Libertia
Libertia is a genus of monocotyledenous plants in the family Iridaceae, first described as a genus in 1824. It is native to South America, Australia, New Guinea, and New Zealand. Seven species are endemic to New Zealand.
Libertia is made up of herbaceous or evergreen perennials growing from short rhizomes, with simple, linear or narrowly lanceolate basal leaves which are often green but may be red, orange, or yellow under direct sunlight. The showy white or blue trimerous flowers are open in spring and are followed by capsules opening by three valves which contain the numerous seeds.
The genus was named after the Belgian botanist Marie-Anne Libert .
The species Libertia chilensis has gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit.
; Species
- Libertia chilensis Gunckel - central + southern Chile, southern Argentina, Juan Fernández Islands
- Libertia colombiana R.C.Foster - Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia
- Libertia cranwelliae Blanchon, B.G.Murray & Braggins - North Island of New Zealand
- Libertia edgariae Blanchon, B.G.Murray & Braggins - North Island of New Zealand
- Libertia falcata Ravenna - Los Lagos region of Chile
- Libertia flaccidifolia Blanchon & J.S.Weaver - North Island of New Zealand
- Libertia grandiflora Sweet - North + South Islands of New Zealand
- Libertia insignis Ravenna - Los Lagos region of Chile
- Libertia ixioides Spreng. - North + South Islands of New Zealand
- Libertia mooreae Blanchon, B.G.Murray & Braggins - North + South Islands of New Zealand
- Libertia paniculata Spreng. - eastern Australia - Branching Grass Flag
- Libertia peregrinans Cockayne & Allan - North + South + Chatham Islands of New Zealand
- Libertia pulchella Spreng. - New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, North + South Islands of New Zealand, New Guinea
- Libertia sessiliflora Skottsb. - central Chile
- Libertia tricocca Phil. - central + southern Chile
- Libertia umbellata Ravenna - Los Lagos region of Chile
Numerous names have been coined using the name Libertia, referring to species that are now regarded as better suited to other genera .
Cytology
Libertia has a high rate of polyploidy, with 9/11 of assessed species confirmed as polyploid and only 2 confirmed as diploid. This is not unprecedented, with polyploidy being a common feature in the tribe Sisyrinchieae. The uniform base number of x=19 is, however, defining within the tribe. This base number is not found elsewhere in the tribe and only Diplarrhena and Solenomelus have uniform base numbers intragenerically.All New Zealand endemic species of Libertia are hexaploid or dodecaploid, while these levels of ploidy have not been found outside New Zealand. Polyploidy is more prevalent in New Zealand species across all botanical taxa and this has been attributed as a relic of glacial refugia during glacial maximums.
Distribution | Species | Ploidy Level | Chromosomal Count | Contention |
South American | L. chilensis | 4x | 76 | Due to numerous issues with this study, authors found the sample, identified as Libertia ixioides but collected from Chile, to have 72 chromosomes present. This was most likely a misidentification of Libertia chilensis, with a further error in counting. Samples from the Juan Fernandez Islands were found to have 114 chromosomes, in comparison to the 76 found on the mainland. |
South American | L. colombiana | No data available. | No data available. | |
New Zealand endemic | L. cranwelliae | 12x | 228 | |
New Zealand endemic | L. edgariae | 6x | 114 | |
South American | L. falcata | No data available. | No data available. | |
New Zealand endemic | L. flaccidifolia | 12x | 228 | |
New Zealand endemic | L. grandiflora | 6x | 114 | The 228/230 chromosome specimen was likely Libertia flaccidifolia, before the 2009 naming by Blanchon and Weaver. |
South American | L. insignis | No data available. | No data available. | |
New Zealand endemic | L. ixioides | 12x | 228 | Due to the difficulty in counting chromosomes, authors found between 220-230 chromosomes in different counts, with 228 being the average count. |
New Zealand endemic | L. mooreae | 6x | 114 | |
Australian | L. paniculata | 4x | 76 | |
New Zealand endemic | L. peregrinans | 6x | 114 | |
Australasia-New Zealand | L. pulchella | 2x | 38 | |
South American | L. sessiliflora | 2x | 38 | |
South American | L. tricocca | No data available. | No data available. | |
South American | L. umbellata | No data available. | No data available. |