Australian Systematic Botany
Volume 35 Number 3 2022
We analyse the terrestrial biogeographical regions of the world and how they have been classified in kingdoms and subkingdoms. After a brief historical analysis, we characterise the kingdoms, subkingdoms, regions, subregions, and transition zones and provide lists of the names that have been given to them. This biogeographic regionalisation is of interest to systematists, biogeographers and other biologists.
SB22002 Abstract | SB22002 Full Text | SB22002PDF (16.2 MB) | SB22002Corrigendum (16.2 MB) Open Access Article
SB21030Morphological and molecular evidence refute a broad circumscription for Pultenaea glabra (Fabaceae: Mirbelieae), with implications for taxonomy, biogeography, and conservation
The threatened plant Pultenaea glabra is actually a complex of eight species, six of which are new to science. Pultenaea glabra is less common than previously thought, and five of the six new species are also rare and likely threatened, some critically so. This study has significant implications for the conservation of unique flora of the upper Blue Mountains and surrounding country.
SB21030 Abstract | SB21030 Full Text | SB21030PDF (49.7 MB) | SB21030Corrigendum (49.7 MB) | SB21030Supplementary Material (197 KB) Open Access Article