"Gesneriaceae" is a
conserved name (
nom. cons.), meaning that although alternative, less well used names for the family were published earlier, the
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants specifies this as the name to be used. It was published by
Louis Claude Richard and
Antoine Laurent de Jussieu in 1816. In 1829,
Barthélemy Dumortier divided the family into two tribes, based on the number of stamens. However, the only genus he placed in his two-stamen tribe,
Columellia, is now placed in the separate family
Columelliaceae. Dumortier's publication has been treated as the first for the family by some sources. Botanists who have made significant contributions to the systematics of the family are
George Bentham,
Robert Brown,
B.L. Burtt,
C.B. Clarke,
Olive Mary Hilliard,
Joseph Dalton Hooker,
William Jackson Hooker,
Karl Fritsch,
Elmer Drew Merrill,
Harold E. Moore Jr.,
John L. Clark,
Conrad Vernon Morton,
Henry Nicholas Ridley,
Laurence Skog,
W.T. Wang,
Anton Weber, and
Hans Wiehler. The
Gesneriad Society is an international horticultural society devoted to the promotion, cultivation, and study of Gesneriaceae.
Phylogeny From about 1997 onwards,
molecular phylogenetic studies led to extensive changes in the classification of the family Gesneriaceae and its genera, many of which have been
re-circumscribed or
synonymized. New species are still being discovered, particularly in Asia, and may further change generic boundaries. A consensus phylogeny used to build classifications of the family in 2013 and 2020 is shown below (to the level of tribes). The family
Calceolariaceae is shown as the sister to Gesneriaceae. }} A
phylogenomic study published in 2021 which used 418 nuclear genes confirmed the
monophyly of all the subfamilies and tribes. It resolved
Peltanthera as sister to a clade of Calceolariaceae and Gesneriaceae. Within the Gesnerioideae, Napeantheae rather than Titanotricheae was found to be sister to the remaining tribes. The position of Titanotricheae varied according to the method used to build the cladogram, which the authors suggested was due to
incomplete lineage sorting following rapid divergence. The phylogenetic position of
Titanotrichum remains unsettled. The genus
Sanango has not always been included in Gesneriaceae. However, molecular phylogenetic studies published up to and including 2021 suggest that it does belong in the family as the most basal member, and it is placed in its own subfamily. The studies also show the genus
Peltanthera to be outside the family, although some sources still place it within the Gesneriaceae. The genus
Rehmannia has also sometimes been included in the family but is now referred to the family
Orobanchaceae. No single morphological feature absolutely divides two main subfamilies (i.e. forms a uniform
synapomorphy). Gesnerioideae seedlings have normal
cotyledons of the same size and shape (isocotylous). The cotyledons of Didymocarpoideae are usually, but not always, eventually different in size and shape (anisocotylous). One cotyledon ceases to grow and withers away, while the other continues to grow, and may even form a very large leaf that is the only one the plant has (
Monophyllaea, some
Streptocarpus). Gesnerioideae flowers usually have four fertile
stamens, rarely two or five. Didymocarpoideae flowers usually have two fertile stamens, less often four, rarely one or five.
Subfamilies and genera '' On the basis of
molecular phylogenetic, morphological and biogeographical differences, the family has been divided into two major subfamilies: subfamily
Didymocarpoideae (formerly Cyrtandroideae) with all but one species from the
Old World, and subfamily
Gesnerioideae native from the Americas west through the Pacific to Australia and southeastern China. The genus
Sanango is placed in its own subfamily, Sanangoideae. The two main subfamilies are further divided into tribes and subtribes. Genera accepted by
Plants of the World Online (PoWO) are listed below, together with their placement in a subfamily and tribe by Weber
et al. (2020). ==Ecology==