Eastern Asia (eastern + asia)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Life Sciences


Selected Abstracts


Evaluation of eradication measures against Anoplophora chinensis in early stage infestations in Europe

EPPO BULLETIN, Issue 2 2010
D. J. Van Der Gaag
Eradication efforts are described at 5 sites where infestations of Anoplophora chinensis have been detected in Europe since 2003. The infestations were in France (declared eradicated in 2006), in Croatia, in Italy (Rome) and in the Netherlands (Westland and Boskoop). Each of these infestations was on or nearby a nursery or location where plants originating from Eastern Asia had (probably) been stocked or sold. Infested plants were all found within a distance of 30 m from the presumed source of infestation except in the Rome-infestation where infested plants, in total 40, were found within 500 m of the presumed source of infestation. The history of plant imports and local observations at 3 sites (France, Croatia and Westland in the Netherlands) suggests that larvae arrived in imported plants and adults emerged and laid eggs on plants in the surroundings between 1 and 5 years before the infestation was detected. It was not possible to make such an estimate for the Boskoop infestation in the Netherlands and the Rome infestation in Italy. [source]


Floristics and Plant Biogeography in China

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 7 2008
De-Zhu Li
Abstract In 1998, a revolutionary system of angiosperm classification, the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group system was published. Meanwhile, another new system of classification of angiosperms, the eight-class system was proposed by C. Y. Wu and colleagues based on long term work on the flora of China. The Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae project was initiated in 1959 and completed by 2004. It is the largest Flora so far completed in the world, including 31 228 species of vascular plants, or one-eighth of the global plant diversity. The English-language and updated Flora of China (FOC) is an international joint effort initiated in 1988 and accelerated in 1998. Up to now, 15 of the 24 volumes of the FOC have been published. Based on the floristic data, the composition, characteristics, floristic divisions and affinities of the flora of China have been studied by Wu and colleagues since 1965. In the past 10 years, analyses of the available floristic data have been very productive. The East Asiatic Floristic Kingdom was proposed in 1998. All 346 families of angiosperms in China, according to the eight-class system of classification, were comprehensively discussed by using knowledge of current and historical distribution of seed plants in the world, together with some morphological and molecular data. A scheme of distribution patterns or areal-types of families and genera of seed plants in China was modified and elucidated, together with a proposed scheme of areal-types of the world. Molecular phylogenetic and biogeographical studies of angiosperms in China in the past 10 years also witnessed a progressive development. Integration of morphological and molecular data and fossil evidence revealed some significant results. Eastern Asia, which used to be regarded as an important center of survival during the ice age, is likely an important center of diversification of angiosperms. [source]


Recolonization and radiation in Larix (Pinaceae): evidence from nuclear ribosomal DNA paralogues

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 10 2004
XIAO-XIN WEI
Abstract Gene paralogy frequently causes the conflict between gene tree and species tree, but sometimes the coexistence of a few paralogous copies could provide more markers for tracing the phylogeographical process of some organisms. In the present study, nrDNA ITS paralogues were cloned from all but one species of Larix, an Eocene genus having two sections, Larix and Multiserialis, with a huge circumboreal distribution and an Eastern Asia,Western North America disjunction, respectively. A total of 96 distinct clones, excluding five putative pseudogenes or recombinants, were obtained and used in the gene genealogy analysis. The clones from all Eurasian species of section Larix are mixed together, suggesting that recolonization and recent morphological differentiation could have played important roles in the evolution of this section. In contrast, the species diversification of the Eurasian section Multiserialis may result from radiation in the east Himalayas and its vicinity, considering extensive nrDNA founder effects in this group. Our study also suggests that the distribution pattern analysis of members of multiple gene family would be very useful in tracking the evolutionary history of some taxa with recent origin or rapid radiation that cannot be resolved by other molecular markers. [source]


