Abstract

Sterling, C. (U. California, Davis.) The affinities of Prinsepia (Rosaceae). Amer. Jour. Bot. 50(7): 693–699. Illus. 1963.—Anatomical study of the carpels of 4 species of Prinsepia has shown that at flowering the 2 ovules are erect and pleurotropic. The funiculus is on the dorsal and lower side of the ovule; the micropyle faces a large obturator on the ventral side. The carpellary margins are separated by a fissure below the funicular insertion, but above this level they are fused. The style is laterally inserted on the ventral face of the carpel; it is vascularized only by the wing bundles and the recurving dorsal bundle. At the base of the ovary, 2 ovular bundles depart from the vascular cylinder and run separately, each to its respective ovule. In carpel morphology, ovular position, ovule structure, and vascular anatomy, Prinsepia is not a prunoid type. Although its features on the whole resemble those of chrysobalanoid plants, there are notable differences. Consequently, Prinsepia is assigned to a new subfamilial group in the Rosaceae, the Prinsepioideae. Some phylogenetic considerations are discussed briefly.

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