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Author Topic: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'  (Read 7396 times)

Giles

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'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« on: July 15, 2008, 11:17:02 PM »
-have any of you read this article in the current American Primrose Society Quarterly 'Primroses' ??
-about the transfer of Dodecatheon species to the Genus Primula?
Any thoughts??

Lesley Cox

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #1 on: July 16, 2008, 10:00:27 PM »
Oh NO! How could they?
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

Giles

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #2 on: July 17, 2008, 12:14:54 AM »
methinks:
European Primulas: friendly, reliable.
Asiatic Primulas: exquisite,tempting.
Dodecatheon: '***********'

Would you take green tea with a 'Big Mac' ?

Maggi Young

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #3 on: July 17, 2008, 11:39:52 AM »
Quote
Would you take green tea with a 'Big Mac' ?
Actually, Ian would do just that!  ::)


Paper on transfer of Dodecatheon to Primula is available free :
www.botany.wisc.edu/courses/botany_940/11JClub/MastReveal2007.pdf
« Last Edit: December 19, 2015, 05:32:01 PM by Maggi Young »
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

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tonyg

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #4 on: July 17, 2008, 04:44:21 PM »
As I get older I find there are too many names to remember ...... lets make things simpler :o
(only joking of course!)

Ed Alverson

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #5 on: July 17, 2008, 09:35:36 PM »
I like to consider myself to be a discriminating consumer of taxonomic information.  So, when a proposal to change a name comes along, I like to delve in to the data and try to understand why the name change is being proposed. 

In the case of Dodecatheon, the change to Primula is advocated by people who believe that all taxa (families, genera, and species) should be monophyletic, that is, include all of the descendants of a common ancestor.  Since Dodecatheon has evolved from within the genus Primula, strict "cladists" require all species of Dodecatheon to be transferred to Primula.  Recognizing Dodecatheon as separate from Primula involved the recognition of paraphyletic taxa.  However, the code of botanical nomenclature does not require all taxa to be monophyletic, so not everybody is in agreement that this rule must be followed.  Another, more familiar example of a paraphyletic taxon are the dinosaurs, that is, if you don't call birds dinosaurs.  Since birds evolved from dinosaurs, strict adherence to monophyly would require birds to be called dinosaurs.

A recent issue of the NARGS journal had a nice article about Dodecatheon and how it has evolved from Primula by Jim Reveal.  Reveal is an adherent of the principle of monophyly, so he advocates for calling shooting stars primroses, but it is still an interesting article to read. 

I plan to still use the genus name Dodecatheon.

Ed
Ed Alverson, Eugene, Oregon

Lesley Cox

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #6 on: July 17, 2008, 09:39:58 PM »
Ed, you should have ended your post with "Have a happy day!"
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

David Lyttle

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #7 on: July 24, 2008, 11:48:00 AM »
Ed,

You have put your finger on a rather vexed question. The same thing has happened to Hebe the genus being recently subsumed back into Veronica. While one could accept returning the smaller semi-herbaceous Parahebes to Veronica it is more difficult to accept returning the shrubby species to Veronica. It seems to me that despite Hebe and Veronica or Primula and Dodecatheon being monophyletic it would appear that some  groups have diversified and moved on in evolutionary terms. So when looking at a monophyletic clade some members have changed little from the progenitors of the group while others have changed dramatically to the point where they appear quite distinct and are recognized as separate genera by traditional taxonomists.

Not withstanding I do not think there will be any rapid resolution of some of these issues. Also one is entitled to use any validly published name provide you cite the authority ie Dodecatheon meadiaL.
David Lyttle
Otago Peninsula, Dunedin, South Island ,
New Zealand.

gote

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #8 on: July 25, 2008, 12:22:27 PM »
Howdy,
My name is Adam Monophylecticus and I live in the country Country and I grow the plant 'Plant' and I am accompanied by the animal 'Animal'   ;D

The way we normally describe plants and animals is that we have groups that contain several subgroups. Primulaceae containing Primula, Dodecatheon, Dionysia, Douglasia etc etc. This is a practical picture but would not describe the probable ancestry correctly. However, it serves the practical purpose of definition and does give good hints about relationships.

It is not so that a Protoprimulace originalis suddenly and parallely splits into Protoprimula communis, Protododdecatheon communis, Protodionysia communis etc. Nor is it so that Protoprimula communis suddenly and at one time split into Primula veris, P elatior, P auricula etc.

The splits come forklike. Protoprimulacea communis split into Protoprimula communis and Protodionysia communis, Protoprimula communis then split into Protoprimula communis and Protododecatheon communis. Then it split off Protoprimula veris which split off Pp elatior. (Note this is a hypothetical description for the sake of argument. I am not saying that I know that this is the order of splits)

As I understand the situation (and I might be all be wrong) The reasoning behind merging Dodecatheon into Primula is that it split off later than some "true" Primulas. It is not enough that they have a common ancestor. If that were enough we would have to put all species of the world into one genus and one family.

As I see it this argument can be contested for several reasons.
 
