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    CHARACTERS
   USED TO DETERMINE GENERIC PLACEMENT  
   Although Hapaline is
      entirely palaeotropical in distribution, its morphology, cytology,
      anatomy and biochemistry indicate a close relationship to neotropical
      genera. Grayum (1984, 1990) cited seven characters that separate
      Hapaline from other palaeotropical ëcolocasioid‰ genera (e.g. Ariopsis
      Nimmo, Remusatia Schott and Colocasia Schott) (Table 1). Some of
      these characters are now know to occur sporadically in other paleotropical
      genera (Hay pers. comm.) but nowhere except Hapaline do all occur
      as a suite. Grayum‰s second character (Absence of sympodial branching
      in the terminal reproductive shoot) is unreliable and should be
      deleted from the list; synflorescences do occur in Hapaline.
      French & Tomlinson (1983) and Fox & French (1988) demonstrated that
      the permanent cortical vascular system typical of neotropical ëcolocasioids‰
      (excluding Jasarum Bunting) and absent from palaeotropical genera,
      is present in Hapaline. Further evidence of a neotropical
      link was presented by French & Fox (in prep.) who found that the
      white latex secreted from cut tissue of Hapaline is similar
      in composition to that found in neotropical Caladieae and unlike
      that of palaeotropical genera in the Colocasieae. Palynological
      evidence for an alliance between Hapaline and neotropical
      genera is less convincing. Hapaline pollen has spinose exine
      sculpturing, a character shared by almost all other palaeotropical
      colocasioids‰ (except Steudnera Schott and some Colocasia spp.),
      but occurring only in neotropical Syngonium (Grayum 1984, 1990,
      1992). However, Grayum (1984) noted that the trinucleate pollen
      of Hapaline was similar only to Remusatia among the palaeotropical
      colocasioid‰ genera. An interesting hypothesis put forward by Grayum
      (1984) was that Hapaline might be related to Pinellia
      Tenore in tribe Areae (subfamily Aroideae sensu Grayum 1984
      (= subfamily Aroideae: tribe Arisaemateae sensu Mayo, Bogner
      & Boyce, in press)). This is based on the shared characters of tuberous
      habit, fusion of the base of the spathe and spadix, sterile male
      flowers or naked regions above and below the fertile male flowers,
      unilocular, uniovular ovaries, anatropous ovules, endospermous seeds,
      inaperturate, globose, spinose, starchy, trinucleate pollen and
      a base chromosome number of x = 13. However, Hapaline and
      Pinellia differ in a number of fundamental characters, including
      venation (ëcolocasioid‰ versus reticulate), stamen type (synandria
      versus free) and secretion tubes (present versus absent). Grayum
      concluded that although it was conceivable that Hapaline
      might be moved to tribe Areae, for the time being it was best left
   in subfamily Colocasioideae (all sensu Grayum 1984). 
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