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History and current status of systematic research with araceae


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Murata is a member of the team of taxonomists working on the Araceae treatment for the Flora Malesiana and is a coauthor of a checklist and bibliography for this region (Hay et al., 1995, 1995a). He organized the VI International Aroid Conference as a part of the XI International Botanical Congress in Yokohama in 1993.
Another Japanese botanist, sometimes publishing with Hotta, is H. Okada. His work has been largely experimental and behavioral, including cytotaxonomical studies of populations of Araceae in West Sumatra (Okada, 1984, 1986), studies of population dynamics of Schismatoglottis in Sumatra (Okada, 1989; Okada & Hotta, 1987; Okada & Mori, in press) as well as on chromosome behavior in Colocasia (Okada & Hambali, 1989) and Schismatoglottis (Okada, 1992a). Two other papers discuss cytotaxonomic studies of rheophytic aroids (Okada, 1992b, 1993).

Tomiki Kobayashi from the Hyogo Prefectural Institute of Environmental Science in Kobe, Japan did graduate work under H. Kamemoto at the University of Hawaii. He has published with Kamemoto on using gel electrophoresis to identify Anthurium cultivars (Kobayashi et al., 1987). He published a review of the cytology of Arisaema, and was also senior author of two recent papers discussing Arisaema seppikoense and the Arisaema undulatifolium group (K. Watanabe et al., 1998; Kobayashi et al., 1999, 2000).



Working in Hungary on Arum, A. Terpo has made studies on the distribution and taxonomy of Arum species (Terpo, 1971, 1973) in Pannonian territories (now mostly Hungary and Yugoslavia).
Toward the end of the 1970s, P. Blanc in France carried out important studies on the growth behavior of the Araceae. These studies (Blanc, 1977a, 1977b, 1978, 1980) were a precurser to the more extensive growth behavior studies carried out by Tom Ray (see below).
As mentioned earlier, the late 1970s also saw the creation of the International Aroid Society, known initially as the American Aroid Society. This organization, founded in Miami, Florida on June 18, 1977, was started through the inspiration of Bette Waterbury, Allen Fernández, John Faust, Shirley Crete, Marilyn Turner, Peggy Fischer (all constituting the first officers with Waterbury as president), Tom Fennell, Monroe Birdsey, Ron Weeks, De Hull, Gary Antosh, Joan Hackler, and others. In the words of Michael Madison, in the leading article of Aroideana, the International Aroid Society was intended to "promote the study of the aroid family in all of its aspects." Madison started publishing the society's journal, naming it Aroideana at the suggestion of Dan Nicolson. The society and certainly the journal have had their share of difficulties, mostly the result of a volunteer-driven and sometimes inadequately prepared staff, but also because of editors who gave up, and even one (Mark Moffler) who died suddenly, along with the many difficulties in finding the right publisher. The journal has by all accounts been immensely valuable in dealing with Araceae. Many of the papers published throughout the years simply would not have been written at all had it not been for the need to "feed the presses." Major contributors in the first few years were Madison himself, Simon Mayo, Josef Bogner, Tom Croat, and Harald Riedl. Other aroid researchers who contributed were George Bunting, Niels Jacobsen, Tom Ray, Dan Nicolson, Alistair Hay, Peter Boyce, M. Sivadasan, Richard Sheffer, Dorothy Shaw, Mike Grayum, Richard Henny, H. Kamemoto, Marianne Knecht, Farah Ghani, Larry Klotz, and Mark Moffler.
From the onset, the journal has encouraged and received articles from horticulturists and plant collectors since plant lovers of all kinds primarily support the aroid society. Many of them have contributed greatly, such as Bette Waterbury, John Banta, Frank Brown, an expert on the genus Aglaonema (Brown, 1980, 1982, 1984), Fred Dortort, Amy Donovan, Lawrence Garner, dealing with hybridizing Alocasia (Garner, 1983), James Watson, Luis Bueno, Julius Boos, David Leedy, Linda Theus, David Prudhomme, John Johnston, Joe Wright, Mike Bush, William Drysdale, Marcel Lecoufle, Stu Cramer, and Arnold Melim. Naturalist Julius Boos, a recent contributer, is particularly knowledgeable about the aroids of Trinidad and some members of the Lasioideae (Boos, 1997), especially Urospatha (Boos, 1993; Boos & Boos, 1993). Fanny Phillips made an important contribution to the understanding of Amorphophallus (Phillips, 1988). Libbe Besse wrote a paper on the native south Florida aroids (Besse, 1980). She has also played an important role in the development of Selby Gardens and has sponsored and participated in several important expeditions to Ecuador with Mike Madison and others at Selby Gardens. These expeditions were among the most productive, ever, in the procurement of living Araceae and her assistance is to be commended. David Burnett made a major contribution where he contributed an unpublished table of contents to earlier Aroideana volumes that was useful in preparing the published indices (Croat & Rossman, 1991; Donovan & Malesevich, 1994), and he published an illustrated introduction to the cultivated Alocasia (Burnett, 1984). Since there is no modern revision of this genus, the work by Burnett has been immensely useful. Another paper discusses a proposal for hybrid and cultivar names (Burnett, 1982).
In addressing the success of the journal and the International Aroid Society itself, both of which have been instrumental in promoting activity with Araceae, a major tribute must go to a small band of enthusiasts in Miami who have provided the impetus to keep things running. The faces have changed over the years although many devoted members are worthy of mention, only a few can be mentioned here. Foremost is the late Bette Waterbury, founder and first president (who also served subsequent terms) and president emeritus, who did so much to keep the society alive. Other productive members such as Linda Theus, Allen Fernandez, and Maree Winter are no longer with us. Special thanks must go to people like Amy Donovan, present editor of the journal and one of the most dedicated society members; Dewey Fisk who served as board member, President, Corresponding Secretary, journal editor, plant sale promotor and auctioneer; David Burnett, who served as a board member, recruited many Australian members and ran Australian membership affairs; David Leedy who served as newsletter editor; Bruce McManus who served as newsletter editor, membership chairman and especially as Show Chairman for the annual meeting and show; Denis Rotalante, Ron Weeks and others who could always be counted on to bring big plants for the Annual Show and Sale; Tricia Frank, Susan Staiger, Jerry Bengis, Donna Rich, and many others who have served as officers or who were heavily involved in the work of putting together the Annual Meeting and Show are all to be commended for their efforts. Petra Schmidt, who was assistant for many years, first as aroid greenhouse manager and later as research assistant, is one of the unsung heros of the aroid community. She has served as a board member, membership chairperson, assistant editor, book sales and compiler of membership lists and Aroideana indices in addition to carrying out the multitude of tasks necessary in my own research program. Finally, the many others who were there making the society work; they are the ones who sold the plants, the T-shirts and books to make the profits which kept the journal in publication during the lean years. Certainly all of us owe them a debt of gratitude.
The 1980s were, in many respects, some of the most important years for aroid research. This period saw the greatest increase of knowledge since the time of Engler, Krause and Sodiro, around the turn of the century. Most researchers who had begun their work in the 1960-1970’s were still active. It was also a time of real ferment with a number of excellent, new, well-trained researchers beginning their careers with Araceae. Peter Boyce at Kew began work with Mediterranean Araceae. The focus of research on Araceae also became increasingly diverse; no longer mostly systematic, but instead focus widened to a number of behavioral and experimental approaches. Hegnauer reviewed the chemical attributes of the Araceae (Hegnauer, 1963, 1986, 1987). Tom Ray began working with a wide variety of aspects of growth behavior (See, Ray below). H. J. Tillich reported on seedling development (1985). Jim French conducted an extensive and comprehensive review of technical aspects of the Araceae, including a wide spectrum of anatomical features and a broad molecular survey before embarking on studies with pollination biology of the Araceae (See French below). Mike Grayum startled the aroid world with his astounding new suprageneric classification that followed his thorough SEM review of pollen and a review of virtually all character states in the Araceae (Grayum, 1984). Marianne Knecht published her biosystematic study of the Araceae of the Ivory Coast. Denis Barabé began studies of floral anatomy. William Carvell followed with studies on the Pothoideae and Monsteroideae (Carvell, 1989a; 1989b). Robin Scribailo at Purdue North Central in Westville, Indiana, is now doing similar studies on floral anatomy. He published work on the developmental anatomy of Peltandra (Scribailo & Lloyd, 1993) and on shoot and floral development in Calla (Scribailo & Tomlinson, 1992). Gitte Petersen began her work with the cytology of the Araceae (see "Miscellaneous Disciplines" below). Helen Young (currently at Barnard College in New York), working at La Selva in Costa Rica, observed Philodendron rothschuhianum (Engl. & K. Krause) Croat & Grayum (Young, 1987), and often with the assistance of George Schatz (Missouri Botanical Garden) studied reproductive biology of Dieffenbachia (Young, 1986, 1988a, 1988b) thereby discovering many interesting features that gave insight into all other beetle pollinated genera. Lloyd Goldwasser (University of California) worked on similar pollination projects. Long Chun-lin, working with Li Heng at the Kunming Institute of Botany, began working with Chinese Araceae. Finally, this decade saw one of the first and certainly the best book devoted to Araceae written for the general public, Aroids, written by Deni Bown, an amateur aroider and a highly regarded professional writer. Her book has gone a long way toward introducing Araceae to the general public. It is not only highly informative, but it is easy reading and is filled with excellent pictures (Bown, 1988). She also contributed papers for Aroideana on naturalized English aroids (Bown, 1985) and on the history of Acorus calamus L. (Bown, 1987) to Aroideana.
The published aroid research of James C. French, first at the University of Mississippi and later at Rutgers, began in the early 1980s. Perhaps no aroid worker was ever as prolific over a single decade. His first paper (French, 1977) dealt with growth relationships of leaves and internodes in vining angiosperms with different modes of attachment. His first paper dealing exclusively with Araceae was a collaborative survey of the vascular system in Araceae (French & Tomlinson, 1980). A series of papers followed which revealed the vascular anatomy of all the subfamilies: Pothoideae (French & Tomlinson, 1981a), Philodendroideae (French & Tomlinson, 1981b, 1984), Calloideae and Lasioideae (French & Tomlinson, 1981c), Monsteroideae (French & Tomlinson, 1981d), and Colocasioideae, Aroideae and Pistoideae (French & Tomlinson, 1983). Another work dealt with a much larger survey of Philodendron, a genus of especially variable vascular anatomy (French & Tomlinson, 1981b) while still another dealt with stems in general (French, 1983). French also embarked on an independent survey of a variety of anatomical features with the hope of understanding their taxonomic significance. These included meristems (Fisher & French, 1976, 1978), endothecial thickenings in stamens (French, 1985a, 1985b, 1986c), ovular vasculature (French, 1986a), sclerotic hypodermis in roots (French, 1987a), anastomosing laticifers (French, 1988), and patterns of staminal vasculature (French, 1986b). With M. G. Fox he studied the systematic occurrence of sterols in the latex of Colocasioideae (Fox & French, 1988). These broad surveys contributed greatly to a better understanding of the evolution of the Araceae and the attempt, so intense at that time, to resolve the differences in competing systems of classification (Grayum, 1984; Bogner & Nicolson, 1991).

