4.2 Article

Synopsis of the species of Cheilolejeunea (Marchantiophyta, Lejeuneaceae) in the Pacific dominion and P?ramo province of tropical America

Journal

PHYTOTAXA
Volume 587, Issue 2, Pages 73-120

Publisher

MAGNOLIA PRESS
DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.587.2.1

Keywords

Lejeuneaceae; liverworts; taxonomy; tropical South America

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article presents a synopsis of 31 species and four varieties of Cheilolejeunea that occur in the Pacific dominion and Paramo province of tropical America. Most taxa occur in the Pacific dominion, with one species being endemic to this dominion. In terms of habitat, Cheilolejeunea is most speciose in the lower montane rainforest, with 77% of taxa occurring in this ecosystem.
Cheilolejeunea is the third largest genus of the family Lejeuneaceae (Marchantiophyta) comprising approximately 130 species described globally; approximately 55 have been recorded for the Neotropics. We present here a synopsis of 31 species and four varieties of Cheilolejeunea that occur in the Pacific dominion and Paramo province of tropical America, representing 56% of the Neotropical diversity and ca. 19% of the global diversity of the genus. Most taxa (30 species and four varieties) occur in the Pacific dominion, with Cheilolejeunea schiavoneana being endemic to this dominion; Cheilolejeunea erostrata is endemic to the Paramo province, that registers 10 species and one variety. The highest diversity (26 taxa) is in the Magdalena province. In terms of ecology, Cheilolejeunea is most speciose in the lower montane rainforest (700-2400 m), with 77% of taxa (27) occurring in this ecosystem. We consider Cheilolejeunea erostrata to be Critically Endangered (CR-B1a). The synopsis of the genus includes descriptions of the species, notes on their distributions and habitats, illustrations, and an identification key.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available