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Oxygonum

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Oxygonum
Illustration of Oxygonum alatum from Hooker's Icones Plantarum, volume 14
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Polygonaceae
Subfamily: Polygonoideae
Genus: Oxygonum
Burch. ex Campd.[1]
Species

See text.

Oxygonum is a genus of plants in the family Polygonaceae with about 30 species. It is native to eastern parts of Africa and to the Arabian Peninsula.[1]

Description

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Species of Oxygonum are annual or perennial herbaceous plants, more rarely shrubs or shrubby. Their leaves are variable between and within species. The inflorescences are long narrow racemes with bundles (fascicles) of flowers, usually one to five, but sometimes up to 15. The flowers are polygamous (i.e. there are male, female and bisexual flowers on the same plant). There are usually five tepals, arranged spirally, fused at the base to form a tube, longer in female flowers than in male ones. The eight stamens are joined at the base, with patches of nectar-bearing tissue at the base of the inner whorl. The fruit is in the form of an achene, usually three-angled, often with rows of spinelike structures.[2]

Taxonomy

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The genus Oxygonum was first published in 1819 by Francisco Campderá, who attributed the name to William John Burchell.[1][3] Oxygonum is placed in the tribe Oxygoneae of the subfamily Polygonoideae; it is the only genus in the tribe. A 2015 molecular phylogenetic study suggested that it was the sister of all the remaining tribes.[2]

Polygonoideae

Oxygoneae (Oxygonum)

Persicarieae

Fagopyreae

Pteroxygoneae

Calligoneae

Rumiceae

Polygoneae

Species

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As of March 2019, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species:[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Oxygonum Burch.", Plants of the World Online, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2019-03-08
  2. ^ a b Schuster, Tanja M.; Reveal, James L.; Bayly, Michael J. & Kron, Kathleen A. (2015), "An updated molecular phylogeny of Polygonoideae (Polygonaceae): Relationships of Oxygonum, Pteroxygonum, and Rumex, and a new circumscription of Koenigia", Taxon, 64 (6): 1188–1208, doi:10.12705/646.5
  3. ^ Campderá, Francisco (1819), "Genarum Polygonaearum Clavis Dichotomica", Monographie des Rumex, Paris: Treuttel & Würtz, retrieved 2019-03-08