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Sabulina basaltica and Sabulina sororia (Caryophyllaceae) are described as new species endemic to Washington State, U.S.A. Sabulina basaltica is restricted to high-elevation, basalt rocks in the northeastern Olympic Mountains, and Sabulina sororia to high-elevation, dunite rocks of the Twin Sisters Range in the North Cascade Mountains. Both were previously confused with Sabulina rossii (formerly called Arenaria rossii or Minuartia rossii). Their recognition as distinct species is supported by morphological and molecular characters and disjunct geographic distributions. Both are illustrated, mapped and compared to related species. We also present a molecular phylogeny of Sabulina based on nuclear ITS and plastid trnQ-rps16 DNA with increased sampling of North American taxa. The phylogeny resolves a single clade containing all glabrous, perennial, North American Sabulina taxa including Sabulina rossii and both of the new species.
Washington, new species, SabulinaSabulinaPlantae, Botany, Caryophyllaceae, Minuartia, Caryophyllales, Tracheophyta, Magnoliopsida, Arenaria, Twin Sisters, QK1-989, Sabulina, endemic, Olympic Mountains, Plantae, Research Article
Washington, new species, SabulinaSabulinaPlantae, Botany, Caryophyllaceae, Minuartia, Caryophyllales, Tracheophyta, Magnoliopsida, Arenaria, Twin Sisters, QK1-989, Sabulina, endemic, Olympic Mountains, Plantae, Research Article
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