A revision of the Adenophorus Group and other glandular-leaved species of Croton (Euphorbiaceae) from northern Madagascar and Mayotte, including three new species
Author
Kainulainen, Kent
Author
Ee, Benjamin van
Author
Razafindraibe, Hanta
Author
Berry, Paul E.
text
Candollea
2017
2017-09-27
72
2
371
402
journal article
20729
10.15553/c2017v722a15
3daa21e6-497a-466b-b4f6-ef0ae1dd0ba4
2235-3658
5722061
Croton bathianus
Leandri in Ann. Mus. Colon. Marseille, sér. 5, 7: 80. 1939
[as
bathiana
] (
Fig. 1D
,
2C
,
4
G-H, 7).
Lectotypus
(designated here):
MADAGASCAR
.
Prov. Mahajanga
:
Haut Bemarivo
,
X.1907
,
Perrier de la Bâthie
9545
(
P
[
P00301483]
!;
isolecto-:
P
[
P00127503
]!).
Syntypi
:
MADAGASCAR
.
Prov. Mahajanga
:
Maromandia
,
presqu’île Radama
,
13.X.1922
,
Decary
1133
(
P
[
P00389631
]!),
ibid. loc.,
11.X.1922
,
Decary
1174
(
P
[
P00301482
]!);
collines sèches du Haut Bemarivo
,
X.1906
,
Perrier de la Bâthie
9633
(
P
[
P00389630
]!).
Shrubs
or small
trees
2-4 m
tall, dichotomously branching, internodes sometimes so short as to give the appearance of whorled branches. Branches flattened on new growth but becoming terete with age, young shoots pale green and densely covered with a reddish, granulate, stellate indument, soon turning glabrous and matte pale gray. Stipules 4-20 ×
1.2-2 mm
, lanceolate, early caducous.
Leaves
opposite. Petioles 2-9(-43) cm, adaxially canaliculate, stellate, usually with a pair of subsessile, concave, discoid acropetiolar glands (
0.5-1 mm
diam.). Leaf blades chartaceous, subentire to shallowly undulate or denticulate, ovate, 5-16(-38) × 4-12(-30) cm, apex acuminate, base rounded to cordate; both sides with a persistent, scabrous stellate indument, green when fresh, drying matte brownish green; venation evident, with 6-11 pairs of brochidodromus, ± penninerved secondary veins (the lowermost pairs congested and appearing palmate), and cross-venulate tertiary venation; venation prominent abaxially, with conspicuous, stipitate, compressed-discoid glands in the axils of some of the secondary veins (
Fig. 1F
), rarely absent.
Inflorescences
terminal, raceme-like thryses
3-15 cm
long, with 1-3(-4) pistillate flowers near the base and numerous staminate flowers in the upper ½ to 2/3, axes stellate, flattened; bracts ovate to triangular, c.
0.7-2.3 mm
long, caducous.
Staminate flowers
with stellate, subglobose buds
2-2.6 mm
diam., pedicels elongating from bud to anthesis,
1-5 mm
long; sepals 5, pale green, shortly connate at base, lobes broadly triangular-ovate, 2-2.6 ×
1.3-3 mm
, apex acute, inflexed at anthesis, abaxially stellate-pubescent, adaxially sparsely pubescent, margins ciliate; petals 5, greenish white, elliptic to spatulate, 2-3 ×
0.8-1.3 mm
, recurved at anthesis, abaxially stellate and papillose, adaxially glabrous, margins densely ciliate; disc glands 5, opposite the sepals, sessile, triangular, truncate, c. 0.6 ×
0.6 mm
; stamens 12-17, white, filaments
1.5-2.7 mm
long, glabrous, anthers broadly elliptic, 0.7-1 ×
0.6-0.9 mm
; receptacle pilose.
Pistillate flowers
with stellate-pubescent ellipsoid buds c.
2 mm
diam., pedicels
1-5 mm
long; sepals 5, elliptic-ovate, spreading at anthesis, 3-4.5 ×
1.7-2 mm
, apex acute, shortly connate at base, abaxially and adaxially stellatepubescent, persistent in fruit; petals, 3-3.5 ×
1 mm
, spatulate, abaxially stellate-pubescent and papillose, adaxially glabrous, margin ciliate; disc glands 5, opposite the sepals, sessile, ellipsoidal, 0.5 ×
0.7 mm
, yellow; ovary densely covered by ferrugineous to dark brown, stellate trichomes, globoid-ellipsoid,
2-3 mm
diam., styles 3, 2-
2.5 mm
long, each branch flattened and 3-4 times bifurcate, often with the first bifurcation congested and fused to appear 4 furcate, spreading, recurved at the apices, abaxially stellate-pubescent, adaxially glabrous, persistent.
Capsules
broadly globoid, 4.5-5.6 ×
6.5-7.5 mm
, smooth, pale brown, covered with dark brown stellate trichomes (
Fig. 4G
), exocarp not separating, endocarp woody,
0.5-0.7 mm
thick; columella 3.0-
4.5 mm
long, cornute, capitate, the angles fimbriate.
Seeds
± compressed-ellipsoid, 3.3-4 × 2.5-3 ×
2-2.5 mm
(
Fig. 4H
); testa glossy, verrucose, brown; caruncle reniform, 0.4-0.7 ×
0.7-1.3 mm
.
Fig. 8.
Croton loucoubensis
Baill.
A.
Habit
, growing in secondary vegetation in Mahajanga Province, S of Ankaromyhely, 111 km N of Antsohihy along RN 6;
B.
