[FZ]
Umbelliferae, J. F. M. Cannon. Flora Zambesiaca 4. 1978
- Morphology General Habit
- Perennial, biennial or annual herbs.
- Morphology Leaves
- Leaves simple, ternate, simply pinnate to finely divided (occasionally showing a wide range of variation within one population).
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
- Umbels compound; bracts and bracteoles 0; calyx teeth obsolete or minute; petals white, cream or sometimes slightly pinkish, apices long-inflexed, the outer ones not noticeably radiate.
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruit ovoid to oblong, somewhat laterally compressed, with a broad commissure. Mericarps with 5 filiform ribs; stylopodium conical to depressed-conical; styles short or long, stigmatic surfaces somewhat clubbed.
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Carpophore
- Carpophore deeply 2-cleft.
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Seeds
- Seed slightly concave on the commissural face.
[FIQ]
Ghazanfar, S. A. & Edmondson, J. R (Eds). (2014) Flora of Iraq, Volume 5 Part 2: Lythraceae to Campanulaceae.
- Morphology General Habit
- Perennial, more rarely annual or biennial herbs, diverse as to stature, leaves pinnately divided, the lower often entire or simply pinnate, the upper usually multisect
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
- Umbels compound
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences Bracts Involucre
- Involucre absent, involucel absent or present
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
- Flowers white, pink, yellow or more rarely deep red
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Calyx
- Calyx teeth obsolete or small
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Corolla
- Petals variable in form, above deeply emarginate to almost entire, with an inflexed lobule variously developed, glabrous or hairy dorsally
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruit ovoid to ovoid-globose, ovoid-oblong or oblong, usually broadest below middle and ± attenuate toward apex, glabrous or furnished with diverse forms of indumentum, laterally compressed. Commissure broad. Mericarps easily separating, ± didymous, subterete, ribs filiform, not or scarcely prominent, usually pale, narrower than valleculae but often hidden beneath hairy or other indumentum
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits Vittae
- Vittae most frequently 3 in the valleculae, occasionally 2 or 4 (rarely more), slender or conspicuous
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Gynoecium Stylopodium
- Stylopodia broad and rounded-convex to shortly- or elongate-conic, the styles variable in length, margin of disk entire
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Carpophore
- Carpophore bifid or bipartite
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Seeds Endosperm
- Endosperm convex, ± terete or bluntly pentagonal dorsally, the commissural face flat or slightly concave.
- Distribution
- Some 150 species in N temperate Europe and Asia, N Africa, with one N American Pacific species and a few species in S America; 17 species in Iraq.
[FTEA]
Umbelliferae, C.C. Townsend. Flora of Tropical East Africa. 1989
- Morphology General Habit
- Annual, biennial or perennial herbs; rootstock various, in Africa often ± tuberous
- Morphology Leaves
- Leaves simple to tripinnate, denticulate to serrulate or coarsely dentate
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
- Umbels compound, usually numerous; involucre absent or of few linear bracts; involucel absent to conspicuous
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
- Flowers hermaphrodite or polygamous (a central umbel hermaphrodite with 1–2 lateral ♂ below)
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Calyx
- Calyx obsolete
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Corolla
- Petals usually white, sometimes cream, yellow or greenish yellow, incised above with an incurved apical lobule or at least the tip incurved
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruit ± laterally compressed, rotund-ovoid to oblong, glabrous or pilose, commissure narrow; primary ribs present, filiform, obvious or obscure, usually pale in ripe fruit; vittae (2–)3(–4) in the valleculae, usually black in the ripe fruit; stylopodia very variable in shape, from flat or pulvinate to long-conical; styles short to slender and flexuose; carpophore ± bipartite
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Seeds
- Endosperm rounded or obtusely 3-angled dorsally, commissural face flat or angled to the carpophore.
[FSOM]
M. Thulin et al. Flora of Somalia, Vol. 1-4 [updated 2008] https://plants.jstor.org/collection/FLOS
- Morphology General Habit
- Annual, biennial or perennial herbs
- Morphology Leaves
- Leaves pinnately divided to simple
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
- Flowers bisexual or central umbel bisexual with 1–2 lateral male umbels below Umbels compound; bracts few or absent; bracteoles present or absent
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Calyx
- Calyx-lobes obsolete
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Corolla
- Petals usually white, with incurved tip
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruits laterally ± compressed, ovoid to globose or oblong, glabrous to pilose, with a narrow commissure; primary ribs filiform, distinct to obscure; vittae 2–4 in each groove and 2–4 on the commissural face, usually black in the ripe fruit; stylopodia from flat to conical.
