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The genus '' Lupinus'' L. and, in particular, its North-American species, were divided by
Sereno Watson Sereno Watson (December 1, 1826 in East Windsor Hill, Connecticut – March 9, 1892 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American botanist. Graduating from Yale in 1847 in Biology, he drifted through various occupations until, in California, he j ...
(1873) into three parts: ''Lupinus'', ''Platycarpos'' and ''Lupinnelus''. Differences in habit and in the number of ovules were accepted as the basis for this classification. A majority of perennial and annual species from the American continent described by Watson were referred to ''Lupinus''. To the ''Platycarpos'' section were attributed some annual species with two ovules in the ovary and two seeds in the pod (''L. densiflorus'' Benth., ''L. microcarpus'' Sims. and others). The section ''Lupinnelus'' consisted of one species ('' L. uncialis''), with axillary and solitary flowers, scarcely reflexed banner, and also with two ovules in the ovary. This principle of classification was extended by Ascherson and Graebner (1907) to cover all lupins from the eastern and western hemispheres. '' Lupinus'' L. was for the first time subdivided into two subgenera: A. ''Eulupinus'' and B. ''Platycarpos'' (Ascherson and Graebner, 1907). Quantity of ovules (seedbuds) in the ovary and seeds in the pod was also accepted as the criterion for this division. Most of the described species from the eastern and western hemispheres were referred to subgen. A. ''Eulupinus''. Subgen. B. ''Platycarpos'' included several annual species from the eastern hemisphere with two seedbuds and seeds in the bean (the same species, as the one specified by S. Watson). Subgen. ''Platycarpos'' ( S.Wats.) Kurl. in new combination
Subgen. PLATYCARPOS (S.Wats.) Kurl. and Subgen. LUPINUS integrates the numerous perennial and annual species from the Western hemisphere, both groups having two and more ovules or seedbuds in the ovary, while subgen. Lupinus L. includes 12 species from the Mediterranean region and Africa with at least four ovules or seedbuds in the ovary. Subgen. ''Platycarpos'' ( S.Wats.) Kurl. 1989, Bull. N.I.Vavilov Inst. Plant Industry 193:24. - §2. ''PLATYCARPOS'' S.Wats. 1873, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 8:522; B. ''Platycarpos'' Aschers. et Graebn. 1907, Mitteleurop. Fl. 6,2:232; §1. ''LUPINUS'' S.Wats. 1873, l.c.:518, p.max.p; A. ''Eulupinus'' Aschers. et Graebn. 1907, Mitteleurop. Fl. 6,2:221, p.p. – New World's or flat-fruited lupins. The ovary contains two and more ovules or seedbuds. The seed are predominantly small-sized, with an underdeveloped embryo and small amount of endosperm. Cotyledons are small-sized, with long caulicles. The first pair of true leaves is alternate. The stem is predominantly naked with waxen coating. Dominating is the monopodial type of branching. Leaflets are smooth, with waxen coating or slight pubescence, predominantly narrow. Pods are flat or orbicular, with two or more seeds. Represented by frutcuilose, fruticose and herbaceous perennial forms, or less often annual ones. Plants are cross-pollinated. 2n = 36, 48, 96. The type of subgenus: ''L. densiflorus'' Benth. Geographic distribution: North, Central and South America, predominantly in the mining systems of the Andes and Cordillera. Some species are cultivated (''L. mutabilis'' Sweet., ''L. polyphyllus'' Lindl.). This subgenus includes several hundreds of species (from 100 up to 500) requiring further analysis of their authenticity.


Notes


References

* Zhukovsky, P.M. 1929. A contribution to the knowledge of genus Lupinus Tourn. Bull. Apll. Bot. Gen. Pl.-Breed., Leningrad-Moscow, XXI, I:16-294. * Kurlovich, B.S. 1989. On the centers of species formation of the genus Lupinus L. (in Russian). Bull.N.I. Vavilov Inst. of plant Industry. Leningrad, 193:20-24. * Kurlovich, B.S., Rep’ev, S.I., Shchelko, L.G., Budanova, V.I., Petrova, M.V., Buravtseva, T.V., Stankevich, A.K., Kartuzova, L.T., Alexandrova, T.G., Teplyakova and T.E., Malysh, L.K. 1995. Theoretical basis of plant breeding. Vol.111. The gene bank and breeding of grain legumes (lupine, vetch, soya and bean), St.Petersburg, VIR, 438p. * Kurlovich, B.S.(Ed.). 2002
Lupins
Geography, Classification, Genetic Resources and Breeding. «Intan», 468p.


External links



Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database. University of Melbourne.

* Hughes, C
''Lupinus''.
{{Taxonbar, from=Q14538001 Lupinus, Platycarpos Garden plants Forages Nitrogen-fixing crops Plant subgenera