Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen

Taxonomic name for “seashore mangosteen” has been known as Garcinia hombroniana and was first established by Pierre (Flore Forestiere de la Cochinchine 1-2. pl. 54–98 Paris, 1882–1885). The distribution of this species is wide and can be found in the Malay Peninsula, upper part of Borneo, and in And...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Salleh, Mohd Nazre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Netherlands 2010
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15021/
http://link.springer.com
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
id my.upm.eprints.15021
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.150212013-07-02T07:59:40Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15021/ Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen Salleh, Mohd Nazre Taxonomic name for “seashore mangosteen” has been known as Garcinia hombroniana and was first established by Pierre (Flore Forestiere de la Cochinchine 1-2. pl. 54–98 Paris, 1882–1885). The distribution of this species is wide and can be found in the Malay Peninsula, upper part of Borneo, and in Andaman and Nicobar islands but not in the Indonesian islands. Instead, many other names are used in Indonesian islands for species that resembles G. hombroniana. This study reviews relevant taxonomic literatures accompanied by observation on herbarium specimens to see whether G. hombroniana is a valid taxonomic name to be used since many more species resembling it were used elsewhere. Historically, when Pierre created G. hombroniana, he placed it together with two Linnaeus species, G. celebica and G. cornea within section Kiras based on the characteristics of male flowers, fruits and geographical distribution. However, no surviving type specimens for G. celebica and G. cornea were found and this has created confusion on the true identities of both Linnaeus species, which have then resulted into many newly-established species. In addition, many early taxonomic classifications including the work of Linnaeus and Pierre have used poor characters for their species delimitation. Morphological evidences based on the literature and herbarium specimens suggested that there are no clear cut discontinuities in morphological characters or any characters exclusive to certain geographical areas between G. hombroniana with G. celebica and G. cornea. Because of that, the valid name that should be used is G. celebica as it was published much earlier. In addition to that, other names including G. benthamii, G. fabrilis, G. ferrea, G. rumphii, G. jawoera, G. kingii, G. krawang, G. kurzii and G. speciosa should simply be synonyms of G. celebica. Springer Netherlands 2010 Article PeerReviewed Salleh, Mohd Nazre (2010) Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 57 (8). pp. 1249-1259. ISSN 0925-9864; ESSN:1573-5109 http://link.springer.com 10.1007/s10722-010-9588-y English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Taxonomic name for “seashore mangosteen” has been known as Garcinia hombroniana and was first established by Pierre (Flore Forestiere de la Cochinchine 1-2. pl. 54–98 Paris, 1882–1885). The distribution of this species is wide and can be found in the Malay Peninsula, upper part of Borneo, and in Andaman and Nicobar islands but not in the Indonesian islands. Instead, many other names are used in Indonesian islands for species that resembles G. hombroniana. This study reviews relevant taxonomic literatures accompanied by observation on herbarium specimens to see whether G. hombroniana is a valid taxonomic name to be used since many more species resembling it were used elsewhere. Historically, when Pierre created G. hombroniana, he placed it together with two Linnaeus species, G. celebica and G. cornea within section Kiras based on the characteristics of male flowers, fruits and geographical distribution. However, no surviving type specimens for G. celebica and G. cornea were found and this has created confusion on the true identities of both Linnaeus species, which have then resulted into many newly-established species. In addition, many early taxonomic classifications including the work of Linnaeus and Pierre have used poor characters for their species delimitation. Morphological evidences based on the literature and herbarium specimens suggested that there are no clear cut discontinuities in morphological characters or any characters exclusive to certain geographical areas between G. hombroniana with G. celebica and G. cornea. Because of that, the valid name that should be used is G. celebica as it was published much earlier. In addition to that, other names including G. benthamii, G. fabrilis, G. ferrea, G. rumphii, G. jawoera, G. kingii, G. krawang, G. kurzii and G. speciosa should simply be synonyms of G. celebica.
format Article
author Salleh, Mohd Nazre
spellingShingle Salleh, Mohd Nazre
Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
author_facet Salleh, Mohd Nazre
author_sort Salleh, Mohd Nazre
title Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
title_short Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
title_full Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
title_fullStr Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
title_full_unstemmed Historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
title_sort historical review and notes on the correct scientific name for seashore mangosteen
publisher Springer Netherlands
publishDate 2010
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15021/
http://link.springer.com
_version_ 1643825808536502272