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1982, Vol.20, No.1 Previous Issue    Next Issue
The origin and early differentiation of the Orchidaceae
Chen Sing-Chi
1982, 20 (1): 1-22. 
Abstract ( 0 )
  An attempt has been made in the present paper to discourse on the orgigin and
early differentiation of the Orchidaceae, based on recent information, as well as a
comparative study of some significant characteristics in the most primitive genera of
this family. Four problems are separately discussed in the following:
On the origin and evolution of the genus Pedicularis L. in Xizang
Yang Han-Pi
1982, 20 (1): 23-33. 
Abstract ( 0 )
 The present paper is a preliminary research of the taxonomy, evolution, geogra-
phical distribution and origin of the species of the Genus Pedicularis L. in Xizang
plateau.  It may be summed up as follows:
     1.  There are 108 species of Pedicularis in Xizang, representing about 33% of the
total species of the genus known in China. Among these species, there are 35 endemics,
about 35.9% of the total species of the genus, this is especially true in Southeastern
Xizang. Where there are 82.7% of total species of Xizang and 88%  of  endemics
reported.
     2.  According to the relationships of the morphology of flower, leaf and evolution,
the genus Pedicularis in Southeastern Xizang seems very active in evolution, because
there is a wide range of flower types varying from the primitive alternate-toothless
and opposite-toothed to the advanced beaked and long-tubed corolla-types.
      3.  There are almost all morphological types of the pollen, especially, the primi-
tive particular tricolpate type is decidedly dominant, and the species with derived
type of bicolpate pollen almost all belong to the beeked, long-tubed type of flowers;
therefore, the evolutionary tendency and correlation between two types is very clear.
     According to above conditions, it may be considered that Southeastern Xizang is
the evolutionary centre of the Genus Pedicularis L.
      4.  Basing upon the floristic-geographical analysis of neighbouring regions, we may
consider that the members of genus Pedicularis in Xizang mainly come from the East,
i.e. the mountains of the plateau frontier in  Western  Sichuan  and  Northwestern
Yunnan.
      Finally, the floral relationships with other regions such as Buthan, Nepal, Xinjiang
and Qinghai, Gansu, etc. are not so close, because the species in common are not very
many and usually widely distributed species.
A preliminary study on the classification, distribution and ecological nature of genus Stipa L. of China
Kuo Pen-Chao, Sun Yong-Hua
1982, 20 (1): 34-44. 
Abstract ( 0 )
 24 species and 4 varietes of genus Stipa L. of China have been studied and des-
cribed in this paper.  It has been noted that  these  different  species  have various
geographical distributions, depending on the changes of climatic and edaphic factors
of their environments.  Based on the study of floral morphology together with ecolo-
gical and distributional factors, the genus have been divided into 5 sections: 1.  Sect.
Regelia Tzvel. 2. Sect. Leiostipa Dum. 3. Sect. Barbatae Junge 4. Sect. Stipa 5. Sect.
Smirnovia Tzvel.
      It should be pointed out that the section Regelia as well as two members of sec-
tion Barbatae, S. purpurea and S. roborowskyi, belong to frigori-xerophilous ecotype,
distributing over Qinghai-Xizang Plateau above the forest line.  The section Leiostipa
belongs to euxerophilous and mesoxerophilous ecotype, distributing widely in north-
west, southwest, northeast and east and extends to the forest-steppe vegetational Zone
of China.  The section Smirnovia and other two members  of section Barbatae,  S.
breviflora and S. orientalis, belong to euxerophilous ecotype, with the latitudinal dis-
tribution as far as Nei-Mongo and the yellow soil plateau, with the altitudinal distribu-
tion as far as the desert steppe of Sinkang and Qinghai-Xizang plateau.  The section
Stipa belongs to euxerophilous ecotype, only distributes to the  mountain steppe  of
north Xingkang and the last, section Barbatae is an artificial group having plumes over
of the awn only, and its four species have already been mentioned above.
Pollen morphology of 8 genera of Chinese Umbelliferae (Apiaceae)
Sheh Meng-Lan, Su Pu, Shan Ren-Hwa
1982, 20 (1): 45-48. 
