Bomarea is one of the two major genera in the plant family Alstroemeriaceae. Most occur in the Andes,[4] but some occur well into Central America, Mexico and the West Indies.[2] Some species are grown as ornamental plants.[5][6][7]

Bomarea
Bomarea sp., southern Ecuador
Note leaf bases twisted 180°
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Liliales
Family: Alstroemeriaceae
Tribe: Alstroemerieae
Genus: Bomarea
Mirb., 1804
Type species
Bomarea ovata[1]
(Cav.) Mirb.
Synonyms[2][3]
  • Leontochir Phil.
  • Vandesia Salisb.
  • Collania Herb. 1837, illegitimate homonym, not Schult. & Schult. f. 1830 nor Broth. ex Sakurai 1941
  • Sphaerine Herb.
  • Dodecasperma Raf.
  • Wichuraea M.Roem.
  • Danbya Salisb.

These plants are similar to their relatives in Alstroemeria, but many take a twining form. Others stand freely upright. A distinctive morphological trait of most, if not all, Alstroemeriaceae is resupinate leaves. The blades twist from the base, taking an upside-down position on the stems.

Bomarea is divided into four subgenera, Baccata, Bomarea, Sphaerine, and Wichuraea. The largest is Bomarea with about 70 species.[8]

There are about 110[9] to 122 species[8] in the genus.

Species

edit

Species accepted as of July 2014:[2]

Image Name Distribution
  Bomarea acutifolia Mexico, Central America
Bomarea albimontana Peru
Bomarea alstroemerioides Peru
Bomarea amazonica Peru
Bomarea amilcariana Venezuela
Bomarea ampayesana Peru
Bomarea anceps Peru
Bomarea andimarcana Peru, Bolivia
  Bomarea andreana Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela
Bomarea angulata Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea angustissima Peru
Bomarea aurantiaca Peru, Bolivia
Bomarea boliviensis Bolivia, Argentina
Bomarea brachysepala Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea bracteata Peru
Bomarea bracteolata Panama
Bomarea bredemeyeriana Colombia, Venezuela
Bomarea brevis Peru, Bolivia
Bomarea callejasiana Colombia
Bomarea campanularia Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea campylophylla Peru
Bomarea carderi Panama, Colombia, Ecuador
Bomarea caucana Colombia
Bomarea caudata Peru
Bomarea caudatisepala Panama
Bomarea ceratophora Ecuador
Bomarea chaparensis Bolivia
Bomarea chimborazensis Ecuador
Bomarea chiriquina Panama, Costa Rica
Bomarea coccinea Peru
Bomarea colombiana Colombia
Bomarea cordifolia Peru
Bomarea cornigera Peru
Bomarea cornuta Peru, Ecuador
  Bomarea costaricensis Panama, Costa Rica
Bomarea crassifolia Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Peru
Bomarea crinita Peru
Bomarea crocea Peru
Bomarea densiflora Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea denticulata Peru
Bomarea diffracta Colombia
Bomarea dispar Peru
Bomarea dissitifolia Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea dolichocarpa Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea dulcis Peru, Bolivia, Chile
  Bomarea edulis widespread across much of Latin America from central Mexico to Argentina, plus West Indies
Bomarea endotrachys Peru
Bomarea engleriana Peru
Bomarea euryantha Colombia
Bomarea euryphylla Colombia, Ecuador
Bomarea evecta Ecuador
Bomarea ferreyrae Peru
Bomarea foertheriana Peru
Bomarea formosissima Peru, Bolivia
  Bomarea glaucescens Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia
Bomarea goniocaulon Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea graminifolia Ecuador
Bomarea hartwegii Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea herbertiana Colombia
Bomarea herrerae Peru
Bomarea hieronymi Colombia, Ecuador
  Bomarea hirsuta Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador
Bomarea huanuco Peru
Bomarea inaequalis Colombia
Bomarea involucrosa Peru, Bolivia
Bomarea kraenzlinii Colombia
Bomarea lancifolia Ecuador
Bomarea latifolia Peru
Bomarea libertadensis Peru
Bomarea linifolia Colombia, Ecuador
  Bomarea longipes Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea longistyla Peru
Bomarea lopezii Venezuela
Bomarea lutea Ecuador
  Bomarea macrocephala Argentina, Bolivia
Bomarea macusanii Peru
Bomarea moritziana Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela
  Bomarea multiflora Colombia, Ecuador
Bomarea multipes Ecuador
Bomarea nematocaulon Peru
Bomarea nervosa Peru, Ecuador
Bomarea nubigena Ecuador
Bomarea obovata Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
  Bomarea ovallei Atacama
Bomarea ovata Argentina, Bolivia, Peru
Bomarea oxytepala Ecuador
Bomarea pardina Colombia, Peru
Bomarea parvifolia Peru
  Bomarea patacoensis Ecuador
  Bomarea patinii Colombia, Ecuador
  Bomarea pauciflora Colombia, Venezuela
Bomarea perglabra Ecuador
Bomarea peruviana Peru
Bomarea porrecta Peru
Bomarea pseudopurpurea Peru
Bomarea pudibunda Colombia
Bomarea pumila Bolivia, Peru
Bomarea puracensis Colombia
Bomarea purpurea Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea rosea Peru
  Bomarea salicifolia Venezuela
  Bomarea salsilla Chile
Bomarea secundifolia Peru
Bomarea setacea Peru
Bomarea shuttleworthii Colombia
Bomarea speciosa Peru
Bomarea spissiflora Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea stans Argentina, Bolivia
Bomarea suberecta Panama, Costa Rica
Bomarea superba Peru
Bomarea tarmensis Peru
Bomarea torta Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea tribrachiata Ecuador, Peru
Bomarea trichophylla Colombia
Bomarea trimorphophylla Ecuador
Bomarea truxillensis Venezuela
  Bomarea uncifolia Ecuador
Bomarea vargasii Peru
Bomarea velascoana Peru
Bomarea vitellina Colombia
Bomarea weigendii Peru

References

edit
  1. ^ lectotype designated by Sanso & Xifreda, Darwiniana 33: 323 (1995)
  2. ^ a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  3. ^ Hofreiter, A. (2006). Leontochir: A synonym of Bomarea (Alstroemeriaceae)? Harvard Papers in Botany 11(1) 53-60.
  4. ^ Guarin, F. A. (2005). Three new species of Bomarea (Alstroemeriaceae) from the Andean region of Colombia. Novon 15(2) 253-58.
  5. ^ Sanso, A. M. and C. C. Xifreda. (2001). Generic delimitation between Alstroemeria and Bomarea (Alstroemeriaceae).[dead link] Annals of Botany 88(6) 1057-69.
  6. ^ Hofreiter, A. (2008). A revision of Bomarea subgenus Bomarea s.str. section Multiflorae (Alstroemeriaceae). Systematic Botany 33: 661-684.
  7. ^ Chacón, J., M. Camargo de Assis, A. W. Meerow, and S. S. Renner. 2012. From east Gondwana to Central America: Historical biogeography of the Alstroemeriaceae. Journal of Biogeography 39(10): 1806-1818. [1]
  8. ^ a b Cáceres González, D. A. (2013). Bomarea rinconii (Alstroemeriaceae), a new species from the Talamanca Mountains in Chiriqui Province, Panama. Phytotaxa 105(1) 21–4.
  9. ^ Alzate, F., et al. (2008). Panbiogeographical analysis of the genus Bomarea (Alstroemeriaceae). Journal of Biogeography 35 1250-57.