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Petrosedum

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45-456: Petrosedum is a genus of the succulent family Crassulaceae (stonecrop family). Petrosedum is a genus in the family Crassulaceae , subfamily Sempervivoideae , tribe Semperviveae, together with two other genera. It was segregated from the very large cosmopolitan and polyphyletic genus, Sedum , where it was variously considered a series (Rupestria). It was originally described with eleven species. The following species are recognised in

90-1325: A broader construct of Sedum , recognising only Pseudosedum . In more recent times Ohba (1978) proposed the narrower view, segregating Rhodiola , Hylotelephium and Prometheum , among other genera. Ohba then subdivided the old world taxa of his now reduced Sedum into five subgenera: Grulich (1984) continued this process, proposing Aizopsis (subgenus Aizoon ), Asterosedum (subgenus Spathulata ), Petrosedum (subgenus Sedum series Rupestria ) and Oreosedum (subgenus Sedum series Alba ) as separate genera. As many as 32 segregate genera have been published, and most Eurasian crassulacean species were originally included in Sedum , but subsequently segregated ( see Sempervivoideae ). Subsequently, various revisions have proposed fewer subfamilies. Takhtajan (1987) initially submerged Sempervivoideae in Sedoideae and Cotyledonoideae in Kalanchiodeae to produce four, but later (1997) only three, Crassuloideae, Kalanchoideae and Sedoideae. Thorne (1992) also proposed three (Sedoidea, Cotyledonoidea, Crassuloidea), and then two (2000), Crassuloideae and Sempervivoideae. Prior to

135-614: A few genera, included in the modern circumscription of Crassulaceae were described; the type genus Crassula (10 species), Tillaea (3), Cotyledon (6), Sempervivum (6), Rhodiola (1) and Sedum (15). By 1777, Rhodiola had been submerged into Sedum , only to be separated again in the twentieth century. While the family can fairly easily be recognised, identifying its constituent genera has been far more problematic. For an extensive history of subfamily Sedoideae, see Ohba 1978 . Saint-Hilaire's original description in 1805 included seven genera, as did De Candolle (1815). In

180-404: A mapping of morphological features and biogeography on the phylogenetic tree, see Mort et al 2001 Fig. 3. Chromosome numbers have played a limited role in elucidating evolution, but suggest a core of x=8, with subsequent polyploidy. For a mapping of chromosome numbers on the phylogenetic tree, see Mort et al 2001 Fig. 4. When Carl Linnaeus published his Species Plantarum in 1753 only

225-540: A much more extensive treatment in 1828, he divided the Crassulaceae into the two groups, Isostemonae and Diplostemonae (i.e. haplostemony vs. obdiplostemony) on the basis of the number of staminal whorls. The former corresponded to the modern Crassuloideae. Two lineages, six subfamilies, and 33 genera of Crassulaceae were described by Berger in 1930: Lineages, subfamilies, biogeography, No. genera , type genus (No. species in genus) Each of these contained one of

270-655: A result, generic boundaries have been considered unclear with frequent intergradation of characteristics between taxa , which may represent recurrent adaptation to xeric habitats. Crassulaceae has been considered a part of the order Saxifragales by most modern authors, including Cronquist (1981), Takhtajan (1987), and Thorne (1992), based on phenotypic features, but subsequently confirmed by molecular methods. The place of Crassulaceae within Saxifragales has varied over time, as molecular data accumulates. The number of families within Saxifragales varies depending on

315-503: A separate clade, Rhodiola, in Thiede & Eggli, making an eighth clade. Hart's taxonomic classification was revised by Thiede and Eggli (2007) to define three molecularly defined subfamilies, corresponding to the major clades , Crassuloideae, Kalanchoöideae and Sempervivoideae, and 34 genera. Although some authors prefer the older term Sedoideae for Sempervivoideae, Sempervivoideae has taxonomic priority. The earliest branching subfamily

360-425: A short to long style with few to many ovules. The fruit is usually capsular with dehiscent follicles, opening along the carpal suture and many seeded. The seeds are small (1.5–3 mm), smooth, elongate, papillate to longitudinally ridged, and generally brownish. However, a number of genera (e.g. Sempervivum , Aeonium ) are polymerous (3-32), have basally fused or partially fused corolla segments, where