Epidemiology of cholangiocarcinoma: An update focusing on risk factors

CANCER SCIENCE, Issue 3 2010
Hai-Rim Shin
(Cancer Sci 2010; 101: 579,585) Cholangiocarcinoma is relatively rare, but high incidence rates have been reported in Eastern Asia, especially in Thailand. The etiology of this cancer of the bile ducts appears to be mostly due to specific infectious agents. In 2009, infections with the liver flukes, Clonorchis sinensis or Opistorchis viverrini, were both classified as carcinogenic to humans by the International Agency for Research on Cancer for cholangiocarcinoma. In addition, a possible association between chronic infection with hepatitis B and C viruses and cholangiocarcinoma was also noted. The meta-analysis of published literature revealed the summary relative risks of infection with liver fluke (both Opistorchis viverrini and Clonorchis sinensis), hepatitis B virus, and hepatitis C virus to be 4.8 (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 2.8,8.4), 2.6 (95% CI: 1.5,4.6), and 1.8 (95% CI: 1.4,2.4), respectively , liver fluke infection being the strongest risk factor for cholangiocarcinoma. Countries where human liver fluke infection is endemic include China, Korea, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. The number of infected persons with Clonorchis sinensis in China has been estimated at 12.5 million with considerable variations among different regions. A significant regional variation in Opistorchis viverrini prevalence was also noted in Thailand (average 9.6% or 6 million people). The implementation of a more intensive preventive and therapeutic program for liver fluke infection may reduce incidence rates of cholangiocarcinoma in endemic areas. Recently, advances have been made in the diagnosis and management of cholangiocarcinoma. Although progress on cholangiocarcinoma prevention and treatment has been steady, more studies related to classification and risk factors will be helpful to develop an advanced strategy to cure and prevent cholangiocarcinoma. [source]


4151: Epidemiology of uveitis in the Middle East and North Africa

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2010
M KHAIRALLAH
Purpose Numerous studies have examined the pattern of uveitis around the world. Most of them are from western countries, including the USA and countries in Europe, and Eastern Asia. The aim of this presentation is to review the epidemiological characteristics of uveitis in the the Middle East and North Africa. Methods The epidemiologic data on uveitis available from the Middle East and North Africa were reviewed. Results Several recent studies addressed the pattern of uveitis in different countries, including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Tunisia. Uveitis was most often seen in adults with a peak age at presentation in the third and fourth decades. There was no dramatic difference in gender distribution. Anterior uveitis was the most common anatomic form of uveitis, but a high rate of posterior uveitis and panuveitis was reported. A definitive or presumed specific diagnosis could be established for 57-87% of patients. The most common infectious entities were herpetic anterior uveitis, toxoplasmosis, and tuberculosis (Saudi Arabia). The most common identifiable non-infectious entities included Behçet's disease and Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease. Conclusion Herpetic infection, toxoplasmosis, and tuberculosis are the most common infectious causes of uveitis in the Middle East and North Africa. Behçet's diease and Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease are the most common non-infectious uveitic entities.HLA-B27 acute anterior uveitis, ocular sarcoidosis, and juvenile idiopathic arthritis associated uveitis are less common than in western countries. [source]


Characterization of the major allergens of Pachycondyla chinensis in ant sting anaphylaxis patients

CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY, Issue 4 2009
E. K. Lee
Summary Background The ant species Pachycondyla chinensis, which has spread from Far Eastern Asia to New Zealand and North America, induces anaphylactic reactions in human with its sting. However, the major allergens of P. chinensis have not yet been characterized. Methods We selected seven patients with histories of anaphylaxis induced by P. chinensis. Two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) was used to identify the major allergens. We subsequently performed Western blots for P. chinensis -specific IgEs, N-terminal amino acid sequencing, ESI-MS/MS, and RT-PCR using primers based on the N-terminal sequence. Results Six of the anaphylactic subjects had an IgE specific to a 23 kDa allergen of P. chinensis. Two candidates for major allergens, 23 kDa (pI 8.7) and 25 kDa (pI 6.2), were revealed by 2-DE using P. chinensis -specific IgE immunoblotting. In N-terminal sequencing and ESI-MS/MS analysis, 23 kDa (pI 8.7) and 25 kDa (pI 6.2) allergens, belonging to the protein families of antigen 5, were identified and share marked amino acid sequence similarity. The 23 kDa allergen is 206 amino acids in length and homology searches showed 54.0% and 50.0% homology with Sol i 3 and Ves v 5, respectively. Conclusion The major allergens of P. chinensis are 23 kDa (pI 8.7) and 25 kDa (pI 6.2) proteins that belong to the antigen 5 family of proteins. [source]


Photosensitivity in Relation to Epileptic Syndromes: A Survey from an Epilepsy Center in Japan