In a thorough survey of the chloroplast DNA of Araceae (French et al., 1995), French and his colleagues contributed greatly to the most recent revision of the suprageneric classification of the Araceae (Mayo et al., 1997). Other molecular studies dealt with Acorus and Gymnostachys (French & Kessler, 1989) and the Colocasioideae (Kessler & French, 1989). Jim French has covered a variety of distinct research topics in Araceae and has done them all well. His latest approach is with the pollination biology that he is conducting during his sabbatical while living with his family in Costa Rica.


Alistair Hay began his career in New Guinea and published a treatment of the Araceae of Papua New Guinea (Hay, 1981). For his Ph.D. dissertation he revised Cyrtosperma (Hay, 1986, 1988a). With D. J. Mabberley he published a paper (Hay & Mabberley, 1991) on a controversial theory of evolution in Araceae and discussed its implication for the evolution of other angiosperms. Hay, now working at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney in Australia, had a major interest in Australasia and published a treatment of Alocasia for Australasia with R. Wise (Hay & Wise, 1991), discussed collecting Alocasia in New Guinea (Hay, 1990a), did a revision of Typhonium (Hay, 1993a), and Amorphophallus (Hay, 1988b) for Australasia, described the new genus, Lazarum, discovered in Australia (Hay, 1992a), published the Araceae of New South Wales (Hay, 1993b), and new taxa of Alocasia (Hay, 1989, 1994; Hay et al., 1997 in press), Colocasia (Hay, 1996b), Nephthytis in Borneo (Hay et al., 1994), Rhaphidophora (Hay, 1993c), and aroids of Papua New Guinea (Hay, 1990b). Recently he completed a revision of the genus Pothos for New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Australia (Hay, 1995), introduced a new species of Typhonium (Hay & Taylor, 1996), a revision of Schismatoglottis for Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore (Hay, 1996a), and a revision of the Schismatoglottideae of Malesia (Hay & Taylor, 2000; Bogner & Hay, 2000). He is also publishing a revision of Homalomena in New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago and Solomon Islands (Hay, 1997a), an article on Alocasia melo (Hay et al., 1997), and on new species of Typhonium (Hay, 1997b). Hay has recently revised Alocasia in the Philippines (Hay, in press), reviewed Schismatoglottis in the Philippines (Hay, in press) and is working on a treatment of the Flora of Australia (Hay, in prep.), a revision of Alocasia in West Malaysia (Hay, in prep.), and a popular account of the Araceae of Sabah and Sarawak (Hay, in prep.). Other recently completed papers involve studies with shoot architecture in Pothos (Hay, in press) and a discussion of the value of living collections for taxonomic studies and for conservation (Hay, in press).
Hay's interest has continued with the subfamily Lasieae worldwide. He described the neotropical genus Anaphyllopsis A. Hay (Hay, 1988c) and discussed the tribal and subtribal distribution and circumscription of the Lasieae (Hay, 1992b) as well as the proper circumscription of Lasia concinna Alderw. (Hay, 1988d). Currently Hay is the coordinator of the Araceae treatment for the Flora Malesiana (Hay, 1994b), a project involving contributions from about a half dozen aroid taxonomists from all over the world, including, in addition to Hay, Josef Bogner, Peter Boyce, Wilbert Hetterscheid, Niels Jacobsen, Jin Murata, and Elizabeth Widjaja. A recent joint effort by several of these contributors has resulted in a checklist (Hay et al., 1995a) and a bibliography (Hay et al., 1955b). As the prime mover on the Flora Malesiana project and a member of the Flora Malesiana Foundation Board, his contribution to aroid research is certain to continue to be profitable.
Tom Ray carried out studies on growth and heterophylly on Syngonium for his Ph.D thesis at Harvard (Ray, 1981). While working at the University of Delaware, he played an important role in understanding growth of Araceae and his first paper in Araceae dealt with skototropism (Strong & Ray, 1975). Other early papers describe the physical aspects and variability of growth behavior in general terms (Ray, 1979) and use of specific cases to demonstrate growth behavior (Ray, 1983a, 1983b; Oberbauer et al., 1980). In another paper (Ray, 1986) he began to define terms and discuss the universality of the stem segment regardless of its age. In another he discusses cyclic heterophylly of plants displaced from trees (Ray, 1987a). In a paper entitled "Leaf types in the Araceae" (Ray, 1987b) he begins to define the complex terminology that will become a part of his work. In the next two papers (Ray, 1987c, 1988) the system is further defined and a schematic formulation is provided for each type of shoot organization. Ray also describes metamorphosis, i.e. the abrupt change from one growth form to another, and discusses how this varies in different genera (Ray, 1990, 1992a). Another paper discusses a novel method to measure and record leaf shape using Syngonium podophyllum Schott as a test case (Ray, 1992b). Though not a systematist, Ray did describe a new species of Syngonium (Ray, 1980). Ray's comparative surveys of most genera proved very useful in helping to sort out the generic relationships. With the assistance of Susanne Renner (Ray & Renner, 1990) he translated Part 2 of Engler's (1877) "Comparative Studies on the Morphology of the Araceae." This information was yet another important element in the body of knowledge accumulated during this productive period of Araceae research. Unfortunately for aroid research, Ray has embarked on another field of learning. His high intellect and imagination will be sorely missed in Araceae research.
Hiromichi Yoshino from Kyoto University in Japan explored the Himalayas of Nepal and Bhutan (and wrote two general interest books on the subject) before he began his work with Araceae at the kihara Institute for Biological Research in 1975, continuing his studies after he moved to Okayama University, publishing molecular studies on Colocasia and Alocasia in Japan and China (Yoshino, 1975, 1994). Another paper describes the morphological characteristics of the wild species of Colocasia (Yoshino, 1984). His Ph.D. dissertation dealt with a phylogenetic differentiation in taro, Colocasia esculenta (Yoshino, 1995). Other papers deal with phosphate and nitrate absorption ability of wild species of taro (Yoshino, 1995) and morphological and genetic variation in cultivated and wild taro (Yoshino, 2002).
Michael H. Grayum, while still a student at the University of Massachusetts, spent a summer in Costa Rica working at La Selva. His first paper dealing with Araceae described the characteristics of that flora (Grayum, 1982). His Ph.D. thesis, written at the University of Massachusetts, involved an SEM study of pollen, but in characteristic thoroughness, he studied every other known character state as well, and on this basis he developed a new system of classification of the genera of Araceae (Grayum, 1984). The system, quite at odds with that of Engler, has for the most part proven over time to better fit our modern state of knowledge of the family. Other papers dealing directly with the information assembled for his thesis include: one on the evolution and ecological significance of starch in pollen of Araceae (Grayum, 1985), the phylogenetic implications of pollen nuclear number in the Araceae (Grayum, 1986a, 1986b), correlation between pollination biology and pollen morphology with some implications for angiosperm evolution (Grayum, 1986b), and the systematic embryology of the Araceae (Grayum, 1991). The bulk of his thesis was published under the titles "Evolution and Phylogeny of the Araceae" (Grayum, 1990) and "Comparative External Pollen Ultrastructure of the Araceae and Putatively Related Taxa" (Grayum, 1992a). Another major contribution was his investigations supporting the removal of Acorus from the Araceae, listing 13 unique characteristics of Acorus not shared with other Araceae (Grayum, 1987a).
Grayum's principal work with Araceae, since his thesis, has involved Costa Rica where he lived for seven years, and with a revision of Philodendron subg. Pteromischum (Grayum, 1996). Some new species of P. subg. Pteromischum have been published (Grayum, 1992b, 1996) as well as a new Anthurium (Grayum, 1993). He has also had an interest in Caladium and Chlorospatha (Grayum, 1987b, 1991b). Grayum now serves as Editor of the Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden and co-investigator of the Costa Rican Manual project. His latest efforts in this project involved a revision of the Araceae of Costa Rica. This has resulted in his current paper (Grayum, in press).
Marianne Knecht, from Switzerland, did a biosytematic study of the Araceae of Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) in tropical West Africa. This was a thorough study of every aspect of each species occurring there from morphology to phytogeography, cytology, anatomy, palynology and flowering behavior. The results are published in a book in French (Knecht, 1983). Another paper deals with African traditional medicine (Knecht, 1980).