405-497: A unique form of photosynthesis , known as Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). Flowers generally have five floral parts. Crassulaceae are usually herbaceous but there are some subshrubs, and relatively few treelike or aquatic plants. Crassulaceae are a medium-sized monophyletic family in the core eudicots , among the order Saxifragales , whose diversity has made infrafamilial classification very difficult. The family includes approximately 1,400 species and 34–35 genera, depending on

450-707: Is a family of morphologically diverse terrestrial perennial , rarely annual or hapaxanthic (flowering once in a lifetime), flowering plants that demonstrate xerophytic adaptations, with thick succulent leaves , a thick waxy cuticle and Crassulacean acid metabolism . Crassulaceae are generally herbaceous but there are some subshrubs , and relatively few treelike, epiphytic (growing on surface of plants), scandent (vine like) or aquatic plants . Most species are herbaceous leaf succulents, with regular 5 part (penta merous or fivemerous) flowers , isomerous free carpels and one or two whorls of stamens . Vegetative: Stems are sometimes succulent, as may also be

495-463: Is often many-branched and bracteate . The flower clusters are red, yellow, or white. The flowers are often apopetalous (separate corolla segments), pentamerous (five-parted), actinomorphic (radially symmetrical), except for the zygomorphic Tylecodon grandiflorus , with one to two whorls of 4–20 sepals that are usually as many as or twice as many as the number of petals and two whorls of stamens, five in each whorl (i.e. as many as or twice

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540-436: Is represented in all four clades, and the bulk of clades 5 and 7. In addition to Sedum , 16 other genera are recognised. Aeonium is basal divergence, followed by Sempervivum, with Leucosedum and Acre as sister groups. The Sedinae were very diverse, making phenotypic circumscription impossible. A similar problem exists for each of its subclades. Given the realisation that Sedum s.l. was a highly artificial construction, there

585-680: Is the Crassuloideae (2 genera), followed by the Kalanchoöideae (4 genera). Both of these represent the genera of southern Africa. The remaining six clades are segregated into the five tribes of the large temperate climate subfamily Sempervivoideae, with about thirty genera. These are Telephiae, Umbilicicae, Semperviveae, Aeonieae and Sedeae. Sedeae is the largest of these and contains two sister clades, Leucosedum and Acre The Sempervivoideae contain many familiar horticultural plants, such as Sedum . The phylogenetic relationships between

630-652: Is x=8, decreasing to 7 in Crassula. In Sedoideae, the base number increases to 9 in the Kalanchoe clade, but Kalanchoe have x=17 or 18 (or a multiple),and is probably of polyploid origin, derived from a tetraploid Cotyledon like taxon. In the Telephium sensu Hart clade the base number has increased to 12 and higher. Of the subclades within Telephium, the first (Hylotelephium sensu Thiede & Eggli: Hylotelphium , Orostachys and Sinocrassula ) has x=12, and of

675-589: The Rosidae , in the order Saxifragales , it is now placed, with that order as a superrosid under the classification system of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group . There, the Saxifragales are a sister group to the rosids . Classification within the family is difficult and complex because many of the species hybridize readily, both in the wild and in cultivation, and the family is morphologically , cytologically and geographically diverse. As

720-513: The botanical authority . Authority has also, at times, been given to De Candolle (DC), who first used the term "Crassulaceae" in 1815. He later placed the family among the Dicotyledons . One of the most complete treatments was Alwin Berger 's revision in 1930. At that time the family comprised about 1,500 species, distributed over six subfamilies and 33 genera. Circumscription of

765-530: The haplostemonous (single series of stamens, equal in number to petals) African Crassuloideae with opposite leaves, from the Sedeae without these characteristics ( obdiplostemonous , two whorls of stamens, twice as many as petals). These clades were (1–7): The last subtribe, the Sedinae, represents the last four clades (4–7) and contained half of the genera and species of Crassulaceae, including Sedum , which

