0000000000352623

AUTHOR

Jaime Güemes

0000-0001-5539-7314

showing 20 related works from this author

Gadoria (Antirrhineae, Plantaginaceae): A new genus, endemic from Sierra de Gádor, Almería, Spain

2017

The surprising discovery of a population of a new species of Antirrhineae (Plantaginaceae) has also given rise to the description of a new genus situated in the subtribe Maurandyinae: Gadoria falukei. This is supported by the characteristics of the flower, pollen grains, seeds and capsule, and phylogenetic results based on DNA sequences. The species is endemic from Sierra de Gádor, Almería, Spain. Scanning electron microscopy was used to explore micromorphology of the capsule, indument, and seed and pollen grains ornamentation. Additionally, chromosomal number, preliminary insights on reproductive biology, phylogenetic position within Antirrhineae, ecological data and conservation status of…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studybiologyPopulationfood and beveragesPlant Sciencemedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAlmeriaAsarinaAntirrhineaeGenusPollenBotanymedicinePlantaginaceaeeducationEudicotsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyPhytotaxa
researchProduct

Chromosome numbers of severalLamiaceae from Spain

1998

Chromosome numbers of twenty taxa, almost all of them Iberian endemics, of the generaTeucrium, Sideritis, Thymus andSalvia are reported. New chromosome numbers are given for the following taxa:Teucrium homotrichum (2n=78),T. hifacense (2n=26),T. rivasii (2n=26),T. rivas-martinezii (2n=26),Sideritis edetana (2n=30),S. murgetana subsp.littoralis (2n=28), and the hybridS. xviciosoi (2n=27). The first count on Iberian material forSalvia pratensis (2n=18) is reported. Chromosome numbers have been confirmed for the rest of the taxa studied on material from SE Spain. Karyotype analyses and taxonomic remarks are included.

biologyPaleontologyZoologyKaryotypePlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationTeucriumTaxonBotanySideritisTaxonomy (biology)LamiaceaeEndemismHybridFolia Geobotanica
researchProduct

<p><strong><em>Linaria semialata</em> and <em>L. amethystea </em>subsp.<em> aedoi</em>,<em> &lt…

2020

Two new taxa of the genus Linaria are described, illustrated and compared, through a morphometric analysis, to morphologically similar species from L. sect. Supinae: L. amethystea, L. diffusa, L. intricata, and L. orbensis. A Principal Component Analysis and Linear Discriminant Analysis were carried out in order to find out which morphological characters were the most important to discriminate these species. Morphometric analyses revealed that discrimination of species were more related to their particular morphological character combinations than to a private character. Two taxa are described as new to science, by providing a detailed description, illustrations, scanning-electron micrograp…

food.ingredientbiologyAmethysteaIdentification keyPlant ScienceLinariabiology.organism_classificationAntirrhineaefoodTaxonGenusBotanyTaxonomy (biology)EudicotsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhytotaxa
researchProduct

A new gypsophilous species ofChaenorhinum(Antirrhinaceae) from the south-east of the Iberian Peninsula

2014

A new strict gypsophilous species of Chaenorhinum, Ch. gamezii, is described. It is an annual to perennial species found in extremely arid locations upon Triassic gypsic habitats in the south-eastern Iberian Peninsula. This species has an eglandular heterotrichous indumentum, which is related to Ch. segoviense and Ch. flexuosum. However, Ch. gamezii has a characteristic combination of vegetative and micromorphological features (trichomes and ornamentation of the seeds) that are not present in any other taxon of the genus. Herein, the affinities and differences with related species are studied and discussed. For its differentiation, an original key is presented with comparative figures of in…

0106 biological sciencesIndumentumEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyBiogeographyPlant ScienceBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCritically endangeredTaxonHabitatThreatened speciesIUCN Red ListEndemismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
researchProduct

Genetic variability in a narrow endemic snapdragon (Antirrhinum subbaeticum, Scrophulariaceae) using RAPD markers

