A revision and one new species of Begonia L. (Begoniaceae, Cucurbitales) in Northeast India
Author
Camfield, Rebecca
Author
Hughes, Mark
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2018
2018-01-19
396
1
116
journal article
22365
10.5852/ejt.2018.396
2b95a851-e1bf-4bdd-9cce-441ddc4135d2
3787049
Begonia xanthina
Hook.
[sect.
Platycentrum
]
Figs 65–66
Botanical Magazine
78: tab. 4683 (
Hooker 1852
)
. –
Type
: Cultivated collection, 1852,
Nuttall
s.n. (lecto-: K000739937, here designated). Cultivated at Rainhill, near Preston, from vegetative material collected in the wild from
Bhutan
in 1850 by
Booth
.
Begonia xanthina
var.
lazuli
Hook.
,
Botanical Magazine
85: tab. 5107 (
Hooker 1859
)
. –
Begonia lazuli
Linden,
La
Belgique
Horticole
8: 166 (
Linden 1858
)
, nom. nud. –
Begonia lazuli
Linden & C.Koch ex K.Koch,
Wochenschrift
für Gärtnerei und Pflanzenkunde
1: 339 (
Koch 1858
)
. –
Type
:
Hooker (1859)
tab. 5107
[illustration].
Begonia xanthina
var.
pictifolia
Hook.
,
Botanical Magazine
85: tab. 5102 (
Hooker 1859
)
. –
Type
:
Hooker (1859)
tab. 5102
[illustration].
Begonia poecila
C.Koch ex K.Koch,
Wochenschrift
für Gärtnerei und Pflanzenkunde
1: 338 (
Koch 1858
). –
Type
: unknown.
Citations in other publications
As
B. xanthina
:
Koch (1858: 340)
,
Clarke (1879: 644)
,
Clarke (1881: 119)
,
Grierson (1991: 245)
,
Gu
et al.
(2007: 204)
,
Uddin (2007: 595)
,
Dash (2010: 41)
.
Fig. 65.
Map showing the location of
B. xanthina
Hook.
specimens.
Fig. 66.
Begonia xanthina
Hook.
A
. Dark
leaf form.
B
. Male flowers.
C
. Female flowers. Photographs courtesy of Darrin Norton of a plant in cultivation in a private collection.
Other material
INDIA
:
Arunachal-Pradesh
: Bhalukpung,
Jul. 1970
,
Yandell 116
(
K
); Geku,
Choudhery 16395
(
ARUN
n.v.); Lohit Valley,
17 Feb. 1950
,
Ward 19163
(
BM
) [aff.
B. xanthina
]; Mirir Hills,
Jan. 1973
,
Yandell 225
(
K
); Mishmi Hills,
1862–1863
,
Griffith 2591
(
K
).
Meghalaya
: Khasi Hills,
Nov. 1886
,
Mann
s.n. (
K
).
Description
Rhizomatous, monoecious herb,
30–60 cm
high. Rhizome:
15–20 mm
wide, pilose. Stipules: lanceolate, 15–20 ×
8–10 mm
, puberulous on midrib, caduceus. Leaves: petiole
12–25 cm
long, pilose to villose; lamina ovate to broadly ovate, broadly bullate, basifixed, base cordate with lobes not overlapping, 14–21 ×
10–14 cm
, slightly asymmetric to asymmetric, upper surface dark green with white/pale green spots between veins, or dark green without spots, sometimes with blue iridescence, glabrous or very sparsely pilose, underside dark red/purple, with or without metallic blue shine, pilose all over, denser on main veins, venation palmate, midrib
10 –15 cm
long; margin entire to undulate, with sparse hairs; apex acute. Inflorescence: cymose, terminal, few; peduncle glabrous, branching 2–3 times, primary
13–19 cm
, secondary
1–5 cm
, tertiary
3–6 mm
, with 2–
4 female
and 4–
6 male
flowers; bracts ovate, 20–22 ×
18–20 mm
, glabrous. Male flower: pedicel
35 mm
long, glabrous; tepals 4; outer tepals 10–12 ×
5 mm
, yellow, puberulous on reverse, entire; inner tepals ovate, 7–12 ×
4–6 mm
, yellow, glabrous; androecium with 80–160 stamens, symmetric; filaments
1 mm
long, fused at base into a short column; anther oblong,
1 mm
long, dehiscing through slits about half the length of the anther, connective extended, acuminate on apical stamens. Female flower: pedicel
15–30 mm
long, glabrous, bracteoles absent; tepals 5, equal, obovate, outer tepals 16–20 ×
7–11 mm
, yellow, puberulous on reverse to glabrous, inner tepals similar yet smaller; ovary 2-locular, placentae bifid, ellipsoid, with one long triangular wing and two short crescent wings, glabrous, styles 2, forked once and twisted twice, deciduous. Fruit: recurved; capsule ovate-triangular, 15 ×
7–9 mm
, glabrous; wings extending along the pedicel slightly, subequal; longest rounded triangle, 20–23 ×
10–14 mm
; shortest semi-circular, 4–6 ×
11–14 mm
.
Distribution and phenology
Arunachal-Pradesh and Meghalaya; also in
China
,
Nepal
, Sikkim, West Bengal and
Bhutan
;
600– 1800 m
. Flowering: June to September; fruiting: June to October.
Conservation status
Least Concern.
Begonia xanthina
is found throughout the Eastern Himalayas and into
China
where there is plenty of suitable habitat. This species has been found in Pakke Tiger Reserve of
Bhutan
and near the Moulling National Park of Arunachal-Pradesh.
Remarks
The stamens have distinctive very long connectives and are arranged in a cylindrical androecium. The description for the female flowers was augmented using
Peng & Leong (2006)
. The only other yellow flowered
Begonia
in the study areas is
B. flaviflora
which has deeply lobed leaves. The leaves can appear similar to
B. iridescens
(which has pink flowers) as they share white markings on the upper surface and a blue iridescence, but
B. iridescens
has a more rounded leaf lamina with denser hairs on the veins and shorter petioles.
There are two varieties listed by
Hooker (1859)
which are no longer recognised;
var.
pictifolia
having white spots/stripes on the surface of leaves and
var.
lazuli
with a blue iridescence. Specimens can also gain a metallic blue shimmer on the underside of their leaves upon drying as seen in
Yandall 225
, even though that was noted as being dark red when collected.
Begonia lazuli
was described from living plants
grown by Linden so no
type
specimen exists, thus the drawing of
B. xanthina
var.
lazuli
in the Botanical Magazine becomes the
type
.
The two Koch names
B. poecila
and
B. lazuli
have no
type
specimens mentioned in the protologues and the descriptions were most likely based on cultivated living material.
Begonia
×
marmorea
Van Houtte ex Planch. (Planch 1854) is
B. xanthina
×
B. rubroveinia
(
B. hatacoa
), erroneously considered a synonym (
Govaerts 1996
). The
type
for this hybrid is the colour plate included in Planch (1854), which lacks the yellow flowers of
B. xanthina
.