Shortia Explained

Shortia is a small genus of subshrubs or perennial herbs in the family Diapensiaceae. There are five species, four in Asia and one in the Appalachian Mountains of eastern North America.[1] They are found in mountainous areas, generally from 1000m–2000mm (3,000feet–7,000feetm) elevation.[2] All have restricted ranges and are generally considered rare. Three of the species, S. galacifolia, S. soldanelloides, and S. uniflora are often cultivated. The genus was by Asa Gray named after botanist Charles Wilkins Short. In Gray's diary entry for April 8, 1839, he named the genus after Charles Wilkins Short because the plant was native to America in a region close to where Short lived, which was Kentucky. Short and Gray never met but they corresponded with one another frequently. Short never saw a live nor dried specimen of his namesake genus.[3] [4]

Species

Image Name Distribution
Shortia exappendiculata Hayata Taiwan
Shortia galacifolia Torr. and Gray southeastern United States, North and South Carolina and Georgia
Shortia sinensis Hemsley China, mountains of southeast Yunnan
Shortia soldanelloides (Siebold & Zuccarini) Makino Japan, southern Hokkaido through Honshu and Kyushu to Yakushima
Shortia uniflora (Maximowicz) Maximowicz Japan, northern Honshu

Notes and References

  1. Phylogeny of Diapensiaceae based on molecular data and morphology. Rönblom, K. . A.A. Anderberg . amp . Systematic Botany. 27. 2. 383–395. 2002. 10.1043/0363-6445-27.2.383. 2024-07-30 .
  2. Web site: A Summary of the genus Shortia (Diapensiaceae). Barnes, P..
  3. Web site: Shortia galacifolia. Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center. January 1, 2015.
  4. Jenkins. Charles F.. Asa Gray and his Quest for Shortia galacifolia. Arnoldia. 2. 3 & 4. 13–28. 1942. 10.5962/p.249222 . 42953488.