Azorina

Azorina
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Campanulaceae
Genus: Azorina
Feer
Species: A. vidalii
Binomial name
Azorina vidalii
(H.C.Watson) Feer

Azorina is a monotypic genus of flowering plants within the family Campanulaceae, whose sole species, the Azorina vidalii, is endemic to the Azores.[1] Its fragmented population is made up of fewer than 1000 mature plants limited to the coastlines of several of the islands.

History

A cluster of Vidalii on the coast of Manadas on the island of São Jorge

It was first harvested by Watson, along the coast of Santa Cruz on the Azorean island of Flores, during his botanical expedition in 1843.[2][3] It was initially designated Campanula vidalii by Watson and published in 1844.[2]

Its ecology has been presented in an inconsistent manner; it has been referred to as adapting to cracks in the sea cliffs, or to deposits, and in abrupt and sandy slopes.[2][4]

The Azorina vidalii was protected by the Bern Convention in 1992 (Annex I) and by the Habitats Directive 140/99 (Diário da República, Anexo 2B) considered a priority species in critical risk; it is an endangered species due to habitat degradation by invasive species, pollution, and development.[2][5]

The Azorina vidalii diverged from its ancestral descendents around 8.3±1.7 million years ago, associated with it first island of colonization, that of Santa Maria (Olesen et al., 2012), forming some 8-10 million years ago (Serralheiro & Madeira, 1993).[2] Carine et al. (2004) and Fernández-Palacios et al. (2011) also refer to the existence of submarine mounts, formerly immersed, that functioned as stepping-stones from the continent.[2] At the same time, the Azorina vidalii was not vulnerable to the rise in temperature and prefers the zones along the coast to propagate.[2]


References

Notes

  1. Azorina vidalii. USDA Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN).
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Rúben Coelho (2014), p.17
  3. Watson (1844)
  4. Sjögren (1984)
  5. M. Bliz (2011)

Sources


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