810-928: The Mediterranean region, and from there to Eastern Europe and Asia (Sempervivum and Leucosedum clades), with multiple groups spreading over the three continents of the Northern Hemisphere. Two lineages from the European Crassulaceae eventually dispersed to North America and underwent subsequent diversification. The Aeonium clade dispersed from northern Africa to adjacent Macaronesia. Distinct centers of speciation developed in Macaronesia (Aeonium clade), Mexico ( Sedum and Echeverioideae in clade 7), and southeastern Asia ( Sedum sarmentosum , and S. morissonensis in Acre clade). On arrival in

855-772: The Northern hemisphere the Sempervivoideae reached its greatest diversity. Conversely, few representatives of the Crassulaceae occur in South America and Australia. Sedum species are found in most of these regions, generally grouped with genera endemic to that region. For instance the North African S. jaccardianum and S. modestum (Aeonium) are a sister group to the endemic Macaronesian species in that clade. The Macaronesian archipelago appears to have been reached by Crassulaceae at least three times. Once by

900-681: The Rhodiola clade Phedimus has x=16 and Umbilcus x=24, representing another episode of polyploidy. Within Sempervivum, Sedum series Rupestre ( Petrosedum ) has x=28. Within the Leucosedum, most taxa are diploid , with 2x=12, 14 but includes two subclades, one with x=6 or 7, the other x=6, but a few have 14 or 16. Acre includes a wide variety of chromosome numbers from x=6 to 270, and occasionally larger and displays widespread polyploidy. Aeonium includes some Sedum species with x=8, while

945-635: The Sedoideae were problematic, being an artificial construction containing all taxa which could not be fitted into the other subfamilies ( catch-all ). Sedoideae contained three centres of diversity, East Asia, the Mediterranean region and North America, with the greatest in E. Asia. Only a few taxa, such as Rhodiola and Hylotelephium , occurring in all three regions. About 120 species were found in Europe and adjacent parts of North Africa and West Asia, and 400 in Eastern and central Asia. Within Sedoideae,

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990-489: The Sedoideae. Attempts to resolve this have followed two opposing positions, lumping and splitting . Either accepting one artificial large catch-all polyphyletic genus, sensu lato ( Sedum s.l. ), or splitting it into many smaller genera, sensu stricto ( Sedum s.l. ). In the 1930s, Berger represented the splitting school of thought segregating genera such as Orostachys , Rosularia , Pseudosedum and Sempervivella . In contrast, Fröderströmm favoured retaining

1035-716: The Telephium clade of Ham was recognised as actually consisting of four separate clades, of which the two largest were named Hylotelephium and Rhodiola. The former are distinguished by being autumn flowering, while the remaining Sedeae bloom in spring and early summer. This analysis also confirmed the separate identity of most of the genera previously segregated from Sedum . A second ITS study of 69 taxa in ten Asian genera resolved Telephium into just these two larger clades. 1. Clade numbers following van Ham, order following phylogeny of Thiede & Eggli 2. Thiede & Eggli renamed clade Telephium to Hylotelephium 3. Rhodiola and Umbilicus were included in Telephium by Hart, but formed

1080-572: The ancestor of Aeonium and Monanthes , most likely from the Western Mediterranean region, with the closest extant relatives of these two genera ( Sedum caeruleum , S. pubescens ), coming from this region (Aeonium clade). The second migration was by an ancestor of a clade of three Sedum species ( S. nudum , S. lancerotense and S. fusiforme (Acre clade)), which appear to have originated in Mexico. The third occurrence likely involved

1125-404: The ancestor of a lineage within the genus Umbilicus (Rhodiola clade). The Macronesian flora include three genera from the Sempervivoideae, Aeonium , Aichryson and Monanthes (Aeonium clade), together with several Sedum spp. and one species of Umbilicus (Rhodiola). North America was reached at least twice, once by an ancestor of Parvisedum and Dudleya , and once by a subclade of Acre. For

1170-431: The chloroplast gene matK . The Telephium clade, which had only been weakly supported, was seen as probably containing several subclades. A similar conclusion was seen in a further but more focussed study of East Asian Sedoideae that examined the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of nuclear ribosomes of 74 taxa. This region includes about 300 species of Sedoideae, and most genera segregated from Sedum . However

