocotyledons: Structure, Evolution and Taxonomy (Jacobsen, 1985c).
Li Heng, working for the Chinese Academy of Sciences at the Kunming Institute of Botany and doing research on Chinese Araceae even before China's opening to the West, has become the authority on the family in China. Her earliest publication deals with the medicinal value of certain Arisaema (Li, 1976) and another, (Li et al., 1977) "Claves diagnosticae et taxa nova Aracearum Sinicarum", provides a key to the genera of Araceae of China and describes 30 new taxa. Her principle interest is in Arisaema, including its phytogeography (Li, 1980a, 1980b, 1981) and taxonomy, describing many new species (Li, 1985, 1988a, 1992a, 1995, 2000; Li et al., 1999; Peng Hua & Li Heng, 1995) as well as Amorphophallus (Li, 1988b-d; Li et al., 1989, 1990; Li & Long, 1989; Long et al., 1989; Yi & Li, 2001), Typhonium (Li & Zgeb-quian, 1983), Remusatia Schott (Li, 1987a, 1991, 1992b; Li & Hay, 1992b; Long et al., 1989b), Rhaphidophora (Li, 1992b), Gonatanthus [later reduced to Remusatia] (Li, 1987b; Li & Hay, 1992b), and Colocasia (Li & Wei, 1993). Her papers frequently deal with cytological details of the species described (Gu et al., 1992; Li et al., 1989). Still others deal with floristics such as that of the Dulongjian Region (Li, 1993b), Xizang area (Li, 1987c), the Gaoligong Mountains (Li et al., 1999), the Hengduan Mountains (Li & Li A.M. 1983, 1994), the Wuliangshan Mountains (Peng Hua & Li Heng, 1998), or plants of medicinal value (Li, 1988, 1990). Papers dealing with the phytogeography of the Araceae (Li 1986, 1996, 1999), divide the family into 12 distribution patterns and 29 subpatterns; and others deal with the origin and phylogeny of Araceae (Li, 1983, 1999). Li presented a paper at the XVI International Botanical Congress in Yokohama dealing with the species diversity of Chinese Araceae (Li, 1993a). Perhaps her major accomplishment is the treatment of the Araceae of China written with C. Y. Wu (Li, 1979a, 1979b) that deals with 34 genera and 191 native species. The largest aroid genus in China, Arisaema, is reported with 82 species. Li Heng is also chiefly responsible for the treatment of the Araceae in the "Iconographia cormophytorum sinicorum (Anonymous, 1976) published by an editorial committee of that publication. This work treats 26 genera and 51 species, all illustrated with line drawings. Li is currently working on the English version of the Flora of China and presented information about that project at the VI and VIII International Aroid Conferences (Li & Long, 1998a). Another recent paper (in Chinese) (Li & Long, 1998b) deals with the taxonomy of Amorphophallus and includes a key to the Chinese species.
Also in China in the same year, Kao Pao-Chung [Gao Baochum], working with the Academica Sinica in Chengdu, Sichuan, did a revision of the Araceae for the Flora Sichuanica (Kao, 1989a) and described new species of Araceae (Kao, 1989b). That flora, not as tropical as Yunnan, treated 13 native genera and 62 native species.
In southwestern China, Liu Pei-Ying at the Research Center of Konjac at the Southwest Agricultural University in Chonqing, has been working on Amorphophallus breeding. She presented a paper at the VI International Aroid Conference in Kunming entitled "Research and Utilization of Amorphophallus (liu, Zhang & Zhang, 1998).
Simon Mayo of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is today one of the foremost aroid researchers. His first paper dealing with Araceae was a report on his early fieldwork in Brazil (Mayo, 1978a), making it one of the first contributions in the new journal Aroideana. His next two papers (Mayo, 1978b; Mayo & Barroso, 1979) dealt with Brazilian species, and his interest in Brazilian Araceae continues to this day (Mayo, 1983a, 1986e, 1987c, 1988b, 1989b, 1995; Mayo & Barbosa, 1996; Mayo & Féliz, 2000; Mayo & Fevereiro, 1982; Mayo & Zappi, 1993; Fevereiro & Mayo, 1982; Mayo et al., 1995; Sampaio et al., 1996). Mayo has in recent years lived and worked in Brazil where he has taught and organized the research of several Brazilian students who were interested in Araceae (Mayo & Nadruz, 1992; Ramalho, 1995; Sakuragui, 1994; Nadruz, 1995; Andrade, 1996; Soares, 1996; Sakuragui & Mayo, 1997). Together with Brazilian colleagues, he has prepared a checklist for all of Brazil (Mayo et al., in prep.) and has been especially interested in the Atlantic coastal regions (Mayo, 1990b). He has published papers on the phytogeography (Mayo, 1984b) and taxonomy of Bahía (Harley & Mayo, 1980; Mayo, 1984b) and has recently prepared a revision of the Araceae of Bahía (Mayo, manuscript). On a broader topic Mayo discussed aroid phytogeography in Africa and South America (Mayo, 1993). Other Mayo papers dealing with New World aroid species are those describing a new Caladium (Mayo & Bogner, 1988) and rediscovering Gearum N. E. Br. (Mayo et al., 1994).
