Chromosome Numbers of a few South African Grasses
- 1 January 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by International Society of Cytology in CYTOLOGIA
- Vol. 19 (2-3) , 97-103
- https://doi.org/10.1508/cytologia.19.97
Abstract
The chromosome numbers of 47 species belonging to 29 genera have been counted. 38 species and 10 genera were previously unknown. The following genera have been investigated for the first time cytologically: Enneapogon (n=12); Pogonarthria (n = 10); Triraphis (n = 10); Acroceras (n = 9); Schizachyrium (n = 10); Urochloa (n = 10); Bothriochloa (n = 10); Dichanthium (n = 10); and Hemarthria (n = 10). The genus Aristida is characterized by two basic chromosome numbers, n = 11 and n = 12. In Hyparrhenia hirta 30-chromosome diploid and 45-chromosome tetraploid races have been observed.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cyto-Taxonomic Studies in OryzopsisBotanical Gazette, 1945
- A Cytological Study of the Genus Sorghum: Subsections Para-Sorghum and Eu-SorghumThe American Naturalist, 1944
- Grass Studies. III. Additional Somatic Chromosome ComplementsAmerican Journal of Botany, 1939
- A New Fixing Fluid and a Revised Schedule for the Paraffin Method in Plant CytologyStain Technology, 1935