A new species of Espeletiopsis (Millerieae, Asteraceae) from Colombia
Author
Diazgranados, Mauricio
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0448-5706
Dept. of Botany, MRC 166, National Museum of Natural History, P. O. Box 37012, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D. C. 20013 - 7012, United States
m.diazgranados@kew.org
Author
Sanchez, Luis Roberto
Departamento de Biologia y Quimica. Universidad de Pamplona. Pamplona, Colombia
text
PhytoKeys
2013
2013-12-19
32
37
48
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.32.6387
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.32.6387
1314-2003-32-37
82118357FFF1FF9BFFE0FFA1FFD9966B
576193
Espeletiopsis diazii M. Diazgranados & L.R.
Sanchez
sp. nov.
Figures 1
-4
Type.
COLOMBIA, Norte de Santander, Municipio de
Cachira
,
Paramo
de
Cachira
o de Guerrero,
via
Alto Chiquito (desde Villa Caro) a
Cachira
, alto del
paramo
, a los lados de la
via
antes de comenzar el descenso a
Cachira
, en comunidad de pajonal-frailejonal dominado por esta especie. Alt. 3394 m,
73.00173°W
,
7.7655°N
.
M. Diazgranados
&
L.R.
Sanchez
3898
(holotype: COL; isotypes: COL, HECASA and to be distributed). Paratypes: same locality,
M. Diazgranados
&
L.R.
Sanchez
3897
(COL, HECASA and to be distributed);
L.R.
Sanchez
10113
(HECASA!),
12714
(HECASA!).
Diagnosis.
Sessile rosette of whitish appearance, related to
Espeletiopsis santanderensis
, but with smaller leaves, capitulescence compact with a dense glomerate cyme of (1-)4-6(-7) capitula and short peduncles, and disc flowers with corolla lobes glabrescent.
Description.
Acaulescent (sessile) polycarpic rosette of whitish appearance, 40-50(-100) cm tall (including capitulescences), growing in grassland of
paramo
proper. Excluding reproductive parts, rosette 20-30(-50) cm tall.
Leaves firm, coriaceous, erect; laminae linear or narrowly oblanceolate, apex acute, base without pseudopetiole, (15-)16-19(-21) cm
x
(0.6-)0.65-0.7(-0.8) cm, length to width ratio 26:1; margins strongly revolute. Adaxial face with indumentum whitish or silvery-sericeous, hairs 1 mm long, very abundant in young leaves, becoming less dense and almost tomentose-velutinous in old leaves, giving them a greener appearance; costa prominent but secondary nerves invisible. Abaxial face with loose indumentum, silvery or whitish, with hairs up to 2 mm long; costa more prominent than from adaxial face,
secondary
nerves invisible. Leaf sheaths narrowly-oblong, (2.5-)2.7-3.1(-3.3) cm
x
(0.5-)0.7-0.9(-1.1) cm; white adaxially, glabrescent in the proximal portion, with 10-15 anastomosing nerves; white abaxially, tomentose-velutinous, with hairs up to 0.9 mm long.
Capitulescences 2-5, corymbiform, more or less coetaneous, axillary, emerging from the upper nodes, twice longer than the leaves, (15-)25-45(-60) cm long; indumentum abundant, lanose-sericeous white towards the base, becoming lanose whitish-yellowish towards the distal portion. Scapes erect, firm, 5-6 mm in diameter; 5-10-bracteate basally, subcoriaceous, alternate, linear with acute apex and without pseudopetiole, up to 13 cm long
x
0.5 cm wide; 2-5 sterile bracts in the first 2/3 of the scape, alternate, linear, shorter, 5-6 cm long
x
0.5 cm wide. Capitula (1-)4-6(-7), arranged in a compact or dense glomerate cyme in the distal 3-4 cm of the capitulescence; peduncles terete, short, 1(-3) cm long or less; with indumentum lanose
whitish-yellowish
, and portions of epidermis reddish. Fertile bracts linear or narrowly triangular, 2-2.5 cm long
x
0.4-0.5 cm wide.
Capitula radiate, subglobose, 2.0-3.0 cm in diameter (including ray flowers). Involucre 1.2-1.4 cm wide
x
0.8-1.2 cm high; phyllaries in 2-3 series, oblanceolate or triangular, the outer phyllaries 10-12 mm long
x
3.0-5.0 mm wide (excluding hairs), the inner phyllaries 6.5-7.2 mm long
x
4.0-4.3 mm wide, with indumentum villous white and epidermis green, turning red when older.
