Abstract

The in toto pattern of the floral vasculature in Koeberlinia Zucc, is distinctive. The median vascular trace to each sepal is concrescent with the antesepalous stamen trace forming a trace complex. Each petal trace is concrescent with the nearest antestaminal trace, and this common trace is in turn concrescent basally with the common basal supply to the adjacent sepal margins. The ventral carpellary bundles and the ovular traces of the two carpels are arranged for part of the ventral carpellary system into an essentially continuous hollow stele‐like cylinder and many of the ovular vascular supplies originate from this strand. All vascular concrescences are congenital. Comparisons of the morphological and floral vasculature characters of Koeberlinia with those of its various putative allies revealed that there are no substantial reasons for linking Koeberlinia with Canotia, Celastraceae, Rutaceae, Simaroubaceae, or Zygophyllaceae. The in toto floral vascular structure of Koeberlinia is closely similar to that of the Caryophyllaceae and dissimilar to that of the Capparaceae. Several qualitative characters of the secondary xylem of Koeberlinia differ from those of the Capparaceae, yet certain important ones are similar. Many of the morphological characters of Koeberlinia are similar to those of the Capparaceae as well as the Caryophyllaceae, yet certain critically important ones strongly indicate a relation of Koeberlinia to the Capparaceae: occurrence of myrosin cells, capparaceous pollen, capparaceous ovular characters. To include Koeberlinia within either of these families is unwise, but the writers are inclined to retain Koeberlinia in a monogeneric family within the larger Capparales.

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