Contribution to Egypt’s Flora: new records from Nile Islands, South Valley, Egypt
Author
Sheded, Mohamed G.
0000-0003-1107-9044
msgaber1960@yahoo.com
Author
Ayed, Fatma A. A.
0000-0002-9880-3527
fatma_adel@sci.aswu.edu.eg
Author
Radwan, Tarek A. A.
0000-0002-4278-4961
radwan_tarek@aswu.edu.eg
Author
Ahmed, Dalia A.
0000-0001-7115-9375
Botany and Microbiology Department, Faculty of Science, Tanta University, 31527, Tanta, Egypt
dalia.ahmed@science.tanta.edu.eg
text
Phytotaxa
2024
2024-07-16
660
1
22
34
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.660.1.2
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.660.1.2
1179-3163
13217982
Acanthospermum hispidum
DC.
in Prodr. 5: 522 (1836)
Synonym:
—
Acanthospermum humile
var.
hispidum
(DC.) Kuntze
in Revis.
Gen. Pl. 1: 303 (1891)
Voucher specimen:
—Deposited in
Aswan
with Acc. No.11819 and TANE with Acc. No. 14267.
Description:
—Annual herb, ±
60 cm
tall, with dichotomous branching; single main taproot supporting many fine lateral roots.
Stem
covered in bushy and tiny glandular hairs.
Leaves
opposite, elliptic, obovate, and sessile; lamina oval and attenuates into petiole in basal third, base clasping; blade
1.5–8 cm
long,
2–4 cm
wide, 3-veined from just above base, both sides of leaf covered with stiff hairs; margin toothed (serrated to subentire) in upper two-thirds; apex obtuse and mucronate.
Inflorescenses
briefly stalked, solitary capitulum, located at intersection of each dichotomous branching; capitulum greenish, subtended by 5 bracts forming a circle; bracts of the capitulum composed of 5 bracts embracing circle of 5–10 fertile, ligulate, female flowers; center of capitulum with tight clusters of few sterile, tubulate, bisexual flowers,small, yellow, oblong acute at apex, hispid-pilose on margin, membraneous; marginal flowers 5–8, ligule of corolla elliptical with 3 teeth at apex, sparsely hispid-pilose, ca.
1.5 mm
long, style lanceolate, obtuse. Disc flowers ca. 7, corolla hispid-pilose, ca.
1.5 mm
long, lobes fairly long, ovaries glandular; pales of receptacle membranous, lacerate and acuminate at apically.
Fruit
wedge-shaped achenes grouped into star-shaped clusters; achenes angular, cuneate, compressed, densely uncinate-hispid,
4–5 mm
long, with 2 more or less straight
3–5 mm
long prickles at apex (
Fig. 2
).
Habitat and human impacts on the recorded plant island:
—
Acanthospermum hispidum
was recorded in Kubbanyia islands. It merged in 1982 and split in 2003. Elkubania1 was originally two islands that were close to merging to
form one
island. The islands have elongated since 1982. A small island (Elkubania2) tends to merge with Elkubania at the upstream end (
Raslan & Salama 2015
). Cultivated fields, summer resorts, wadi and uninhabited sandy regions are the most abundant habitats of these isalnds. Recorded associated species are
Alhagi graecorum
Boiss.
,
Convolvulus arvensis
L.,
Lantana camara
L.,
Nidorella aegyptiaca
(L.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt,
Solanum nigrum
L., and
Tephrosia purpurea
(L.) Pers.
Human impacts on the island were represented by agricultural activities and tourism construction. The plant was recorded in cultivated fields, sandy plains, and wadi.
World native and introduced range:
—
Acanthospermum hispidum
is native to
Argentina
Northeast,
Argentina
Northwest,
Bolivia
,
Brazil
North,
Brazil
Northeast,
Brazil
South,
Brazil
Southeast,
Brazil
West-Central,
Colombia
,
Costa Rica
,
Cuba
,
Dominican Republic
,
El Salvador
, French Guiana,
Guatemala
,
Guyana
,
Haiti
,
Honduras
, Leeward Is.,
Netherlands Antilles
,
Nicaragua
,
Paraguay
,
Peru
,
Puerto Rico
,
Suriname
, Trinidad-Tobago,
Venezuela
, and Windward Is. (
POWO 2023
), but it has spread rapidly to North America, Africa (e.g.,
Cape Verde
,
Ethiopia
,
Kenya
,
Tanzania
,
Uganda
,
Sierra Leone
,
Angola
,
Botswana
,
South Africa
,
Madagascar
,
Mauritius
, and Reunion) (
Fig. 3
).