Ray flowers (30-)44-46 in 2(-3) series, yellow, 10.5-11.5 mm long (excluding ovary). Ligules 7.6-8.0 mm long, elliptical or oblong, tridentate; tube hirsute, small, 0.35-0.5 mm in diameter and 2.5-3.0 mm long, without linguiform appendages, yel
low
becoming brown distally, the hairs 0.2-0.3(-0.7) mm long. Style 6.5-7.0 mm long
x
0.16-0.2 mm in diameter, with stigmatic branches 1.0-1.5 mm long, broadening in the distal portion, 0.25-0.28(-0.5) mm wide, papillose, papillae to 0.1 mm long.
Discs 1.0-1.5 cm in diameter; disc flowers (72-)100-108; corolla 6.2-7 mm long (excluding anthers and fruit); corolla throat 4.4-4.6 mm long, 2-2.2 mm wide when open, 5-lobed, lobes 1-1.1 mm long, glabrescent or with a few hairs; tube 1.8-2.4 mm long
x
0.3-0.5 mm in diameter, glabrous, with a few hairs; anthers dark yellow, sometimes exceeding the corolla by 2 mm, slightly translucid, approximately 1 mm long and 0.3 mm wide; disc paleae 5.2-5.5 mm long
x
1.0-1.1 mm wide, brownish, with 3 main nerves, glabrescent but becoming villous in the distal third.
Cypselae oblong, triangular, 2.3-2.4 mm
x
1.5-1.6 mm, glabrous, black. Paleae 6.4-6.8 mm long, 1.8-2.0 mm wide, brownish, profusely villous. Pollen yellow when fresh, tricolporate, 20.56-21.08
μm
in equatorial diameter (not counting spines); spines 68-80 total, 14-16 equatorial spines, (2.8-)3.6-4.06
μm
long, erect.
Figure 1.
Espeletiopsis diazii
:
A
acaulescent (sessile) habit
B
whitish rosette from top
C
lateral view of capitulescence showing a dense glomerate cyme of capitula
D
capitulum of the holotype collection (
M. Diazgranados
&
L.R.
Sanchez
3898
)
E
paratype collection (
M. Diazgranados & L.R.
Sanchez
3897
)
F
holotype collection (
M. Diazgranados & L.R.
Sanchez
3898
)
G
capitulescence showing the alternate bracts along the scape.
Figure 2.
Illustrations of
Espeletiopsis diazii
.
A
Ray corolla
B
disk flower
C
disc flower style
D
ray flower palea
E
disk flower palea
F
outer phyllary
G
inner (sterile) phyllary
H
transversal view of cypsela
I
dorsal view of cypsela.
Figure 3.
Photomicrographs of
Espeletiopsis diazii
.
A
Fragment of anther with pollen grains
B
pollen grain
C
disc flower style with pollen grains
D
papillae of outer side of stigmatic branches, showing pollen grains.
Distribution.
Endemic to Colombia. This species has been found only in the
Paramo
de
Cachira
(or
Paramo
de Guerrero), and in a smaller adjacent
paramo
, called
Paramo
de los Ranchos, at elevations of 3300-3500 m (
Fig. 4
). The area of distribution is less than 75 km2.
Figure 4.
Distribution map showing collections for
Espeletiopsis diazii
(red circles),
Espeletiopsis santanderensis
(blue squares) and
Espeletiopsis caldasii
(green triangles). Photograph of the
Paramo
de
Cachira
, with a population of
Espeletiopsis diazii
.
Ecology
.
A large population of several hundreds or thousands of individuals growing in the grasslands of the
paramo
proper was observed (
Fig. 4
). Other
Espeletiinae
found in the area are:
Espeletia brassicoidea
Cuatrec.,
Espeletiopsis conglomerata
Cuatrec. and
Libanothamnus occultus
ssp.
oroquensis
Cuatrec.
Etymology.
The specific epithet of this new species,
"diazii"
, is dedicated to Santiago
Diaz-Piedrahita
, Colombian botanist, for his vast contributions to the knowledge of the
Compositae
of his country.
Conservation status.
The preservation of this species is linked to the preservation of the
Paramo
de
Cachira
and the
Paramo
de Los Ranchos. These are both very small
paramos
(70-80 km2 of total area), likely sensitive to climate and land use change, with substantial fragmentation, and without any legal measures of protection. Therefore,
Espeletiopsis diazii
is probably
Critically Endangered
(CR, according to the IUCN criteria: extent of occurrence estimated to be less than 100 km2, habitat fragmentation, and likely decline of the extent of the
paramo
; http://jr.iucnredlist.org/documents/redlist_cats_crit_en.pdf), or
Critically Imperiled
(G1, according to NatureServe; http://www.natureserve.org/explorer/ranking.htm).