The genus Begonia (Begoniaceae) in Peru
Author
Moonlight, Peter. W.
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh, EH 3 5 LR, Scotland, UK. & Botany Department, School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
moonligp@tcd.ie
Author
Jara-Muñoz, Orlando A.
Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá D. C., Colombia.
oajaram@unal.edu.co
Author
Purvis, David A.
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh, EH 3 5 LR, Scotland, UK.
dpurvis@rbge.org.uk
Author
Delves, Jay
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh, EH 3 5 LR, Scotland, UK.
j.delves@westernsydney.edu.au
Author
Allen, Josh P.
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh, EH 3 5 LR, Scotland, UK.
myrmeciaman@gmail.com
Author
Reynel, Carlos
Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad Nacional Agraria-La Molina, Lima 12, Peru.
reynel@lamolina.edu.pe
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2023
2023-07-18
881
1
334
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2023.881.2175
journal article
287311
https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2023.881.2175
225ee515-e526-4cc0-b86b-85e8f2e4c83a
2118-9773
8178280
51.
Begonia huancabambae
Moonlight
sp. nov.
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77323295-1
Figs 65D
,
68
Begonia velata
auct. non L.B.Sm. & B.G.Schub.:
Tebbitt,
Edinburgh
Journal of Botany
74 (2): 226 (
Tebbitt 2017
)
.
Begonia velata
auct. non L.B.Sm & B.G.Schub.: Moonlight
et al.
,
Taxon
67 (2): 295 (
Moonlight
et al.
2018
).
Diagnosis
Most similar to
B. acerifolia
but differs in having a ring of trichomes at the leaf apex (vs glabrous or with scattered hairs at the leaf apex); and in having sub-symmetrical leaves that are orbicular in outline (vs asymmetrical with an ovate outline).
Etymology
Named for the Huancabamba depression, which is where the species is found. The area is likely a centre of origin of Andean begonias.
Type
PERU
–
Cajamarca Region
:
Prov. Cotumazá
•
Bosque Cachil
; [
6°23′ S
,
79°17′ W
];
2500 m
a.s.l.
;
16 Jun. 1994
;
A. Ságastegui A.
&
S. Leiva G.
15307
;
holotype
:
US
[
US0051126
];
isotype
:
MO
[
MO-1643554
].
Selected specimens examined
PERU
–
Piura Region
:
Prov. Morropón
•
Dist. Chalaco
,
cima del cerro Mijal
; [
5°05′ S
,
79°45′ W
];
3100 m
a.s.l.
;
10 May 2003
;
I. Sánchez V.
,
R. Cruz C.
&
E. Peña C.
11952
;
CPUN
.
–
Prov. Huancabamba
•
Canchaque-Minas Turmalina
; [
5°03′ S
,
79°49′ W
];
2200 m
a.s.l.
;
23 Jul. 1975
;
A. Ságastegui A.
,
J. Cabanillas S.
&
O. Dios C.
8279
;
HUT
,
MO
[
MO-2180420
],
US
[
US00222067
]
•
Dist. Canchaque
,
Chorro Blanco
; [
5°20′ S
,
79°36′ W
];
1500–1900 m
a.s.l.
;
17 Apr. 1987
;
C. Díaz
&
S. Baldeón M.
2457
;
MO
[
MO-1643556
],
USM
•
Above Palambla
;
5°22′ S
,
79°35′ W
;
1711–2300 m
a.s.l.
;
27 May 2014
;
M.C. Tebbitt
&
A. Daza
838
;
MOL
•
Above Canchanque on the Huancabamba pass
;
5°22′35″ S
,
79°34′59″ W
;
1758 m
a.s.l.
;
27 Jan. 2016
;
P.W. Moonlight
&
A. Daza
107
;
E
[
E00885597
],
MO
[
MO-3254800
],
MOL
•
ca
70 km
east of Olmos
; [
5°51′ S
,
79°31′ W
];
2035 m
a.s.l.
;
H. Ellenberg
3705
;
US
[
US00222069
];
–
Cajamarca Region
:
Prov. Cotumazá
•
ca
3 km
(por aire) ENE Monteseco
; [
6°51′ S
,
79°06′ W
];
1800 m
a.s.l.
;
9 May 1987
;
J. Santisteban C.
&
J. Guevara B.
34
;
F
,
HUT
,
MO
[
MO-1643550
],
NY
,
US
[
US00222346
].
Description
Caulescent, rhizomatous herb, to
200 cm
high.
Rhizome
ellipsoid, 5–20 ×
0.75–2.5 cm
, unbranched, with> 1 growing point per branch.
Stem
erect, unbranched; internodes to
19 cm
long, to
8 mm
thick, succulent, pale red, glabrous.
Stipules
persistent on the rhizome, tardily deciduous on the stem, ovate, 5–18 ×
5–9 mm
, apex acuminate, opaque, pale green, glabrous, margin entire, aciliate.
Leaves
1–5 per stem, alternate, basifixed; petiole
3–25 cm
long, pale green to red, glabrous but with a ring of squamous hairs at the apex of the petiole; blade subsymmetric, orbicular in outline, to 25 ×
32 cm
, succulent, apex acuminate, base cordate, basal lobes not overlapping, sinus to
8.5 mm
deep, margin with 4 or 6 triangular lobes around the lamina, serrulate to serrate, ciliate, upper surface green, pilose, lower surface pale, flushed red between the major veins, glabrous, sparsely to densely pilose on the veins, veins palmate but with one primary vein, 6–8 veined from the base, with 1–3 secondary veins on the larger side, 1–3 secondary veins on the smaller side.
