Haemanthinae

Haemanthinae
Haemanthus coccineus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Subfamily: Amaryllidoideae
Tribe: Haemantheae
Subtribe: Haemanthinae
Pax[1] or Baker[2]
Type genus
Haemanthus L.
Genera
Synonyms[1]

Haemanthineae (orth. var.)

Haemanthinae is a small subtribe of Haemantheae, and therefore within the African clades of Amaryllidoideae. It consists of two genera, Haemanthus, and Scadoxus.

Description

The genera of Haemanthinae share brush-like inflorescences, in which the bracts frequently form part of the pollinator attraction system. Not all Scadoxus form bulbs, while all species of Haemanthus do.[1]

Taxonomy

For the early taxonomic history of these two genera, see Meerow and Clayton (2004).[1] Pax (1888) treated the Amaryllidaceae as four subfamilies, with two tribes in subfamily Amarylloideae, which consisted of two tribes, Amaryllideae and Narcisseae. The former contained six subtribes, placing Haemanthus together with Clivia in subtribe Haemanthinae.[3] Hutchinson (1934) subsequently elevated this to tribe Haemantheae.[4] Later, Traub placed Haemanthus with Choananthus (subsequently submerged in Scadoxus) in tribe Haemantheae in his 1963 monograph on the Amaryllidaceae.[5] Later the Müller-Doblies' created a narrower concept of Haemantheae as a tribe with Haemanthinae as one of two subtribes and two genera, Haemanthus and Scadoxus.[6] Molecular phylogenetic research has confirmed this placement, with Meerow and Clayton (2004) situating Haemanthinae[note 1] as one of three subtribes of Haemantheae.[1]

Phylogeny

The Haemanthinae are placed within the Haemantheae as follows:

Tribe Haemantheae

Subtribe Cliviinae




Subtribe Haemanthinae



Subtribe Gethyllidinae




Subdivision

Distribution and habitat

Scadoxus is a forest understory herbaceous genus, most commonly found in the tropical areas of Africa. Haemanthus on the other hand is confined to southern Africa, within the summer and winter rainfall regions of the Cape.[1]

Notes

  1. They used the spelling "Haemanthineae" in this paper, which differs from earlier authors and is contrary to Article 19 of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, which requires subtribe names to have the ending "-inae".[7]

References

Bibliography

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