EPILEPSIA, Issue 3 2001
Hideaki Shiraishi
Summary: ,Purpose: We examined the incidence and distribution of photosensitivity among the different age groups and different types of epilepsies and epileptic syndromes. Furthermore, we considered the influence of ethnic and geographic factors on the incidence of photoparoxysmal response (PPR) in epilepsy patients. Methods: We analyzed the responses to intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) by using a Grass PS22 or PS33 photic stimulator for in 2,187 unselected patients with epilepsy who were treated in our center. Results: The classic PPR was elicited in 37 (1.7%) patients. The mean age of these 37 patients was 17.0 years. The subpopulation of patients having PPR included 2.0% of all patients with symptomatic generalized epilepsy, 5.6% (p < 0.01) of those with idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 0.7% of those with symptomatic localization-related epilepsy, and 2.9% of those with undetermined epilepsy. PPR accounted for 17.4 % (p < 0.01) of the patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 7.6% (p < 0.01) of those with grand mal on awakening, and 6.1% (p < 0.01) of those with symptomatic occipital lobe epilepsy. The incidence of PPR increased in patients up to age 15 years, and suddenly decreased after age 20 years. Conclusion: The present study presents the first report from eastern Asia, analyzing the incidence of PPR with a restricted definition comparable to the other studies, and the rate of PPR was relatively low compared with the studies performed in the European countries. We could confirm the clear relation between age and positive PPR. [source]


Rudabánya: A late miocene subtropical swamp deposit with evidence of the origin of the African apes and humans

EVOLUTIONARY ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
László Kordos
Abstract Rudabánya, a rich late Miocene fossil site in northern central Hungary, has yielded an abundant record of fossil primates, including the primitive catarrhine Anapithecus and the early great ape Dryopithecus. While the affinities of Anapithecus are not clear, Dryopithecus is clearly a great ape sharing numerous characteristics of its dental, cranial and postcranial anatomy with living great apes. Like all Miocene hominids (great apes and humans), Dryopithecus is more primitive in a number of ways than any living hominid, which is probably related to the passage of time since the divergence of the various lineages of living hominids, allowing for similar refinements in morphology and adaptation to take place independently. On the other hand, Dryopithecus (and Ouranopithecus) share derived characters with hominines (African apes and humans), and Sivapithecus (and Ankarapithecus) share derived characters with orangutans, thus dating the split between pongines and hominines to a time before the evolution of these fossil great apes. Pongines and hominines follow similar fates in the late Miocene, the pongines moving south into Southeast Asia from southern or eastern Asia and the hominines moving south into East Africa from the Mediterranean region, between 6 to 9 Ma. [source]


White pines, Ribes, and blister rust: integration and action

FOREST PATHOLOGY, Issue 3-4 2010
R. S. Hunt
Summary The preceding articles in this series review the history, biology and management of white pine blister rust in North America, Europe and eastern Asia. In this integration, we connect and discuss seven recurring themes important for understanding and managing epidemics of Cronartium ribicola in the white pines (five-needle pines in subgenus Strobus). Information and action priorities for research and management of the pathogen, telial and aecial hosts, and their interactions are listed in a detailed Appendix. Syntheses focused on genetics, plant disease, invasive species or forest management have provided alternative but knowledgeable lessons on the white pine blister rust pathosystem. Two critical issues for the conservation of white pines are to sustain ecosystems affected by blister rust and to maintain genetic diversity for adaptive traits such as disease resistance. Forest genetics includes tree improvement and molecular techniques for research; their application can increase rust resistance by artificial and natural selection. Silviculture augments genetics with methods to deploy and enhance resistance as well as to regenerate and tend white pine stands. Although cultivated or wild Ribes might serve as inoculum sources, silviculture and horticulture can reduce the risk of serious impacts from blister rust using genetics for breeding and epidemiology for hazard assessment and disease control. Climate change threatens to cause major alterations in temperature and precipitation regimes, resulting in maladapted conifers succumbing to various diseases and insect outbreaks. In contrast, many white pine species have broad ecological ranges and are tolerant of harsh environments,traits that permit successful establishment and growth over wide geographic and altitudinal zones. Given appropriate management, white pines could thrive as valuable commercial and ecologically important keystone species. In an uncertain environment, adaptive management provides a learning and participatory approach for sustaining resilient ecosystems. [source]


