Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics

Bulbophyllum is probably one of the largest genera in the orchids with Pantropical occurence, but the dis- tribution is not homogeneous across the world. The Paleotropics is the richest area and there are hundreds of species in Asia (Vermeulen 1991). The genus was described by Thouars in 1822, and t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Smidt, Eric, Silva-Pereira, Viviane, Borba, Eduardo, van den Berg, Cassio
Formato: Online
Idioma:spa
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 2015
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/18448
id LANKESTERIANA18448
record_format ojs
spelling LANKESTERIANA184482021-06-09T21:00:38Z Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics Smidt, Eric Silva-Pereira, Viviane Borba, Eduardo van den Berg, Cassio Bulbophyllum Neotropics richness complementarity analysis PAE orchid Bulbophyllum Neotropics richness complementarity analysis PAE orchid Bulbophyllum is probably one of the largest genera in the orchids with Pantropical occurence, but the dis- tribution is not homogeneous across the world. The Paleotropics is the richest area and there are hundreds of species in Asia (Vermeulen 1991). The genus was described by Thouars in 1822, and the first Neotropical species was described only in 1838 (B. setigerum Lindl.) from a plant collected in Guayana by George Loddiges and sent to John Lindley. Until today, one hundred and ten species names were pub- lished for the Neotropics, however only ca. 70 species could be recognized in five sections supported by phy- logenetic studies based on nuclear and chloroplast genome sequence data (Smidt unpubl. data).  Bulbophyllum is probably one of the largest genera in the orchids with Pantropical occurence, but the dis- tribution is not homogeneous across the world. The Paleotropics is the richest area and there are hundreds of species in Asia (Vermeulen 1991). The genus was described by Thouars in 1822, and the first Neotropical species was described only in 1838 (B. setigerum Lindl.) from a plant collected in Guayana by George Loddiges and sent to John Lindley. Until today, one hundred and ten species names were pub- lished for the Neotropics, however only ca. 70 species could be recognized in five sections supported by phy- logenetic studies based on nuclear and chloroplast genome sequence data (Smidt unpubl. data).  Universidad de Costa Rica 2015-06-17 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/18448 10.15517/lank.v7i1-2.18448 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2007: Lankesteriana: Volumen 7, Número 1-2 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2007: Lankesteriana: Volumen 7, Número 1-2 2215-2067 1409-3871 spa https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/18448/18617
institution Universidad de Costa Rica
collection Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology
language spa
format Online
author Smidt, Eric
Silva-Pereira, Viviane
Borba, Eduardo
van den Berg, Cassio
spellingShingle Smidt, Eric
Silva-Pereira, Viviane
Borba, Eduardo
van den Berg, Cassio
Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
author_facet Smidt, Eric
Silva-Pereira, Viviane
Borba, Eduardo
van den Berg, Cassio
author_sort Smidt, Eric
description Bulbophyllum is probably one of the largest genera in the orchids with Pantropical occurence, but the dis- tribution is not homogeneous across the world. The Paleotropics is the richest area and there are hundreds of species in Asia (Vermeulen 1991). The genus was described by Thouars in 1822, and the first Neotropical species was described only in 1838 (B. setigerum Lindl.) from a plant collected in Guayana by George Loddiges and sent to John Lindley. Until today, one hundred and ten species names were pub- lished for the Neotropics, however only ca. 70 species could be recognized in five sections supported by phy- logenetic studies based on nuclear and chloroplast genome sequence data (Smidt unpubl. data). 
title Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
title_short Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
title_full Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
title_fullStr Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
title_full_unstemmed Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
title_sort richness, distribution and important areas to preserve bulbophyllum in the neotropics
title_alt Richness, distribution and important areas to preserve Bulbophyllum in the Neotropics
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2015
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/18448
work_keys_str_mv AT smidteric richnessdistributionandimportantareastopreservebulbophyllumintheneotropics
AT silvapereiraviviane richnessdistributionandimportantareastopreservebulbophyllumintheneotropics
AT borbaeduardo richnessdistributionandimportantareastopreservebulbophyllumintheneotropics
AT vandenbergcassio richnessdistributionandimportantareastopreservebulbophyllumintheneotropics
_version_ 1810112928814202880