A monograph of Daviesia (Mirbelieae, Faboideae, Fabaceae)
Author
Crisp, Michael D.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Cayzer, Lindy
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & Present address: Australian National Herbarium, Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: lcayzer @ netspeed. com. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Chandler, Gregory T.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & Present address: Department of Agriculture and Water Resources, 1 Pederson Road, Eaton, Northern Territory 0812, Australia. Email: gregory. chandler @ agriculture. gov. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Cook, Lyn G.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia. Email: l. cook @ uq. edu. au & Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
text
Phytotaxa
2017
2017-03-24
300
1
448
450
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1
1179-3163
13688467
128.
Daviesia crassa
Crisp (1995: 1183)
.
Type
[approximate locality data given because the species is rare]:
Western Australia
,
Avon
,
SW of Harrismith
,
33°S
,
117°40’E
,
M.
D. Crisp
5531
,
28 January 1979
.
Holotype
: CBG, 2 sheets;
isotypes
: K, L, NSW, PERTH
Compact dense
shrubs
to
1.8 m
high, glabrous, glaucous to pruinose.
Root anatomy
with anomalous secondary thickening (cord
type
).
Branchlets
spreading to ascending, usually flexuose with crowded phyllodes, smooth when fresh, longitudinally wrinkled when dry; occasional shoots are long and straight with scattered slender phyllodes.
Phyllodes
crowded (rarely scattered), erect, thick, clavate (rarely linear-fusiform), terete, apically acuminate, pungent, tapering to the articulate base,
10–40 mm
long,
2–6 mm
diam., appearing succulent but filled with pith, smooth when fresh, longitudinally wrinkled when dry.
Seedling phyllodes
flattened at nodes 1–3, becoming terete by node 10.
Unit inflorescences
1 per axil, racemose, 3–5(–8)-flowered,;
peduncle
3.5–6 mm
long;
rachis
4–11 mm
long;
subtending bracts
appressed, ovate, ca.
0.5–1 mm
long.
Pedicels
gently dilated upwards,
2–4 mm
long.
Calyx
narrowly campanulate,
4–5 mm
long including
2–2.5 mm
stipe-like receptacle; upper 2 lobes united in a truncate,
A MONOGRAPH OF
DAVIESIA
Phytotaxa
300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press •
279 280
•
Phytotaxa
300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press
FIGURE 129.
Daviesia crassa
. A. Flowering branchlet. B. Inflorescence. C. Pod. A, B from
Crisp 5531
(type); C from
Crisp 6147
. Drawn by A.L. Prowse. Adapted from Crisp (1995) with permission from CSIRO Publishing.
CRISP
ET AL.
emarginate lip, ca.
1 mm
long; lower 3 minute, deltoid, ca.
0.5 mm
long.
Corolla
pure yellow;
standard
very broadly ovate, emarginate, margins recurved, slightly cordate, 4–4.5 ×
5.5–6 mm
including the ca.
0.5 mm
claw;
wings
spathulate, with lower margins divergent and apices rounded and incurved but not overlapping, scarcely auriculate, ca. 4.5 ×
2.5 mm
including the
1 mm
claw;
keel
half depressed-obovate, scarcely acute, auriculate, saccate, ca. 4.5 ×
2 mm
including the
1.5 mm
claw.
Stamens
weakly dimorphic and ca. uniform in length; inner whorl of 5 with slender, angular filaments and shorter anthers; outer whorl of 5 with broader, compressed filaments and longer anthers; filaments free; anthers all basifixed and 2-celled except vexillary anther versatile with confluent thecae.
Pod
obliquely shallowly obtriangular, beaked, compressed, ca. 20 ×
7 mm
; upper suture undulating; lower suture scarcely acute.
Seed
not seen. (
Fig. 129
).
Flowering period:—
Only specimen flowering in January.
Fruiting period:
One specimen
seen fruiting in September.
Distribution:—
Western Australia
, south-central wheatbelt, between Wagin and Harrismith.
Habitat:—
Grows in white, sometimes gravelly, sand over laterite, in undulating terrain in kwongan heath.
Conservation status:—
National: Not listed. WA: Priority 4, adequately known and near-threatened or not threatened, requiring regular monitoring.
Additional specimens examined:—
Approximate
locality data given because the species is rare.
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
.
Avon
:
SW of Harrismith
,
33°S
,
117°40’E
,
L
.
R
.
Frizell
s.n. &
K
.
Morrison
,
4 August 1964
(
PERTH 5200539
);
ibid.
,
M
.
D. Crisp
5533
,
28 January 1979
, seedling (
CBG
);
ibid.
,
M
.
D. Crisp
6147 et al.
,
26 September 1979
(
CBG
,
PERTH
); near
Wagin
,
33°20’S
,
117°20’E
,
Cronin
s.n.
, 1890 (
MEL 81103
and 81105); source of the
Blackwood River
,
33°40’S
,
116°50’E
,
Cronin
s.n.
, 1889 (
MEL 81106
)
.
Affinity:—
This bizarre plant looks more like a member of the
Crassulaceae
than a legume. However, the thick, club-shaped phyllodes are filled with dry pith, not with succulent tissue. No other
Daviesia
could be confused with this species. There is, however, an apparent relationship with
D. pachyphylla
, which also has thick, pith-filled phyllodes, as well as similar inflorescences and flowers.
Daviesia pachyphylla
is readily distinguished by the phyllodes diverging at 90° from the branchlet and not tapering to the base, the slightly larger flowers (e.g. standard
7–8 mm
broad) with intense maroon markings on the petals, and the more or less equilateral pods. Moreover,
D. pachyphylla
has an open, spindly habit.