Bartsia

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 2: 602. 1753.

Etymology: For Johann Bartsch, 1709–1738, German physician
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 17. Treatment on page 488. Mentioned on page 458, 490, 503.
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 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA17 P54 Bartsia alpina.jpegBartsia alpina
Bellardia trixago
Euphrasia ostenfeldii
Yevonn Wilson-Ramsey
Yevonn Wilson-Ramsey
Barbara Alongi

Herbs, perennial; hemiparasitic, caudex woody. Stems erect, not fleshy, pilose and eglandular at base, hirsute and glandular at apex. Leaves basal (scalelike) and cauline (expanded), decussate; petiole absent; blade not fleshy, subleathery or not, margins crenate to serrate. Inflorescences terminal, racemes; bracts present. Pedicels present; bracteoles absent. Flowers: sepals 4, calyx bilaterally symmetric, tubular, lobes triangular; petals 5, corolla violet to yellow, strongly bilabiate, funnelform, abaxial lobes 3, adaxial 2, adaxial lip galeate; stamens 4, didynamous, filaments minutely pubescent; staminode 0; ovary 2-locular, placentation axile; stigma subcapitate. Capsules: dehiscence loculicidal. Seeds ca. 50, white, fusiform-cylindric, wings present. x = 12.

Distribution

ne North America, Europe

Discussion

Species 1.

Until recently, Bartsia included 49 species distributed in North America, South America, Eurasia, and Africa (U. Molau 1990). However, phylogenetic analyses of nuclear and chloroplast genes, obtained using both traditional and high-throughput sequencing, indicate that Bartsia so circumscribed is polyphyletic (S. Uribe-Convers and D. C. Tank 2015, 2016; Uribe-Convers et al. 2016). The type species, B. alpina, is recovered on a branch with no other species of Bartsia; therefore, Bartsia is herein treated as monospecific following Uribe-Convers and Tank (2016). The remaining species of Bartsia have been placed in Bellardia, Hedbergia Molau, and a new South American genus, Neobartsia Uribe-Convers & Tank. Of these, only Bellardia occurs in the flora area.

Lower Taxa

... more about "Bartsia"
Christopher P. Randle +  and Simon Uribe-Convers +
Linnaeus +
not +, subleathery +  and not fleshy +
tubular +
violet +  and yellow +
subrotate +, cylindric +, club--shaped +, salverform +, campanulate +  and tubular +
ne North America +  and Europe +
For Johann Bartsch, 1709–1738, German physician +
2 +  and 1 +
indehiscent +, septicidal +, loculicidal +  and dehiscence +
axillary +  and terminal +
deciduous +
cauline +  and basal +
triangular +
crenate +  and serrate +
tenuinucellate +  and unitegmic +
campylotropous-like +
molau1990a +  and uribe-convers2016a +
fusiform-cylindric +
subequal +
aerial +  and subterranean +
hirsute +  and pilose +
not fleshy +
Bartsia +
Orobanchaceae +