- Distribution
- Some 150 species, the majority in Eurasia.
- Note
- P. anisum L., anise, is widely cultivated as a spice, but some old records of this from southern Somalia actually refer to Trachyspermum pimpinelloides.
[FIQ]
Ghazanfar, S. A. & Edmondson, J. R (Eds). (2014) Flora of Iraq, Volume 5 Part 2: Lythraceae to Campanulaceae.
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
- Flowers usually white, rarely pink, reddish or purple
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Corolla
- Petals always deeply incised above with a well-developed inflexed lobule
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruit glabrous and smooth.
[FIQ]
Ghazanfar, S. A. & Edmondson, J. R (Eds). (2014) Flora of Iraq, Volume 5 Part 2: Lythraceae to Campanulaceae.
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
- Flowers usually white, rarely pink or reddish
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Corolla
- Petals always deeply excised above with a well-developed inflexed lobule
- Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
- Fruit furnished with hairs, granules, tubercles, papillae or other form of indumentum, rarely glabrescent at maturity (not in Iraqi species).
[LOWO]
Legumes of the World. Edited by G. Lewis, B. Schrire, B. MacKinder & M. Lock. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. (2005)
- Note
-
Polhill (1981a, h & i) recognised Galegeae and Carmichaelieae as distinct tribes. Within the Galegeae he distinguished four subtribes: Coluteinae, Astragalinae, Galeginae and Glycyrrhizinae. Polhill (1994) added a fifth subtribe Alhagiinae. More recent studies suggest that the Carmichaelieae are best treated as another subtribe within Galegeae, and this is followed here. However, these studies also point strongly to the polyphyly of Galegeae (Wagstaff et al., 1999; Wojciechowski et al., 2000; 2004). Polhill’s concept of Galegeae appears to be in the process of disintegration into a number of smaller tribes, but decisions on this would be premature until constituent taxa are sampled more comprehensively, and putative monophyletic groups can be substantiated by morphological and other systematic data.
Glycyrrhizinae Rydb. was recognised by Polhill (1981h) as very distinct, but he left it as ‘an outlying subtribe of Galegeae’. Molecular analyses have confirmed the outlying position of Glycyrrhiza (Fig. 53). Although it is a member of the Inverted Repeat Lacking Clade (IRLC), it forms a basal grade or sister group, along with such woody millettioid genera as Callerya and Wisteria, to the whole of the rest of the IRLC (Sanderson & Liston, 1995; Wojciechowski et al., 2000; 2004).
Galeginae, containing the single genus Galega (Fig. 53), is also isolated from the rest of ‘Galegeae’. In Wojciechowski et al. (2000), it falls near the base of their Vicioid clade (Fig. 53) and is sister to the Cicereae. In Wojciechowski et al. (2004), Galega is sister to a combined Cicereae-Trifolieae-Fabeae clade, although with relatively poor support. Such placements have not been suggested before and careful morphological studies are needed to see if they support the relationships suggested by molecular analyses. One of the prominent features of Cicereae is the craspedodromous venation of the leaflets and while the leaflet venation in Galega is not truly craspedodromous, Polhill (1981h) does give ‘leaflet-nerves to margin or nearly so’ as one of the characteristics of Galeginae.
Astragalinae contains, inter alia, what is probably the largest genus of flowering plants — Astragalus — with 2300–2500 species. Wojciechowski et al. (1999; 2000) have shown that their Astragalean clade (Fig. 53) is itself made up of several distinct clades. The first of these includes the vast majority of the species of Astragalus. Wojciechowski et al. (1999) and Kazempour Osaloo et al. (2003) find good support for Astragalus sens. strict. as a monophyletic group, i.e., excluding only a very few outlying species (mentioned below). Wojciechowski et al. (1999) also showed that genera such as Oxytropis, Sutherlandia and Swainsona, which are morphologically very similar to Astragalus (although they have never been formally combined within it), are in fact distinct and not nested within Astragalus. Sanderson & Liston (1995) and Wojciechowski et al. (1999, and references therein) have clearly shown that the vast majority of New World Astragalus form a single clade in which most of the species have chromosome numbers in an aneuploid series: n = 11, 12, 13, 14 or 15 (Spellenberg, 1976). The Old World taxa, on the other hand, have chromosome numbers that are euploid: n = 8, 16, 32 etc., and polyploids are common (Spellenberg, 1976). All the studies of Liston and his group (e.g., Liston & Wheeler, 1994) demonstrate that Astragalus, far from being a taxonomic ragbag, does in fact form a monophyletic group in which speciation has been particularly active; possible mechanisms have been discussed by Barneby (1964) and Polhill (1981h).