2002

Antirrhinum subbaeticum is an endangered species inhabiting fragmented limestone cliffs. In the last 3 years, a drastic population decline has been observed in three of four known populations and the estimated number of surviving individuals is now close to 400. A RAPD study was conducted to evaluate the levels of genetic variation present in this species to improve conservation guidelines. Thirty-nine polymorphic products identified 66.1% of the samples by unique RAPD multilocus profiles. A cluster analysis grouped the samples into two broad groups corresponding to northern or southern provenances. AMOVA analysis showed that only 17.7% of the genetic diversity was partitioned within popula…

Genetic MarkersConservation of Natural ResourcesDNA PlantPopulationZoologyBiologyGenes PlantGenetic variationAntirrhinumGeneticsGenetic variabilityeducationPhylogenyGenetics (clinical)DNA Primerseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversityGeographyEcologyGenetic VariationAntirrhinum subbaeticumbiology.organism_classificationRandom Amplified Polymorphic DNA TechniqueRAPDGenetic structureGene poolHeredity
researchProduct

A new species ofFumana (Cistaceae) from Rif, Morocco

1999

A new species ofFumana (Dunal) Spach subgenusFumana, F. fontqueri, is described from the region of Rif, Morocco. Notes on its morphology, ecology, distribution and taxonomic relationships are presented. It differs fromF. procumbens (Dunal) Gren. etGodr. andF. baetica Guemes, by the indument of the stem, the disposition of pedicels, and the size of the flowers.

Plant ecologybiologyPedicelBotanyPaleontologyTaxonomy (biology)North africaPlant ScienceCistaceaebiology.organism_classificationFolia Geobotanica
researchProduct

Can the problem of hybridization in threatened species be evaluated using a fieldwork research? A case study in snapdragons

2019

Abstract Hybridization, natural or artificial, is considered disadvantageous for species biodiversity when it threatens the population integrity of endangered species. Frequently, studies investigating whether hybridization poses a legitimate risk to rare species are based on genetic data obtained in molecular biology laboratories. In this study, we used field research to approach the problem that hybridization could cause for the viability of a population of a rare species and to be able to propose the most appropriate initial conservation strategy. Specifically, using the model genus Antirrhinum, the reproductive barriers between the rare A. pulverulentum and its common congener A. litigi…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationRare speciesEndangered speciesBiodiversityReproductive isolationBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGene flowEvolutionary biologyThreatened specieseducationNature and Landscape ConservationHybridJournal for Nature Conservation
researchProduct

Typification of seven names in the genus Antirrhinum (tribe Antirrhineae, Plantaginaceae)

2021

The typification of seven names in the genus Antirrhinum (tribe Antirrhineae, Plantaginaceae): A. charidemi, A. latifolium, A. molle var. mollissimum, A. molle var. marianum, A. sempervirens, A. siculum, and A. valentinum is discussed. The designation of the nomenclatural types is based on the consultation of original material and the literature cited in the respective protologues. The names are lectotypified using specimens from BC, C, MA, and an illustration of Boccone published in 1697. An epitype is also designated for A. latifolium due to ambiguity in the interpretation of the lectotype. The name A. siculum is neotypified from a specimen preserved at VAL, and a second-step lectotypific…

biologyAntirrhinumPlantaginaceaePlant ScienceBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationTribe (biology)AntirrhineaeLamialesTracheophytaMagnoliopsidaType (biology)GenusBotanyPlantaginaceaeTypificationEudicotsPlantaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomy
researchProduct

Pollination biology in an endangered rocky mountain toadflax (Linaria cavanillesii)

2013

Knowledge about the reproductive system of species inhabiting rocky habitats is scarce. The reproductive biology (floral biology, experimental pollination, insect visits, inbreeding depression, and seed predation) of the rupicolous Linaria cavanillesii was analyzed under field and experimental conditions. Self-compatibility was revealed by the high fruit set, seed set, and seed mass in the pollination experiment. Furthermore, results disclose that this species does not need insect visitors for seed production since fruit set after autonomous self-pollination was similar to that by hand cross-pollination. Self-offsprings were not affected by a strong degree of inbreeding depression in early …

biologyPollinationPerennial plantEcologyEndangered speciesfood and beveragesSelfingPlant ScienceLinariabiology.organism_classificationHabitatSeed predationBotanyInbreeding depressionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
researchProduct

Lectotypification of the names of two species of Fumana ( Cistaceae )

2004

The names Cistus ericoides Cav. and C. laevis Cav. are typified. These names apply to two species, currently classified within the genus Fumana (Dunal) Spach, but the names have been frequently misapplied and both of thempose typification problems. The type specimen of the first has not been found. Thus an illustration is chosen as type and an epitype designated. The original material of C. laevis comprises a mixture of two different species. One element is selected to clarify the application of this binomial.

