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1.
PhytoKeys ; 238: 11-31, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38344432

ABSTRACT

Recent research has indicated that the Phyllagathis (raphides) clade (Sonerileae, Melastomataceae) is only distantly related to the type of Phyllagathis and should be separated as a distinct genus. Phylogeny of this clade is here reconstructed with expanded taxon sampling. Four strongly supported subclades have been identified. The possible affinities of taxa that were not sampled in the analysis are discussed, based on morphological data. Perilimnastes is resurrected as the generic name of the Phyllagathis (raphides) clade. A generic description, colour figures, map of distribution, a list of included species and a key are provided for Perilimnastes. Fifteen new combinations are made plus the description of a new species. As interpreted here, Perilimnastes consists of twenty species and two varieties.

2.
PhytoKeys ; 235: 1-19, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37969746

ABSTRACT

Perilimnastes is a genus currently treated in the polyphyletic Phyllagathis. Recent phylogenomic analyses have identified a morphologically cohesive lineage referred to as the Phyllagathis (raphides) clade, which should be excluded from Phyllagathis and treated as a distinct genus under the name Perilimnastes. Morphological and phylogenomic data have confirmed that four new species collected from Vietnam are part of the Phyllagathis (raphides) clade. They are described herein as Perilimnastesmultisepala, P.setipetiola, P.uniflora, and P.banaensis. Perilimnastesmultisepala is phylogenetically closest to Phyllagathissetotheca, and morphologically to P.fruticosa and P.stenophylla, but is distinct in the 4- to 8-lobed calyx, 28 × 9 mm, apically long acuminate petals, and 1-2 mm pedicel at fruiting stage. Perilimnastessetipetiola, P.uniflora, and P.banaensis are phylogenetically most closely related. Perilimnastesuniflora is characterized by its prostrate habit, small size, glabrous, obovate to obovate-lanceolate leaf blade, and solitary flower. Perilimnastessetipetiola and P.banaensis resemble each other in habit, leaf size and shape, and sessile or near sessile inflorescences but can be easily distinguished by the indumentum of the stems and leaves.

3.
Nanotechnology ; 35(5)2023 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37863077

ABSTRACT

Near-field lithography has evident advantages in fabricating super-resolution nano-patterns. However, the working distance (WD) is limited due to the exponential decay characteristic of the evanescent waves. Here, we proposed a novel photolithography method based on a modified photonic crystal (PC), where a defect layer is embedded into the all-dielectric multilayer structure. It is shown that this design can amend the photonic band gap and enhance the desired high-kwaves dramatically, then the WD in air conditions could be extended greatly, which would drastically relax the engineering challenges for introducing the near-field lithography into real-world manufacturing applications. Typically, deep subwavelength patterns with a half-pitch of 32 nm (i.e.,λ/6) could be formed in photoresist layer at an air WD of 100 nm. Moreover, it is revealed that diversified two-dimensional patterns could be produced with a single exposure using linear polarized light. The analyses indicate that this improved dielectric PC is applicable for near-field lithography to produce super-resolution periodic patterns with large WD, strong field intensity, and great uniformity.

4.
Zootaxa ; 5375(4): 582-588, 2023 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38220801

ABSTRACT

Goniogryllus bistriatus Wu & Wang, 1992 was described at the end of the last century, based on the female holotype, and there have been no further studies or reports related to this species since then. Callogryllus yunnanus Wu & Zheng, 1992 also has a similar situation. Although the holotype is a male, its external genitalia have been lost. These issues pose obstacles to subsequent taxonomic research. Recently, we have successively discovered these two species in Huize County, Yunnan Province, China. To address the aforementioned taxonomic problems, this article describes the male specimens of the G. bistriatus and redescribes the female; meanwhile, since the original description of C. yunnanus lacked male genital characteristics, and we have also conducted a complete redescription of this species based on the new specimen.