A second small clade, sister to Astragalus, includes Biserrula pelecinus L. and Astragalus epiglottis L. These are both annuals of the Mediterranean Basin and N Africa. Both have only five fertile anthers and dorsiventrally compressed pods. The position of Biserrula has long been disputed but it has often been regarded as no more distinct from Astragalus than some of the other monotypic genera that have from time to time been split off, usually on account of their distinctive pods (Barneby 1964: 26). The position of Biserrula at the base of the Astragalus clade (e.g., in Wojciechowski et al., 1999, 2001; Kazempour Osaloo et al., 2003), however, supports its current treatment as a separate genus. Astragalus epiglottis, however, does not seem to have been treated anywhere above sectional rank.
The third clade (Fig. 53) within the Astragalean clade of Wojciechowski et al. (1999; 2001), i.e., the Coluteoid clade, contains much of Polhill’s (1981h) Coluteinae, plus Astragalus sinicus L. and A. complanatus Bunge and the Southern Hemisphere carmichaelioid group. The group has a very scattered distribution, with the two Astragalus species occurring in E Asia, Lessertia and Sutherlandia in southern Africa, the carmichaelioids (including Swainsona) in Australia and New Zealand, Colutea widespread in continental Eurasia and NE Africa, and various smaller genera such as Smirnowia and Eremosparton restricted to C Asia. Wojciechowski et al. (1999) point out that Astragalus sinicus and A. complanatus resemble other Coluteinae in possessing non-interlocking wing and keel petals and a ciliate style (Lavin & Delgado, 1990). However, they also note that Wenniger (1991) has found stylar hairs to be quite widely scattered among sections of Old World Astragalus, and suggest that the character may have arisen several times. Kazempour Osaloo et al. (2003) found that Astragalus vogelii (Webb) Bornm., from N Africa, Arabia, W Asia, Pakistan and India, grouped with Colutea in their analyses, and they erected a new genus Podlechiella Maassoumi & Kazempour Osaloo (p. 22) to account for this species. This decision appears premature before detailed molecular analyses of the Coluteinae are available, and it is not accepted here. The genera separated as Carmichaelieae by Polhill (1981i) also appear best placed in this clade (Heenan, 1998a; Wagstaff et al., 1999). They have been shown to form a monophyletic group, confined to Australia and New Zealand.
The fourth clade (Fig. 53), is made up of a monophyletic and distinct Oxytropis. The isolation of Oxytropis is reassuring but somewhat surprising as members of the genus are often morphologically extremely similar to species of Astragalus and can only be distinguished by the pointed keel petals and by the pod septum that arises from the adaxial suture, not the abaxial as in Astragalus. Species of Oxytropis are widespread in the north temperate regions, often on mountains.
Three further groups of genera, exemplified by a) Erophaca baetica Boiss. (=Astragalus lusitanicus Lam.); b) Chesneya plus Gueldenstaedtia and c) Caragana, Calophaca and Halimodendron, are sister either to the Astragalean clade, or to the Astragalean plus Vicioid clade (Wojciechowski et al., 2000). Relatively poor sampling within these groups has resulted in different analyses suggesting different divisions and placements. Some of the genera are poorly known and of restricted distribution (e.g., Oreophysa and Tibetia), but others are more widespread, including Chesneya and Gueldenstaedtia.
Erophaca baetica, together with Chesneya and Gueldenstaedtia (note that G. himalaica Baker, the exemplar of the genus in the supertree, is now placed in Tibetia) are part of the sister group to the Astragalean clade (Wojciechowski et al., 2001). Caragana, Calophaca and Halimodendron, on the other hand, form a monophyletic group sister to the Hedysaroid clade, and are here placed in Hedysareae. Sanderson & Wojciechowski (1996) and Wojciechowski et al. (2000; 2004) show that Alhagi appears to be best placed in Hedysareae, in agreement with Hutchinson (1964).
