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  • Pothos sp. sect. Eupothos
    식물/들꽃-천남성과(Araceae) 2025. 2. 24. 15:08

    국표에 없다.

    Subgenus Pothos

    Pothos subgen. Eupothos Schott, Aroideae 1 (1856 – 1857) 21
    Pothos sect. Eupothos Engl. in A. & C. DC., Monogr. Phanerogam. 2 (1879) 27.
    Pothos sect. Eupothos Engl. series Scandentes Engl., in Engl., Pflanzenr. 21(IV.23B) (1905) 22.
    Pothos sect. Eupothos Engl. series Papuani Engl., loc. cit.
    Pothos sect. Eupothos Engl. series Loureiriani Engl., loc. cit.
    Pothos sect. Eupothos Engl. series Longipedes Engl., loc. cit.

    Index of Pothos (aroid.org)

    Pothos L. is a genus of c. 70 species of subtropical and tropical, predominantly forest root-climbing lianes distributed from Madagascar to Western Oceania (east to Vanuatu) and China (north to Hubei) to Australia (south to Queensland, New South Wales). The greatest diversity is met with in Indo-Malesia where the largest concentration of species and widest diversity is to be found in Borneo (see e.g. Hay et al., 1995). Pothos is placed in tribe Potheae (sensu Mayo et al., 1997), a palaeotropical assemblage of three very similar, possibly inseparable, genera. Besides Pothos, the other genera, both monospecific, are Pothoidium Schott and Pedicellarum M. Hotta. For discussion of generic delimitation in Potheae see Boyce & Hay (1998). Linnaeus (1753, 1763) treated Pothos as a genus of climbing aroids with bisexual flowers. Subsequently many climbing aroids were included to form a heterogeneous assemblage. Early in the 19th century Schott recognised that Pothos was, as then defined, ‘unnatural’ and in a series of papers (Schott, 1832, 1856 –1857, 1860) redefined the bisexual-flowered aroid genera. The current circumscription of Pothos is essentially that of Schott (1832, 1856–1857, 1860). Schott (1856–1857) established two BLUMEA 45 (2000) 147– 204 Published on 12 July 2000 © 2000 Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch 148 BLUMEA — Vol. 45, No. 1, 2000 sub­genera, Pothos (as Eupothos) and Allopothos. Engler (1905) further subdivided Schott’s subgenera (referring to them as sections) into seven series. While accepting Schott’s subgenera, no attempt is made here to follow Engler’s series.

    Pothos in Thailand & Indochina - Boyce 2000.pdf (aroid.org)

     

    https://youtu.be/RruEuCtC05g?t=822

     

     

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