Rubi Capenses: a further contribution to the knowledge of the genus Rubus (Rosaceae) in South Africa
Author
Beek, Abraham Van De
text
Phytotaxa
2021
2021-08-19
515
1
1
71
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.515.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.515.1.1
1179-3163
8061143
b.
Rubus borbonicus
Persoon (1806: 51)
Homotypic synonym
:—
Rubus tomentosus
Bory de Saint-Vincent (1804: 375)
, non
Borkhausen (1794: 2)
,
nom. illegit.
Lectotype
(designated here):—
RÉUNION
. ‘
Rubus borbonicus Pers. Bourbon. Legit
Bory’ (
P02579816
[https://science.mnhn.fr/institution/ mnhn/collection/p/item/p02579816])
.
Notes:
—
Persoon (1806)
, in the protologue of
R. borbonicus
, explicitly refers to
R. tomentosus
Bory
as identical and the details of the description are borrowed from Bory’s publication. So
R. borbonicus
is a homotypic synonym of the illegitimate
R. tomentosus
Bory.
There are
two specimens
collected by Bory in P. On the label of the first one is written: ‘
Rubus tomentosus
/ nob. var./ en arivant a la/ plaine des cafres/ a Bourbon’ (P02520892). It could not be selected as
type
because of the addition ‘var.’; the combination ‘nob.’ and ‘var.’ suggests that Bory already acknowledged a species
R. tomentosus
and considered this plant as a variety. It has stronger curved prickles, narrow leaves, an open inflorescence, shorter ovate sepals, but on the other hand very clearly the conspicuous serrature of
R. borbonicus
. It may be a
form from
a sunny place.
The other sample collected by Bory consists of some broken off leaflets and a piece of an inflorescence stem (P02579816). Richard wrote on the label ‘
Rubus borbonicus Pers. Bourbon. Legit
Bory’. Though it is not written by Bory, it is clear that the specimen was collected by him, and because no other specimen is available it was selected as the
lectotype
.
The non-flowering branch (either a very young primocane or a secondary shoot) of the
type
of
R. apetalus
is not very characteristic. The inflorescence of the
type
is more characteristic and there is no reason to not identify
R. borbonicus
with it. Earlier authors (except
Gustafsson 1934
) drew the same conclusion. Consequently
R. borbonicus
is a later synonym of
R. apetalus
.