M. Sivadasan (Das), from the University of Calicut in Kerala, India, has worked with the Araceae extensively since the mid-1970s. His unpublished doctoral thesis was a taxonomic study of the Araceae of South India (Sivadasan, 1982). His first published paper described a new species of Typhonium (Sivadasan & Nicolson, 1981), and his first major production was a revision of Theriophonum (Sivadasan & Nicolson, 1982). Other publications include popular articles published on rare Indian aquatic plants, including Cryptocoryne (Sivadasan, 1985a, 1989b) and Lagenandra (Sivadasan, 1990; Sivadasan & Babu, 1995; Sivadasan & Bogner, 1986), and he co-produced the Araceae for the flora of Tamilnadu Carnatic (Sivadasan & Nicolson, 1983). Sivadasan (1983) also wrote on threatened species of Indian aroids as well as the description of new species or new names of Arisaema (Sivadasan, 1985b; Sivadasan & Kumar, 1987; Sivadasan & Nicolson, 1981, 1983a), Lasia (Sivadasan & Sajeev, 1996), Amorphophallus (Sivadasan, 1986a, 1986b, 1989a), Pothos (Sivadasan et al., 1989; 1994), and Theriophonum (Sivadasan & Wilson, 1997, in press). Another paper discusses the pollination biology of Amorphophallus (Sivadasan & Sabu, 1989). In collaboration with C. R. Suresh and K. S. Manilal, he discussed the taxonomy of aroid species in H. A. van Rheede tot Draakestein's Hortus Indicus Malabaricus. A recent addition to the study of the Indian flora is his study of the Araceae of the Silent Valley area (Sivadasan, 1999). This treats 9 genera and 21 species with 17 color figures. Currently, Sivadasan has an article in press with the journal Aroideana concerning flowering phenology and beetle pollination in Theriophonum infaustum N. E. Br.
Peter Boyce's interest in Araceae began about 1980. He was involved in the cultivation of aroids and exploration, made a collecting trip to Crete as early as 1986 (Boyce, 1986). In his official capacity at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, he began his work with Araceae as Simon Mayo's assistant. He properly chose to work in a different part of the world than Mayo, initially doing revisionary work with the Mediterranean genera, especially Arum, about which he has published a book (Boyce, 1993a). This work, complete with color paintings, covers all aspects of the taxonomy and biology of the genus. A similar book, this one dealing with Biarum, is to be published. Other publications on Mediterranean plants deal with Arisarum (Boyce, 1989, 1990), Biarum (Boyce, 1987b, 1995h, 1999; Boyce & Athanasiou, 1991), Arum (Boyce, 1987a, 1988, 1989, 1994a, 1995j), and include descriptions of new species. Boyce has also published a treatment of both Dracunculus and Helicodiceros (Boyce, 1994b).
As noted above, Boyce is a member of the team working on the Araceae for the Flora Malesiana and has coauthored a checklist and bibliography of the region (Hay et al., 1995, 1995a) and written about collecting in Peninsular Malaysia (Boyce, 1994). He is responsible for Epipremnum (Boyce, 1998), Pothos (Boyce, 2000), Rhaphidophora (Boyce, 1999), and Scindapsus. He is also doing the Araceae for the Flora of Brunei (Boyce, 1994c, 1997). In additiion, he is coordinator of the Araceae project for the Flora of Thailand, contributing the accounts for the Pothoideae and Monsteroideae. Most of his recent publications deal with the biogeography (Boyce, 1996c), and architecture and growth patterns of Pothos (Boyce & Poulsen, 1994) and P. grandis (Boyce & Nguyen, 1995, 1996), and miscellaneous papers as well as other genera from southeast Asia including Amydrium (Boyce, 1995a), Bucephalandra (Boyce, 1995b; Boyce et al., 1995a), Eminium (Lobin & Boyce, 1991), Hapaline (Boyce, 1996), Homalomena (Boyce, 1994b), Pinellia Ten. (Boyce, 1988), Rhapidophora (Boyce, 1996b, 2000c), Schismatoglottis and Pycnospatha (Boyce, 1993b), Scindapsus (Boyce, 1993c), and Steudnera (Boyce, 1995b). Besides working with Asian genera his studies have also included African genera, namely Culcasia (1995g) and the American genera Anthurium (Boyce, 1995e) and Ulearum (Boyce, 1995f). Boyce was largely responsible for compiling a special issue of Curtis's Botanical Magazine that was devoted entirely to Araceae and included genera from Asia, Africa, and America (Boyce, 1995d-i). Many of his individual contributions to this are cited above but he also wrote for this work an introduction to the family Araceae (Boyce, 1995d), Araceae at the herbarium of Kew (Boyce, 1996b), and an article on aroid conservation (Boyce, 1995i) for the special issue. Boyce co-authored an article on aroid cultivation with P. Brewster and R. Wilford (Boyce et al., 1995) and along with Mayo and Bogner he contributed an article on the history of Araceae research (Mayo et al., 1995). Boyce (1996d) also contributed Arisarum, Arum, Biarum, and Pothos to The World of Plants series. Finally, Boyce is a member of a team (including Mayo and Bogner) who are working on a new understanding of the family at both the supra-family level (Mayo et al., 1995b) and at the suprageneric level (Mayo et al., in press). His intimate knowledge of the Asian Araceae is critical to that effort. Along with Mayo and Bogner, he is an author of The Genera of Araceae (Mayo et al., 1997) and he lectured on this subject at the VI International Aroid Conference in Kunming, China (Mayo et al., 1998). Boyce also contributed to a major study dealing with a infrageneric and infrafamiliar phylogeny of subfamily Monsteroideae with Sheh-May Tam as the senior author (Tam et al., 2004).
Miklos Treiber, working at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, did his Ph.D. thesis on a biosystematic study of the Arisaema triphyllum complex (Treiber, 1980).
Collette Ntépé-Nyame of the University of Cameroon has described a new species of Rhektophyllum (R. camerunense Ntépé-Nyame [now Cercestis] (Ntépé, 1981). She also wrote a paper, with R. Letouzey in Paris, on the nomenclatural and taxonomic problems with Culcasia scandens (Letouzey & Ntépé, 1981). Her most recent contribution is the treatment of the Araceae for the Flore du Cameroun (Ntépé-Nyame, 1988). The treatment, written in French, has 56 plates each with one or more detailed line drawings.
Sue Thompson of the Carnegie Museum published her first paper on the distribution and ecology of Cyrtosperma chamissonis Merr. (Thompson, 1982). She has begun a revision of Xanthosoma (Thompson, 1984, 1985, 1989) and did her Ph.D. thesis on the systematics and biology of Araceae and Acoraceae of temperate North America (Thompson, 1990). She contributed the treatment of the Araceae for the Flora of North America (Thompson, 2000) and another paper detailing the biology of North American Araceae (Thompson, in prep). Thompson is a member of the Honorary Board of Directors for the International Aroid Society and has also been editor of the I. A. S. Newsletter.
Chinese botanists, Wen-yen Lien and Ru-zhi Feng, published a survey of Arisaema and Pinellia in China (Lien & Feng, 1982). Z. Xie et al. (1996) reported on morphological variation within P. ternata populations, and Z.-L. Wang introduced a new species of Sauromatum from Gaoligong Mountains (Z.-L. Wang & H. Li, 1999). A new species, Typhonium jinpingense Z. L. Wang, H. Li & F. H. Bian, is described from Yunna Province with a haploid chromosome number of 10, making it, along with Anthurium gracile, the lowest base number in the family (Wang et al., 2002).
Denis Barabé, at the Montreal Botanical Garden, working with different collaborators, made extensive studies of the floral anatomy (Barabé, 1982; Barabé & Chrétien, 1985, 1986; Barabé & Forget, 1988a-b, 1992; Barabé & Labrecque, 1983, 1984, 1985; Barabé et al., 1984, 1985, 1986a, 1987a; Jeune & Barabé, 1998; Poisson & Barabé, 1998) and development (Barabé, 1993, 1994, 1995; Barabé & Bertrand, 1996; Barabé & Jean, 1996; Boubes & Barabé, 1996, 1997; Barabé, D. & C. Lacroix, 2003; Barabé et al., 1986b, 1987b, 1996b, 2003) of various genera and species of Araceae. These studies include a discussion of neotany in the Araceae (Barabé, 1987) and a cladistic analysis of the Calloideae (Barabé & Forget, 1987a). More recently, Barabé investigated homeosis of Philodendron (Araceae) (Barabé et al., 2002a, 2002b; Barabé & Lacroix, 1999, 2000), and completed further studies on floral developmental morphology within Araceae (Barabé & Lacroix, 2001a & b, 2002; Barabé et al., 2000, 2002, 2003). Papers have been published describing flowering and pollination of Aroid species, including Philodendron melinonii and P. squamiferum (Gibernau & Barabé, 2000, 2002), as well as, thermogenesis in several Philodendron (Gibernau & Barabé, 2000; Barabé et al., 2002). Collaborating with three other aroid researchers, Barabé studied seed predation in Philodendron solimoesense by chalcid wasps (Hymenoptera) (Gibernau et al., 2002), and beetle pollination of Araceae (Gibernau et al., 1999; Gibernau & Barabé, 2003).
The late Mark Moffler, former editor of Aroideana and student of Homalomena, was working on a revision of the genus Homalomena at the time of his death. His published papers deal with the anatomy of Homalomena (Moffler, 1983), a description of a new species with Josef Bogner (Moffler & Bogner, 1984), the cold tolerance of Araceae (Moffler, 1980), and on Anthurium araliifolium (Moffler, 1981). His partially finished thesis on the genus is being revised by Tom Croat and Richard Wunderlin with assistance from Richard Mansell (Moffler et al., in prep). Richard Wunderlin, University of South Florida, recently published three new taxa of Homalomena including Homalomena moffleriana Croat to honor the late Mark Moffler (Croat & Wunderlin, 2004).
Farah D. Ghani from Malaysia published a paper on useful Araceae of Peninsular Asia (Ghani, 1983) and one on edible aroids (Ghani, 1984a) that includes keys for the identification of cultivars of Colocasia esculenta in Malaysia (Ghani, 1984b).

