BellotSidonieRennerSusanne S.The systematics of the worldwide endoparasite family Apodanthaceae (Cucurbitales), with a key, a map, and color photos of most speciesPhytoKeys3042014201436415710.3897/phytokeys.36.7385 Pilostyles coccoidea http://species-id.net/wiki/Pilostyles_coccoidea K.R.Thiele, Nuytsia 18: 273–284. 2008.Type.

Australia, Western Australia, Waddi Road, 30°33'26"S, 115°28'10"E, 7 Mar. 2008, parasitic on Jacksonia, K.R. Thiele 3495 (PERTH 07692447).

Note.

Tepals pale orange to brown, in 2 whorls, flowers <3 mm in diameter. Growing in stems of Jacksonia in Western Australia (Figs 2 and 3, see Thiele et al. 2008 for pictures of flowers).

Geographic distribution of Apodanthaceae based on label information from 785 herbarium collections.

Phylogenetic relationships among the hosts of Apodanthaceae (legume relationships from Wojciechowski et al. 2006) and among the species of Apodanthaceae (from Bellot and Renner in review). Identical colors link parasite species and their host(s) and are also used in Figure 2. Dashed lines represent associations with rarely reported hosts; hosts in bold are the most common ones.

WojciechowskiMFMahnJJonesB (2006) Fabaceae legumes. Version 14 June 2006. http://tolweb.org/Fabaceae/21093/2006.06.14in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/ [accessed 02.2014]BellotSRennerSS (in review) Exploring new dating approaches for parasites: the worldwide Apodanthaceae (Cucurbitales) as an example. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.ThieleKRWylieSJMaccaroneLHollickPMcCombJA (2008) Pilostyles coccoidea (Apodanthaceae), a new species from Western Australia described from morphological and molecular evidence.Nuytsia 18: 273-284.