1215-431: The circumscription of the genus Sedum , and distributed over three subfamilies. Members of the Crassulaceae are found worldwide, but mostly in the Northern Hemisphere and southern Africa, typically in dry and/or cold areas where water may be scarce, although a few are aquatic . Crassulaceae are mainly perennial and have huge economic importance, internationally, as collectible, indoor and garden plants . Many species in

1260-657: The degree of sympetaly , and phyllotaxis ) which are now recognized as being of limited value due to extensive homoplasy , having evolved independently many times, and hence provides little useful information, only two of the subfamilies proving monophyletic . Berger used sympetaly to define the group of Kalanchiodeae, Cotyledonoideae and Echeveroideae, but it also occurs in taxa within Crassuloideae and Sedoideae. Berger also placed all species with polymery into his Sempervivoideae, but it occurs in two different clades, Sempervivum and Aeonium. Although five of his six subfamilies appeared to be morphologically and geographically defined,

1305-903: The delimitation of individual families. Here, 14 families are shown in a cladogram , according to the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website , situating Crassulaceae as sister to the Haloragaceae sensu lato , and thus forming one of two subclades of the core Saxifragales. Peridiscaceae Paeonia (Paeoniaceae) Altingiaceae Hamamelidaceae Cercidiphyllum (Cercidiphyllaceae) Daphniphyllum (Daphniphyllaceae) Crassulaceae Aphanopetalum (Aphanopetalaceae) Tetracarpaea (Tetracarpaeaceae) Penthorum (Penthoraceae) Haloragaceae s.s. Iteaceae (including Pterostemonaceae ) Ribes (Grossulariaceae) Saxifragaceae Crassulaceae evolved approximately 100–60 million years ago in southern Africa with

1350-548: The family has remained relatively stable, with the exception of the placement of the genus Penthorum and Tetracarpaea , which has at times been placed either in their own monogeneric family, Penthoraceae and Tetracarpaeaceae, or in the Saxifragaceae . When Penthorum and Tetracarpaea were separated from Crassulaceae, they became a natural monophyletic group. Some later authors, such as Cronquist , included only 900 species. Thiede and Eggli (2007), in their treatment of

1395-426: The family have a bizarre, alien and intriguing appearance, with interesting textures, growths or even "furry" coverings, and are quite hardy, typically needing only minimal care. Still, many others have a more typical, "conventional" rosette form, something reflected in many common names, such as 'black rose' often referring to Aeonium arboreum var. 'Swartzkopf' or var. 'Merlot'. Well-known genera and species include

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1440-400: The family, describe 34 genera with about 1,410 species. The size of the genera varies considerably, from Sedum , the largest with 300–500 species, to the smallest, which are monotypic . Estimates of the number of species has varied between 1500 (Berger 1930) and 900 (Cronquist 1981). Molecular phylogenetics has shown that morphological characters and chromosome numbers are so labile in

1485-399: The family, with rampant polyploidy and aneuploidy, that they cannot be used reliably to infer evolution, even at low taxonomic levels, with few exceptions. For instance Prometheum and Rosularia have been segregated from Sedum by their basic chromosome numbers. Crassulaceae is a medium size monophyletic grouping within the core eudicots . Originally considered a primitive member of

1530-469: The genus Petrosedum : This Crassulaceae -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Crassulaceae Sempervivae [Sempervivaceae] Jussieu The Crassulaceae ( / ˈ k r æ s j uː l eɪ s iː ˌ iː , - s i ˌ aɪ / , from Latin crassus , thick), also known as the stonecrop family or the orpine family , are a diverse family of dicotyledon flowering plants characterized by succulent leaves and

1575-442: The large cosmopolitan typical genus Sedum (ca. 500 species), accounts for much of these issues, together with several smaller genera. Sedum refers to herbaceous, predominantly perennial species with alternate and entire leaves, a single subaxial hydathode and pentamerous obdiplostemous flowers with free petals. Most systematic treatments of the genus have resulted in conflicting classifications and evolutionary relationships within

1620-439: The largest genera. Though various revisions since have proposed simpler schemes, such as Borisova (1939, revised 1969). Berger's classification has proven practical and been the most widely used, although some of the subfamilies are polyphyletic. Berger's classification depended on biogeography and a number of morphological characteristics (primarily the number and arrangement of floral parts (haplostemonous androecia, polymery),