Type (biology)biologyGenusBotanyCistusZoologyTypificationType specimenPlant ScienceCistaceaeFumanabiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTAXON
researchProduct

A geographical pattern ofAntirrhinum(Scrophulariaceae) speciation since the Pliocene based on plastid and nuclear DNA polymorphisms

2009

Aim To infer phylogenetic relationships among Antirrhinum species and to reconstruct the historical distribution of observed sequence polymorphism through estimates of haplotype clades and lineage divergence. Location Antirrhinum is distributed primarily throughout the western Mediterranean, with 22 of 25 species in the Iberian Peninsula. Methods Plastid (83 trnS-trnG and 83 trnK-matK) and nuclear (87 ITS) sequences were obtained from 96 individuals representing 24 of the 25 Antirrhinum species. Sequences were analysed using maximum parsimony, Bayesian inference and statistical parsimony networking. Molecular clock estimates were obtained for plastid trnK-matK sequences using the penalized …

EcologyPhylogenetic treeLineage (evolution)fungiAntirrhinumHaplotypeBiologybiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyMonophylyPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyBotanyMolecular clockEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Biogeography
researchProduct

Phylogeny of snapdragon species (Antirrhinum; Scrophulariaceae) using non-coding cpDNA sequences

2005

Antirrhinum is an Old World genus of up to 25 perennial taxa, mainly located in the western Mediterranean basin. A molecular analysis of 24 taxa of Antirrhinum was undertaken using cpDNA sequences from the trnT (UGU)-trnL (UAA) 5' exon region. The Kimura two-parameter model was chosen to calculate pairwise nucleotide divergence values between cpDNA sequences, and a bootstrapped neighbor-joining dendrogram was constructed from the nucleotide divergence distance matrix. Eighteen sites were variable across the studied samples and the position of 7 indels, ranging from 1 to 7 bp, was inferred from the sequence alignment. Several trnT-trnL sequences are identical in: some members of subsection K…

biologyAntirrhinumDendrogramSequence alignmentPlant ScienceSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationChloroplast DNAGenusPhylogeneticsBotanyIndelAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsrael Journal of Plant Sciences
researchProduct

The effectiveness of pre- and post-zygotic barriers in avoiding hybridization between two snapdragons (Antirrhinum L.: Plantaginaceae)

2014

Reproductive barriers play an important role in the maintenance of species boundaries. However, to date, few studies have provided a detailed analysis of reproductive isolation barriers between species or examined their importance in maintaining species identity. This is the first detailed study into pre- and post-zygotic reproductive isolation barriers in Antirrhinum, based on a mixed population with two species that rarely co-occur. The study revealed that pollinator constancy and preference and poor hybrid seed viability were the most important reproductive isolating mechanisms. Reproductive isolation was practically complete by both pre- and post-zygotic barriers. Average pre-zygotic is…

education.field_of_studyZygotebiologyIsolation (health care)EcologyAntirrhinumPopulationZoologyPlant ScienceReproductive isolationbiology.organism_classificationHybrid seedPollinatorPlantaginaceaeeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society
researchProduct

Phylogeny, biogeography, and morphological ancestral character reconstruction in the Mediterranean genus Fumana (Cistaceae)

2020

Fumana is a diverse genus of the Cistaceae family, consisting of 21 currently accepted species. In this study, nuclear (ITS) and plastid (matK, trnT‐L) molecular markers were used to reconstruct the phylogeny and to estimate divergence times, including 19 species of Fumana. Phylogenetic analyses (Bayesian Inference, Maximum Parsimony and Maximum Likelihood) confirmed the monophyly of Fumana and did not support the infrageneric divisions previously established. The results support four main clades that group species that differ in vegetative and reproductive characters. Given the impossibility to define morphological characters common to all species within the clades, our proposal is to reje…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climateMolecular phylogenetics.Character evolutionbiologyBiogeographyPlant ScienceCistaceaeCistaceaeMediterraneanbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArchaeologyFumanaGeographyGenusMolecular phylogeneticsBotanical gardenCharacter evolutionFumanaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular clocks010606 plant biology & botanyJournal of Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

