familyVitaceae

Nekemias

Rafinesque

Sylva Tellur., 87. 1838.

Etymology: Etymology uncertain perhaps Latin nec, not, and Greek mya, unknown plant, alluding to segregation from Ampelopsis and Vitis
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 12. Treatment on page 20. Mentioned on page 4.

Lianas, climbing by tendrils, synoecious. Branches: bark adherent; pith white, continuous through nodes; tendrils 2-branched, without adhesive discs. Leaves [1–]2–3-pinnately compound. Inflorescences bisexual, leaf-opposed, corymblike cymes, sometimes compound. Flowers bisexual; calyx saucer-shaped, indistinctly undulate; petals 5, distinct; nectary proximally adnate to base of ovary, distally free, cup-shaped; stamens 5; style conic, ± elongate. Berries purple, blue, or black. Seeds 1–4 per fruit.

Distribution

North America, West Indies, e, se Asia.

Discussion

Species 9 (1 in the flora).

Ampelopsis Michaux has been shown to be paraphyletic by recent phylogenetic analyses (A. Soejima and Wen J. 2006; Ren H. et al. 2011; Nie Z. L. et al. 2012), with molecular data placing the African Rhoicissus Planchon and the South American Cissus striata Ruiz & Pavon complex within Ampelopsis. To maintain the monophyly of genera of Vitaceae, Wen et al. (2014) separated Ampelopsis into two genera: Ampelopsis and Nekemias. The two genera can be distinguished by their leaf and bud morphology. Nekemias has pinnately compound leaves (versus simple, trifoliolate, or palmately compound leaves in Ampelopsis) and complex axillary buds (versus serial accessory buds).

Lower Taxa

... more about "Nekemias"
Michael O. Moore† +  and Jun Wen +
Rafinesque +
North America +, West Indies +, e +  and se Asia. +
Etymology uncertain +  and perhaps Latin nec, not, and Greek mya, unknown plant, alluding to segregation from Ampelopsis and Vitis +
Sylva Tellur., +
wen2014a +
Nekemias +
Vitaceae +