George R. Haager, currently Director of the Prague Botanical Garden in the Czech Republic has had a long interest in Araceae, collecting in Mexico, Venezuela and Ecuador. He was responsible for collecting Anthurium sarukhanianum in Mexico (Croat, 1991a). He has also described other new species from Ecuador (Haager & Jenik, 1984) and Mexico (Haager, 1991).


W. Greuter (Greuter, 1984) produced a revision of Arum for the island of Crete in the Mediterranean.
Arie de Graaf, sometimes with J. C. Arends and J. D. Bastmeijer, has published papers on Cryptocoryne. Graaf & Arends published on the occurrence of Cryptocoryne and Lagenandra in Sri Lanka (Graaf, 1987a, 1987b, 1988, 1991; Graaf & Arends, 1986). J. D. Bastmeijer published a series of short papers, each featuring a species of Cryptocoryne (Bastmeijer, 1982, 1984, 1986a, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2002; Bastmeijer & Leenen, 1983; Bastmeijer & Kettner, 1991; Bastmeijer et al., 1984) and along with Arends published on the chromosomes of Lagenandra (Arends & Bastmeijer, 1978). He published biographic notes about de Wit and Jacobsen (Bastmeijer, 1986b). Finally Arends and F. M. van der Laan published a paper on the chromosomes of Lagenandra (Arends & van der Laan, 1978).
Richard Keating from Southern Illinois University has spent part of the past 15 years working on the vegetative anatomy of the Araceae for Metcalfe & Chalk's Anatomy of Monotocotyledons (Keating, 2003a). He has presented papers at major meetings that dealt with the anatomical distinction between the Pothoideae and Monsteroideae (Keating, 1980) and with other relationships within the family (Keating, 1982). Other general papers entitled "Techniques for studying aroid anatomy", "Vegetative anatomical features in the Araceae," "Structural trends in lamina histology in the Araceae", are expected to be published in upcoming issues of Aroideana. Keating published a manuscript on collenchyma in Araceae (Keating, 2000), and more recently, one on leaf anatomical characters and their value in understanding morphoclines in the Araceae (Keating, 2003b), as well as manuscripts on the systematic occurrence of raphide crystals in Araceae (2004b) and vegetative anatomical data (2004a).
William N. Carvel has completed an as yet unpublished thesis dealing with the floral anatomy of the Pothoideae and Monsteroideae (Carvell, 1989a, 1989b). Another work worthy of mention is a completed revision of Stenospermation for Central America by Alcira Pérez de Gómez (1983), a Venezuelan student from Barquisimeto, who worked under the direction of Tom Croat.
Kerim Alpinar, at the Department of Pharmacy of the University of Istanbul in Turkey and has published a key (with illustrations) to the Turkish species and recognized new taxa as well as reported on the starch and protein content of the Turkish species (Alpinar, 1985). In addition, he has published chromosome information on Arum in Turkey (Alpinar, 1987) as well as phytochemistry of Dracunculus vulgaris Schott (Alpinar & Meridi, 1987).
Surawit Wannakrairoj at the Department of Horticulture at Kasetsart University in Bangkok, Thailand, a former student of H. Kamemoto at the University of Hawaii, works on a breeding program with Aglaonema. His thesis involved studies of Anthurium spathes and the inheritance of color, a feature so important to the cut flower industry (Marutani et al., 1988; Wannakrairoj & Kamemoto, 1990a, 1990b).
Long Chun-lin from the Kunming Institute of Botany in China published his first papers on Amorphophallus in China in collaboration with Li Heng (Li & Long, 1989a, 1989b). Working with Li Heng, Gu Zhijian and Liu Xianzhang, he produced a cytogeographic study of Remusatia (Long et al., 1989) and a study of the karyotypes of Amorphophallus from China. A recent paper dealt with ethnobotanical uses of Amorphophallus (Long, 1992, 1998). He presented a paper on Amorphophallus of China at the VII International Aroid Conference (Long et al., in press). He has been involved with many papers with Li Heng, including the recent study of aroids of the Gaoligong Mountains (Li et al., 1999) and a new species of Amorphophallus (Long & Li, 2000). See also papers discussed under Li Heng.
Z. Y. Zhu (1985) redescribed Alocasia cucullata (Lour.) G. Don in Sichuan, China as the "new" genus Panzhuyuia with a single species, P. omeiensis.
Greg Ruckert, founder of the Australian Area collection and the journal Area that features information about tuberous aroids, especially Arisaema, has published articles on Arisaema and recently participated in the work on the Gaoligong Mountains (Li et al., 1999; Li & Ruckert, 1998).
P. J. Matthews published several papers on taro, including their cultivation (Matthews, 1987), the origins, dispersal and domestication (Matthews, 1990, 1995; Matthews et al., 1992), and on ribosomal and mitochondria DNA variation (Matthews et al., 1992). S. Chandra (1984) published a work on the taro and other edible aroids.
A. G. Panurangan and V. J. Nair (1994), from the Tropical Botanical Garden and Research Institute, Thiruvananthapuram, India and Kew Gardens respectively, published a new species of Pothos, P. keralensis, from Kerela State in SW India.
Yashica Singh, from the National Botanic Institute in Durban, South Africa in collaboration with A. E. van Wyk and H. Baijnath, has published a guide to identifying members of Zantedeschia (Singh et al., 1995). They have also worked on the floral biology of Z. aethiopica (Singh et al., 1996a) and on taxonomic notes of the genus (Singh et al., 1996b). These publications form part of a M.Sc. study on the systematics of Zantedeschia (Singh, 1996) undertaken by Singh at the University of Pretoria.
Jenn-Che Wang from Taiwan Normal University in Taipei, Taiwan has completed a systematic revision of Taiwanese Arisaema (Wang, 1996). The work contains detailed drawings, photographs of spathe and spadix, and pollen micrographs.
Matyas Buzgo did his PhD thesis at the Institute of Systematic Botany at the University of Zurich and now works at the Natural History Museum at the University of Florida, Gainesville. His thesis dealt with floral development of the Araceae with comparisons with the Alismatales and Acoraceae (Buzgó, 2001). He has also worked with odor production in Lagenandra (Buzgó, 1998), with the development of inflorescences of Pistia, leaf develoment in basal monocots (Rudall & Buzgo in press), and molecular systematics of Arisaema. His actual studies are on the expression pattern of homeotic genes [responsible for the regulation of other genes, and therefore for development] in Alismatales, a group including Araceae.
Mihaela Antofie at the Institute of Biology at Bucharest University in

