To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer

Morphological investigations confirm that there are two species of Papaver in Svalbard: P. dahlianum and P. cornwallisense. The two most distinctive diagnostic characters are the number of stamens and the length of papillae on the stigmatic rays. Papaver cornwallisense has few stamens, usually 16 bu...

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Main Authors: Solstad, Heidi, Eidesen, Pernille Bronken, Little, Lorna, Elven, Reidar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian Bokmål
Published: Norsk Botanisk Forening 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2450972
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2450972 2023-05-15T16:29:44+02:00 To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer Solstad, Heidi Eidesen, Pernille Bronken Little, Lorna Elven, Reidar 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2450972 nob nob Norsk Botanisk Forening Norges forskningsråd: 210460 Blyttia : Norsk botanisk forenings tidsskrift. 2014, 72 (3), 187-196. urn:issn:0006-5269 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2450972 cristin:1159105 187-196 72 Blyttia : Norsk botanisk forenings tidsskrift 3 Journal article Peer reviewed 2014 ftntnutrondheimi 2019-09-17T06:52:34Z Morphological investigations confirm that there are two species of Papaver in Svalbard: P. dahlianum and P. cornwallisense. The two most distinctive diagnostic characters are the number of stamens and the length of papillae on the stigmatic rays. Papaver cornwallisense has few stamens, usually 16 but sometimes as few as 4 or 8 or as many as 24, and short papillae (0.15–0.4 mm). Papaver dahlianum usually has 25–35 stamens and conspicuously long papillae (0.5–0.9 mm). In addition, P. cornwallisense has smaller flowers than P. dahlianum and these are mostly white. The fruit of P. cornwallisense is subglobular and narrow beneath the stigmatic disc, whereas that of P. dahlianum is urn-shaped and broadest immediately beneath the disc. There are also some smaller differences in leaf lobes, which are more obtuse in P. cornwallisense than in P. dahlia-num,and leaf pubescence, which is sparse and white in P. cornwallisense, denser and more yellowish in P. dahlianum. In Svalbard, P. dahlianum is the most common of the two, occurring throughout the archipelago, but P. cornwallisense is also common, particularly in western Spitsbergen (where most people visit), where it constitutes almost exactly 50 % of the collected plants in the herbaria. The two species often grow intermixed, both in Svalbard as well as in Greenland and Canada (where they are about equally common). No hybrids or transitional forms are known. A molecular investigation supports the presence of two species. publishedVersion © Norsk Botanisk Forening Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland Papaver dahlianum Svalbard Spitsbergen NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Canada Fjell ENVELOPE(14.526,14.526,67.181,67.181) Greenland Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
language Norwegian Bokmål
description Morphological investigations confirm that there are two species of Papaver in Svalbard: P. dahlianum and P. cornwallisense. The two most distinctive diagnostic characters are the number of stamens and the length of papillae on the stigmatic rays. Papaver cornwallisense has few stamens, usually 16 but sometimes as few as 4 or 8 or as many as 24, and short papillae (0.15–0.4 mm). Papaver dahlianum usually has 25–35 stamens and conspicuously long papillae (0.5–0.9 mm). In addition, P. cornwallisense has smaller flowers than P. dahlianum and these are mostly white. The fruit of P. cornwallisense is subglobular and narrow beneath the stigmatic disc, whereas that of P. dahlianum is urn-shaped and broadest immediately beneath the disc. There are also some smaller differences in leaf lobes, which are more obtuse in P. cornwallisense than in P. dahlia-num,and leaf pubescence, which is sparse and white in P. cornwallisense, denser and more yellowish in P. dahlianum. In Svalbard, P. dahlianum is the most common of the two, occurring throughout the archipelago, but P. cornwallisense is also common, particularly in western Spitsbergen (where most people visit), where it constitutes almost exactly 50 % of the collected plants in the herbaria. The two species often grow intermixed, both in Svalbard as well as in Greenland and Canada (where they are about equally common). No hybrids or transitional forms are known. A molecular investigation supports the presence of two species. publishedVersion © Norsk Botanisk Forening
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Solstad, Heidi
Eidesen, Pernille Bronken
Little, Lorna
Elven, Reidar
spellingShingle Solstad, Heidi
Eidesen, Pernille Bronken
Little, Lorna
Elven, Reidar
To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
author_facet Solstad, Heidi
Eidesen, Pernille Bronken
Little, Lorna
Elven, Reidar
author_sort Solstad, Heidi
title To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
title_short To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
title_full To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
title_fullStr To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
title_full_unstemmed To valmue-arter på Svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
title_sort to valmue-arter på svalbard, og litt om fjell- og polarvalmuer
publisher Norsk Botanisk Forening
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2450972
long_lat ENVELOPE(14.526,14.526,67.181,67.181)
geographic Canada
Fjell
Greenland
Svalbard
geographic_facet Canada
Fjell
Greenland
Svalbard
genre Greenland
Papaver dahlianum
Svalbard
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Greenland
Papaver dahlianum
Svalbard
Spitsbergen
op_source 187-196
72
Blyttia : Norsk botanisk forenings tidsskrift
3
op_relation Norges forskningsråd: 210460
Blyttia : Norsk botanisk forenings tidsskrift. 2014, 72 (3), 187-196.
urn:issn:0006-5269
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2450972
cristin:1159105
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