Inflorescences
1–3 per stem, bisexual, axillary, erect, cymose, with up to 3 branches, bearing up to 8 staminate flowers and 8 pistillate flowers, protandrous; peduncle to
40 cm
long, green flushed red, glabrous, bracts deciduous, ovate, 7–14 ×
4–7 mm
, opaque, colour unknown, glabrous, apex obtuse, margin entire, aciliate.
Staminate flowers
: pedicels to
65 mm
long, glabrous; tepals 4, spreading, outer 2 obovate to broadly obovate, 15–25 ×
12–20 mm
, apex rounded, white, sometimes flushed green or pink on the outside, glabrous, margin entire, aciliate, inner 2 obovate, 11–24 ×
5–17 mm
, apex rounded, white, sometimes flushed green or pink on the outside, glabrous, margin entire, aciliate; stamens 50–75, spreading, yellow, filaments
2.5–5 mm
long, fused at the base, anthers broadly obovoid, 1–1.5 ×
0.75–1 mm
, dehiscing via lateral slits, connectives not extending, symmetrically basifixed.
Pistillate flowers
: pedicels to
31 mm
long; bracteoles absent; tepals 5, subequal, deciduous in fruit, spreading, obovate, 5–12 ×
4–12 mm
, apex rounded, white, sometimes flushed pink or green outside, glabrous, margin entire, aciliate; ovary body ovoid, 4.5–10 ×
3–6 mm
, pale green flushed pink, glabrous, unequally 3-winged, the largest triangular 7–16 ×
5–11 mm
, the smallest rib-like, to
1 mm
wide; 3-locular, placentae branches divided, bearing ovules on both surfaces; styles 3, yellow, fused at the base,
3–6 mm
long, once-divided, stigmatic papillae in a spirally twisted band.
Fruiting pedicel
to
35 mm
long.
Fruit body
ovate, to 15 ×
10 mm
, drying brown, the wings same shape as in ovary, the largest expanding to 16 ×
21 mm
, the smallest expanding to
2 mm
wide.
Fig. 68.
Begonia huancabambae
Moonlight
sp. nov.
A
. Habit including inset of upper leaf indumentum.
B
. Fruit, side view, side view. Illustration by Anna Dorward from
A. Ságastegui A.& S. Leiva G. 15307
(US).
Proposed conservation assessment
Known from three fragments of highly threatened northwest Peruvian relict montane forest on the western slopes of the Andes. The most distant sites are approximately
220 km
apart and none are protected. Given the species low EOO (ca
1200 km
2
), its few known localities and fragmented distribution, and the threats to its habitat, we assess
B. huancabambae
sp. nov.
as Endangered (EN B1ab(iii)).
Notes
The
holotype
of
B. huancabambae
sp. nov.
has two staminate flowers with the normal four tepals and ca 75 stamens and a third, aberrant flower with ca 6 flowers and> 100 stamens. The aberrant flower is excluded from our description.
Tebbitt (2017)
published an emended description of
B. velata
based upon living plants collected at the
type
locality (
M.C. Tebbitt & A. Daza 838
). These specimens represent a species superficially similar to the
type
collection of
B. velata
but differing in several key characters. For example, Tebbitt’s collection is rhizomatous (vs tuberous, though this was not known at the time); it has a ring of hairs at the apex of the petiole and scattered, simple hairs across the upper and lower surface of the leaf (vs glabrous petiole and leaves); it has large, persistent stipules (vs inconspicuous and deciduous); it has small (up to 16 ×
10 mm
), green bracts that do not cover the inflorescence (vs large, up to 28 ×
22 mm
, white flushed pink bracts, frequently covering the developing inflorescence). Tebbitt’s collection instead represented an undescribed species, which we describe herein as
B. huancabambae
sp. nov.
Moonlight
et al.
(2018)
also published a sequence made from a plant collected the
type
locality of
B. velata
and matching Tebbitt’s description of
B. velata
. The sequence data they provided in
Moonlight
et al.
(2018)
is instead the newly described
B. huancabambae
.
Tebbitt (2017)
discussed that his concept of
B. velata
had a possible hybrid origin from
B. ludwigii
and
B. acerifolia
because of unpublished sequence data (later published in
Moonlight
et al.
2018
) and because both species have a ring of hairs around the petiole apex. This speculation is reasonable but should now be applied to
B. huancabambae
sp. nov.
Identification notes
Superficially similar to
B. acerifolia
but differing in the outline of its leaves, which are more or less symmetrical with an orbicular outline (vs asymmetrical with an ovate outline). It also has a ring of small trichomes around the apex of its petiole, which is absent in
B. acerifolia
. It is also similar to
B. velata
but has an above-ground rhizome rather than a subterraneous tuber.
Distribution and ecology
Endemic to
Peru
and known from
Piura
and
Cajamarca
Regions (
Fig. 65D
). Found in northwest Peruvian montane forests at an elevation of
1800–3100 m
a.s.l.