TY - JOUR
T1 - Chromosome numbers, sudanese wild forms, and classification of the watermelon genus Citrullus, with 50 names allocated to seven biological species
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
AU - Sousa, Aretuza
AU - Chomicki, Guillaume
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Harry S. Paris (Agricultural Research Organization, Newe Ya’ar, Ramat Yishay, Israel) for fruitful discussions; Martina Silber for sequencing and GenBank submissions; Werner Greuter (Palermo) for consultation about Schweinfurth’s varietal name; Robert Jarret (USDA/ARS Plant Genetic Resources Unit, Griffin, Georgia 30223, U.S.A.), Amnon Levi (USDA/ARS, U.S. Vegetable Laboratory, Charleston, SC 29414), and Yong Xu and Guo Shaogui (Key Laboratory of Vegetable Germplasm Improvement, Beijing, 100097, People’s Republic of China) for sharing photos of germplasm plants in their collections; Joachim Kadereit, Dirk Albach, and two anonymous reviewers for their suggestions; and the Elfriede and Franz Jakob Foundation for supporting research in the Botanical Garden Munich.
Publisher Copyright:
© International Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT) 2017.
PY - 2017/12
Y1 - 2017/12
N2 - Watermelons are among the most important vegetable crops worldwide, but targeted breeding is hindered by problems with Citrullus taxonomy. Here we clarify nomenclature and species relationships in Citrullus, its chromosome numbers, and the likely geographic region of watermelon domestication. We correct an erroneous chromosome count in recent literature, provide a count for an understudied species, and data on chromosome numbers for the entire genus. We also use a nuclear/ plastid locus phylogeny to summarize data on Citrullus sexual systems, loss of tendrils, life history, and geographic ranges. Key insights from new sequences are that (i) material of C. vulgaris var. “colocynthoides”, collected by Schweinfurth in Egypt in 1882 represents the colocynth, C. colocynthis, and (ii) the citron or bitter watermelon, C. amarus, is indeed a separate species, not a subspecies of the dessert watermelon. Schweinfurth’s varietal name, a nomen nudum, has been widely used for seeds as old as 5400 BP, and it now needs to be investigated whether these seeds are colocynths, watermelon or a hybrid. To help improve Citrullus taxonomy and nomenclature, we allocate some 50 scientific names to seven biological species, tabulate chromosome counts, and provide notes on misidentified germplasms traceable by accession numbers. More wild-collected herbarium-verified material from northeast Africa is urgently needed, especially given the discovery of Russian breeders that populations of wild “cordophanus” from Sudan are closer to the cultivated watermelon than are any other wild populations so far known.
AB - Watermelons are among the most important vegetable crops worldwide, but targeted breeding is hindered by problems with Citrullus taxonomy. Here we clarify nomenclature and species relationships in Citrullus, its chromosome numbers, and the likely geographic region of watermelon domestication. We correct an erroneous chromosome count in recent literature, provide a count for an understudied species, and data on chromosome numbers for the entire genus. We also use a nuclear/ plastid locus phylogeny to summarize data on Citrullus sexual systems, loss of tendrils, life history, and geographic ranges. Key insights from new sequences are that (i) material of C. vulgaris var. “colocynthoides”, collected by Schweinfurth in Egypt in 1882 represents the colocynth, C. colocynthis, and (ii) the citron or bitter watermelon, C. amarus, is indeed a separate species, not a subspecies of the dessert watermelon. Schweinfurth’s varietal name, a nomen nudum, has been widely used for seeds as old as 5400 BP, and it now needs to be investigated whether these seeds are colocynths, watermelon or a hybrid. To help improve Citrullus taxonomy and nomenclature, we allocate some 50 scientific names to seven biological species, tabulate chromosome counts, and provide notes on misidentified germplasms traceable by accession numbers. More wild-collected herbarium-verified material from northeast Africa is urgently needed, especially given the discovery of Russian breeders that populations of wild “cordophanus” from Sudan are closer to the cultivated watermelon than are any other wild populations so far known.
KW - Chromosome counts
KW - Crop plants
KW - Herbarium resources
KW - Natural geographic ranges
KW - Wild relatives
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85039055721
U2 - 10.12705/666.7
DO - 10.12705/666.7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85039055721
SN - 0040-0262
VL - 66
SP - 1393
EP - 1405
JO - Taxon
JF - Taxon
IS - 6
ER -