Reinstatement of Aloe mutans (Asphodelaceae subfam. Alooideae), a distinctive, endemic, maculate aloe from the central Limpopo province of South Africa
Author
Smith, Gideon F.
0000-0002-5417-9208
Ria Olivier Herbarium, Department of Botany, Nelson Mandela University, P. O. Box 77000, Gqeberha, 6031 South Africa.
smithgideon1@gmail.com
Author
Figueiredo, Estrela
0000-0002-8511-8213
Ria Olivier Herbarium, Department of Botany, Nelson Mandela University, P. O. Box 77000, Gqeberha, 6031 South Africa.
epnfigueiredo@gmail.com
Author
Klopper, Ronell R.
Foundational Biodiversity Sciences Division, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X 101, Pretoria, 0001 South Africa. & H. G. W. J. Schweickerdt Herbarium, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X 20, Hatfield, 0028 South Africa.
text
Phytotaxa
2024
2024-03-12
640
3
265
274
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.640.3.4
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.640.3.4
1179-3163
13213669
Aloe mutans
Reynolds (1936
: t. 602) (
Figs 1
and
3
).
Also treated in:
Groenewald (1941: 85
, 105, 117, 135),
Reynolds (1950: 261)
,
Judd (1967: 55
, plate 14, top, second from the left),
Jeppe (1969: 91
, plate on following, unnumbered page),
Bornman & Hardy (1971: 122–123)
,
Jacobsen (1977: 90)
,
Jacobsen (1986: 182)
,
Grace
et al
. (2011: 107)
,
Van Wyk & Smith (2014: 256–257)
, and
Klopper (2015: 348
, 602).
Type
:
—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Limpopo province
.
Pietersburg
[Polokwane] district,
Boschplaats
, [Mphathleles Location,
20 miles
[
32 km
] south of Chunies Poort [Chuenespoort], fl. 11]
August 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1527
, “
and in Nat. Herb
. 20215” (
holotype
,
PRE
barcodes
PRE0086199-1
! and
PRE0086199-2
! [2 sheet gathering];
isotypes
PRE
[3 sheets, but not labelled “20215” as in the holotype],
BOL
barcodes
BOL140154
!,
BOL140155
!, and
BOL140156
!,
K
barcodes
K000256634
! and
K000256635
!,
SRGH
barcode
SRGH0106230
-0!,
W
barcode
W19610000092
!)
.
Notes on the typification of the name
Aloe mutans
:—
Reynolds (1936
: t. 602) indicated the type of the name
A. mutans
as “TRANSVAAL: Pietersburg distr.; Boschplaats,
Aug. 1935
,
Reynolds 1527
(typus),
and in Nat. Herb
. 20215”. Crucially, the number ‘20215’, which refers to the
PRE
accession number given to this gathering, was unambiguously mentioned in the protologue (
Reynolds 1936
: first text page accompanying plate 602). This particular
G
.
W
. Reynolds 1527
specimen is the only one mentioned and can be regarded as the
holotype
, following
Turland
et al
. (2018
: Art. 9.1). This was also the only specimen later mentioned in
Reynolds (1950: 261)
, albeit with additional locality detail, thus providing additional evidence that its status is that of
holotype
. The
holotype
consists of two sheets, indicated as ‘Sheet I’ and ‘Sheet II’ written in pen on the mounting boards (available online at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/ viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.pre0086199-1 and https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen. pre0086199-2). Duplicates of this collection were cited from Herbs.
BOL
and
SRGH
in
Glen & Hardy (2000)
and further duplicates are known from Herbs.
K
and
W
(
JSTOR Global Plants 2023
).
The three duplicates of
G
.
W
. Reynolds
1527
in Herb.
BOL
are treated as
three specimens
, since they were not accessioned as sheets of the same collection.All three have a label affixed that reads ‘Type No.’ and all
three specimens
bear the date ‘
10 Aug 1935
’. The
holotype
and protologue (
Reynolds 1936
: t. 602) only cite ‘
Aug 1935
’ as the date of collecting, but
Reynolds (1950: 261)
indicates that the material flowered on
11 August 1935
. Two of the specimens (
BOL
140154 and
BOL
140155; available online at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen. bol140154 and https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.bol140155)have the locality ‘Boschplaats, Transvaal’, while the third cites the locality as “Boschplaats,
14 m
.
[miles]
S
[south] of Chunes Poort [Chuenespoort] Police Post, –
7 m
.
[miles]
N
[north] of Olifants River Bridge” (
BOL
140156; available online at https://plants.jstor. org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.bol140156).