Romania has done research with micropropagation of several aroid genera, notably Syngonium and Spathiphyllum. Her thesis entitled “Study of factors involved in morphogenetic potential expression of some in vitro cultured ornamental plant species” (Antofie, 2002). She has worked with peroxidase activity associated with wounding stress in Syngonium (Antofie, et al. 1999) as well as in vitro development of Spathiphyllum (Antofie & Brezeanu, 2003; Antofie, 2004).


Alain Fridlender, at the Univesité de Provence, Marsailes, France is working with Araceae in the Mediterranean region. Working in a university department entitled Dynamique et Ressources du Végétal/IUP-ENTES, his research involves a study of the evolution of some Mediterranean genera belonging to Araceae/Colchicaceae (Fridlender, 1999, 2000a, 2000b). He works with poorly known species, endemism in species of Araceae and polyploidy in Araceae, making use of cytology, flow cytometry, floral biology and molecular phylogeny.
Michael Hesse at the Institute of Botany and Botanical Garden, University of Vienna working with Josef Bogner, H. M. Halbritter and Martina Weber works with pollen of Araceae. Papers dealing with the perigoniate Aroideae: Zamioculcas, Gonatopus and Stylochaeton (Hesse et al., 1998c, 2000b & 2001), have been published, as well as, manuscripts on pollen wall types and stratification (Hesse, 1999, 2000; Hesse et al., 2000a; Weber et al., 1998a, 1999), and roles of pollen in Araceae systematics (Hesse, 2001b, 2002a; Hesse et al., 1998b). Two recent papers deal with zona-aperturate pollen grains of Proxapertites with affinity to Araceae (Zetter et al., 2001; Hesse & Zetter, 2001). Other research has been published on the rarity of Araceae pollen (Hesse et al., 1998b), pollen features in the Arum lilies (Hesse, 2001a), pollen aperture in Lasioideae (Hesse, 2002b), and pollen structure (Hesse, 2003a & b).
Victor Soukup from the University of Cincinnati has been working for a number of years on a broad survey of the Araceae studying the distribution of fatty acids (Nicolaides et al., 1983; Schmid, et al. 1999; Meija & Soukup, 2004). He is continuing this work and needs fresh seeds for some genera. If you are interested please contact him.
Gar W. Rothwell, working with Michelle R. Van Atta, Harvey E. Ballard, Jr. and Ruth A. Stockey, has completed a molecular study involving the Lemnaceae and Araceae using chloroplast trnL-trnF intergenic spacer genes. Rothwell et al. (2004) justifies the incorporation of the Lemnaceae into the Araceae.
Jorge Jácome, a graduate of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogotá, studied the vertical distribution of Araceae on Cabo Corrientes in Chocó Department at the Estación Biológica El Amargal (Jácome, 2000; Jácome et al., in press) and is currently a student at the University of Göttigen in Germany. His studies are also with epiphytes, but now in Bolivia. With Tom Croat he published a paper describing for the first time the inflorescence of Monstera minima (Jácome & Croat, 2002 [2003].
Working with the Jardin Botanico in Bogota, Jorge collected aroids in order to prepare a treatment of the Araceae of the Botota Region (Cundinamarca Department, Colombia) (Jácome & Croat, in prep). The project has been stalled now that he is in graduate school but with the help of Tom Croat he hopes to continue the study. One of the most exciting discoveries during this work was the recollection of Anthurium metalicum Linden ex Schott, a beautiful member of Section Cardiolonchium, hitherto of unknown origin (Jácome & Croat, in press).
Martha Marcela Mora, a graduate of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogotá, worked on the Araceae flora of Cabo Corrientes. Working at the Estación Biológica El Amargal she discovered a number of new species of Araceae (Mora & Croat, 2004) vertical distribution of Araceae on Cabo Corrientes in Chocó Department. This work earned her the highest honors at the university for quality of her thesis (2002). The results of her thesis were presented at the VIII International Aroid Confernence and will be published in a paper in the Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden in 2005. Marcela is currently working on her Master’s degree at the Universidad de Porto Rico in Mayaguez and will soon begin a new project the Royal Botanic Garden working with web development of the genus Philodendron.
Lynn Hannon, Odesa, Florida, began a revision of Chlorospatha in the year 2000 with the encouragement and help of Tom Croat. This exhaustive study is now completed (Croat & Hannon, in press). This revision demonstrates the richness of poorly known Andean genera that show a great increase in the number of species previously undescribed (30 of 70 species are new to science). Lynn’s living collection of mostly Ecuadorian species is unparalleled. She has participated in many field trips, mostly in Ecuador, mostly accompanying Tom Croat. She recently published a revision of the species of Chlorospatha from Antioquia Department, Colombia (Croat & Hannon, 2004).
Felipe Cardona, at the Universidad de Antioquia has worked on the genus Spathiphyllum for Colombia (Cardona, in prep.) and intends to continue his work on Spathiphyllum to prepare a much needed new revision of the genus. He has published a new species of Spathiphyllum from Colombia and Panama (Croat & Cardona, 2004). His preliminary studies were reported at the VIII International Aroid Conference in St. Louis, and published in the Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden (Cardona, 2004).

