Taxonomic Merge 132357 (Submetido em 17-10-2023)

desconhecido
Adicionado(s) por kevinfaccenda em 18 de outubro de 2023, 05:47 AM | Committed by kevinfaccenda on 17 de outubro de 2023
fundido com

Comentários

These varieties and forms are not biologically distinct and are simply cultivated forms.

Publicado por kevinfaccenda 7 meses antes

The Plants of the World Online site (https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn%3Alsid%3Aipni.org%3Anames%3A415571-1#synonyms) treats the North American plants as native species, while many of us believe that the rampant growths in wetlands are likely caused by hybrids with introduced genes from Eurasia. See also: Jakubowski, A. R., R. D. Jackson, & M. D. Casler. 2014. History of Reed Canarygrass in North America: Persistence of Natives among Invading Eurasian Populations. Crop Sci. 54: 210–219.
cited in https://michiganflora.net/record/2180
and
"Phalaris arundinacea (reed canary grass)". CABI. Retrieved 16 March 2020. citing, inter alia, Häfliger, Ernst; Scholz, Hildemar (1980). Grass weeds / 2, Weeds of the subfamilies 'Chloridoideae', 'Pooideae', 'Oryzoideae'. Documenta. Basel, Switzerland: CIBA-Geigy.
cited in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalaris_arundinacea

Publicado por chuckt2007 7 meses antes

Yea, there's some nuance that's lost in the POWO database for this. I think iNat ignores the POWO information and labels all of the American observations as introduced. See this flag: https://www.inaturalist.org/flags/555908

Publicado por kevinfaccenda 7 meses antes

Adicionar um Comentário

Iniciar Sessão ou Registar-se to add comments