In a tribe that is so clearly polyphyletic it is difficult to know how to arrange the constituent genera. For the purposes of this book, genera recognised in the tribe largely follow Polhill (1981h; 1994), although with modifications resulting from more recent research. The two major realignments since Polhill (1994) are the transfer of the genera mentioned above to the Hedysareae and the inclusion of the Carmichaelieae (Polhill, 1981i) within Galegeae. The arrangement of genera in this treatment is that suggested by the supertree of Wojciechowski et al. (2001). Not all genera have been sampled; genera not represented in the supertree have been intercalated in positions that appear to be appropriate from other data in, e.g., Polhill (1981h). Likewise, with the exception of Astragalus lusitanicus, here treated as Erophaca, the isolated species of Astragalus revealed by the supertree have not been treated separately. Podlech’s (1994) placement of three isolated Astragalus species as genera (Biserrula, Ophiocarpus and Barnebyella) has been followed here.
Although we have suggested that it is premature to re-circumscribe tribal limits in this group, the bulk of taxa (i.e., those comprising Polhill’s subtribes Astragalinae [for the most part] and Coluteinae, and tribe Carmichaelieae), are likely to become recognised as a more narrowly defined tribe Astragaleae. As treated here the Galegeae sens. lat. comprises 24 genera and (2880)–3030–(3180) species.
Native to:
Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Altay, Amur, Angola, Assam, Austria, Azores, Baleares, Baltic States, Bangladesh, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canary Is., Cape Provinces, Central African Repu, Central European Rus, China North-Central, China South-Central, China Southeast, Chita, Corse, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, East Aegean Is., East European Russia, East Himalaya, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Free State, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Guinea, Gulf of Guinea Is., Gulf States, Hainan, Hungary, India, Inner Mongolia, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, Irkutsk, Italy, Japan, Jawa, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kirgizstan, Krasnoyarsk, Kriti, Krym, Kuwait, KwaZulu-Natal, Lebanon-Syria, Lesotho, Lesser Sunda Is., Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Manchuria, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, Nigeria, North Caucasus, North European Russi, Northern Provinces, Northwest European R, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Poland, Portugal, Primorye, Qinghai, Romania, Sardegna, Saudi Arabia, Sicilia, Sinai, Somalia, South European Russi, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Tadzhikistan, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Tibet, Transcaucasus, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkey-in-Europe, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, West Himalaya, West Siberia, Xinjiang, Yemen, Yugoslavia, Zambia, Zaïre, Zimbabwe
Extinct in:
Egypt
Introduced into:
Argentina Northeast, Argentina Northwest, Brazil South, Buryatiya, Connecticut, Delaware, Guatemala, Indiana, Kamchatka, Korea, Laos, Leeward Is., Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Brunswick, New Jersey, New York, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ohio, Ontario, Pennsylvania, Philippines, Québec, Trinidad-Tobago, Venezuela, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin
- Pimpinella acronemastrum Farille & Lachard
- Pimpinella acuminata (Edgew.) C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella acutidentata C.Norman
- Pimpinella adiyamanensis Yıld. & Kılıç
- Pimpinella adscendens Dalzell
- Pimpinella affinis Ledeb.
- Pimpinella ahmarensis Dawit
- Pimpinella alismatifolia C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella anagodendron Bolle
- Pimpinella anisactis Rech.f.
- Pimpinella anisetum Boiss. & Balansa
- Pimpinella anisoides V.Brig.
- Pimpinella anisum L.
- Pimpinella aromatica M.Bieb.
- Pimpinella atropurpurea C.Y.Wu ex R.H.Shan & F.T.Pu
- Pimpinella aurea DC.
- Pimpinella barbata (DC.) Boiss.
- Pimpinella battandieri Chabert
- Pimpinella bialata H.Wolff
- Pimpinella bisinuata H.Wolff
- Pimpinella bobrovii (Woronow ex Schischk.) M.Hiroe
- Pimpinella brachyclada Rech.f. & Riedl
- Pimpinella bracteata Haines
- Pimpinella buchananii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella caffra (Eckl. & Zeyh.) D.Dietr.