Abstract ( 0 )
This paper deals with the studies of pollen morphology of 8 genera including 22
 species and 1 variety of Umbelliferae (Apiaceae).  They have been investigated under
 both the light microscope and the SEM.  These genera can be distinguished by their
 pollen characters.  The observed data listing in the following table reveal that they
 can be distinguished according to shape of pollen, form of pores, sculpture of exine
and size of grains etc.
  1.  Shape of pollen grains
         (1)  subrhomboidal type:  Chuanminshen Sheh  et  Shan,  Changium  Wolff,
                Cyclorhiza Sheh et Shan
         (2)  oval type:  Seseli L.
         (3)  subrectangular type
                a.  thickened at the equator and rugulose:  Peuecdanum L.
                b.  constricted at the equator and rugulose:  Ligusticum L.
                e.  constricted at the equator and rugulose, thickened at both polar zones:
                     Vicatia DC.
         (4)  equatorially-constricted type, rugulose at the equator, thickened at both
                polar zones: Ferula L.
      2.  Form of aperture
         (1)  rectangular protrude type:  Chuanminshen  Sheh  et  Shan,  Ferula  L.,
                Changium Wolff
         (2)  circular type:  Ligusticum L.
         (3)  elliptic type:  Peucedanum L., Vicatia DC., Seseli L.
      3.  Sculpture of exine
         (1)  reticulate:  Chuanminshen Sheh et Shah
         (2)  pitted-reticulate: Changium Wolff
         (3)  striate-reticulate:  Ferula L., Peucedanum L., Ligusticum L., Seseli L.,
               Vicatia DC.
         (4)  cerebro-reticulate:  Cyclorhiza Sheh et Shan
     Basing upon the above pollen characters, the genera Cyclorhiza Sheh et Shah and
Chuanminshen Sheh et Shan are briefly discussed.  They are two clearly delimitated
natural genera.
Comparative anatomy of nine species of the genus Rhododendron from Qinghai Plateau and their systematic position
Wang Wei-Yi
1982, 20 (1): 49-58. 
Abstract ( 0 )
 Anatomical characteristics of the wood, the branchlets and the leaf blades of nine
representative species of Rhododendron on Qinghai plateau have been examined in order
to explore their taxonomic position.
     On the basis of vessel figures in growth rings, the wood of Rhododendron can be
divided into two divisions, namely, semi-ring pore and scattered pore wood. Because of
the differences of the wood ray-structure and the glandular hairs on the branchlets and
the leaf blades, the latter can be further classified into two subdivisions.
Chromosome counts in some Chinese ferns
Wang Zhong-Ren, Sun Ching-San
1982, 20 (1): 59-62. 
Abstract ( 0 )
 The spore mother cells of six species of Chinese homosporous ferns have been ex-
amined, among them the chromosome numbers of five species, Adiantum capillus-junonis
Rupr. (n= 30), Ctenitis rhodolepis (Clarke) Ching  (n = 41), Cyclogramma flexilis
(Christ) Tagawa (n = 68), Leptogramma scallani (Christ) Ching (n = 36) and Vanden-
boschia auriculata (B1.) Copel. (n=36), from Emei Shan  (Omei) Sichuan province
are recorded for the first time.  The chromosome  number n=68  from the species
Cyclogramma flexilis suggests that the base number for this genus is 34.  Another
species, Athyrium brevifrons Nakai from Wuling Shah Beijing (Peking) has a gametic
chromosome number n=40, as already reported by K. Mitui and H. Hirabayashi.
Palynoflora of the Liushagang formation (Eocene-Early Oligocene) in the northern part of South China Sea
Sun Xing-Jun, Kong Zhao-Chen, Li Ming-Xing, Li Pun
1982, 20 (1): 63-72. 