Evolution of the second orangutan: phylogeny and biogeography of hominid origins

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 10 2009
John R. Grehan
Abstract Aim, To resolve the phylogeny of humans and their fossil relatives (collectively, hominids), orangutans (Pongo) and various Miocene great apes and to present a biogeographical model for their differentiation in space and time. Location, Africa, northern Mediterranean, Asia. Methods, Maximum parsimony analysis was used to assess phylogenetic relationships among living large-bodied hominoids (= humans, chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, orangutans), and various related African, Asian and European ape fossils. Biogeographical characteristics were analysed for vicariant replacement, main massings and nodes. A geomorphological correlation was identified for a clade we refer to as the ,dental hominoids', and this correlation was used to reconstruct their historical geography. Results, Our analyses support the following hypotheses: (1) the living large-bodied hominoids represent a monophyletic group comprising two sister clades: humans + orangutans, and chimpanzees (including bonobos) + gorillas (collectively, the African apes); and (2) the human,orangutan clade (dental hominoids) includes fossil hominids (Homo, australopiths, Orrorin) and the Miocene-age apes Hispanopithecus, Ouranopithecus, Ankarapithecus, Sivapithecus, Lufengpithecus, Khoratpithecus and Gigantopithecus (also Plio-Pleistocene of eastern Asia). We also demonstrate that the distributions of living and fossil genera are largely vicariant, with nodes of geographical overlap or proximity between Gigantopithecus and Sivapithecus in Central Asia, and between Pongo, Gigantopithecus, Lufengpithecus and Khoratpithecus in East Asia. The main massing is represented by five genera and eight species in East Asia. The dental hominoid track is spatially correlated with the East African Rift System (EARS) and the Tethys Orogenic Collage (TOC). Main conclusions, Humans and orangutans share a common ancestor that excludes the extant African apes. Molecular analyses are compromised by phenetic procedures such as alignment and are probably based on primitive retentions. We infer that the human,orangutan common ancestor had established a widespread distribution by at least 13 Ma. Vicariant differentiation resulted in the ancestors of hominids in East Africa and various primarily Miocene apes distributed between Spain and Southeast Asia (and possibly also parts of East Africa). The geographical disjunction between early hominids and Asian Pongo is attributed to local extinctions between Europe and Central Asia. The EARS and TOC correlations suggest that these geomorphological features mediated establishment of the ancestral range. [source]


The Middle Asian Element in the Southern Rocky Mountain Flora of the western United States: a critical biogeographical review

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2003
William A. Weber
Abstract Aim, Presentation of an hypothesis suggesting that the extraordinarily similarity of the Russian Altai and the American Southern Rocky Mountain Flora represents an Oroboreal Flora; that had to have had an essential continuity across the northern part of the world in the Tertiary period, constituting a highland and steppe component of the better-known Arcto-Tertiary Flora of eastern and far-western North America and eastern Asia. Location, North America and Middle (Altai) Asia. Methods, Summarization of the author's field and herbarium studies of whole floras over a period of over 60 years, consisting of successive specializations in vascular plants, lichens, and bryophytes. Main conclusions, (1) The modern alpine and associated marginal steppe and montane floras contain taxa of Tertiary age. (2) The floras of the southern mountains antedate those of the present-day Arctic. (3) The Middle Asiatic and the North American floras once enjoyed a contiguous existence over a broad area involving connections between North America and Asia across the North Pole by way of Greenland. Their present disjunctions are products of extinction and attrition of ranges, not of long-distance migration or dispersal mechanisms. (4) North-eastern North American disjunctions of so-called Cordilleran species (the Nunatak hypothesis) need not require explanations involving long-distance dispersal or migration, but represent relictual populations of the once widely distributed Oroboreal flora. [source]


Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Leibnitzia Cass. (Asteraceae: Mutisieae: Gerbera -complex), an Asian,North American disjunct genus

JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATICS EVOLUTION, Issue 3 2010
Kristen E. BAIRD
Abstract Leibnitzia comprises six species of perennial herbs that are adapted to high elevation conditions and is one of only two Asteraceae genera known to have an exclusively disjunct distribution spanning central to eastern Asia and North America. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Leibnitzia and other Gerbera -complex members indicates that Leibnitzia is monophyletic, which is in contrast with our expectation that the American Leibnitzia species L. lyrata and L. occimadrensis would be more closely related to another American member of the Gerbera -complex, namely Chaptalia. Ancestral area reconstructions show that the historical biogeography of the Gerbera -complex mirrors that of the entire Asteraceae, with early diverging lineages located in South America that were followed by transfers to Africa and Eurasia and, most recently, to North America. Intercontinental transfer of Leibnitzia appears to have been directed from Asia to North America. Independent calibrations of nuclear (ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer region) and chloroplast (trnL,rpl32 intron) DNA sequence data using relaxed clock methods and either mean rate or fossil-based priors unanimously support Miocene and younger divergence times for Gerbera -complex taxa. The ages are not consistent with most Gondwanan vicariance episodes and, thus, the global distribution of Gerbera -complex members must be explained in large part by long-distance dispersal. American species of Leibnitzia are estimated to have diverged from their Asian ancestor during the Quaternary (ca. 2 mya) and either migrated overland to North America via Beringia and retreated southwards along high elevation corridors to their present location in southwestern North America or were dispersed long distance. [source]