Among Mayo's earliest efforts were with the flora of Trinidad (Mayo, 1981, 1986a) and with taxonomic problems in the West Indies, such as a resolution of the poorly understood Anthurium acaule and its relationship to the A. sect. Pachyneurium (Mayo, 1982a). Mayo has also been heavily involved with African Araceae, and he has produced the treatment of the Araceae for the Flora of the Mascarene Islands (Mayo, 1983b, 1984c) and the Flora of Tropical East Africa (Mayo, 1985a). This in turn has led to considerable involvement with the taxonomy of African Amorphophallus (Mayo et al., 1982; Bogner et al., 1985), Araceae in the Flora of Cyprus 2 (Mayo & Meikle, 1985), and Arisaema (Mayo, 1982b, 1984a, 1985b, 1986b, 1987a, 1987b; Mayo & Gilbert, 1986). A short paper deals with Biarum (Mayo, 1980a) while others focus on aroids at Kew (Mayo, 1979) and an aroid symposium at Selby Gardens (Mayo, 1980b). Still another paper discusses the presence of anthocyanins and flavonoids in the Araceae (Williams et al., 1981). Mayo's participation in a special volume of Curtis's Botanical Magazine resulted in articles dealing with the "Genera of Araceae" project (Mayo et al., 1995a, 1995b, 1995e), and Roberto Burle Marx (Mayo, 1978c, 1982c, 1982d; Mayo et al., 1995c). He has also reviewed various books on Araceae (Mayo, 1980d, 1982d, 1983c, 1986c, 1991b).
For his Ph.D. work Mayo chose to do a revision of Philodendron subg. Meconostigma (Schott) Engl. (Mayo, 1986d) but his work went well beyond Meconostigma, leading him to conduct research in various aspects of the whole Philodendroideae. In a series of papers he discusses the evolution (Mayo, 1988a), the gynoecial structure (Mayo, 1989a), and the taxonomy of P. subg. Meconostigma (Mayo, 1991a); and the history and infrageneric nomenclature of Philodendron (Mayo, 1990). He was the first to formally recognize tribe Pteromischum as a subgenus. Mayo has subsequently put all of his information on this group and other genera together in a massive computer-driven cladistic study to reappraise the suprageneric classification of the Araceae. This system is presented in The Genera of the Araceae (Mayo et al., 1997). Using the same cladistic information, the authors (including J. Bogner & P. Boyce) present the case for the inclusion of the Lemnaceae into the Araceae as a subclade of a monophyletic Araceae (Mayo et al., 1995). They have also completed a treatment of the Araceae in K. Kubitzki's The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants (Mayo et al., in press), and done an article on the acolytes of the Araceae (Mayo et al., 1995d).
Simon Mayo's decision in 1973 to leave the Horticulture Department at Kew Gardens and to become involved with the taxonomy of the Araceae was an important event for research with the Araceae. His research, especially his broad general studies in the evolution of the Philodendroideae and his cladistic studies that have reclassified the genera of Araceae, are on the cutting edge.
Richard Sheffer did important breeding studies and cytological work with Anthurium during his Ph.D dissertation (Sheffer, 1974, 1977) at the University of Hawaii and later at Indiana University Northwest. The work was carried out in part with his major professor, cytologist and Anthurium breeder H. Kamemoto (Sheffer & Kamemoto, 1976a, 1978; Sheffer et al., 1980). Sheffer published a review of chromosome numbers for Anthurium (Sheffer & Kamemoto, 1976b; Sheffer & Croat, 1983), and he conducted a cytotaxonomic study of the Anthurium scandens complex (Sheffer et al., 1980). Another major accomplishment was breeding studies carried out with Anthurium sect. Pachyneurium (Croat, 1991a) [see also Kamemoto above]. Sheffer has a new greenhouse facility filled with Araceae that he uses in his cytological research.
Another important plant breeder dealing primarily with Araceae is R. J. (Jake) Henny from the Central Florida Research and Education Center, University of Florida in Apopka. His work has been largely experimental involving culture techniques of Aglaonema, Anthurium, Dieffenbachia, and Spathiphyllum (Henny, 1980a, 1989a, 1989b; Henny & Fooshee, 1990a, 1990b; Henny et al. 1980a, 1994, 1995), the use of growth regulators to induce flowering (Henny, 1980b, 1981, 1983a, 1983c, 1988c, 1989b, 1991, 1992; Henny & Fooshee, 1983, 1989b, 1990b, 1990c, 1991; Henny & Rasmussen, 1980b), breeding (Henny, 1982a-c, 1983b, 1984, 1988a, 1989a; Henny & Rasmussen, 1980a, 1980c, 1980d, 2000), and aroid introductions (Henny, 1988b, 1995a, 1995b; Henny et al., 1987a, 1987b). Henny recently published a manuscript on progress in ornamental Aroid breeding research (Henny et al. 2004). Ann Chase, also from the C.F.R.E.C.-Apopka, works on aroid research and has published results on various cultural aspects (Chase, 1989; Chase & Henny, 1990; Chase & Poole, 1991) as have C.A. Conover (Conover & Henny, 1995), R.W. Henley (Henley, 1992), and D. Norman (Norman, 1996).
