TL;DR: Pollen of the 27 genera presently recognized as comprising the family Lythraceae have been surveyed with light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy, revealing the family is revealed as the most diverse palynologically of the order Myrtales.
Abstract: Pollen of the 27 genera presently recognized as comprising the family Lythraceae have been surveyed with light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Results for five genera (Physocalymma, Pleurophora, Rotala, Tetrataxis, Woodfordia), in addition to Duabanga, Sonneratia, and Punica (assigned to the Lythraceae in some classifications), are presented here; the remaining genera were treated previously in the series. The family is revealed as the most diverse palynologically of the order Myrtales. The most simple pollen type and the one common to the largest number of genera is prolate-spheroidal to prolate; tricolporate, without pseudocolpi; psilate, scabrate or finely verrucate; and 16-28 μm or less in length. Specializations include oblate grains, development of pseudocolpi (three or six in number), diversification of exine sculpturing, broadening of the colpal and pseudocolpal areas, and reduction in the conspicuousness of the colpi. Pollen evidence provides qualified support for inclusion of Punica in the Lythraceae, the generalized nature of the pollen tempering the conclusion, and little support for inclusion of Sonneratia and Duabanga in the family. Completion of the survey provides a data base of pollen characters that will be integrated in future studies with other evidence into an overall phenetic and cladistic assessment of the family leading to production of a more natural classification.
TL;DR: A colony of seven individuals of Tetrataxis, a monotypic endemic of Mauritius, has been discovered in a valley south-east of the type area, where it appears to have no close affinity to any single member of the family.
Abstract: The Caribbean genus Ginoria Jacq. (Lythraceae) is revised for the first time since a monograph was completed in 1903. Studies of the wood anatomy, vegetative and floral morphology, pollen and seed morphology, and chromosome numbers are summarized for Ginoria and the putatively closely related genera Crenea Aubl., Haitia Urb., Lawsonia L., and Tetrataxis Hook. f. Flowers of G. lanceolata O. C. Schmidt are described for the first time. Ginoria is minimally paraphyletic and possibly polyphyletic. Either Ammannia L./Nesaea Comm. ex Kunth or Lawsonia is sister to Ginoria based on ITS data. Phylogenetic analysis based on morphology finds Ginoria monophyletic only when Haitia is included in the genus. Phylogenetic analysis based on ITS sequences produced a single tree in which G. jimenezii Alain, a rare species from the Dominican Republic, is sister to the rest of the genus and Tetrataxis is nested within Ginoria. The positions of Haitia and Crenea remain to be tested by molecular data. Haitia is placed...