
Phaeoceros laevis
Taxonavigation
| Taxonavigation: Notothyladales |
|---|
| Classification System: Söderström et al., 2016 (down to genus level)
Superregnum: Eukaryota |
Familia: Notothyladaceae
Genus: Phaeoceros
Species: P. carolinianus – P. laevis – P. microsporus – P. miyakeanus – P. mohrii – P. oreganus – P. pearsonii – P. striatisporus
Name
Phaeoceros Prosk. 1951
Type species: Phaeoceros laevis (L.) Prosk.
Synonyms
References
Primary references
- Hasegawa, J. 1994. New classification of Anthocerotae. Journal of the Hattori Botanical Laboratory 76: 21–34.
- Proskauer, J. 1951. Studies on Anthocerotales. III. The genera Anthoceros and Phaeoceros. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 78 (4): 331–349.
Additional references
- Hasegawa, J. 1994. A remarkable new species of Phaeoceros (Anthocerotae) with canaliculate-striate spore surface. Journal of the Hattori Botanical Laboratory 75: 267–273.
- Hasegawa, J. 2000. Hattorioceros striatisporus (Hasegawa) Hasegawa newly found in Fiji. Bryological Research 7: 273–275.
- Li, J.; Zhang, L.; & Zhou, L. 2011. Phylogenetic position of the genus Hattorioceros (Anthoceratophyta). Taxon 60 (6): 1633–1636.
- Söderström, Lars, Anders Hagborg, Matt von Konrat, Sharon Bartholomew-Began, David Bell, Laura Briscoe, Elizabeth Brown, D. Christine Cargill, Denise P. Costa, Barbara J. Crandall-Stotler, Endymion D. Cooper, Gregorio Dauphin, John J. Engel, Kathrin Feldberg, David Glenny, S. Robbert Gradstein, Xiaolan He, Jochen Heinrichs, Jörn Hentschel, Anna Luiza Ilkiu-Borges, Tomoyuki Katagiri, Nadezhda A. Konstantinova, Juan Larraín, David G. Long, Martin Nebel, Tamás Pócs, Felisa Puche, Elena Reiner-Drehwald, Matt A. M. Renner, Andrea Sass-Gyarmati, Alfons Schäfer-Verwimp, José Gabriel Segarra Moragues, Raymond E. Stotler, Phiangphak Sukkharak, Barbara M. Thiers, Jaime Uribe, Jiří Váňa, Juan Carlos Villarreal, Martin Wigginton, Li Zhang, Rui-Liang Zhu. (2016) World checklist of hornworts and liverworts. PhytoKeys 59:1–828. Full text Reference page.
- Villarreal, J.C. & Renner, S.S. 2012. Hornwort pyrenoids, carbon-concentrating structures, evolved and were lost at least five times during the last 100 million years. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science U.S.A. 109 (46): 18873–18878. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1213498109
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