Reynolds (1950: 261)
indicates the type locality as “
Northeastern Transvaal
: Pietersburg Dist. [Polokwane]: Boschplaats, Mphathleles Location,
20 miles
south of Chunies Poort [Chuenespoort]”, while the protologue only mentions “TRANSVAAL: Pietersburg distr.; Boschplaats” in the type citation and further on in the text it is stated that the material was collected “at Boschplaats, Mphathlele’s Location,
42 miles
south of Pietersburg [Polokwane] in the northern Transvaal [now the
Limpopo province
of
South Africa
]” (
Reynolds 1936
: t. 602). Despite these minor discrepancies, the Herb.
BOL
duplicates are here regarded as
isotypes
.
The two duplicates at
Herb
.
K
were also not accessioned or indicated to be sheets of the same collection and are regarded as
two specimens
(
K000256634
and
K000256635
; available online at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/ viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.k000256634 and at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen. k000256635).
Both
coNtaiN a SimiLar
Herb
.
PRE
LabeL with the date “10-8-35” aNd the
LocaLity
“BoSchpLaatS, 19½ miles
S
[south] of Chuniespoort [Chuenespoort] +
7 m
.
[miles]
N
[north] of Olifants River Bridge”.
The
PRE
accession number (20215) linked to the
holotype
is not present on these specimens.
There
is no indication of type status on the
Herb
.
K
specimens. The Herbs.
SRGH
and
W
duplicates have similar labels to those of the
Herb
.
K
specimens with corresponding information, and also lack the
PRE
accession number (20215). The
Herb
.
SRGH
duplicate further bears a label stating “
ISOTYPUS
” (
SRGH0106230
-0; available online at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap. specimen.srgh0106230-0), while the
Herb
.
W
duplicate bears a 2005 determinavit slip by
H
.
Rainer
with “
TYPUS
” added in red ink (
W19610000092
; available online at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/viewer/10.5555/al.ap.specimen. w19610000092).
These
are all considered to be
isotypes
.
FIGURE 1.
Three solitary specimens of
Aloe mutans
growing between Morotse and Malekapane in South Africa’s Limpopo province. Usually only a single, 3- or 4- to 7-branched panicle is produced per rosette per season. Photographer: Gideon F. Smith.
FIGURE 2.
A two-headed specimen of a form of
Aloe davyana
[
var.
davyana
] with pale flesh-pink, greenish to greyish white-striped flowers. Photograph taken between Donkerhoek and Pretoria, Gauteng province, South Africa, by Gideon F. Smith. Note that each rosette has produced two inflorescences.
FIGURE 3.
Aloe mutans
growing near Morotse in South Africa’s Limpopo province.
A.
A solitary specimen.
B.
A two-headed specimen showing the brownish to yellowish green adaxial leaf surface.
C.
Solitary and multi-headed specimens, some of which are in flower while others are already in fruit.
D.
The leaf sap dries dark purplish. Abaxially the leaves are uniformly light green to greyish green; longitudinally indistinctly dark green-lined; and sometimes obscurely white-spotted, as here.
E.
Plants often grow in the shade of lowgrowing shrubs and small trees that act as nurse plants with only the inflorescences protruding above the shrub layer.
F.
The apicaL ⅓ to ½ of the perianth is yellow, which transitions through orange to strawberry pink basally. The basal swelling of the flowers is longitudinally more abruptly flattened than in
A. davyana
. All photographs by Gideon F. Smith.
FIGURE 4.
Aloe davyana
growing near Pretoria, Gauteng province, South Africa.
A.
A three-headed specimen, with each rosette simultaneously producing two inflorescences.
B.
A form with
uniformly dull brick-red flowers.
C.
Two flower colour forms (dull brickred on the left and pale flesh-pink on the right) growing in close proximity.
D.
The flowers are uniformly chromatic, not multi-coloured as in
A. mutans
. All photographs by Gideon F. Smith.
In addition, a further duplicate of the type (consisting of three sheets) is also present at Herb.
PRE
. This specimen has the same label information as the duplicates held at Herbs.
K
,
SRGH
, and
W
but, importantly, lack the uniquely defining Herb.
PRE
accession number, “20215”, that
Reynolds (1936
: t. 602) cited in the protologue. This particular specimen contains a note in the handwriting of Reynolds that indicates that this three-sheet gathering was deposited together with the
holotype
material, but with an instruction to the herbarium curator that the
holotype
material was wrapped separately from it. The somewhat illegible text, written vertically on the note that is attached to the
G
.
