Morphometrics and taxonomy of Erigeron acris sensu lato

Morphometric multivariate analysis has been performed based on 23 characters observed on 113 herbariumspecimens from throughout Fennoscandia. This demonstrates that four taxa can be recognised withinErigeron acris L. sensu lato, viz. E. acris L. subsp. acris, E. acris subsp. decoloratus (H. Lindb.)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:New Journal of Botany
Main Authors: Olander, Sanna, Tyler, Torbjörn
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Swedish
Published: Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland 2017
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Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8f540896-e515-42d4-b65d-8aefd1e139b4
https://doi.org/10.1080/20423489.2017.1344076
Description
Summary:Morphometric multivariate analysis has been performed based on 23 characters observed on 113 herbariumspecimens from throughout Fennoscandia. This demonstrates that four taxa can be recognised withinErigeron acris L. sensu lato, viz. E. acris L. subsp. acris, E. acris subsp. decoloratus (H. Lindb.) Hiitonen,E. acris subsp. droebachiensis (O. F. Müll.) Arcang. and E. acris subsp. politus (Fr.) H. Lindb. In contrast,the previously accepted E. (acris subsp.) brachycephalus H. Lindb. is shown to be indistinguishable fromE. acris subsp. droebachiensis and is accordingly treated as a synonym. The subspecies aredistinguishable mainly based on indumentum characteristics, and size and pigmentaton of phyllaries andfloral parts, but 21 of the 23 characters were significantly different among taxa. The largest number (ten)of significantly different characters was found between subspecies acris, droebachiensis and politus,whereas only five characters differed significantly between decoloratus and acris. The contrastingcharacter ranges and distinctness of these taxa is presented and discussed, and a key to the subspeciesis provided. In addition, their distributions in Sweden are mapped based on herbarium specimens,showing that subsp. acris is common almost throughout the country, subsp. droebachiensis is relativelyrare and restricted to the central parts, and subsp. politus is confined to the northern half.