Fimbriate stipules;
C.
Inflorescence with pistillate flowers; note the persistent bracts;
D.
Pistillate flowers, with patent, multiply bifurcating stigmas;
E
.
Underside of a leaf showing the pubescent,stipitate acropetiolar glands, the palmate venation of the first pairs of secondary veins, and a pair of laminar glands. [
A-D:
Gillespie et al. 10646
;
E
:
Antilahimena 154
] [Photos:
A
, C-D:
G
. Levin;
E
:
P. Antilahimena]
Phenology. –
Specimens in flower have been collected in August, October, November, February and March and in fruit in March and November.
Distribution, habitat and ecology. –
Croton bathianus
inhabits remnants of semi-deciduous and semi-evergreen forests in
Antsiranana
and
Mahajanga
Provinces, from near sea level to roughly
400 m
elevation (
Fig. 2C
). It is sometimes cultivated in hedgerows, either to delimit parcels of land or as a shade plant, and it is sometimes coppiced and then produces gigantic leaves (see the upper extremes of leaf dimensions above).
Conservation assessment. –
Croton bathianus
was first described from three collections from the hills in the “haute Bemarivo” of
Mahajanga Province
in the
XXth
century that probably represent three different locations. We found at least six more locations of this species in semi-deciduous to semievergreen forests in
Antsiranana
and
Mahajanga
Provinces in the last two decades. Even if this species has a substantial geographical range, the populations are severly fragmented. We therefore consider this species as “Near Threathened” [NT] according the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria (
IUCN, 2012
).
Vernacular names. –
“Hazomafaitra”
(van Ee et al. 2290).
Notes. –
Croton bathianus
was named in honor of J.M.H.A. Perrier de la Bâthie (1873-1958), who collected the
type
and collected extensively throughout
Madagascar
.
This species can be distinguished by the rusty-reddish, granulate pubescence on young shoots (
Fig. 7E
), with the stems soon turning glabrous, dull gray, and striate. The glands in the vein junctions on the lower side of the leaves can be among the largest and most conspicuous found on any
Croton
species.
Compared to the other species of the Adenophorus Group from northern
Madagascar
,
C. bathianus
has more compact inflorescences, with the pistillate flowers in particular often being nearly sessile, as well as having well-developed petals (
Fig. 7
G-H). Like
C. adenophorus
,
this species is sometimes cultivated, and it is used for hedgerows (e.g.,
van Ee et al. 2406
). Coppiced plants have been observed to grow enormous leaves, to c. 38 ×
30 cm
(
Fig. 7
A-B).
LEANDRI (1939)
indicates in his protologue that the diagnosis of the species was done based on characters noted by Perrier de la Bâthie in living specimens. The
lectotype
selected above includes a lengthy description in the hand of Perrier de la Bâthie, with a note on the top saying “sur le frais” (from fresh material).
RADCLIFFE-SMITH (2016)
recognized three additional varieties under
Croton bathianus
. We consider
C. bathianus
var.
ihosianus
Radcl.
-Sm. to be a synonym of
C. ihosianus
Leandri
,
C. bathianus
var.
toliarae
Radcl.
-Sm. to be a synonym of
C. crocodilorum
Leandri
, and
C. bathianus
var.
ambatondrazakae
Radcl.
-Sm. to be a synonym of
C. scoriarum
Leandri.
Additional
specimens
examined.
–
MADAGASCAR
.
Prov. Antsiranana
:
Diana Reg.
,
RN 6
,
43 km N of Ambanja
,
13°30’33”S
48°41’51”E
,
20 m
,
2.XI.2009
,
van Ee et al.
1138
(
MICH
);
ibid loc.
,
van Ee et al.
1139
(
MICH
);
ibid loc.
,
van Ee et al.
1140
(
MICH
);
RN 6
,
just north of the turnoff to Belinta
,
13°30’47”S
48°41’44”E
,
24 m
,
27.II.2016
,
van Ee et al.
2289
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
ibid loc.
,
van Ee et al.
2290
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
RN 6 E of Ampampamena
,
13°30’46”S
48°40’30”E
,
34 m
,
27.II.2016
,
van Ee et al.
2296
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
along RN 6
, at
village of Ambatoharanana
,
13°30’46”S
48°41’44”E
,
33 m
,
8.III.2016
,
van Ee et al.
2383
(
MICH
,
TAN
).
Prov. Mahajanga
:
Sofia Reg.
,
Analalava Distr
.,
Route Nationale 6
,
gorge off to the E of highway between PK 359 and 360
,
14°23’26”S
48°01’14”E
,
30 m
,
22.X.2009
,
Van Ee et al.
1043
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
RN 6
,
between PK 388 and 389
,
14°10’20”S
48°05’32”E
,
20 m
,
22.X.2009
,
Van Ee et al.
1048
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
RN 6
approximately
18 km
N of Port Berge
(
Boriziny
),
15°27’47”S
,
47°35’57”E
,
97 m
,
26.II.2016
,
Van Ee et al.
2282
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
RN 6
,
between PK 170 and 171
,
north of Port Berger
,
15°30’07”S
47°34’58”E
,
115 m
,
9.III.2016
,
van Ee et al.
2406
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
track heading into Bongolava Hills to west of RN6
,
15°33’10”S
47°33’31”E
,
79 m
,
10.III.2016
,
van Ee et al.
2408
(
MICH
,
TAN
);
ibid loc.
,
van Ee et al.
2409
(
MICH
,
TAN
).