The breeding system of Fumana ericifolia: first evidence of autogamy in woody Cistaceae

2001

Fumana ericifolia belongs to the family Cistaceae, in which all perennial species previously studied have been reported to be self-incompatible and xenogamous. Here we show that F. ericifolia is self-compatible and autogamous. Its flowers last only four to eight hours and produce a small amount of pollen and ovules. Self-pollination depends on changes in the relative position of the stigma and the anthers, triggered by the abscission of the petals; this in turn causes closing of the sepals, which push the anthers onto the stigma. Pollen remains highly viable and germinable, and the stigma keeps its receptivity several hours after the loss of the petals. Hand pollination treatments revealed …

StamenPlant ScienceCistaceaeBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationPollinatorPollenSelf-pollinationBotanymedicinePollen tubePetalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHand-pollinationNordic Journal of Botany
researchProduct

Reproductive biology and conservation implications of three endangered snapdragon species (Antirrhinum, Plantaginaceae)

2009

About 32% of Antirrhinum species are considered to be endangered; however, no field studies have focused on their reproductive biology. In this work, several aspects of the reproductive biology (flowering phenology, floral biology, breeding system) and potential limits on seed quantity and quality (pollen limitation, inbreeding depression) were studied in natural populations of three endangered species of the genus (Antirrhinum charidemi, Antirrhinum subbaeticum, Antirrhinum valentinum). Results disclose that all three species need insect visitors for seed production since fruit set after autonomous self-pollination was lower than under hand cross-pollination. A. charidemi and A. valentinum…

education.field_of_studyPollinationEcologyAntirrhinumPopulationEndangered speciesAntirrhinum subbaeticumBiologybiology.organism_classificationPollinatorInbreeding depressionConservation biologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationBiological Conservation
researchProduct

2000

Plant ScienceBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnales del Jardín Botánico de Madrid
researchProduct

Breeding system and conservation strategy of the extremely endangered Cistus carthaginensis Pau (Cistaceae) of Spain

2001

Cistus carthaginensis is one of the most endangered plants in Europe: at present there exist only a few individuals in Murcia and one in Valencia (SE and E Spain). To design an adequate conservation strategy able to avoid the extinction of this species, various aspects of its reproductive biology were studied. The extreme rarity of C. carthaginensis is not related to problems of development and/or fertility of pollen or ovules produced by the few existing specimens. Meiosis in the pollen mother cells is always regular and chromosome segregation is completely equilibrated in the male gametes. Pollen and ovule production is high and similar to that reported for other related species of Cistus…

biologyEndangered speciesfood and beveragesPlant ScienceCistaceaemedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationGerminationPollenBotanyCistusmedicinePollen tubeOvuleAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHand-pollinationIsrael Journal of Plant Sciences
researchProduct

Nectar robbing does not affect female reproductive success of an endangered Antirrhinum species, Plantaginaceae

2019

ABSTRACTBackground: Nectar robbers in many plant species affect female reproductive success, usually decreasing the amount of seed produced by plants, which can affect populations persistence.Aims:...

0106 biological sciencesEcologybiologyReproductive successfungiAntirrhinumEndangered speciesfood and beveragesZoologyPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationAffect (psychology)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesBombus terrestrisPlantaginaceaeNectarNectar robbingEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyPlant Ecology & Diversity
researchProduct

Nectar robbing does not affect female reproductive success of an endangered Antirrhinum species, Plantaginaceae

2019

Background: Nectar robbers in many plant species affect female reproductive success, usually decreasing the amount of seed produced by plants, which can affect populations persistence. Aims: To evaluate the impact of nectar robbers on the viability of the populations, we investigated the effects of nectar robbing on the female reproductive success of a threatened snapdragon species in four populations over 2 years. Methods: We observed insect visitors and their behaviour and quantified the percentage of robbed and non-robbed flowers and the production of fruits and seeds. Results: The results showed the degree of variation in nectar robbing among the populations and between years within the…

fungifood and beverages
researchProduct