Notes on Early Land Plants Today. 50. Radula sainsburiana is a synonym of R.

Radula helix was described as Jungermannia helix from a specimen collected by J.D. Hooker on Hermite Island, Tierra del Fuego during the Antarctic expedition of HM Ships Erebus and Terror. A century later Radula sainsburiana was described from a collection made by G.O.K. Sainsbury on Mt Ruapehu in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matt A. M. Renner, Lars Söderström, Anders Hagborg, Matt Von Konrat
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.638.1907
http://www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/content/2014/f/pt00162p239.pdf
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Summary:Radula helix was described as Jungermannia helix from a specimen collected by J.D. Hooker on Hermite Island, Tierra del Fuego during the Antarctic expedition of HM Ships Erebus and Terror. A century later Radula sainsburiana was described from a collection made by G.O.K. Sainsbury on Mt Ruapehu in the North Island of New Zealand. Subsequently Radula sainsburiana was reported for Tasmania by Renner (2005). Radula sainsburiana specimens from Tasmania, New Zealand, and southern South American collections attributed to R. helix share all salient morphological characters, including the paroicous inflorescence, the tightly inrolled lobules, the yellow-green colour, and the habit of forming dense interwoven mats. The shared morphological and ecological similarity of individuals from all three regions is consistent with membership to a single species. Radula helix is so far the only Radula species having a circum-Subantarctic range disjunction.