MISCELLANEOUS DISCIPLINES THAT PLAYED AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE HISTORY OF AROID RESEARCH


It is not the intent of this paper to cover all disciplines that have affected our understanding of Araceae. However, some specialized researchers made discoveries that have greatly enhanced our understanding of the taxonomy and evolution of the family.
Papers dealing with fossils, though often individually not important should be mentioned because of their relative importance to the study of evolution of Araceae. Among them are papers by Madison & Tiffney (1976), Bogner (1976c), Gregor & Bogner (1984, 1989), Dilcher & Daghlian (1977), and (Stockey et al., 1997).
In the field of vegetative and floral anatomy of aroids, the works of P. van Tieghem (1867, 1872, 1885), H. Solereder (1919), and Solereder & F. J. Meyer (1928) are noteworthy, as are those of M. Lierau (1887, 1888) on roots, M. Dalitzsch (1886) on leaf anatomy, and E. Daumann (1931) on nectar production. Engler, no doubt, built on these extensive anatomical studies and more recent morphological studies of floral anatomy by Eyde et al. (1967), Carvell, Barabé, and Blanc (see above) and studies with fruits and seeds (Martius, 1831; Krishnamurthi & Geetha, 1986; Kulkarni et al., 1990; Seubert, 1993) have also been important in helping to define relationships in the family. [See also the discussion of the important anatomical work by J. C. French.]
Developmental and embryological studies have been comprehensive. Embryological studies have been made by D. H. Campbell (1900, 1903, 1912) and F. J. Jüssen (1929), and systematically important aspects of embryology were reviewed by Grayum (1985, 1986a). James Gow (1908) made developmental studies on a variety of genera, followed by a paper attempting to define phylogeny in the Araceae (Gow, 1913a, 1913b) [see also Barabé, Blanc, and Ray above]. Other studies of growth behavior have been made on Philodendron (Ritterbusch, 1971) and Symplocarpus and Lysichiton (Rosendahl, 1911). Hans-Jürgen Tillich, from Germany, has carried out extensive surveys of the structure and growth behavior of seedlings of Araceae as a part of his broader survey (Tillich, 1985). Also, M. Möbius (1936) published a brief review of vegetative reproduction.
Molecular studies have been done on the economically useful genera Colocasia and Alocasia by H. Yoshino (1975, 1994, 1995, in press) in Japan and China. (See also section above on James French.) Papers critical to the understanding of the evolution of the Araceae are molecular studies of rbcL in the Liliiflorae (Chase & Albert, 1995) and among all monocots (Duvall et al., 1993). A recent molecular study appears to establish the Lemnaceae along with the genus Pistia to form a monophylletic group within the Araceae (Stockey et al., 1997).

There have been numerous studies on chromosomes of Araceae. In England, C. J. Marchant conducted an important series of cytological studies throughout much of the 1970's (Marchant, 1970, 1971a, 1971b, 1972, 1973, 1974). His section-by-section treatment and discussion of cytology is one of the earliest attempts to understand the Araceae cytologically. His cytological work was preceeded by others, who though not dealing specifically with Araceae, did a great deal of cytological work with the Araceae. Among these researchers are G. E. Jones in the United States (Jones, 1957), P. Pfitzer (Pfitzer, 1957) in Germany, and several other cytologists, especially in India. Principal among the Indian cytologists is A. K. Sharma and his collaborators. Their papers deal with a study of karyotypes (Sharma & Das, 1954), the cytological evolution of Aglaonema and Richardia [= Zantedeschia] (Sharma & Datta, 1961), a cytological study on Philodendron and Monstera (Sharma & Mukhopadhyay, 1964), on Arisaema and Typhonium (Sharma & Mukhopadhyay, 1965) and on eight genera in five tribes (Sharma & Bhattacharya, 1968). Other cytological work was carried out by A. Mookerjea who attempted to trace the evolution of a number of genera of Araceae (Mookerjea, 1955). Both K. Ramachandran (1977, 1978) and K. S. Patil (Patil & Dixit, 1995) did studies on Indian Araceae.


