Sempervivoideae
Sempervivoideae is the largest of three subfamilies in the Saxifragales family Crassulaceae, with about 20–30 genera with succulent leaves. Unlike the two smaller subfamilies, it is distributed in temperate climates. The largest genus in this subfamily is Sedum, with about 470 species.
Description
Succulent leaved plants. Unlike the other two smaller subfamilies, which are highly derived, Sempervivoideae retain the basic features of the family Crassulaceae. The Sempervivoideae contain many familiar horticultural plants, such as Sedum.Taxonomy
Sempervivoideae has taxonomic priority over its synonym, Sedoideae, and is related to the other Crassulaceae subfamilies, as shown in this cladogram, although Messerschmid and colleagues state that these three subfamily clades are successive sisters, rather than Sempervivoideae being a direct sister only to Kalanchoideae.Subdivisions
Six clades within the Subfamily Sempervivoideae have been segregated into five tribes with about thirty genera.| Clade | Tribe |
| Acre | Sedeae |
| Leucosedum | Sedeae |
| Aeonium | Aeonieae |
| Sempervivum | Semperviveae |
| Rhodiola | Umbiliceae |
| Hylotelephium | Telephieae |
The composition of the five tribes are: ;
- Telephieae
- Umbiliceae
- Semperviveae
- Aeonieae
- Sedeae
However, given the difficulty of establishing a stable classification, some authors prefer larger groupings, e.g.;
- Telephinae
- Sedinae
- Telephium 9, 160
- Sempervivum 3, 60
- Aeonium 4, 67
- Leucosedum 6,80
- Acre 7, 205
Semperviviae, Aeonieae and Sedeae are definable only by plesiomorphic features, with their genera all derived from within Sedum. Segregates of Sedum occur in each of these, but lack sufficient features to allow them to be allocated to definitive genera.
Telephium clade
This monophyletic clade is sister to the remainder of the Sempervivoideae subfamily, and its three sublineages, Telephiae, Phedimus/Rhodiola and Umbilicus form a polytomy with the rest of the subfamily.Telephieae tribe ('t Hart) Ohba and Thiede [ined.]
The Telephieae genera consist of former infrageneric taxa of Sedum, and are distributed primarily in East Asia, but with a few species found in Europe and N America. Defined by 5-merous flowers, free petals, flat, dentate leaves and tuberous roots or thickened rhizomes. Leaves usually in rosettes, except Hylotelephium, petals often spotted, autumn flowering. The taxonomy remains unstable, with species Orostachys embedded within both Meterostachys and Hylotelephium. Neither Hylotelphium nor Orostachys are considered monophyletic. But of the two sections of the genus, section Appendiculatae appears monophyletic and sister to Meterostachys. Kungia is a segregate of a non-monophyletic Orostachys and appears to be a sister to Sinocrassula.It is likely that diversification of the tribe occurred at the time of the formation of the Himalayas. Telephiae contains about 6 genera, with about 48–50 species, including:
- Hylotelephium H.Ohba c. 27–30 sp., N hemisphere
- Kungia K.T.Fu 2 sp., SW China
- Meterostachys Nakai c. 1 sp., E Asia
- Orostachys Fisch. c. 5–15 sp, C-E Asia
- Sinocrassula A.Berger c. 3–7 sp., Himalaya
- Perrierosedum H.Ohba incertae sedis c. 1 sp., Madagascar
Umbiliceae tribe [Meisn.]
The second is the genus Umbilicus with about 13 species, distributed in the Mediterranean, Macaronesia, SW Asia, Arabia and north to east Africa.
These genera are among those that have been segregated from Sedum, including:
- Aizopsis Grulich
- Phedimus Raf. c. 18–20 sp., Asia, Europe
- Pseudosedum A.Berger c. 10–12 sp., C Asia
- Rhodiola L. c. 58–60 sp., Himalaya, Siberia, Europe, N America
- Umbilicus DC.
Petrosedum clade
- Petrosedum Grulich c. 23–26 sp. Euro-Mediterranean
Sempervivum/Jovibarba clade (Semperviveae tribe [Dumort.])
- Jovibarba Opiz c. 2 sp.
- Sempervivum L. c. 46 sp.
Aeonium clade (Aeonieae tribe) Thiede ined.
- Aeonium Webb & Berthel. 39 sp. Macaronesia, Morocco, E Africa
- Aichryson Webb & Berthel. 15 sp. Macaronesia
- Hypagophytum A.Berger 1 sp. Ethiopia
- Monanthes Haw. 10 sp. Macaronesia
- Sedum L. 8 sp. NW Africa
Sedeae Fr.">Elias Magnus Fries">Fr.
Leucosedum clade
Genera derived from European and Mediterranean Sedum subg. Gormania, with two western North American genera. This clade has the largest topological discordance between the phylogenies defined by ITS and plastid markers. The genera included are:- Rosularia Stapf c. 20 sp., E Europe, Himalaya, Altai
- Dudleya Britton & Rose N America
- Sedella Britton & Rose N America
- Afrovivella A.Berger
- Pistorinia DC. Mediterranean
- Prometheum H.Ohba c. 8 sp., N Greece, SW Asia
Acre clade
- Echeveria DC.
- Graptopetalum Rose
- Lenophyllum Rose c. 7 sp.
- Pachyphytum Link, Klotzsch & Otto
- Thompsonella Britton & Rose
- Villadia Rose
- Sedum L. c. 470 sp. N hemisphere, S. America, N Africa
Genera
Evolution and biogeography
There is no known fossil record of Crassulaceae. The Crassulaceae family evolved approximately 100 million years ago in southern Africa with the two most basal phylogenetic branches representing the predominantly southern African members. Divergence times are shown in Cladogram III. The family had a gradual evolution, with a basal split between Crassuloideae and the rest of the family at 82 mya, and Sempervivoideae splitting from Kalanchoideae at 71 mya. The Sempervivoideae subsequently dispersed north to the Mediterranean region, and from there to Eastern Europe and Asia, with multiple groups spreading over the three continents of the Northern Hemisphere. The Telephium clade splitting from the rest of the subfamily at 66 mya. This was followed by the Petrosedum and Aeonium clades at 56 mya and Sempervivum/Jovibarda at 52 mya. The remaining two clades, constituting Sedeae separating from each other at 48 mya. Two lineages from the European Crassulaceae eventually dispersed to North America and underwent subsequent diversification. The Aeonium clade dispersed from northern Africa to adjacent Macaronesia.Books
- ''
Articles
Websites
- , in Flora of China online vol. 8