Dear All
I dont agree with the transfer of species under Malaxis to Corymborchis. 
Following points I want to raise here
1. Generic concept or circumscription of a genus is same for the species of 
that genus throughout the world. There is defined generic limit for both 
Malaxis and Corymborkis and if the species are not fitting in Malaxis they will 
not be fitting in Corymborkis as well. 
2. There are other recent developments in the nomenclature of this group and 
species of Malaxis have been transferred to Dienia, Crepidium, Seidenfia etc. 
and these transfers are well within the limit of ICBN code. Dr. Almeida has not 
discussed about these genera.
These statements are premature as I have not seen the Fl. Maharashtra 
physically and these comments are based on whatever Rashida Ji have sent.
Regards
Dinesh

On Thu, 19 Aug 2010 20:23:13 +0530  wrote
>Thanks Rashida jiThat should settle the issue. Any other thing as I wrote 
>earlier is the matter of Taxonomic judgement.

-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired  Associate Professor

SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone: 011-25518297  Mob: 9810359089
http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/ 

 

On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 7:41 PM, Rashida Atthar  wrote:

Dr. Gurcharan ji, Here are the details as requested by you sir for the species 
under discussion from Flora of Mah, Vol V - A pg 28, 29Corymborkis Thouars

  1. Small pseudobulbs present- C. densiflora
1. Pseudobulbs not present- C. versicolor 
Five new combinations have been described- C. acuminata (D. Don) Almeida (comb. 
nov.).


C. intermedia (A. Rich.) Almeida (comb. nov.)
C. latifolia (J.E.Sm.) Almeida (comb. nov)
C. versicolor (Lind.) Almeida (comb. nov.).


Two explanations of particular interest to the discussion, one on pg 29 under 
the description of c. acuminata is as follows:  "Generic name Malaxis Sw. is 
not applicable to the generic concept and circumscription of these species. Why 
it is not a appropriate generic name for our plants, is explained under C. 
versicolor. Other generic name used for the taxa under this group is 
Microstylis Nutt. (nom.cons.). This generic name also applies to the  New World 
series, which is typified by Microstylis ophioglossoides Willd., and Willdenow 
might be correct considering it a close ally of Geodorum Jackson. (1810). 
Lindley (1827) published a new generic name under Dienia congesta Lindl. based 
on Malaxis latifolia J.E. Sm. However, the  earliest  available generic name 
for this generic concept happens to be Corymborchis Du Petit Thuars. applied to 
Himalayan species going under Malaxis and Microstylis (Sensu lato). I propose 
to restore this generic name for our Indian orchids ".


Another important explanation at the end of the description of C. versicolor is 
as follows: pg 30 : "The Malaxis rheedii Sw. was revived by Nair & Ansari 
(1981) . However, Swartz in original publication (1778) has cited Epidendrum 
resupinatum G. Forst.,    reducing his new name to illegitimate status . 
Seidenfaden (Bot. Tidsskr. 73: 97, 1978) excluded Forster's synonym and 
lectotypified  Swartz's  name on Rheede's figure. This practice is against the 
rules of the ICBN. Any name including  the indication of type of different  
species or even the inclusion of the name of different species renders the new 
name illegitimate, irrespective  of its own type. Similarly, Swartz's generic 
name also must be typified by Epidendrum resupinatum Forst. Secondly , 
Seidenfaden was wrong in selecting Rheede's figure as type. because Swartz had 
proposed the name for Occidental plant which he has applied to Oriental 
species".    


I hope the above resolves the confusion. Sir just a few days back Dr. Almeida 
had mentioned to me that it can take any number of years for the Kew index and 
other data indexes to update the new combinations.


I am also attaching scanned image of a line drawing and a picture of C. 
versicolor from the flora. 
regards,Rashida.    

On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:49 PM, Pankaj Kumar  wrote:

I have met Dr. Almeida personally and I respect him undoubtedly and I also know 
some of his students very well. My intention of saying was just to see what he 
has done with Malaxis in his book. My personal view says, they can never be 
placed in Corymborkis.....it is totally out of my head!! He may have made a new 
combination...



Neither do I doubt credibility of Dr. Neil. What he said was based on a proper 
reference, so has is justified himself.

Sameer Surve, Swapna, Aparna, Page, if you are reading this, then get me xerox 
of orchidaceae. I would really like to see. The book is not available in 
Dehradun.



