{"title":"Spread of the African spotted orchid Oeceoclades maculata in the New World","authors":"Sarah K. Wetterer, J. K. Wetterer","doi":"10.15517/lank.v22i3.53113","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Oeceoclades maculata (Lindl.) Lindl. (= Eulophia maculata (Lindl.) Rchb.f.) has a broad native range across tropical Africa and Madagascar. Here, we document the spread of O. maculata in the New World, using published records, herbarium specimens, photographs posted online, and our own collections. The earliest known New World record of O. maculata is from Brazil dating to before 1790. Until 1962, O. maculata was known in the New World only from South America. Since then, this species has spread north through Central America into Mexico and across the West Indies to Florida and the Bahamas. It was first found in Florida in 1974, and until 1994 all Florida records of O. maculata were restricted to Miami-Dade County (except one record of greenhouse escapees in Gainesville). Here, we document O. maculata records from the following geographic areas in the New World: 11 South American countries (all except Chile and Uruguay), all 7 Central American countries, Mexico, 22 West Indian island-groups, and Florida. We also document records from 31 counties in peninsular Florida. Oeceoclades maculata has now been recorded in the New World from northeastern Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (~28.5°S) and Estancia Santa Teresa, Corrientes, Argentina (28.0°S) in the south, to Gainesville (29.7°N) and Palm Coast, Florida (29.6°N) in the north. A report of O. maculata populations in Gainesville dying out after a hard frost suggests that this species may have reached its northern outdoor limit in peninsular Florida. Although its impact on native species in the New World appears to be minor, there are efforts to eradicate O. maculata in some natural areas.","PeriodicalId":18023,"journal":{"name":"Lankesteriana","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Lankesteriana","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15517/lank.v22i3.53113","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Oeceoclades maculata (Lindl.) Lindl. (= Eulophia maculata (Lindl.) Rchb.f.) has a broad native range across tropical Africa and Madagascar. Here, we document the spread of O. maculata in the New World, using published records, herbarium specimens, photographs posted online, and our own collections. The earliest known New World record of O. maculata is from Brazil dating to before 1790. Until 1962, O. maculata was known in the New World only from South America. Since then, this species has spread north through Central America into Mexico and across the West Indies to Florida and the Bahamas. It was first found in Florida in 1974, and until 1994 all Florida records of O. maculata were restricted to Miami-Dade County (except one record of greenhouse escapees in Gainesville). Here, we document O. maculata records from the following geographic areas in the New World: 11 South American countries (all except Chile and Uruguay), all 7 Central American countries, Mexico, 22 West Indian island-groups, and Florida. We also document records from 31 counties in peninsular Florida. Oeceoclades maculata has now been recorded in the New World from northeastern Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (~28.5°S) and Estancia Santa Teresa, Corrientes, Argentina (28.0°S) in the south, to Gainesville (29.7°N) and Palm Coast, Florida (29.6°N) in the north. A report of O. maculata populations in Gainesville dying out after a hard frost suggests that this species may have reached its northern outdoor limit in peninsular Florida. Although its impact on native species in the New World appears to be minor, there are efforts to eradicate O. maculata in some natural areas.
黄斑卵枝介(林)林。(=Eulophia maculata(Lindl.)Rchb.f.)原产于热带非洲和马达加斯加。在这里,我们使用已发表的记录、植物标本馆标本、网上发布的照片和我们自己的收藏,记录了斑蝶在新世界的传播。已知最早的新世界斑蝶记录来自巴西,可追溯到1790年之前。直到1962年,黄斑O.maculata在新大陆只在南美洲为人所知。从那时起,该物种向北传播,穿过中美洲进入墨西哥,穿过西印度群岛到达佛罗里达州和巴哈马群岛。它于1974年在佛罗里达州首次被发现,直到1994年,佛罗里达州所有关于斑尾蠊的记录都仅限于迈阿密戴德县(除了盖恩斯维尔的一份温室逃犯记录)。在这里,我们记录了来自新大陆以下地理区域的斑节藻记录:11个南美洲国家(除智利和乌拉圭外)、所有7个中美洲国家、墨西哥、22个西印度群岛和佛罗里达州。我们还记录了佛罗里达半岛31个县的记录。从巴西南里奥格兰德州东北部(~28.5°S)和南部阿根廷科连特斯的Estancia Santa Teresa(28.0°S),到北部的盖恩斯维尔(29.7°N)和佛罗里达州棕榈海岸(29.6°N),新大陆现已记录到斑尾蛇。一份关于盖恩斯维尔的斑尾蠊种群在一场严寒后灭绝的报告表明,该物种可能已经达到了佛罗里达半岛北部户外的极限。尽管它对新大陆的本土物种的影响似乎很小,但在一些自然地区,人们正在努力根除黄斑O.maculata。