2009
DOI: 10.21829/abm87.2009.1084
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Revisión del género Mimophytum Greenm. (Boraginaceae)

Abstract: Se presenta una descripción morfológica del género Mimophytum Greenm. (Boraginaceae), datos referentes a su distribución geográfica y ecológica y una clave dicotómica para identificar sus elementos. Asimismo, se describen las dos especies conocidas de este grupo vegetal endémico de la Sierra Madre Oriental de México; una de ellas, M. benitomartinezii se propone como nueva para la ciencia, pues difiere de M. omphalodoides en que lleva el tallo rizomatoso-estolonífero, el haz de la hoja glabro, la lámina foliar … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1

Citation Types

0
1
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
1

Relationship

0
1

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
references
References 1 publication
0
1
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The vast richness and uniqueness of the Sierra de Xilitla has attracted the attention of various collectors that have conducted sporadic botanical explorations in the area. As a result, in the last 57 years, 17 plant species have been described from this area (McVaugh 1963, Lundell 1964, Matuda 1966, Landry & Wilson, 1979, Hunziker 1980, Rollins 1993, Rzedowski, 1994, Rzedowski & Guridi-Gómez, 1998, Zamudio 2001, Pérez-Calix & Patiño-Siciliano 2009, Carrillo-Reyes et al 2010, Galván & Zamudio, 2013, Bedolla-García & Zamudio 2015, 2017, Vázquez-García et al 2015Zamudio et al 2018), which highlight the need to conduct exhaustive systematic botanical explorations in the region. In particular, for the genus Salvia Linnaeus (1753: 23) the recent botanical explorations conducted in Sierra de Xilitla have led to the description of two new species: S. carranzae Zamudio & Bedolla (2015: 36), and S. guevarae Bedolla & Zamudio (2017: 6).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vast richness and uniqueness of the Sierra de Xilitla has attracted the attention of various collectors that have conducted sporadic botanical explorations in the area. As a result, in the last 57 years, 17 plant species have been described from this area (McVaugh 1963, Lundell 1964, Matuda 1966, Landry & Wilson, 1979, Hunziker 1980, Rollins 1993, Rzedowski, 1994, Rzedowski & Guridi-Gómez, 1998, Zamudio 2001, Pérez-Calix & Patiño-Siciliano 2009, Carrillo-Reyes et al 2010, Galván & Zamudio, 2013, Bedolla-García & Zamudio 2015, 2017, Vázquez-García et al 2015Zamudio et al 2018), which highlight the need to conduct exhaustive systematic botanical explorations in the region. In particular, for the genus Salvia Linnaeus (1753: 23) the recent botanical explorations conducted in Sierra de Xilitla have led to the description of two new species: S. carranzae Zamudio & Bedolla (2015: 36), and S. guevarae Bedolla & Zamudio (2017: 6).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%