Studies on the New Zealand, and some related, species of Pteris L.

dc.contributor.advisorAssoc. Professors L.H. Millener and J.A. Battenburyen
dc.contributor.authorBraggins, John E.en
dc.date.accessioned2007-11-14T02:29:30Zen
dc.date.available2007-11-14T02:29:30Zen
dc.date.issued1975en
dc.description.abstractFour New Zealand species are recognised: (1) P. tremula R.Br., (also in Australia, Lord Howe Is., Norfolk Is., the Kermadecs Is. and the Chatham Is.). (2) P. carsei sp. nov. (previously ‘P. comans’) (also in Australia and the Kermadec Is.). (3) P. macilenta A. Rich. (previously P. macilenta var. saxatilis Carse) endemic. (4) P. pendula Col. (previously P. macilenta Auct. non. Rich. and P. macilenta var. pendula (Col.) Cheeseman) endemic. The taxonomy and nomenclature of these species is discussed in detail and the nomenclature is also discussed for P. kingiana Endl. (previously sometimes treated as P. tremula) and P. zahlbruckneriana Endl. (previously treated under ‘P. comans’ or P.endlicheriana Agardh) both Norfolk Is. endemics, and the taxonomy of P. sp.aff.comans LHI (previously ‘P. comans’) endemic to Lord Howe Island is also discussed. Detailed study of the spores and paleae using conventional light microscopy and SEM was made for these species and also P. comans Forst. f. (from the New Hebrides) and P. novae-caledoniae from New Caledonia. Comparisons of the distribution, fronds, stipes, venation, rhizomes, paleae, indumentum, apices, sori, sporangia and spores have been made and where appropriate material of P. dentata ssp. flabellata, P. pacifica and P. vittata, has also been compared. Further comparisons have been made with material of ‘P. comans’ from other Pacific Islands including Fiji (three species ), Rarotonga, Samoa, Tahiti (each one species). P. tremula, P. kingiana and P. novae-caledoniae are exceptional in the genus because they lack paraphyses in the sori. P. kingiana and P. novae-caledoniae have a copious waxy deposit around and among the sporangial stalks but P. tremula has no accessory sporangial features at all. Germination and gametophyte growth follow the normal pattern for the genus. Some gametophytes can be kept alive and growing for considerable periods (up to three years) and become elongate, ribbon-like and unisexual (female). Hybridisation was achieved between P. carsei and P. macilenta. The progeny resemble the natural hybrid swarms suspected of being the product of the same parents.en
dc.formatScanned from print thesisen
dc.identifier.citationThesis (PhD--Botany)--University of Auckland, 1975.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2292/2069en
dc.identifier.wikidataQ111963934
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherResearchSpace@Aucklanden
dc.relation.ispartofPhD Thesis - University of Aucklanden
dc.relation.isreferencedbyUoA217785en
dc.rightsItems in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.en
dc.rights.holderCopyright: The authoren
dc.rights.urihttps://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htmen
dc.subject.marsdenFields of Research::270000 Biological Sciences::270400 Botanyen
dc.titleStudies on the New Zealand, and some related, species of Pteris L.en
dc.typeThesisen
pubs.local.anzsrc060310 - Plant Systematics and Taxonomyen
pubs.org-idFaculty of Scienceen
thesis.degree.disciplineBotanyen
thesis.degree.grantorThe University of Aucklanden
thesis.degree.levelDoctoralen
thesis.degree.namePhDen

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