Additions to the vascular flora of the Tyumen region, Western Siberia
Author
Kapitonova, Olga A.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6618-7029
Tobolsk complex scientific station of the Ural branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 626152, Russia, Tyumen Region, Tobolsk, 15 Academic Yu. Osipov St
kapoa.tkns@gmail.com
text
Acta Biologica Sibirica
2020
2020-10-05
6
339
355
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/abs.6.e52696
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/abs.6.e52696
2412-1908-6-339
9FF763A6E92E47F5A081FB6648E1AE7A
BF0606D3FEDD5165BD1AD6C2DD4921AE
Utricularia australis R. Br.
Material examined.
RUSSIA
,
Tyumen
Reg. -
Tobolsk distr.
• neighbourhood of
Suzgun station
;
58.2228°N
,
68.1915°E
; left coast of the floodplain of the
Irtysh River
, in a lake with shallow water;
21 Jul. 2018
;
V.I. Kapitonov
leg. •
400 m
S of village Bajgara;
58.0236°N
,
68.8440°E
; lake in the floodplain of the
Irtysh River
with shallow water on the east shore;
3 Jul. 2019
. •
300 m
S of village Bajgara;
58.0246°N
,
68.8442°E
; lake at the right bank of the
Irtysh River
, shallow water off the shore;
3 Jul. 2019
(Fig.
1
)
.
Note.
There are three specimens with flowers. This species differs well from its closely related
Utricularia vulgaris
L. based on the following characters: corolla with lower lip flat and spreading margins, palate without hairs (
Taylor 1989
) and some additional characters such as, the long straight pedicels, slightly deflected from the peduncle, being three or more times longer than the bracts, free anthers not intergrown with each other, and the curved S-shaped stem (
Tzvelev 2000
;
Lisitsyna et al. 2009
) (Fig.
3
). This species is characterized by some environmental preferences. So, it was revealed that
U. australis
grows in warm (~ 26 °C), alkaline (pH 8.3 median value) and shallow (<20 cm) waters (
Ceschin et al. 2020
). The examined species grows in the European part of Russia (
Tzvelev 2000
;
Lisitsyna et al. 2009
), including those specimens found in the southern regions (Astrakhan region) (
Kapitonova et al. 2011
) and in the Vyatka-Kama Cis-Urals (
Kapitonova 2015
). For Western Siberia, the species was not previously recorded (
Lisitsyna and Papchenkov 2000
;
Doron'kin 2012
).
Figure 3.
Utricularia australis
R. Br. Tobolsk distr., 400 m S of village Bajgara, lake in the floodplain of the Irtysh River, 3 Jul. 2019. Photo by author.