Phylogenetics and biogeography of eastern Asian,North American disjunct genus Pachysandra (Buxaceae) inferred from nucleotide sequences

JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATICS EVOLUTION, Issue 3 2009
Zhihua JIAO
Abstract Pachysandra is an eastern Asian,North American disjunct genus with three species, two in eastern Asia (Pachysandra axillaris and Pachysandra terminalis) and one in eastern North America (Pachysandra procumbens). Although morphological and cytological studies suggest a close affinity of P. procumbens with P. axillaris, molecular data from nuclear and chloroplast DNA regions have provided conflicting signals. In this study, we tested previous phylogenetic hypotheses using sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacers and chloroplast ndhF gene from multiple individuals of each of the three species. We also estimated the time of divergence between eastern Asia and eastern North America. Our results support the morphological and cytological conclusion that P. procumbens is more closely related to P. axillaris than to P. terminalis. The estimated time of divergence of P. axillaris and P. procumbens was 14.6±5.5 mya, consistent with estimates from many other eastern Asian,North American disjunct genera. The migration of Pachysandra populations from eastern Asia to North America might have occurred by way of the North Atlantic land bridge. [source]


Variation analysis of ,3 -adrenergic receptor and melanocortin-4 receptor genes in childhood obesity

PEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2007
TOMOE KINOSHITA
Abstract Background: Decreased energy expenditure and increased food intake are principal causes for obesity. In the present study, genotypes of ,3 -adrenergic receptor (,3AR) and of melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R), both of which are believed to have a close link to the cause of obesity, were analyzed and compared with phenotypes of childhood obesity. Methods: Thirty-five obese children with moderate to severe obesity were enrolled. Direct sequencing of the MC4R coding region and pinpoint-polymerase chain reaction were used to detect genomic variation in the ,3AR gene using peripheral blood-derived DNA. Results: Allele frequency of Trp64Arg variation in the ,3AR gene in the obese subjects was 0.16, which is comparable with that in the healthy general population in eastern Asia. Comparison of phenotypical characteristics did not show a significant difference between Trp/Trp and Trp/Arg subjects. It was notable that body height SD was significantly higher in the Trp/Trp than the Trp/Arg subjects (0.93 ± 1.0 SD vs 0.07 ± 1.3 SD, P= 0.03). Annual weight gains were far beyond a hypothetical fat gain in an Arg64 heterozygote with decreased energy consumption, suggesting increased food intake in childhood obesity. There was, however, no variation in the MC4R gene despite thorough sequencing of the entire coding region. Conclusions: The Trp64Arg variation in the ,3AR gene has no relationship to the degree or the incidence of childhood obesity. The majority of childhood obesity can be characterized as tall stature, more rapid weight gain than that expected by decreased energy expenditure. Further investigation is necessary in regard to the increased food intake as a major cause of childhood obesity. [source]


Life-history monographs of Japanese plants.

PLANT SPECIES BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2007
9: Helonias orientalis (Thunb.) N. Tanaka (Liliaceae)
Abstract The life-history characteristics of Helonias orientalis (Liliaceae) are described. The genus Helonias (Liliaceae), which includes Heloniopsis and Ypsilandra, is one of the representative members of the so-called Arcto-Tertiary Geoflora, with typical disjunct geographical ranges in eastern North America and eastern Asia, including the Japanese Islands to inland China and the Himalayan Mountains. The seasonal growth patterns of this evergreen perennial are most unique, showing different replacement patterns in foliage leaves, which are formed during two different seasons, once in late spring and again in late summer to autumn. Flowering occurs at different times of the year in populations that are located at different elevations. Lowland populations flower in late March to early April, whereas montane and subalpine,alpine populations bear flowers in early to mid-summer, June to August. Another outstanding feature of this species is that it produces tiny plantlets at the tips of the oldest (3-year-old) foliage leaves just before decaying. Survival rates of plantlets (ramets) are obviously much higher than that of the exceedingly minute seedlings (gamets), especially on the dark shady forest floor. Thus, populations in closed woodland habitats are primarily maintained by plantlets, that is, vegetative plantlet formation. The cost of seed production is dramatically higher in the subalpine,alpine populations compared with those of the lowland populations. [source]


