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Topic: Byblidaceae


In the News (Mon 6 Jul 09)

  
  CPN Samples
Additionally, a division between Lentibulariaceae + Byblidaceae (sympetalous plants) and the other (dialypetalous) families has been made in order to reflect differences between groups of different phylogenetic origin.
The sympetalous families are believed to be members of a younger group (appearing in Early Tertiary) than the dialypetalous ones.
The families considered are: Droseraceae, Drosophyllaceae, Dioncophyllaceae, Nepenthaceae, Cephalotaceae, Roridulaceae, Sarraceniaceae, Byblidaceae, and Lentibulariaceae.
www.carnivorousplants.org /cpn/samples/Cons293BioDiv.htm   (531 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Byblidaceae: A family overview page and list of genera from the U.S. National Plant Germplasm System
Byblidaceae: holdings from Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Conservatory - University of Connecticut
Byblidaceae: Full family nomenclature from the INSPV Project
www.csdl.tamu.edu /FLORA/cgi/gateway_family?fam=Byblidaceae   (72 words)

  
 Sciences | School of ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Conran JG (in press 8 June 1999) Byblidaceae.
Conran JG, Christophel DC (in press 6 Jan 2004) A fossil Byblidaceae seed from Eocene South Australia.
Conran JG, Lowrie A, Moyle-Croft J (2002) A revision of Byblis (Byblidaceae) in south-western Australia.
www.ees.adelaide.edu.au /people/enviro/jconpubs.html   (814 words)

  
 CSIRO PUBLISHING - Australian Systematic Botany   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The relationships of the Byblidaceae have been the subject of a number of recent molecular phylogenetic studies where their traditional relationships with the Roridulaceae and other members of the Rosidae have been overturned in favour of affinities with the Asteridae, in particular to the Lentibulariaceae in the Lamiales.
Although the embryological relationships between these families were the subject of an earlier study, the data for the Byblidaceae were incomplete.
Embryogenesis appears to conform to the Onagrad type noted for several of the other members of the Lamiales s.l., including the Lentibulariaceae, to which the Byblidaceae have been related in recent molecular studies.
www.publish.csiro.au /nid/150/paper/SB9960243.htm   (241 words)

  
 Byblis
Allen Lowrie discusess a Byblis filifolia in his third volume, but I didn't include any of that information here yet -- I'm tried to get a second source on it.
These plants first belonged to the Sundew family, but now belong to their own family; Byblidaceae.
The species in this group are Byblis gigantea and liniflora (and Byblis filifolia noted above) Both are native to Australia and New Guinea.
www.crazyjoe.us /carnivorous/byblis/byblisinfo.htm   (452 words)

  
 Reference lists
Conran, J.G., Lowrie, A. and Moyle-Croft, J. 2002, A revision of Byblis (Byblidaceae) in southwestern Australia.
Lowrie, A. 1987, Carnivorous Plants of Australia, Vol I. University of Western Australia Press, XXVI + 202 pp.
Lowrie, A. and Conran, J.G. 1998, A taxonomic revision of the genus Byblis (Byblidaceae) in northern Australia.
www.sarracenia.com /faq/notesbib.html   (1704 words)

  
 Insectivorous Plants in the Wilderness
Twenty species are found in the U.S. See
The genus Byblis belongs to the monotypic family Byblidaceae.
Their slender leaves covered in glistening dews, the rainbow plants are so named because of the rainbow effect of their mucilage secretion.
www.honda-e.com   (5949 words)

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