Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.

The Bryaceae are one of the largest families of mosses and are of particular interest because of a relatively primitive position in relation to other families. Although a number of recent taxonomic studies have been devoted to genera of the subfamily Bryoideae, few have considered taxa in other subf...

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Main Author: Shaw, Arthur Jonathan
Other Authors: Ann Arbor
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/159645
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spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/159645 2024-01-07T09:46:56+01:00 Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America. Shaw, Arthur Jonathan Ann Arbor 1983 281 p. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/159645 English eng https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/159645 Science Thesis 1983 ftumdeepblue 2023-12-10T17:40:41Z The Bryaceae are one of the largest families of mosses and are of particular interest because of a relatively primitive position in relation to other families. Although a number of recent taxonomic studies have been devoted to genera of the subfamily Bryoideae, few have considered taxa in other subfamilies. Pohlia is the largest genus in the Pohlioideae and accounts for about 80% of the species found in the subfamily. As progress toward a phylogenetic analysis of the Bryaceae, Pohlia is the focus of this morphological and ecological study. The morphological relationships between species and supraspecific taxa are analyzed using two cladistic methods (character compatibility analysis and the Wagner Tree method) and several phenetic approaches including those based on information theory. About 500 substrate samples were gathered representing 24 North and Central American Pohlias, and pH, organic matter content, and concentrations of exchangeable calcium and magnesium were measured. A revision of the North and Central American species includes descriptions, illustrations, and distribution maps, and a key to thirty-six species and two varieties. Cladistic and phenetic analyses support the recognition of four major groups of species of Pohlia. Species of sections Mniobryum and Cacodon (classified in subgenus Mniobryum) occur most frequently on mildly acidic to strongly basic soils of low organic content. Species of subgenera Nyholmiella (subg. nov.) and Pohlia are most frequent on strongly to mildly acid soils of a more organic nature. Nyholmiella taxa are almost all tropical in distribution, (subg.) Pohlia is represented worldwide, and Cacodon (including section Mniobryum) is most diversified in temperate to subarctic regions. Morphological and ecological data indicate that primitive species of the genus were presumably of moderate size, with long, narrow leaf cells, and perfect peristome structure, and occurred on mildly acidic soils of relatively high organic matter content. PhD Botany University of Michigan ... Thesis Subarctic University of Michigan: Deep Blue
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language English
topic Science
spellingShingle Science
Shaw, Arthur Jonathan
Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
topic_facet Science
description The Bryaceae are one of the largest families of mosses and are of particular interest because of a relatively primitive position in relation to other families. Although a number of recent taxonomic studies have been devoted to genera of the subfamily Bryoideae, few have considered taxa in other subfamilies. Pohlia is the largest genus in the Pohlioideae and accounts for about 80% of the species found in the subfamily. As progress toward a phylogenetic analysis of the Bryaceae, Pohlia is the focus of this morphological and ecological study. The morphological relationships between species and supraspecific taxa are analyzed using two cladistic methods (character compatibility analysis and the Wagner Tree method) and several phenetic approaches including those based on information theory. About 500 substrate samples were gathered representing 24 North and Central American Pohlias, and pH, organic matter content, and concentrations of exchangeable calcium and magnesium were measured. A revision of the North and Central American species includes descriptions, illustrations, and distribution maps, and a key to thirty-six species and two varieties. Cladistic and phenetic analyses support the recognition of four major groups of species of Pohlia. Species of sections Mniobryum and Cacodon (classified in subgenus Mniobryum) occur most frequently on mildly acidic to strongly basic soils of low organic content. Species of subgenera Nyholmiella (subg. nov.) and Pohlia are most frequent on strongly to mildly acid soils of a more organic nature. Nyholmiella taxa are almost all tropical in distribution, (subg.) Pohlia is represented worldwide, and Cacodon (including section Mniobryum) is most diversified in temperate to subarctic regions. Morphological and ecological data indicate that primitive species of the genus were presumably of moderate size, with long, narrow leaf cells, and perfect peristome structure, and occurred on mildly acidic soils of relatively high organic matter content. PhD Botany University of Michigan ...
author2 Ann Arbor
format Thesis
author Shaw, Arthur Jonathan
author_facet Shaw, Arthur Jonathan
author_sort Shaw, Arthur Jonathan
title Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
title_short Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
title_full Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
title_fullStr Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeny and Ecology of Pohlia Hedw. with a Revision of the Species of North and Central America.
title_sort phylogeny and ecology of pohlia hedw. with a revision of the species of north and central america.
publishDate 1983
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/159645
genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/159645
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