Reviews of the cytology of the Araceae were made by C. J. Marchant (1970, 1971a, 1971b, 1972, 1973, 1974), and the cytology of Anthurium has been recently summarized by Sheffer (Sheffer & Croat, 1983) and for the whole family by Gitte Petersen of Copenhagen. Petersen did a thorough review of the cytology of the Araceae for her Masters thesis as well as in other subsequent cytological work (Petersen, 1989, 1993a, 1993b; Petersen, unpublished). Kai Larsen, at the University of Aarhus, did a revision of the cytology of the aroids of Thailand (Larsen, 1969).
Michael H. Grayum has recently reviewed the palynology of the Araceae (Grayum, 1984, 1990). In addition to Grayum's study there have been other major and some minor palynological studies on the Araceae. One of the first thorough studies that preceded Grayum was a light microscopic study of Araceae pollen by the late G. Thanikaimoni (1969) of India. Ohashi et al. (1983; J. Murata & Ohashi, 1984) reviewed the pollen morphology of Arisaema. M. Zavada made an extensive comparative study on aroid pollen, especially involving evolutionary trends of aperatures and wall structures (Zavada, 1983). A review of the pollen of Amorphophallus and Pseudodracontium was made by van der Ham, Hetterscheid and van Heuven (Ham et al., 1998). Daniel Beath, from England, has a principal interest in pollination of Araceae and has completed a study on Amorphophallus in Ghana (Beath, 1996), and on beetle pollination in Dieffenbachia longispatha (Beath, 1999). Current work on palynology is being carried out by V. F. Tarasevich at the Komarov Botanical Institute. She has published an SEM study of 34 species of Anthurium (Tarasevich, 1989). Micheal Hesse has also been a major contributor to pollen research within the Araceae (refer to section on Micheal Hesse).
Chemical aspects of Araceae have been reviewed by Hegnauer (Hegnauer, 1963, 1986, 1987) and more recently by Dring and his associates at the Jodrell Laboratory at Kew (Dring et al., 1995).
Studies on pollination biology of Araceae are numerous and have been reviewed elsewhere (Grayum, 1986c, 1990; Bay 1995). K. Dormer (1960) wrote on pollination in Arum. Y. Mori and H. Okada (in press) reported on reproductive biology and pollen flow of Furtadoa. Most have dealt with the physiological phenomenon of thermogenesis (Walker et al., 1983) and only indirectly with pollination (Uemura et al., 1993). No attempt will be made here to review all of the literature on pollination biology of Araceae but some of the more recent and thus not previously reviewed papers dealing with the subject will be mentioned here. A recent paper (Patt et. al., 1995) discusses the brood-site-based pollination system of Peltandra virginica in eastern North America. The work also serves as the debut of Jim French, one of the coauthors, into work with pollination systems. Pollination strategies were studied in Brazilian species of Philodendron (Gottsberger & Amaral, 1984).
A major review work on P-type sieve-element plastids of all the Arales (Behnke, 1995) provides new evidence for the inter-relationship of the Araceae to other closely related monocots and for the subgeneric classification of the family.
Finally, other general papers dealing with phylogeny are critical to the understanding of the evolution and general placement of the Araceae among the monocotyledons. Some of these are: Takhtajan (1969, 1980, 1997); Thorne (1968, 1976, 1983); Hutchinson (1973); Cronquist (1981); and Dahlgren & Rassmussen (1983).
MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS MOSTLY DEALING WITH SPECIFIC GENERA
In any review of this kind there are always some research publications or individual horticultural treatments, that though individually worthy of comment, are not cited in any of the above commentary. Generally these are contributions by persons not considered to have played an important role in the history of aroid systematics but whose contributions may be of special interest to those seeking information about a particular genus. These publications will be cited here and will be referenced by genus in alphabetical order. They include: Aglaonema (Brown, 1895a; Craig, 1988; Jervis, 1978, 1980); Alocasia (Brown, 1882b, 1884b, 1884c, 1885a, 1887, 1894, 1895b, 1898; Burnett, 1984; Chai, 1975a; D'Ancona, 1885; Hooker, 1865; Houtte, 1863; Linden, 1865, 1882a; Pijl, 1933; Linden & Rodigas, 1886a, 1886c, 1887); Amorphophallus (Akiya, 1933; Allen, 1998); Brummit, 1978, 1983; Camp, 1937; Carrière, 1871; Dakkus, 1924, 1957; Everett, 1937; Giordano, 1999; Hodge, 1962; Houtte, 1863b; Larsen & Larsen, 1974; Lemaire, 1860, 1865; Misra et al. 2002; Phillips, 1988; Pijl, 1937; Regel, 1875; Reijnvaan, 1924, Stout, 1937; S. Singh & Gadgil, 1995); Anchomanes (Tchiakpè, 1979); Anthurium (Barahona Carvajal, 1978; Dressler, 1978, 1980; Sheridan, 1994); Anubias (Chang et al., 1993, Rada & Jaimez, 1992; Sheridan, 1994); Arisaema (Alexander, 1959; Barnes, 1934, 1936, 1940, 1946; Barnes & Fischer, 1936b; Bierzychudek, 1982; Chadwell, 1994; Chu, 1979; Clay, 1993; Dieringer & L. Cabrera R., 2000); Franchet & Savatier, 1878; Fu, 1990; George & Stuckey, 1989; Glattstein, 1989a, 1989b; Gouda & G. Gusman, 1999; Grey-Wilson, 1992; Grimshaw, 1992; Gusman, 1992, 1993, 1994a, 1994b, 1995, 1997a-f, 1998a-c, 1999, 2000; L. Gusman & G. Gusman, 1997, 1998, 1999; Hammond, 1985; J. Harris, 1915; Hillstrom, 1986; Kao, 1989; Kinoshita, 1994; Ko & Kim, 1985; Ko et al., 1987, 1990a, 1990b, 1993; Lovett & Cavers, 1982; G. Maekawa, 1924, 1936; McClements, 1997, 2000; Murata, 1956, 1962; Nava, 1994; Nelson, C., 1999; Oh et al., 1990; Ohba, 1962; Ohno & Tsukada, 1986; Oliver, 1871; Raymond, 1949; Richardson & Clay, 1993a, 1993b; Schmidt (2002); Sealy, 1939a, 1939b; Shaffner, 1922; Stilwell, 2000; Takasu, 1987; Taekeda, 1906; Treiber, 1980; Wada et al., 1993); Wright, 1920; Wurdak, 1983; Yadav et al., 1997; Zhu, 1982; Arisarum (Galil, 1978; Mossi, 1959); Arum (Aked, 1989; Gonzales-Patino, 1977; Hooker, 1828; Hruby, 1912; Upshaw, 1998; Méndez & Obeso, 1993, Ventenat, 1800); Caladium (Lemaire, 1863); Calla (Dudley, 1937; Lehmann & Sattler, 1992; Topic & Ilijanic, 1989); Genaust, 1999; Colocasia (Barrett, 1910; Cook, 1910; Haudricourt, 1941; Hill, 1939; Harris et al., 1992; Hirai et al., 1989; Hodge, 1954b; Linden & Rodigas, 1886b; Plarre, 1995; Plucknett, 1983; Sunnell & Arditti, 1983; Sastrapradia & Rijanti, 1972; Tanimoto, 1990; Wang, 1982; Whitney et al., 1939); Cryptocoryne (Bastmeijer, 2000; Benl, 1960; Bouwmeester & Hoogendoorn, 1966; Davis & Kane, 1995; Dötsch, 1985, 1986, 2001; de Graf, 1980; Eichner, 2001; Hendriks, 1981; Hertel, 1985; Hertel & Mühlberg, 1994; Jones et al., 1980; Kane et al., 1990; Kasselmann, 1986; Koorders, 1981a; Korthaus, 1980; Machlin, 1997; Mansor, 1991; Möhlmann, 1989; Mühlberg, 1980 [mostly Cryptocoryne]; Ørgaard & Jacobsen, 1998 [also Lagenandra]; Reumer, 1984; Schulze, 1971a-d; Watts, 1995, Wendt, 1954; Cyrtosperma (Linden & Brown, 1892); Epipremnum (Hemsley, 1904); Gymnostachys (Shelton, 1980); Homalomena (Brown, 1884a, 1885a, 1885b; Chai, 1975b); Hydrosme (Troll, 1951); Lasia (Hambali & Sizemore, 1997); Lysichiton (Bowerman, 1933; Hiratsuka et al., 1995); Hultén, 1932, 1934; Hultén & St. John, 1956; Turesson, 1916; Monstera (Bloch, 1946; Haydon & Shaw, 1991); Montrichardia (Crüger, 1854); Nephthytis (Alexander, 1955); Orontium (Grear, 1966; Klotz, 1991, 1992); Peltandra (Barkley, 1944); Philodendron (Barahona Carvajal, 1978; Cutak, 1962; Grau, 1983; Kramer, 1974; Pabst, 1980; Vas et al., 1984; Waterbury, 1983); Pinellia (Rugh, 1990); Piptospatha (Brown, 1879, 1910); Pistia (Aliotta et al., 1992; Chillers, 1991; Coert, 1934; Nelson, 1993); Podolasia (Brown, 1882c); Pothos (Burtt, 1936; Linden & André, 1880); Scindapsus (Carrière, 1884); Sauromatum (Meeuse, 1966); Schismatoglottis (Brown, 1884a; Linden, 1881, 1882); Spathicarpa (Troll, 1928, 1932); Spathiphyllum (Regel, 1870); Symplocarpus (Berthold & Siedow, 1993; Case, 1992; Shufeldt, 1918; Small, 1959; Voss, 1964); Taccarum (Arcangeli, 1879a, 1879b); Typhonium (Banerji, 1947; van Steenis, 1948b; Turrill, 1951; Zhu, 1982); Xanthosoma (Okeke, 1992; Quynh & Uyen, 1987); Zantedeschia (Yao et al., 1994), and Zomicarpella (Brown, 1881).
OTHER SPECIAL GENERAL WORKS DEALING WITH ARACEAE
Many general works have already been cited that are general in nature but which have dealt, at least in part, with Araceae. These include all the general floristic works and even large monographic accounts such as Das Pflanzenreich and Pflanzenfamilien (cited above under Engler) but there are also many general works, both taxonomic and ecological, in which Araceae are included. These can be important sources of information for the family. Among these works are standard works (some cited elsewhere in this paper) describing broad scale systems of classification. These include Engler's Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien (Melchior, 1964), as well as the classification systems by J. Hutchinson (Hutchinson, 1934, 1959), A. Lemée (Lemée, 1941), G. H. M. Lawrence, (Lawrence, 1964), A. B. Rendle (Rendle, 1930); A. Cronquist (1968), R. M. J. Dahlgren and H. J. Clifford (1982; Dahlgren et al., 1985).
Other general works that discuss important aspects of Araceae are those dealing with phytogeography (Willis, 1949), fruit dispersal (van der Pijl, 1969), ethnobotany (Duke & Vasquez, 1994), pollination systems (Faegri & van der Pijl, 1966), growth habits of monocotyledons (Holttum, 1955), and rheophytic plants (van Steenis, 1981, 1987). A few standard reference works dealing with horticultural plants are also important references. These include the Manual of Cultivated Plants (Bailey, 1949), The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture (Bailey, 1963), Hortus Third (Bailey & Bailey, 1976), Exotica 3 (Graf, 1963), Exotica 4 (Graf, 1982), Exotica International (Graf, 1985), Tropica (Graf, 1986) and Hortica (Graf, 1992), The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture (Everett, 1980-1982), The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening (Huxley, 1992), European Garden Flora (Walters et al., 1984); The RHS Encyclopedia of House Plants (Beckett, 1987), Index of Garden Plants (Griffiths, 1994), Pareys Blumengärtnerei (Encke, 1958), and In Gardens of Hawaii (Neal, 1965).
A few additional references are, in effect dictionaries that give vital statistics, and in some cases a list of all genera for each family. Among the earliest complete dictionary of this type was that by Ernst Ender (1864) who published his Index Aroidearum with an introduction by Karl Koch. In Genera Siphonogarum genera are arranged according to the Englerian system (Dalla Torre & Harms, 1900). This work gives details about the taxonomy of the family and is directly associated with a separate concise dictionary (Dalla Torre & Harms, 1958). In the Plant Book (Mabberley, 1987) genera are arranged alphabetically.
An important reference source for learning about floristic projects that might now, or in the future, deal with Araceae floras is Floristic Inventory of Tropical Countries by D. G. Campbell and H. D. Hammond (1989).
PRESENT FOCUS ON AROID RESEARCH
The current focus of research with Araceae is to a great extent covered by the past history since many of the participants are doing similar research and continue to be active. Simon Mayo, Josef Bogner, and Peter Boyce have released their long awaited book, The Genera of Araceae (1997) published by Kew. Simon Mayo continues his efforts in Brazil along with several Brazilian collaborators. Mayo is working on a checklist for the Araceae of Brazil and in collaboration with Tom Croat will begin a study of Philodendron, which will involve the production of a thorough web-based analysis of the entire genus which will allow the public to have access and determine plants by means of a multi-access key. Tom Croat has finished a revsion of Dieffenbachia of Central America and a preliminary key to the species of South America. Work continues on the revision of Rhodospatha and a revision of Homalomena sect. Curmeria and a revision of Anthurium sect. Porphyrochitonium. With Monica Carlsen, University of Missouri, St. Louis, he has completed a revision of Anthurium sect. Semaeophyllium. He also continues to work with floristic projects in South America, especially with Dorothy Bay on the Araceae of Bajo Calima, and the Araceae of the Guianas. One of the largest commitments is the Araceae for the Flora of Ecuador and fieldwork for the past five years has concentrated there. Local Ecuadorian aroid florulas being completed are the Flora of Lita-San Lorenzo (Esmeraldas), Flora of Shell-Mera (Pastaza), Flora of Parque Nacional Sangay (Tungurahua & Morona-Santiago) and the Flora of Cordillera del Condor (Zamora-Chinchipe).
Alistair Hay, Peter Boyce, Wilbert Hetterscheid, and others on the Flora Malesiana team continue to work toward finishing that major Asian project, now due to be completed in the year 2000. Hay is also responsible for organizing an aroid conference in Sydney in 1989. Hetterscheid works independently on his revision of Asiatic Amorphophallus, with S. Ittenbach on the African Amorphophallus species (Ittenbach, 2003), and with Ittenbach and Bogner on the Amorphophallus species from Madagascar. Jin Murata spends a lot of time in China working on a revision of Arisaema for that region as well as for the Flora Malesiana region. He is also undertaking molecular studies on all genera he can acquire. Li Heng is working on a revision of the Araceae treatment for the Flora of China to be included in the English version of the flora, a project being done in part with collaboration by the Missouri Botancal Garden. Li also was responsible for organizing the VI International Aroid Conference held in Kunming, China in late June 1995. The field of Araceae research is attracting new researchers in both Latin America and in Asia.
A large group of researchers, though perhaps having a long-standing interest in Araceae, began publishing articles regarding Araceae in the present decade and some are only beginning their studies. Matyas Buzgó, from the Botanical Garden and Institute for Systematic Botany at the University of Zürich has studied floral development in Araceae, especially Pistia (Buzgó, 1994) and Lagenandra. A recent paper deals with odor differentiation in Lagenandra (Buzgó, 1998).
A small group of researchers in the Department of Horticulture at the University of Hawaii continues work begun by H. Kamemoto with Anthurium. Most of the work, carried out under the supervision of Adelheid R. Kuehnle, deals with aspects of plant breeding, morphology and embryology. Tracie K. Matsumoto, a student of Kuehnle, did her thesis on the embryology of Anthurium (Matsumoto, 1994) and has subsequently published other papers dealing with the origin of somatic embryos (Matsumoto et al., 1996), the improvements of observing plant structures with light microscopy (Matsumoto et al., 1995), and on micropropagation of anthuriums (Matsumoto & Kuehnle, 1996). Nuttha Kuanprasert works on fragrance of Anthurium species and hybrids (Kuanprasert & Kuehnle, 1995, 1999).
Others who have been working with Araceae are Marcus Nadruz (Rio de Janiero Botanical Garden), who has recently published two new species of Anthurium from the southeast region of Brazil (Nadruz & de S. Leoni, 2004), Shrirang Ramchadra Yadav, from Shivaji University, Gladys Benevides, and Jimena Rodríguez de Salvador. Benevides did her thesis on a study of the Araceae of the `La Favorita' Biological Reserve in Pichincha Province (Benevides & Ordoñez, 1993). She is continuing her studies with Araceae in other parts of Ecuador. Ileana Arias Grande, working at the botanical garden in Havana, Cuba has a strong interest in Cuban Araceae (Arias Grande, 1992, 1994). Shrirang Ramchandra Yadav, formerly of Goa University in India and now at Shivaji University in Kolapur, India, works on the Araceae of western Ghats (Yadav et al., 1993). He presented a paper at the VI International Aroid Conference in Kunming (Yadav, 1998). He recently published a flora of the Kolhapur District in Maharashtra State, coauthored by M. M. Sardesai (also from Shivaji University) (Yadav & Sardesai, 2002). The flora contains 23 native species as well as a number of introduced species.