Molecular systematics in the genus Clintonia and related taxa based on rbcL and matK gene sequence data

PLANT SPECIES BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2001
Kazuhiko Hayashi
Abstract In an attempt to elucidate the affinity and phylogeny of the disjunct North American,eastern Asian genus Clintonia, two chloroplast genes, rbcL and matK, were sequenced for all five species (Clintonia andrewsiana, Clintonia borealis, Clintonia umbellulata, Clintonia uniflora and Clintonia udensis). Similar sequence data sets for both genes supported the idea that a monophyly of Clintonia consists of two clades, one in eastern Asia and one in North America. The North American lineage resolves into an eastern group and a western group. There are surprisingly few site substitutions within these two genes, notwithstanding the wide morphological diversity of the genus. To root the Clintonia trees, Cardiocrinum (=Lilium) cordatum, Medeola virginiana, Scoliopus bigelovii and Scoliopus hallii were used as outgroup taxa. Similar topologies for Clintonia resulted when both the rbcL and matK gene sequences were combined. However, when an amino acid tree was generated for the matK sequence, all differences between the North American species were reduced to similarities due to synonymous codon sequences. Differentiation patterns of some selected morphological, karyological and embryological characters in Clintonia were also reviewed in comparison to the resulting molecular topologies. The unique, Clintonia -type megasporogenesis that produced identical, maternally derived, diploid zygotes and endosperm coupled to polyploid buffering provides a considerable constraint on variability. A search of possible sister genera to Clintonia was also attempted based on the molecular analyses and outgroup analysis, and Medeola virginiana from eastern North America turned out to be the closest relative found. [source]


Morphometric analysis of the Taxus wallichiana complex (Taxaceae) based on herbarium material

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 3 2007
MICHAEL MÖLLER
We used morphological and geographical data of 128 herbarium specimens of the Taxus wallichiana complex in eastern Asia to investigate their utilization in discriminating and identifying taxa included in the complex. One bud scale and 26 leaf characters were used to separate T. fuana, T. wallichiana var. wallichiana, T. wallichiana var. mairei, T. wallichiana var. chinensis and T. sumatrana by K-means clustering and dendrograms using Ward's distance. Out of the 27 characters examined 21 were found to be well correlated with geographical patterns. T. fuana was morphologically the most distant taxon, while T. sumatrana clustered among the T. wallichiana varieties. After correcting misidentifications of the specimens in T. wallichiana, its varieties occupied discrete geographical ranges, except for some limited sympatry of varieties mairei and chinensis east of the Tanaka,Kaiyong line and the Sichuan Basin, China. Our analysis demonstrates the importance of consistency in character selection and definition in the identification of morphologically difficult taxa and the power of combining morphometric and geographical data in clarifying their spatial distribution. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 155, 307,335. [source]


Analysis of morphological variation of the Acer tschonoskii complex in eastern Asia: implications of inflorescence size and number of flowers within sect.

BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2003
Macrantha
Flower and fruit specimens of 184 individuals were sampled to investigate patterns of intraspecific variation and to evaluate recognition of taxa within the Acer tschonoskii complex using morphometric analysis. Previous taxonomic treatments have considered A. tschonoskii var. rubripes (= A. komarovii) and A. tschonoskii var. tschonoskii to be separate species. The morphological discontinuity between these two taxa was evident in peduncle and pedicel length, and in number of flowers. In addition, the delimitations of some species within sect. Macrantha were clarified using these diagnostic characters. In view of the geographical distribution of the A. tschonoskii complex, which includes many taxa of sect. Macrantha from China to Japan through Korea, the long raceme with many flowers (A. sikkimense) and unlobed leaf are considered more primitive than the short raceme with a small number of flowers and five-lobed leaf (A. maximowiczii and A. komarovii). However, many intermediate taxa were present. This study also suggests that several Chinese taxa, such as A. metcalfii, A. taronense, A. hookeri and A. grosseri, may be subject to different taxonomic interpretation and should be reinvestigated morphologically. © 2003 The Linnean Society of London. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2003, 143, 29,42. [source]