- Pimpinella camptotricha Penz.
- Pimpinella candolleana Wight & Arn.
- Pimpinella cappadocica Boiss. & Balansa
- Pimpinella caudata (Franch.) H.Wolff
- Pimpinella chungdienensis C.Y.Wu
- Pimpinella cnidioides H.Pearson ex H.Wolff
- Pimpinella coriacea (Franch.) H.Boissieu
- Pimpinella corymbosa Boiss.
- Pimpinella cretica Poir.
- Pimpinella crispulifolia H.Boissieu
- Pimpinella cumbrae Link
- Pimpinella cypria Boiss.
- Pimpinella dendroselinum Webb
- Pimpinella deverroides (Boiss.) Boiss.
- Pimpinella diversifolia DC.
- Pimpinella ebracteata Baker
- Pimpinella enguezekensis Yıldırım, Akalın & Yeşil
- Pimpinella eriocarpa Banks & Sol.
- Pimpinella erythraeae Armari
- Pimpinella etbaica Schweinf.
- Pimpinella fargesii H.Boissieu
- Pimpinella favifolia C.Norman
- Pimpinella filiformis H.Wolff
- Pimpinella filipedicellata S.L.Liou
- Pimpinella flabellifolia (Boiss.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex Drude
- Pimpinella flaccida C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella gilanica Mozaff.
- Pimpinella grisea H.Wolff
- Pimpinella hadacii Engstrand
- Pimpinella hastata C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella helosciadoidea H.Boissieu
- Pimpinella henryi Diels
- Pimpinella heyneana (DC.) Benth. & Hook.f.
- Pimpinella heywoodii Dawit
- Pimpinella hirtella (Hochst.) A.Rich.
- Pimpinella homblei C.Norman
- Pimpinella huillensis Welw. ex Engl.
- Pimpinella ibradiensis Çinbilgel, Eren, H.Duman & Gökceoğlu
- Pimpinella × intermedia Figert
- Pimpinella inundata (Farille & S.B.Malla) P.K.Mukh. & Constance
- Pimpinella isaurica V.A.Matthews
- Pimpinella javana DC.
- Pimpinella junionae Ceballos & Ortuño
- Pimpinella kaessneri (H.Wolff) Cannon
- Pimpinella kawalekhensis Farille & Lachard
- Pimpinella keniensis C.Norman
- Pimpinella khayyamii Mozaff.
- Pimpinella khorasanica Engstrand
- Pimpinella kingdon-wardii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella koelzii M.Hiroe
- Pimpinella kotschyana Boiss.
- Pimpinella kurdica Rech.f. & Riedl
- Pimpinella kyimbilaensis H.Wolff
- Pimpinella ledermannii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella leschenaultii DC.
- Pimpinella liiana M.Hiroe
- Pimpinella limprichtii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella lindblomii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella lineariloba Cannon
- Pimpinella lutea Desf.
- Pimpinella major (L.) Huds.
- Pimpinella menachensis Schweinf. ex H.Wolff
- Pimpinella mulanjensis C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella nana Pimenov
- Pimpinella neglecta C.Norman
- Pimpinella nephrophylla Rech.f. & Riedl
- Pimpinella nervosa C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella niitakayamensis Hayata
- Pimpinella nudicaulis Trautv.
- Pimpinella nyingchiensis Z.H.Pan & K.Yao
- Pimpinella oliverioides Boiss. & Hausskn.
- Pimpinella olivieri Boiss.
- Pimpinella oreophila Hook.f.
- Pimpinella paludosa C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella parishiana Kurz
- Pimpinella pastinacifolia (Boiss.) H.Wolff
- Pimpinella paucidentata V.A.Matthews
- Pimpinella peregrina L.
- Pimpinella peucedanifolia Fisch. ex Ledeb.
- Pimpinella physotrichioides C.Norman
- Pimpinella pimpinelloides (Hochst.) H.Wolff
- Pimpinella pretenderis Orph. ex Halácsy
- Pimpinella procumbens (Boiss.) Pau
- Pimpinella propinqua H.Wolff
- Pimpinella pruatjan Molk.
- Pimpinella puberula (DC.) Boiss.