Abstract ( 0 )
In the northern part of South China Sea, including Tonkin Gulf, Hainan lsland,
Leizhon Peninsula and some basin of Guangdong  Province,  Paleogene  deposits  are
composed of three formations: the Weizhon, the Liushagang and the Changliu forma-
tions arranged in descending order.  The paper on the palynoflora of the Weizhon
Formation (early and middle Oligocene) is in press[2].  This paper deals only with the
palynoflora of the Liushagang Formation, with may be divided into four main stages:
      The first stage is represented by Monocolpollenites tranquillus and Crassoretitri-
letes sp., assigned to early Eocene The second stage is characterized by Salixipollenites,
Momipites triletipollenites and Operculumpollis.  Its age is middle Eocene.  The third
stage is dominated by some species of Quercoidites  and  Ulmipollenites  and  also
characterized by the presence of Platycaryapollenites  and Prominangularia  dogying-
ensis, This sporo-pollen assemblage suggests a late Eocene in age.  The fouth stage is
marked by profusion of some alga of brockish water, such as Rugasphera corrugia,
Granodiscus gronulatus and some pollen types  of  Liquidambarpollenites   minutus,
Multiporopollenites puctatus and Tricolporopollenites minutus.  The age of the last
stage is assigned to early oliocene.
      In generaly, the palynoflora of the Liushagang Formation is quite different from
that of the Weizhou Formation.  The main types of spores and pollen are common
with those found in Europe and North America of the same age, while the Weizhou
Formation has many elements common both in this region and Borneo.
      During Eocene and early Oligocene this area was  of continental  phase with
brackish basins. At the beginning the climate was rather moist and hot, but then it
became moist and warmtemperate.
On the systematic position of Athyrium crenulato-serrulatum Makino from North-eastern Asia
Ching Ren-Chang, Wang Zhong-Ren
1982, 20 (1): 73-77. 
Abstract ( 0 )
  The fern Athyrium crenulato-serrulatum  Makino  is  found  in  the  whole  of
 Northeastern Asia embracing Northeastern China, Korea, Japan, Ussuri and the Far
 East USSR. It is similar to the European Athyrium distentifolium, formerly known
as A. alpestre, in having exindusiate round or  ovate  sori,  but  differs in  several
 essential characters, such as the well-spaced fronds are biseriately arranged along a
 thick and long-creeping rhizome, the base of stipe is thickened and not attenuated to-
wards the point of attachment, the deltoid-ovate lamina with the basal pinnae as long
as those next above, which all are distinctly petiolate and the rachis, costis and espe-
cially the costules of pinnules clad in fine pale-colored generally septate hairs under-
neath.  All these clearly show that the fern in question is not an Athyrium sen. str.
neither Pseudoathyrium Newman  to which latter the fern was referred by Nakai.
However, we have been long suspicious of its proper systematic position. In his recent
monograph on the genus Cornopteris (Acta Phytotax. Geobot. 30: 104. 1979.) Kato
has pointed out that C.crenulato-serrulata (Makino)  Nakai  “has  the  northernmost
destribution in the genus and exhibits a few characteristics similar to Athyrium, the
swollen base of stipes with projections and cartilaginous  lamina  margin.  By  these
characteristics the species is clearly discriminated from other species”.  According to
Kurita (1964), Mitui (1970) and Karo (1978) the species in question has chromosome
numbers n=40, the base number of the subfamily Athyrioides instead of x=41, the
base number of the subfamily Diplazioides including  Cornopteris  Nakai.  Since  the
fern in question fits no other athyrid genera, hence a new genus is proposed.
Materia ad floram Orchidacearum Sinensium—Amitostigma Schltr.
Tang Tsin, Wang Fa-Tsuan, Lang Kai-Yung
1982, 20 (1): 78-86. 
Abstract ( 0 )
Symplocaceae novae e flora Tibetica
Wu Young-Fen
1982, 20 (1): 91-94. 
Abstract ( 0 )
New taxa of Iris L. from China
Zhao Yu-Tang
1982, 20 (1): 99-100. 
Abstract ( 0 )
A new species of Theaceae from Guangxi, China
Liang Sheng-Yeh
1982, 20 (1): 115-117. 
Abstract ( 0 )
New names for three species of Euphorbiaceae
Li Ping-T’ao
1982, 20 (1): 117-117. 
Abstract ( 0 )
A new variety of Pterocarya stenoptera C. DC.
Chao Zi-En, Zheng Cheng-Jin
1982, 20 (1): 119-119. 
Abstract ( 0 )