#1: Names are labels used for identification. In the phonebook you will find August Andersson next to Augusta Andersson even if they are not related and have never met. Nobody considers the phonebook wrong for that reason. Nobody would suggest that the order in the phonebook should be after relationship.
#2: It would make quite as much logical sense to rise the Primula sections  auricula, sikkimensis etc. into genera and keep Dodecatheon as such.
#3: If Dodecatheon as a group is distinct enough from the members of the genus Primula they should deserve generic status. I think that is the case.
#4: Strict cladism would destroy our present system entirely. We would have a new subgroup for each split. No Order would have more than two families, no family would have more than two genera. We would then have to revise the whole system every time someone finds a new gene somewhere.
 
It all boils down to: how much distance that signifies that there are two groups; be they genera, species or families. The world is not all that clearcut. Ranzania japonica is very distinct from all its relatives. Enough to form a separate genus and species. It sits nicely in its little box. Trilliums erectum, flexipes, simile, vasyeii etc have all sorts of intermediate forms. They float around. Some people say that they are all the same variable species. Some say that there is the ideal erectum and the ideal flexipes out there like holy grails and that all other forms  (making up 95% or more) are mongrels.

For these reasons I will also go on using the word Dodecatheon.  ;D

Göte




 
Göte Svanholm
Mid-Sweden

David Lyttle

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #9 on: July 26, 2008, 01:31:34 PM »
Gote,

You raise some interesting points some of which I support others not entirely.

Names are not just "tags" they do serve to indicate relationship or similarity and common ancestry is the most powerful measure of a relationship between different individuals and by extrapolation different species. This is the rational for constructing phylogenetic trees based on the analysis of gene sequences.  Plants have a nuclear genome inherited from both parents, and a chloroplast genome that is inherited from the female parent so often sequences from both nuclear and chloroplast genes are analysed for taxonomic purposes.  In some cases they produce different phylogenies. The qualification of all of this is that you are looking at relationships between the genes you are studying when you construct phylogenetic trees.  Genes do not necessarily accumulate changes at uniform rates so it is difficult to time splits with any confidence from genetic data alone.

The other difficulty is ranking taxa ie do three nucleotide changes indicate a species or eight a generic split?

I agree with the point that in some cases you can resolve these problems by raising subgroup to generic status. However again I agree that strict cladism would in some measure destroy the utility of any taxonomic system - a Dodecatheon is a Dodecatheon because it has distinctive morphological features that differentiate it from the rest of the Primulaceae.
I think that DNA taxonomy is useful in placing related species in the appropriate genus but where it is used to define rankings between/within genera problems arise.
David Lyttle
Otago Peninsula, Dunedin, South Island ,
New Zealand.

Lesley Cox

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #10 on: July 27, 2008, 01:45:05 AM »
Dear Gote and David,

If you were not very nice men, as I know you both are, and if I were a very rude person (which I can be but generally am not) I would say to you both, what my partner Roger says to me when he thinks I'm talking nonsense: "Go boil your head!"
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

Joakim B

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #11 on: July 28, 2008, 10:15:46 AM »
Dear all :)
It has been interesting to read Your views and ideas around and about this subject.
I learned a lot.
Kind regards
Joakim
Potting in Lund in Southern Sweden and Coimbra in the middle of Portugal as well as a hill side in central Hungary

gote

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #12 on: July 28, 2008, 10:31:21 AM »
David,
It has been proposed to let the name of a plant or animal include all classes and Thus let all plant names look like:

Plantae-Magnoliophyta-Rosidae-Sapindales-Aceraceae-Acer-saccharum

To make it even more palatable it should be reducede to acronymes so that the sugar maple would be called:

PlMaRoSaAcAcesa.

It was further proposed that in the name of computation (This was some time ago) the letters should be replaced by numbers.

I do not think that all names should be labels only. However, I would not like a mess like the one above described.
I do not disagree with you that plants names should as far as practical reflect relationship.
However, A name as Saxifragaceae is a label since all genera are not closely related.

Dear Lesley,
Does this mean that you are a phylogeniholic??
Or is it Roger who is one?
 ;D
Göte

 



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David Lyttle

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #13 on: July 28, 2008, 11:30:38 AM »
Gote,

It has always seemed to me that the genus species concept is the core of the Linnean system of classification. The fact that the Saxifragaceae are polyphyletic can be sorted out by reassigning the constituent genera to the appropriate family. Our Hebes have been shifted to the Plantaginaceae by recent authors. One can be consoled by the fact that despite being weeds Plantago is a very successful genus.

However a stable classification is important for very practical reasons especially for horticulturalists. It is inconvenient to have plants shuffled around between different genera and families etc on the apparent whim of academic taxonomists. So from my own point of view it is easier to accept some changes but not others and I suspect I am not alone in this.
David Lyttle
Otago Peninsula, Dunedin, South Island ,
New Zealand.

Lesley Cox

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Re: 'Goodbye Dodecatheon; Hello Primula!'
« Reply #14 on: July 28, 2008, 09:44:31 PM »
Very true David. What I now realize is that this whole topic was introduced for the purpose of giving us a good laugh.

Last night we had cream and PlMaRoSaAcAcesasy on pancakes, for dessert!

As to your question Gote, I can only answer yes, or no, or maybe.
« Last Edit: July 28, 2008, 09:46:17 PM by Lesley Cox »
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

 


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