1665-399: The leaf blades are flat or round. They may be sessile or petiolate . Stipules are absent. New plants often form easily from vegetative parts that fall off the parent plant. Reproductive: The inflorescence is usually terminal to lateral with many-flowered thyrses of cymes , less commonly spikes, racemes or panicles , rarely few to single flowered and axillary . The inflorescence

1710-543: The many forms of Crassula ovata ('jade plant', 'money plant' or 'friendship tree'), Kalanchoe blossfeldiana (florists' or supermarket-kalanchoe); Cotyledon , such as 'Chalk Fingers' and ' Pig's Ear ', Sempervivum such as cobweb houseleek (or hen-and-chicks ) and S. calcareum , and Aeonium such as A. haworthii (and its popular variegate 'Kiwi'), A. arboreum, canariense , urbicum ; Monanthes , Umbilicus (pennywort), Bryophyllum , Echeveria , Sedum and Dudleya . General: Crassulaceae

1755-459: The number of petals), with their filaments either free or fused to the petals at the base and sometimes unequal. Anthers are basifixed and open lengthwise. The flowers are bisexual, less commonly unisexual (more or less dioecious ). Ovaries superior to partially inferior, with carpels equal to the number of petals, each forming a single locule, superior, free or almost so, basally with a small to conspicuous basal nectary scale, gradually tapering to

1800-510: The petals may form a corolla tube of varying length (e.g. Kalanchoe , Cotyledon ), or have only a single whorl of 5 stamens (e.g. Crassula , Tillaea ), while Sedum includes much of the morphological diversity within the family as a whole. Although the typical number of floral parts is four or five, a number of genera, such as Sempervivum and Jovibarba , demonstrate polymery (at least ten or greater parts). Chromosome numbers are highly variable. The original base chromosome number

1845-493: The remaining taxa are x=18. The core of this clade is probably polyploid from an ancestor with x=8. Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM photosynthesis) is named after the family, because the pathway was first discovered in crassulacean plants. It is one of the few families that still has CAM as an active, photosynthetic pathway, and is unique in which all its members are known to possess CAM. Originally described by Saint-Hilaire (1805) as Crassuleae, and therefore has his name as

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1890-493: The two most basal phylogenetic branches (Crassula, Kalanchoe) representing the predominantly southern African members. Other sources suggest that Crassulaceae evolved approximately 70 million years ago together with Haloragaceae sensu lato ( Penthoraceae , Haloragaceae ). The family is considered to have had a gradual evolution, with a basal split between Crassuloideae and the rest of the family (Kalanchoideae, Sempervivoideae). The Sempervivoideae subsequently dispersed north to

1935-438: The underground caudices (rootstock), and may form rhizomes or corms . Bulbils may form along the stem or leaf margins. The leaf arrangement is opposite and decussate or alternate and spiral, and they are frequently aggregated into rosettes . The leaf shape is simple (rarely pinnate ) and usually entire, or crenate to broadly lobed, sometimes dentate or more deeply incised, glabrous (smooth) or tomentose. In cross section

1980-600: The use of molecular methods of classification, attempts to replace Berger's system were largely unsuccessful. Subsequently, Hart and colleagues (1995) proposed two subfamilies, based on molecular phylogenetic data with chloroplast DNA , based on 49 species in 26 genera, which identified seven clades, named for constituent genera or species. Hart utilized a hierarchical system of subfamilies, tribes and subtribes, based on molecular, geographical and morphological criteria, including embryology , pollen morphology and phytochemistry . The basal split at subfamily level, separates

2025-509: Was support for reducing it by describing a number of segregate genera. Ohba (1995) proposed that Sedum s.s. should be restricted to clade 7, or at most clades 5–7, continuing some of the premolecular work in this direction, newly describing a number of Asian genera in addition to this reduced Sedum .: The general phylogenetic topology described by 't Hart et al. (1995) was confirmed in a larger study of 112 species of Crassulaceae sampled from 33 genera, and all six recognized subfamilies, using

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