W
. Reynolds 1527
isotype
(i.e., not the
holotype
qualified by “20215”) reads: “What [
I
would?] like[?] as the type please is wrapped up separately”.
Description
:—Plants small, low-growing, solitary or forming clumps of up to 10(–14) rosettes, rosette erect, up to (15–)
20 cm
tall.
Stem
± absent, short, simple or once-branched, thickened lower down if present, clothed in persistent, twisted, dried leaves.
Leaves
densely rosulate, at first erect, then horizontally spreading,
10–20 cm
long, 5–7(–8) cm wide at base, brownish to yellowish green, deltoid-lanceolate, abaxially uniformly light green to greyish green, longitudinally indistinctly dark green-lined, lines narrow, not confluent, sometimes obscurely white-spotted, adaxially usually densely white-spotted, white spots ± H-shaped-oblong, in interrupted, wavy transverse bands or haphazardly arranged, rarely confluent to yield green-striped appearance, texture smooth;
margins
shiny-dark brown especially abaxially, sometimes concolorous, armed with short, prominent, very pungent, deltoid, shiny-brown, dark orangetipped teeth, ± 4–5(–6) mm long, 5–7(–8) mm apart, straight or more rarely variously curved towards leaf base;
leaf sap
drying dark purplish.
Inflorescence
a 3- or 4- to 7-branched panicle, usually one produced per season, (0.5–)0.6– 0.9(–1.2) m tall, erect, branched below or at middle, branches erect at ± 45° from peduncle, terminal raceme longer than others;
peduncle
rather stout, lacking sterile bracts below racemes, panicle branches subtended by prominent, rapidly-drying fertile bracts of ±
15–30 mm
long;
peduncular bracts
creamy white, irregularly lanceolate-triangular, longitudinally brownish-lined.
Racemes
cylindrical-acuminate, rather narrow, very gradually tapering upwards,
15–30 cm
long,
7–8 cm
wide where flowers are at anthesis, sparsely flowered;
buds
erect to erectly spreading.
Floral bracts
10–22(–30) mm long, whitish grey, many-nerved, not prominent, as long as or slightly longer than pedicels, drying rapidly, narrowly lanceolate, variously twisted, much narrower than fertile bracts.
Pedicels
14–16 mm
long, light pinkish when young, dark pinkish with age, sometimes lengthening when in fruit.
Flowers
pendulous at anthesis;
perianth
: covered in a bloom, buds strawberry pink, with alternating light greenish and white longitudinal stripes; opeN fLowerS copiouSLy NectariferouS, apicaL ⅓ to ½ yeLLow, traNSitioNiNg through oraNge to baSaLLy Strawberry piNk, longitudinally white-striped, (28–)32(–33) mm long, 6–7(–8) mm across ovary, narrowed above ovary to yield distinct bulbous base, distinctly enlarged towards mouth from below middle, then constricted towards mouth; tips of segments Very SLightLy fLared, outer SegmeNtS free for ± ⅓ of their LeNgth;
stamens
with filiform-flattened filaments, uniformly light yellowish green, hardly exserted, visible at mouth;
ovary
6–7 mm
long,
2–4 mm
in diam., mid-green, distinctly grooved;
style
included to hardly exserted, uniformly light yellow;
stigma
tiny, very slightly capitate, same colour as style.
Fruit
a loculicidal capsule, 25(–28) ×
14–16 mm
, light green turning light brown-purplish with age, dry remains of perianth variously persistent.
Seed
not seen.
Chromosome number
: unknown.
Distribution
:—
Aloe mutans
essentially occurs in the northern parts of the Springbokvlakte of the
Limpopo province
(note that there are several locations in
South Africa
with the name ‘Springbokvlakte’, see
Leistner & Morris 1976: 467–468
), where it is a component of
Combretum
-Acacia
veld (
Fig. 5
). Plants grow in open places among rocks or, often, in the shade of low-growing shrubs and small trees that act as nurse plants.
FIGURE 5.
Map of where
Aloe mutans
occurs. The Strydpoortberge are shaded in grey.
Aloe mutans
grows south and southwest of Morotse and Malekapane, in the Springbokvlakte in South Africa’s Limpopo province. Main roads are shown in red and rivers in blue.
Aloe mutans
is reasonably common around Morotse and Malekapane south of Lebowakgomo, and further south towards Jane Furse (
Fig. 5
). The area is subject to extensive urban development.
Additional specimen investigated
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Limpopo
. Adriaansdraai,
F.Z. van der Merwe 75
(PRE).