RegardsPankaj




On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 4:34 PM, Gurcharan Singh  wrote:



Neil jiIt may solve the issue if you could have the paragraph on nomenclature 
(with authority) of this species forwarded on the group.




-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired  Associate Professor

SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone: 011-25518297  Mob: 9810359089
http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/ 






On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 4:09 PM, Neil Soares  wrote:




Hi Prof. Singh,
    I own all the voumes of 'Flora of Maharashtra' but haven't had time, 
neither do I have any material to work on.
                   Regards,
                     Neil Soares.
 

--- On Thu, 8/19/10, Gurcharan Singh  wrote:


From: Gurcharan Singh 
Subject: Re: Re: [efloraofindia:44808] Re: one more ground orchid for id from 
Amboli




To: "dinesh kumar agrawala" 
Cc: sahanipan...@gmail.com, tanaybos...@gmail.com, drneilsoa...@yahoo.com, 
indiantreepix@googlegroups.com, le...@rediffmail.com




Date: Thursday, August 19, 2010, 2:38 PM


Dear Members
It is true that name Corymborkis versicolor has not been incorporated in IPNI, 
but we should respect Neil ji's word, and not reject it outright.May be the 
book has not reached the compilers of these databases. Dr. Almeida is a 
accomplished taxonomist with great contribution to the knowledge of Flora of 
Maharashtra. Till some one from the area is able to get hold of this volume, we 
should avoid commenting to the contrary. Perhaps Neil ji can help in procuring 
this important page of the book, or possibly Rashida ji who knows the Flora of 
Maharashtra so well.






As far as whether the two species are distinct or synonymous is a matter of 
taxonomic judgement. There are thousands of species which have been merged or 
split by different authors. Only yesterday there was a plant uploaded by me 
from Kashmir with dense inflorescence and much narrower leaves (which Flora of 
Pakistan treated as Phytolacca latbenia Walter) and one uploaded by Nalini ji 
from Germany with much lax inflorescence and broader almost ovate leaves 20-30 
cm broad. Most recent publications treat both as P. acinosa. 




Let us wait about the two species of Malaxis also till the said volume of Dr. 
Almeida is available to any member.


 


-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired  Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007




Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone: 011-25518297  Mob: 9810359089
http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/ 



  


On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 2:09 PM, dinesh kumar agrawala  wrote:





I agree with Dr. Pankaj that Malaxis rheedii and M. versicolor are two 
different plants based on Microstylis rheedii amd Microstylis versicolor 
respectively. The generic concept as to which genus these species will belong 
is a never ending debate which can only be solved with the help of phylogenetic 
and experimental taxonomy. It does not matter in which genus it is being 
treated but the identity at species level does really matters. It is true that 
the two species are different and treated under Seidenfia by Sath. Kumar and 
Manilal, Orchids of Kerala in Orchid Memories: a tribute to G. Seidenfaden 
published in 2004. Regarding the species level difference, there are some 
publications specific to this two species but unable to recall right now. Sorry 
for that.




Dinesh

On Thu, 19 Aug 2010 11:50:16 +0530 wrote



>Dear Neil Sir,



Just wanted to ask...do you mean to say that the Shubhada's plant is

not Crepidium resupinatum? but Corymborkis versicolor?

Or you are talking about your plant. Please do post a closeup picture





of the flowers if possible.



Unfortunately, I dont know of any species which is called Corymborkis

versicolor. Corymborkis belongs to subfamily Tropidioideae whereas the

Malaxis group belongs to Epidendroideae. They are totally different.







Secondly, Malaxis versicolor and Malaxis rheedii are two different

plants according to my knowledge and IPNI and Kew.



I may be wrong though.



Regards

Pankaj







Dinesh Kumar Agrawala
Research Officer (Botany)
Central Council for Research in Ayurveda and Siddha
Jawaharlal Nehru Bhartiya Chikitsa Avum Homeopathy Anusandhan Bhawan
61-65, Institutional
 Area
Opposite D-Block, Janakpuri
New Delhi - 110 058
Mobile: +91 9560570745
SAVE PLANTS AND SAVE LIFE













      













Dinesh Kumar Agrawala
Research Officer (Botany)
Central Council for Research in Ayurveda and Siddha
Jawaharlal Nehru Bhartiya Chikitsa Avum Homeopathy Anusandhan Bhawan
61-65, Institutional Area
Opposite D-Block, Janakpuri
New Delhi - 110 058
Mobile: +91 9560570745
SAVE PLANTS AND SAVE LIFE

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