Subject(s)
Gryllidae , Orthoptera , Male , Female , Animals , China , Animal Distribution , Animal Structures , Body Size , Organ Size
5.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 175: 107581, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35810973

ABSTRACT

Sonerileae is a diverse Melastomataceae lineage comprising ca. 1000 species in 44 genera, with >70% of genera and species distributed in Asia. Asian Sonerileae are taxonomically intractable with obscure generic circumscriptions. The backbone phylogeny of this group remains poorly resolved, possibly due to complexity caused by rapid species radiation in early and middle Miocene, which hampers further systematic study. Here, we used genome resequencing data to reconstruct the phylogeny of Asian Sonerileae. Three parallel datasets, viz. single-copy ortholog (SCO), genomic SNPs, and whole plastome, were assembled from genome resequencing data of 205 species for this purpose. Based on these genome-scale data, we provided the first well resolved phylogeny of Asian Sonerileae, with 34 major clades identified and 74% of the interclade relationships consistently resolved by both SCO and genomic data. Meanwhile, widespread phylogenetic discordance was detected among SCO gene trees as well as species trees reconstructed using different tree estimation methods (concatenation/site-based coalescent method/summary method) or different datasets (SCO/genomic/plastome). We explored sources of discordance using multiple approaches and found that the observed discordance in Asian Sonerileae was mainly caused by a combination of biased distribution of missing data, random noise from uninformative genes, incomplete lineage sorting, and hybridization/introgression. Exploration of these sources can enable us to generate hypotheses for future testing, which is the first step towards understanding the evolution of Asian Sonerileae. We also detected high levels of homoplasy for some characters traditionally used in taxonomy, which explains current chaotic generic delimitations. The backbone phylogeny of Asian Sonerileae revealed in this study offers a solid basis for future taxonomic revision at the generic level.


Subject(s)
Melastomataceae , Genomics/methods , Hybridization, Genetic , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, DNA
6.
PhytoKeys ; 195: 107-125, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36761360

ABSTRACT

Brediabullata, B.enchengensis, and B.nitida (Sonerileae, Melastomataceae), three species occurring in Sino-Vietnamese limestone karst regions, are described as new. Molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological divergence indicate that these species are well separated from their close relatives in Bredia, justifying their recognition as distinct species. Brediabullata is unique in its interveinal areas prominently bullate each with an apical seta, a character otherwise never recorded in the genus. Bredianitida resembles B.malipoensis in habit, leaf shape, and inflorescence morphology, but differs in the glabrescent and nitid adaxial leaf surface (vs. densely pubescent and subvelvety), ovate-elliptic or elliptic calyx lobes (vs. triangular to semiorbicular), and white petals (vs. purplish-red). Brediaenchengensis is closest to B.longiradiosa, but easily recognized by its prostrate habit (vs. erect), the yellowish-green, membranous and fragile leaves (vs. green or dark green, papery), and white anthers (vs. pink to purplish). These new discoveries show that further botanical exploration is warranted in the remote Sino-Vietnamese bordering region.

7.
PhytoKeys ; 152: 1-14, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32714011

ABSTRACT

Bredia hispida (Sonerileae, Melastomataceae), a species occurring in southeastern Sichuan, China, is newly described based on morphological and molecular data. The generic placement of B. hispida is well supported by phylogenetic analysis and morphological characters, including basally cordate, hairy leaf blade, cymose inflorescence, basally gibbous anthers and enlarged ovary crown enclosing an inverted frustum-shaped depression. Both molecular and morphological divergence showed that B. hispida is well separated from its close relatives, justifying its recognition as a distinct species. The new species resembles B. repens, B. changii and B. guidongensis in the prostrate habit and isomorphic stamens but differs markedly in the unequal opposed leaves, the 2-4 mm long, stout bristles on the adaxial surface of leaf blade and acuminate leaf apex. Bredia hispida co-occurs with B. esquirolii in the wild. No morphologically putative hybrids between them were observed despite their overlap in flowering season. The isolating mechanism remains unclear, pending further investigation.

8.
PhytoKeys ; 146: 47-52, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32440251

ABSTRACT

A nomenclatural and taxonomic treatment of the name Melastoma candidum f. albiflorum (Melastomataceae) is presented. A lectotype is designated for this name, with an updated morphological description based on fresh material. The name Melastoma candidum f. albiflorum is proposed as a heterotypic synonym of Melastoma candidum.