Marija Bedalov, working at the University of Zagreb in Croatia, has worked many Araceae of the Balkan region. Her Ph.D. thesis, written in Croatian, dealt with the cytotaxonomy of the Araceae of Yugoslovia (Bedalov, 1973a, 1976b). Since then she has worked with several genera including Arisarum (Bedalov & Broni?, 1999), Biarum (Bedalov, 1969b), Calla (Bedalov, 1983b, 1994), and Dracunculus (Bedalov, 1972, 1976b, 1994; Bedalov & Hesse, 1999), but most of her work has been with Arum, especially dealing with aspects of cytology, phytogeography and palynology (Bedalov,1975a-c, 1976a, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1981a, 1981b, 1982, 1983a, 1984, 1985, 1999; Bedalov & Guttermann, 1982; Bedalov & Bronic, 1989; Bedalov & Hesse, 1989; Bedalov et al., 1991; Bedalov et al., 1993a, 1993b, 1999a, 1999b; Bianco et al., 1994; Bedalov & Fischer, 1995; Bedalov & Drenkovski, 1997; Bedalov & Bronic (1998a, 1998b; Bedalov et al., 1998). She also has been very active publishing chromosome reports (Bedalov, 1973; Favarger & Bedalov, 1998) and especially in IOPB Chromosome Data 10 [see list of literature]. With M. Hesse she has studied pollen types within Dracunculus (Bedalov & Hesse, in prep). Other papers in preparation include a cytotaxonomical study of Arisarum vulgare (Bedalov & Bronic, in prep.), a paper on the artificial hybridization in Arum (Bedalov et al., in prep), on observations in meiosis in Arum (Bedalov et al., in prep), and on studies with Arum in Denmark (Bedalov et al., in prep).
Bedalov has also dealt with the cytology and phytogeography of Calla and Acorus (Bedalov, 1983b). Her work has largely been concentrated in the Balkan region, especially in the former Yugoslavia. A participant in the first International Aroid Conference as well as third, fourth and sixth, she is an active and productive researcher. In addition to her work in Zagreb, she carries out independent investigations with a colleague in Switzerland.
Jin Murata, an expert on Asian Arisaema, published his first paper on Arisaema late in the decade (J. Murata, 1978). Several other papers describing new species followed (J. Murata, 1956, 1983a, 1985a; J. Murata & Ohashi, 1980; J. Murata & Ohno, 1989; J. Murata & S. Wu, 2003; J. Murata et al., 1994), one on a new combination in Typhonium (J. Murata & Mayo, 1991) and another describing the first leaves of a species (J. Murata, 1986a). Murata provides keys, photos and a discussion of the Japanese species of Arisaema (J. Murata, 1990a), in Aroideana. Other papers include information on chromosomes of Arisaema (J. Murata, 1983b, 1990b; J. Murata & Iijima, 1983), a study of the stem morphology (J. Murata, 1988), a study of shoot organization recognizing four types of stems (J. Murata, 1990c), and a study of developmental pattern of pedate leaves (J. Murata, 1990d) and allozyme differentiation in Arisaema (J. Murata & Kawahara, 1994a-c; M. Maki & J. Murata, 2001). Two papers deal with attempts of infrageneric classification (J. Murata, 1984, 1990f) and others deal with revisions of minor groups or species complexes of Arisaema (J. Murata, 1962, 1985b, 1986b, 1986c, 1990d, 1990g, 1991, 1995; J. Murata & Ohno, 1991). Murata also wrote a memoriam for Hiroshi Hara (J. Murata, 1987).
Among Murata's major publications is a complete revision of Arisaema in Japan (Ohashi & J. Murata, 1980), complete with keys and illustrations [see Ohashi above] and a proposed infrageneric classification of Arisaema (J. Murata, 1984). Murata also participated in the research of his student, Duangchai Sriboonma in a molecular study of the genus Typhonium (Sriboonma et al., 1993) and a revision of the genus (Sriboonma et al., 1994). Murata has recently published an extensive review of the cytology of Arisaema with the help of senior author Kuniaki Watanabe and Tomiki Kobayashi (K. Watanabe et al., 1998). Murata also co-authored papers discussing Arisaema seppikoense and the Arisaema undulatifolium group with Watanabe and Kobayashi, the latter as senior author (Kobayashi et al., 1999, 2000).
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