- Pimpinella purpurea (Franch.) H.Boissieu
- Pimpinella renifolia H.Wolff
- Pimpinella rhodantha Boiss.
- Pimpinella rhomboidea Diels
- Pimpinella richardsiae C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella rigidistyla C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella rigidiuscula C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella rigidula (Boiss. & Orph.) H.Wolff
- Pimpinella robynsii C.Norman
- Pimpinella rollae Billore & Hemadri
- Pimpinella rubescens (Franch.) H.Wolff ex Hand.-Mazz.
- Pimpinella saxifraga L.
- Pimpinella schimperi Dawit
- Pimpinella schweinfurthii Asch.
- Pimpinella serbica (Vis.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex Drude
- Pimpinella sikkimensis C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella silvatica Hand.-Mazz.
- Pimpinella silvicola Hemp
- Pimpinella sintenisii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella smithii H.Wolff
- Pimpinella squamosa Karjagin
- Pimpinella stracheyi C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella × subnigra Tzvelev
- Pimpinella tagawae M.Hiroe
- Pimpinella tenuicaulis Baker
- Pimpinella thellungiana H.Wolff
- Pimpinella tibetanica H.Wolff
- Pimpinella tirupatiensis N.P.Balakr. & Subr.
- Pimpinella tomentosa Dalzell ex C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella tongloensis P.K.Mukh.
- Pimpinella tragioides (Boiss.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex Drude
- Pimpinella tragium Vill.
- Pimpinella tripartita Kalen.
- Pimpinella triternata Diels
- Pimpinella tunceliana Yıld.
- Pimpinella turcomanica Schischk.
- Pimpinella urbaniana Fedde ex H.Wolff
- Pimpinella urceolata Watt ex Banerji
- Pimpinella valleculosa K.T.Fu
- Pimpinella villosa Schousb.
- Pimpinella wallichiana (Miq.) Gandhi
- Pimpinella wallichii C.B.Clarke
- Pimpinella woodii C.C.Towns.
- Pimpinella xizangensis R.H.Shan & F.T.Pu
- Pimpinella yunnanensis (Franch.) H.Wolff
- Pimpinella zagrosica Boiss. & Hausskn.
- Adarianta Knoche
- Afrosison H.Wolff
- Albovia Schischk.
- Anisometros Hassk.
- Anisum Hill
- Chesneya Bertol.
- Disachoena Zoll. & Moritzi
- Gaytania Münter
- Gymnosciadium Hochst.
- Heterachaena Zoll. & Moritzi
- Ledeburia Link
- Murrithia Zoll. & Moritzi
- Pancicia Vis.
- Pimpinele St.-Lag.
- Platyrhaphe Miq.
- Reutera Boiss.
- Tobion Raf.
- Tragium Spreng.
- Tragolium Raf.
- Tragoselinum Mill.
Pimpinella L. appears in other Kew resources:
First published in Sp. Pl.: 263 (1753)
Accepted by
- Tutin, T.G. & al. (eds.) (1968). Flora Europaea 2: 1-469. Cambridge University Press.
Literature
Flora of West Tropical Africa
- Norman in J. Linn. Soc. 47: 583 (1927).
- —F.T.A. 3: 13
Flora of Iraq
- Axenov E.S., Tikhomirov, V.N. (1972) Byull. Glavn. Bot. Sada (Moskva) 85: 35–45.
- Linnaeus, Gen. Pl. ed. 5: 128 (1754);
- Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. ed. 1: 263 (1753);
- Wolff in Pflanzenr. IV. 228, 90: 219 (1927)
Flora Zambesiaca
- Gen. Pl. ed. 5: 128 (1754).
- Sp. Pl. 1: 263 (1753)
Flora of Somalia
- Flora Somalia, Vol 2, (1999) Author: by M. Thulin [updated by M. Thulin 2008]
Flora of Tropical East Africa
- L., Gen. Pl., ed. 5: 128 (1754)
- Sp. Pl.: 263 (1753)
-
Flora Zambesiaca
Flora Zambesiaca
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
-
Flora of Iraq
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
-
Flora of Somalia
Flora of Somalia
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
-
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Flora of Tropical East Africa
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
-
Kew Backbone Distributions
The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 2022. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/
© Copyright 2017 World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
-
Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone
The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 2022. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/
© Copyright 2017 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
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Legumes of the World Online
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