Gunnera is the only genus in the family Gunneraceae. The
APG II system of 2003 accepted this family and assigned it to the order Gunnerales in the clade
core eudicots. The family then consisted of one or two genera,
Gunnera and, optionally,
Myrothamnus, the latter optionally segregated as a separate family,
Myrothamnaceae. This represents a change from the
APG system of 1998, which accepted two separate families, unplaced as to order. The
APG III system and
APG IV system accept the family Gunneraceae, and places
Myrothamnus in Myrothamnaceae; both families are placed in the order Gunnerales in the core eudicots. The genus
Gunnera was named after the Norwegian botanist
Johann Ernst Gunnerus. At first it was assigned to the family
Haloragaceae, though that presented difficulties that led to the general recognition of the family Gunneraceae, as had been proposed about the beginning of the 20th century. In the meantime, in many publications it had been referred to as being in the Haloragaceae, variously misspelt (as for example "Halorrhagidaceae".) Such references still cause difficulties in consulting earlier works. However, currently
Gunnera is firmly assigned to the
monogeneric family Gunneraceae. The
type species of the genus is
Gunnera perpensa L.
Evolution Gunnera is thought to be a rather ancient group, with a well-documented fossil history due to the presence of fossilized
pollen spores, known by the
palynotaxon Tricolpites reticulatus. It is a
Gondwanan lineage, having originated in
South America during the
Cretaceous. The earliest fossilized pollen is known from the
Late Cretaceous (
Turonian) of Peru, about 90 million years ago, and within the following 10 million years,
Gunnera had achieved a worldwide distribution, with fossil pollen grains being found in areas where it is not found today, such as western
North America, mainland
Australia, and
Antarctica. Based on fossil pollen recovered from drilling cores,
Gunnera is also known to have inhabited the now-submerged islands of the
Ninetyeast Ridge during the
Paleocene, likely having dispersed there from either
Australasia or the then-emergent
Kerguelen Plateau islands. Due to the widespread distribution of
Gunnera during the Cretaceous, it was previously thought that the modern disjunct distribution of the genus was a relic of this period. However, phylogenetic analysis indicates that the majority of
Gunnera species, even those found on entirely different continents, diverged from each other during the
Cenozoic, indicating that the modern distribution of
Gunnera is a consequence of
long-distance dispersal from South America to other parts of the world, rather than relics of a former cosmopolitan distribution. The only species that diverged prior to the Cenozoic is
Gunnera herteri, described from Uruguay and distributed in Uruguay and southeastern
Brazil, which is thought to be the most ancient species of the genus, its lineage having diverged during the Late Cretaceous, roughly concurrent with the oldest
Gunnera fossil pollen from Peru. The persistence of the
Gunnera crown group since the Cretaceous makes it unique among flowering plants, and may have been facilitated by strong
niche conservatism,
dispersal ability, and being able to aggressively colonize disturbed land. ==Description==