A foundation monograph of Convolvulus L. (Convolvulaceae)
Author
Wood, John R. I.
Department of Plant Sciences, South Parks Road, University of Oxford, OX 1 3 RB, UK & Honorary Research Associate, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Author
Williams, Bethany R. M.
Department of Plant Sciences, South Parks Road, University of Oxford, OX 1 3 RB, UK & Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
Author
Mitchell, Thomas C.
Plant Biodiversity Research, Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Maximus-von-Imhof Forum 2, 85354 Freising, Germany
Author
Carine, Mark A.
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
Author
Harris, David J.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6801-2484
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh EH 3 5 LR, UK
Author
Scotland, Robert W.
Department of Plant Sciences, South Parks Road, University of Oxford, OX 1 3 RB, UK
robert.scotland@plants.ox.ac.uk
text
PhytoKeys
2015
2015-06-18
51
1
282
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.51.7104
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.51.7104
1314-2003-51-1
E76E3938E216FF804849B803C469FE14
576310
120.
Convolvulus erinaceus Ledeb., in Eichwald, Pl. Nov. Cauc. Casp. 11. 1831. (Eichwald 1831:11).
Figure 16, t. 1-7
Convolvulus excelsus
R.R.Mill, Edinburgh J. Bot. 70: 368. 2013. (
Mill 2013
: 368). Type. SAUDI ARABIA,
Collenette
6385 (holotype E00699569!; isotype K!).
Type.
AZERBAIJAN (?), "Caspian Sea",
Eichwald
474 (lectotype LE!, sheet labelled 474 and with
Sa'ad's
annotation, designated here; isolectotypes HAL?, LE!).
Description.
Much-branched undershrub with somewhat zigzag, rigid branches forming an intricate ball-like plant to 1(-3) m in height, the lower part sometimes with a distinct trunk up to 1.5 cm in diameter; young stems sericeous, branching at 80-90°. Basal leaves 10-30
x
1 mm, stem leaves usually few, sessile, 6-7 (-20)
x
0.5-1 mm, linear, pubescent. Flowers usually solitary (rarely paired) borne on thin, rigid peduncles 4-15 (-20)mm long; bracteoles 1 mm, triangular, scale-like, puberulent; pedicels 1-5 mm, puberulent, often recurved; outer sepals 3-4
x
2.5 mm, elliptic-obovate, round
ed
to emarginate, sericeous-pubescent; inner sepals narrower, 1-1.5 mm wide; corolla 0.6-0.9 cm long, deeply lobed to about quarter of its length, white or pink, midpetaline bands narrowly triangular, pubescent, terminating in a point; ovary sericeous; style glabrous, very short, divided c. 2 mm above base, stigmas c. 1.5 mm; capsule pubescent or glabrous, 1-seeded; seeds pubescent. [
Sa'ad
1967
: 95 p. p. excl.
Convolvulus hamadae
and
Convolvulus erinaceus var. kermanensis
;
Petrov 1935
: 137 (plate);
Nowroozi 2002
: 32 (plate), 101 (map);
Collenette 1999
: 228 as
Convolvulus excelsus
(photo);
Grigoriev 1953
: 11 (plate)]
Distribution.
Russia: Dagestan (
Teimurov
s.n. [20/6/2011]),
"Siberia"
(
Turczaninov
); Azerbaijan (
Shipzchinsky
s.n. [14/7/1925]); Uzbekistan (
Neustreuva-Knorring
3769,
Rodin & Arkadyev
s.n. [8/5/1948]); Turkmenistan (
Androsov
s.n. [10/7/1932],
Babrov
535,
Granitov
in Herb. Fl. As. Med.442; Kirgizstan (
Minkwitz
376); Tadjistan (
Nikitin
2780); Kazakhstan (
Dubrayansky
852, 856,
Afannasiev
3767,
Berg
s.n. [28/6/1900],
Spiridonow
s.n. [1914],
Rodin et al.
468); Northern Iran (
Reino Alava & Iranshahr
23405,
Furse
7614); Afghanistan (
Aitchison
701,
Koie
2225,
Neubauer
4206), Pakistan (?), Saudi Arabia (
Collenette
6385). A plant of sandy and stony desert.
Notes.
Distinguished by the sericeous stem, short obtuse sepals, small, lobed corolla and tendency to have short rigid peduncles giving the plant a characteristic intricate habit.
The recently described
Convolvulus excelsus
from Saudi Arabia is distinguished principally by its tall habit and disjunct distribution. However neither its height nor its disjunction is as distinctive as
Mill (2013)
suggests, there being records from scattered locations in many countries (see above) and images and descriptions of specimens at least 1 m high.