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(Created page with "Fagopyrum (buckwheat) is a large genus of Polygonaceae Gross (1913) first classified the species of the Polygonaceae native to Asia including buckwheat . Steward (1930) later classified ten buckwheat species in the Polygonaceae native to Asia . Among them, F.suffruticosum Schm. is native to Sakhalin and the rest are all native to southwest China. Miyabe and Miyake (1915) suggested that F.suffruticosum is the same species as F.tataricum in their book (Flora of Sakhali...")
 
 
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Fagopyrum (buckwheat) is a large genus of [[Polygonaceae]]
<u>Fagopyrum</u> (buckwheat) is a large genus of [[Polygonaceae]]
Gross (1913) first classified the species of the Polygonaceae native to Asia including buckwheat . Steward (1930) later classified ten buckwheat species in the Polygonaceae native to Asia . Among them, F.suffruticosum Schm. is native to Sakhalin and the rest are all native to southwest China. Miyabe and Miyake (1915) suggested that F.suffruticosum is the same species as F.tataricum in their book (Flora of Sakhalin). Ohnishi’s research group collected cultivated and wild buckwheat resources native to China and the Himalaya region beginning in 1988 and suggested one big-achene species (F.homotropicum Ohnishi = F.esculentum var. homotropicum) and five new small-achene species (F.callianthum Ohnishi, F.pleioramosum Ohnishi, F.capillatum Ohnishi, F.rubifolium Ohsako et Ohnishi, F.macrocarpum Ohsako et Ohnishi). Chen (1999) suggested three new big-achene species, tetraploid annual F.zuogongense Q.F. Chen, diploid perennial F.megaspartanium Q.F. Chen and F.pilus Q.F. Chen . Krotov (1973)  made a new annual species (F.giganteum) by crossing the tartary buckwheat and F.cymosum complex. Due to the similarity in morphology, the three large-achene perennial buckwheat species are normally called the F.cymosum complex
Gross (1913) first classified the species of the Polygonaceae native to Asia including buckwheat . Steward (1930) later classified ten buckwheat species in the Polygonaceae native to Asia . Among them, F.suffruticosum Schm. is native to Sakhalin and the rest are all native to southwest China. Miyabe and Miyake (1915) suggested that F.suffruticosum is the same species as F.tataricum in their book (Flora of Sakhalin). Ohnishi’s research group collected cultivated and wild buckwheat resources native to China and the Himalaya region beginning in 1988 and suggested one big-achene species (F.homotropicum Ohnishi = F.esculentum var. homotropicum) and five new small-achene species (F.callianthum Ohnishi, F.pleioramosum Ohnishi, F.capillatum Ohnishi, F.rubifolium Ohsako et Ohnishi, F.macrocarpum Ohsako et Ohnishi). Chen (1999) suggested three new big-achene species, tetraploid annual F.zuogongense Q.F. Chen, diploid perennial F.megaspartanium Q.F. Chen and F.pilus Q.F. Chen . Krotov (1973)  made a new annual species (F.giganteum) by crossing the tartary buckwheat and F.cymosum complex. Due to the similarity in morphology, the three large-achene perennial buckwheat species are normally called the F.cymosum complex
<ref>Chen Q.-F et al. 2018[https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/2/536 Recent Progress in Perennial Buckwheat Development. Sustainability 10(2), 536]; https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020536
<ref>Chen Q.-F et al. 2018 [https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/2/536 Recent Progress in Perennial Buckwheat Development. Sustainability 10(2), 536]; https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020536 </ref>
</ref>
==External Links==
[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8715082/pdf/fpls-12-799904.pdf Fan Y, Jin Y, Ding M, Tang Y, Cheng J, Zhang K, Zhou M] 2021. The Complete Chloroplast Genome Sequences of Eight Fagopyrum Species: Insights Into Genome Evolution and Phylogenetic Relationships. Front Plant Sci.; 12:799904
 
[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=112620 Fl.China]
===GBIF records ===
疏穗野荞
[https://www.gbif.org/es/species/4036370 F caudatum] A J Li
 
[https://www.gbif.org/es/species/7835272 F tibeticum] (A J Li)Adr.Sánchez et Jan M Burke
(Parapteropyrum [https://www.gbif.org/es/species/4037331 Parateropyrum tibeticum])
{{refs}}

Latest revision as of 20:07, 17 August 2024

Fagopyrum (buckwheat) is a large genus of Polygonaceae Gross (1913) first classified the species of the Polygonaceae native to Asia including buckwheat . Steward (1930) later classified ten buckwheat species in the Polygonaceae native to Asia . Among them, F.suffruticosum Schm. is native to Sakhalin and the rest are all native to southwest China. Miyabe and Miyake (1915) suggested that F.suffruticosum is the same species as F.tataricum in their book (Flora of Sakhalin). Ohnishi’s research group collected cultivated and wild buckwheat resources native to China and the Himalaya region beginning in 1988 and suggested one big-achene species (F.homotropicum Ohnishi = F.esculentum var. homotropicum) and five new small-achene species (F.callianthum Ohnishi, F.pleioramosum Ohnishi, F.capillatum Ohnishi, F.rubifolium Ohsako et Ohnishi, F.macrocarpum Ohsako et Ohnishi). Chen (1999) suggested three new big-achene species, tetraploid annual F.zuogongense Q.F. Chen, diploid perennial F.megaspartanium Q.F. Chen and F.pilus Q.F. Chen . Krotov (1973) made a new annual species (F.giganteum) by crossing the tartary buckwheat and F.cymosum complex. Due to the similarity in morphology, the three large-achene perennial buckwheat species are normally called the F.cymosum complex [1]

External Links

Fan Y, Jin Y, Ding M, Tang Y, Cheng J, Zhang K, Zhou M 2021. The Complete Chloroplast Genome Sequences of Eight Fagopyrum Species: Insights Into Genome Evolution and Phylogenetic Relationships. Front Plant Sci.; 12:799904

Fl.China

GBIF records

疏穗野荞 F caudatum A J Li

F tibeticum (A J Li)Adr.Sánchez et Jan M Burke (Parapteropyrum Parateropyrum tibeticum)

References

References: