1 Graduate Student, University of Alaska Museum of the North, 2 Assistant Professor of Botany and...
-
Upload
bartholomew-watkins -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of 1 Graduate Student, University of Alaska Museum of the North, 2 Assistant Professor of Botany and...
A New Species of Claytonia from Feniak Lake: Assessing Morphological Variation, Niche
Space, and Genetics
Stephany Jeffers1, Steffi Ickert-Bond2, & David F. Murray3
1 Graduate Student, University of Alaska Museum of the North, 2 Assistant Professor of Botany and Curator of the UA Museum Herbarium (ALA), University of Alaska Fairbanks, 3 Curator Emeritus, University of Alaska Museum of the North
The genus Claytonia L. (Spring Beauty) is well recognized around Alaska for its attractive flower. Despite its charismatic appearance, there is much
confusion around the species delineation of Claytonia in Alaska.
The Genus: Claytonia
Limnia• 3 ovules• annual
Claytonia• 6 ovules• bulbs
Rhizomatosae• 6 ovules• caudex or
rhizome
FamilyMontiaceae
GenusClaytonia
SectionLimnia
perfoliata (invasive)sibirica
SectionClaytonia
acutifoliaeschscholtziimultiscapaogilviensistuberosa
SectionRhizomatosae
arcticaporsildii
sarmentosascammaniana
Alaskan Claytonia
1817 C. arctica Adams
1939 C. scammaniana Hultén
1981C. porsildii Jurtz
1829 C. sarmentosa C.A.
Mey.
Claytonia sect. Rhizomatosae
A. Gray ex Poelln. 1932
Young’s survey of Noatak
1974
Historical Perspective
C. eschscholtzii Cham.1831
C. acutifolia Pall. ex Willd.
1819
Research Questions
1 Taxonomic Identity
2 Morphological differences: ecological or genetic
3 Feniak Lake: new species
Distribution map of Claytonia in Alaska
Research Methods
-Specimen Review
-Field Collection
-Molecular analysis
-Ecological Niche Modeling
Type Description Review
1) Review of original publication
2) Translate Latin descriptions
3) Request Type Specimens
Variation within genus
C. acutifoliaC. arctica
C. tuberosa
C. scammaniana
C. megarhiza
Variation within speciesC. scammaniana
Review of type specimens and figures
Field work!• Noatak National Preserve– Collection of potentially new species
• Eagle Summit– Collection at Scamman’s original type location
• Aleutian Islands – Specimen for comparison to C. arctica type
• North Slope
Future Work
- Genetic Analysis- Ecological Niche Modeling- Greenhouse Experiment
And hopefully clarification…
Follow my work at: http://sites.google.com/a/alaska.edu/stephany-jeffers/
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to:Robin O’QuinnJordan Metzgar, Monte Garroutte, & Zachary MeyersAndrew Balser & Katie ChristieCarolyn Parker
Funding through:NPS Murie Science & Learning Center Research Fellowship