Two Brazilian botanists, E.L.M. Catharino and A.R.R. Olaio (Sao Paulo) have published jointly, describing a new species of Anthurium (Catharino & Olaio, 1990) and in the preparation of the Araceae treatment for Caroza Island in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Sao Paulo State (Olaio & Catharino, 1991).


Elke Seubert conducted a thorough survey of fruits and seeds of the Araceae and proposed a novel system of classification based on that information (Seubert, 1993). Her book, "Die Samen der Araceen" has a wealth of information about fruits and especially seed and contains excellent line drawings. To summarize her work, her observations are divided into five categories: (1) flower characteristics; (2) vegetative characteristics; (3) seed characteristics: seedcoat; (4) seed characteristics: endosperm and embryo; and (5) location of crystals. Each category is further subdivided into four or five features. Diagrams are presented with the use of colored lines denoting tribes and subfamilies possessing each feature. A review is planned by Josef Bogner. Seubert also studied the distribution and frequency of sclereids within aerial-roots, leaf sheaths, petioles, blades, spadices, and flowers in Araceae (Seubert, 1997).
Elizabeth Widjaja, working at the Bogor Botanical Garden herbarium in Indonesia did her graduate work in England on the genus Amorphophallus. Sunu [monomial], a student of Elizabeth A. Widjaja in Bogor, Indonesia, is working on a revision of Anadendrum.
Mikhail Serebryanyi, Moscow Main Botanical Gardens, has a principal interest in the Araceae of Vietnam, especially Pothos and Pseudodracontium. He has prepared a revision of the latter (Serebryanyi, 1995). His first paper dealing with Araceae dealt with pigmentation in new leaves of Anubias (Serebryanyi & Filimonove, 1990). During his fieldwork in Vietnam he discovered new species, some of which have been published (Serebryanyi, 1991; Hetterscheid & Serebryanyi, 1994). Serebryanyi, in collaboration with other computer staff at the Moscow Main Botanical Garden, has developed a computerized database for Araceae nomenclature. He organized the very successful IV International Botanical Congress in Moscow in August 1992.
Wilbert Hetterscheid began his career at the University of Utrecht, and then worked for the Vaste Keurings Commissie in Alsmeer. One of his major botanical connections is at the Leiden Botanical Garden where much of his living collection is housed. He is working on a revision of the Asian species of the large and complex genus Amorphophallus of Asia, and he has been successful in bringing many of the species into cultivation, an essential task since herbarium material of these huge plants is notoriously poorly prepared. With S. Ittenbach (Hetterscheid & Ittenbach, 1996), many species of Amorphophallus from Asia and Africa were described and illustrated. Hetterscheid estimates that there are a total of 200 species in the genus. He has already published a considerable number of new species, 52 to date (Hetterscheid, 1991, 1992, 1994a, 1994b, 2003; Hetterscheid & Sarker, 1996; Hetterscheid & Serebryanyi, 1994; Hetterscheid & R. W. J. M. Van der Ham, 2001; Hetterscheid et al., 1994, 1996, 1999). With the help of Ching-I Peng from the Academica Sinica in Taipei, he revised the Amorphophallus of Taiwan (Hetterscheid & Peng, 1995), and with S. R. Yadav and K. S. Patil (Hetterscheid et al., 1994) he worked on members of Amorphophallus section Raphiophallus. With D. DeSarker (1997) he looked at the cytological details of Amorphophallus margaritifer, and with Raymond W.J.M. Van der Ham in a textbook called Pollen and Spores: Morphology and Biology on the exine pollen structure and taxonomy of Amorphophallus (Van der Ham, 2000). A major participant in the Araceae treatment for the Flora Malesiana, Wilbert Hetterscheid is the European coordinator for the project headquartered in Leiden. He will contribute Amorphophallus to the flora project. As a part of this project he was a coauthor of the checklist and bibliography for the Flora Malesiana region (Hay et al., 1995, 1995a). A recent paper profiled Filarum manserichensis (Hetterscheid & Sizemore, 1997) and another deals with the odor presentation of Amorphophallus and Pseudodracontium (Kite & Hetterscheid, 1997) and with P.C. Boyce (2000) reclassified Sauromatum to Typhonium. Wilbert also made significant contributions to the recently published Amorphophallus titanum monograph (Barthlott & Lobin, 1998). Though most of his activities involve Asian species he is also interested in tuberous species from the neotropics and has described two species of the tribe Spathicarpeae from Bolivia (“Hetterscheid et al. 2003).
Larry Klotz, though not otherwise known as an aroid researcher, made an interesting study of Orontium aquaticum (Klotz, 1991, 1992).
A. Lourteig (1990), at the Paris Herbarium, has attempted to typify some of the Araceae depicted in the illustrations done by Charles Plumier (1755-1760).
Guy Gusman, of the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, has emerged as a leading specialist on Arisaema. He has published new species of Arisaema from China (1999) and Thailand (2001). He has also published on Arisaema sections

Tortuosa (1993, 1994), Arisaema (1994), Trisecta (1995) and Sinarisaema

(1999). He has been interested in the messy state of Arisaema

erubescens/consanguineum and found that Wallich’s Arisaema erubescens was indeed a different species recently rediscovered at high altitude in Nepal.

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