9.
PhytoKeys ; 127: 121-150, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31379453

ABSTRACT

Bredia (Melastomataceae) is an Asian genus that extends from central and southern mainland China to Taiwan and the Ryukyu islands. Molecular phylogenetic analyses reveal that the type of Bredia is nested in a clade of 20 species, while Tashiroea, a genus previously synonymized in Bredia, falls in another distantly related clade of 10 species. Our morphological survey shows that the two clades can be distinguished by several diagnostic features including leaf indumentum, texture, leaf surface sculpture under SEM, presence/absence of yellowish uniseriate trichomes, and capsule morphology. Based on molecular and morphological evidence, Bredia is recircumscribed and Tashiroea is resurrected. Description and a list of species are provided for the two genera with the description of a new species, T.villosa.

10.
PhytoKeys ; 122: 15-28, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31182906

ABSTRACT

Fordiophytonjinpingense (Melastomataceae; Sonerileae), a species occurring in south-eastern Yunnan, China, is described as new, based on morphological and molecular data. Phylogenetic analyses, based on nrITS sequence data, showed that, except F.breviscapum, all species sampled in Fordiophyton formed a strongly supported clade in which two geographical lineages were recovered. The generic placement of F.jinpingense is well supported by phylogenetic analyses and a character combination of 4-merous flowers, distinctly dimorphic stamens and the connectives basally not calcarate. Molecular divergence and morphological evidence indicate that F.jinpingense is well separated from other members of the genus, thus justifying its recognition as a distinct species. Fordiophytonjinpingense is phylogenetically closest to F.repens, but differs markedly from the latter in stem morphology (short, obtusely 4-sided vs. long, 4-angular), habit (erect vs. creeping), leaf size (6-16.5 × 4.5-13 cm vs. 4-7.5 × 4-6.5 cm) and flower number per inflorescence (5-13 vs. 3-6).

11.
Bot Stud ; 60(1): 5, 2019 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30923953

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Melastoma has undergone rapid species radiation during the last one million years, and circumscription of some species in the genus has remained controversial. Melastoma kudoi, an erect species narrowly endemic to central Taiwan was previously treated as a synonym of M. intermedium, a semicreeping hybrid between the erect species M. candidum and the creeping M. dodecandrum, making its identity questionable. We addressed this question based on molecular and morphological data. RESULTS: Phylogenetic analyses based on nrITS sequence data revealed that M. kudoi is most closely related to M. dodecandrum. Further analyses of six nuclear genes (cam, chi, gapC, gbss, tpi and vr) and two chloroplast markers (trnL-trnF and psbA) showed that M. kudoi is well diverged from its close relatives. Morphologically, it is also easily distinguished from related species by its erect habit, center-positioned stigma, and spreading, basally enlarged hairs on the hypanthium. CONCLUSIONS: Both molecular phylogenetic and morphological data suggest that M. kudoi is well separated from M. intermedium, M. dodecandrum, and O. scaberrima, and should be treated as a distinct species. Taxonomic treatment and detailed description of M. kudoi are provided.

12.
J Craniofac Surg ; 29(4): 1031-1033, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29381608

ABSTRACT

Sagittal fracture at the temporal root of the zygomatic arch often occurs as a part of zygomaticomaxillary fractures. The authors described the application of computer-assisted navigation in the lag screw insertion for the fixation of sagittal fracture at the temporal root of zygomatic arch. Using the presurgical planning of the computer-assisted navigation system, the trajectory of lag screw insertion was designed, and the insertion depth was calculated. In the presurgical planning, the trajectory of screw insertion was placed with an anterior inclination of 10° to 15° (mean: 12.24°), and the screw insertion depth was 9.0 to 12.0 mm (mean: 10.65 mm). In the operation, the screw insertion in the fixation of the sagittal fracture was performed under the guidance of navigation system according to the presurgical planning. The postoperative CT scan showed exact reduction and fixation of the sagittal fracture in all cases. Computer-assisted navigation is a useful tool for the lag screw insertion in the precise fixation of sagittal fracture at the temporal root of the zygomatic arch in complex zygomaticomaxillary fractures.


Subject(s)
Fracture Fixation, Internal/methods , Skull Fractures , Surgery, Computer-Assisted/methods , Zygoma , Bone Screws , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Skull Fractures/diagnostic imaging , Skull Fractures/surgery , Zygoma/diagnostic imaging , Zygoma/injuries , Zygoma/surgery
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