Artocarpeae

Artocarpeae is a tribe within the plant family Moraceae. It includes 7 to 12 genera and 70 to 87 species including Artocarpus altilis, the breadfruit.

Artocarpeae
Sydney Parkinson's original illustration of Artocarpus altilis, the species upon which the tribe is based.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Rosales
Family: Moraceae
Tribe: Artocarpeae
Lam. & DC.
Genera

Artocarpus J.R.Forster & G.Forster
Batocarpus H.Karst.
Clarisia Ruiz & Pavón
Hulletia King
Parartocarpus Baillon
Prainea King
Treculia Decne. ex Trécul

Description

Species in the Artocarpeae are tropical trees or shrubs which, like all members of the Moraceae, produce latex. Most are dioecious, although some are monoecious. The male and female inflorescences include a variety of elongate or compact structures. The Artocarpeae is the least homogeneous of the five tribes that make up the Moraceae.[1]

Taxonomy

The tribe is based on the genus Artocarpus, the largest and best-known genus in the group. The first post-Linnaean description of the species was done by Sydney Parkinson during James Cook's first voyage to the Pacific. Parkinson, an artist employed by Joseph Banks, died on the return leg of the voyage and his descriptions were published posthumously by his brother Stanfield Parkinson in 1773. Parkinson named the species Sitodium altile. Three years later, Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster published a description of the species using the name Artocarpus communis.[2] Over the next 160 years the name Artocarpus was much more widely used, leading to its preservation as a conserved name.[3]

Distribution

Members of the Artocarpeae are native to tropical Asia, the Indo-Pacific, southern Africa, Madagascar and the Neotropics. In addition, members of the genus Artocarpus are cultivated throughout the tropics, especially Artocarpus altilis, the breadfruit, and A. heterophyllus, the jackfruit.[2]

The native range of Artocarpus, the largest genus, includes tropical Asia, Indonesia, New Guinea, the Philippines and Micronesia. Artocarpus altilis, was introduced across Oceania by Polynesians colonists.[2] Batocarpus and Clarisia are native to the Neotropics.[4] Hulletia is native to Southeast Asia, Parartocarpus and Prainea (sometimes included in Artocarpus) to the Indo-Pacific and Treculia to tropical Africa and Madagascar.[4]

Genera

gollark: It might even be commercially saleable as long as beeoids don't complain about genetic modification and "crimes against nature" and such.
gollark: If exposed to UV or whatever.
gollark: Idea: splice that 'green fluorescent protein" stuff into grass. Your grass WILL be greener than on the other side.
gollark: Reducing moving parts is good I guess.
gollark: Maybe seed engineered viruses in the grass periodically to stop it growing.

References

  1. Berg, Cornelis C. (2001). "Moreae, Artocarpeae, and Dorstenia (Moraceae), with Introductions to the Family and Ficus and with Additions and Corrections to Flora Neotropica Monograph 7". Flora Neotropica. 83: 1–346.
  2. Zerega, Nyree J. C.; Diane Ragone; Timothy J. Motley (2005). "Systematics and Species Limits of Breadfruit (Artocarpus, Moraceae)" (PDF). Systematic Botany. 30 (3): 603–15. doi:10.1600/0363644054782134.
  3. Fosberg, F. R. (1939). "Nomenclature Proposals for the 1940 Botanical Congress". American Journal of Botany. 26 (4): 229–31. doi:10.2307/2436494. JSTOR 2436494.
  4. Zerega, Nyree J. C.; Wendy L. Clement; Shannon L. Datwyler; George D. Weiblen (2005). "Biogeography and divergence times in the mulberry family (Moraceae)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 37 (2): 402–16. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.418.1442. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.07.004. PMID 16112884.
  5. "Genera of Moraceae tribe Artocarpeae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
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