Cistus inflatus is a shrubbyspecies of flowering plant in the family Cistaceae, often known as Cistus psilosepalus, although this name is a synonym of the hybrid Cistus × laxus. It has white flowers.
Description
Cistus inflatus is a slightly spreading shrub, up to 1 m (3 ft) tall. It leaves are green, oblong in shape, usually 2–6 cm (0.8–2.4 in) long by 5–20 mm (0.2–0.8 in) wide, with turned under (revolute) margins, variably hairy, with long simple and stellate hairs on both sides. The leaves are unstalked (sessile) and, at least near the base, have three veins. The flowers are arranged in cymes with one to five individual flowers, each 4–6 cm (1.6–2.4 in) across with five white petals with narrowed yellow bases, and five sepals. The style is very short.[3][4]
Taxonomy
Cistus inflatus has a somewhat confused nomenclatural history. In 1786, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck described this species under the name Cistus hirsutus, but it was an illegitimate name since he had earlier used it for a different species.[5][6] In 1826, Robert Sweet published the name Cistus psilosepalus,[7] which was then applied to this species by many authors.[6] In 1997, Jean-Pierre Demoly identified Sweet's type as C. × laxus Aiton, a hybrid between this species and C. populifolius.[4][6][8] As the name Cistus laxus was published by Aiton in 1789, it has priority over the name Cistus psilosepalus, which becomes a synonym. Demoly revived a name used (but not published) by Pierre André Pourret, namely C. inflatus.[8]
In summary, in Demoly's analysis:
Cistus psilosepalus Sweet is a synonym of Cistus × laxus Aiton
Cistus psilosepalus auct., non Sweet has incorrectly been used for what is now Cistus inflatus Pourr. ex J.-P.Demoly
Sweet called his C. psilosepalus "the smooth sepaled rock-rose" (the meaning of the epithet), describing it as "differing from all others ... by its smooth glossy sepals",[9] whereas later sources (including Flora Europaea) described C. psilosepalus as having hairy sepals.[3] In C. × laxus the backs of the outer sepals are hairless (glabrous); in C.inflatus they are hairy.[4]
^ abDemoly, J.-P. (1997), "L'identité du Cistus psilosepalus Sw. (Cistaceae)", Acta Botanica Gallica (in French), 144 (1): 35–44, abstract (in French and English)
^Sweet, Robert (1826), "33 Cistus psilosepalus", Cistineae : the natural order of Cistus or Rock-rose, London: James Ridgeway, retrieved 2015-03-15
^ abCiveyrel, Laure; Leclercq, Julie; Demoly, Jean-Pierre; Agnan, Yannick; Quèbre, Nicolas; Pélissier, Céline & Otto, Thierry (2011). "Molecular systematics, character evolution, and pollen morphology of Cistus and Halimium (Cistaceae)". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 295 (1–4): 23–54. doi:10.1007/s00606-011-0458-7. S2CID21995828.
^Guzmán, B. & Vargas, P. (2005). "Systematics, character evolution, and biogeography of Cistus L. (Cistaceae) based on ITS, trnL-trnF, and matK sequences". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 37 (3): 644–660. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.04.026. PMID16055353.
^Guzmán, B. & Vargas, P. (2009). "Historical biogeography and character evolution of Cistaceae (Malvales) based on analysis of plastid rbcL and trnL-trnF sequences". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 9 (2): 83–99. doi:10.1016/j.ode.2009.01.001.
Page, R.G. (n.d.) [2002 onwards], "Cistus inflatus Pourr. ex Demoly", The Cistus & Halimium Website, archived from the original on 2015-09-23, retrieved 2015-03-14; includes photograph