Porophyllum spathulatum (Asteraceae: Tageteae), a new species from the southern Brazilian coast
Author
Carneiro, Camila Rezendo
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Botânica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, CEP 91501 - 970, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; email: milarezendo @ yahoo. com. br
Author
Schneider, Angelo Alberto
Universidade Federal do Pampa, UNIPAMPA, Campus São Gabriel, Av. Antônio Trilha, 1847, São Gabriel, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
Author
Ritter, Mara Rejane
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Botânica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, CEP 91501 - 970, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; email: milarezendo @ yahoo. com. br
text
Phytotaxa
2014
2014-06-25
173
2
157
162
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.173.2.6
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.173.2.6
1179-3163
5151697
Porophyllum spathulatum
C.R.Carneiro & A.A.Schneid.
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
and
2
)
Inter species generis Porophylli habitu decumbenti, foliis spathulatis, capitulis ultra 50-floris, corolla albo-lutea, pedunculis apice dilatatis ab aliis recedens.
Porophyllum spathulatum
differs from the other species of the genus by the combination of its decumbent habit along with the spatulate shape of the leaves, the large heads with more than 50 light-yellow florets, and the swollen upper part of peduncles.
Type
:—
BRAZIL
.
Rio Grande do Sul
:
Santa Vitória do Palmar
,
Hermenegildo Beach
, 0 m elev.,
33º40ʹ21ʺ S
,
53º16ʹ11ʺ W
,
17 November 2013
,
C
.
R
.
Carneiro
73
(
holotype
ICN
!; isotypes:
K
!,
LP
!,
RB
!)
.
FIGURE 1.
Porophyllum spathulatum
C.R.Carneiro & A.A.Schneid.
A.
Habit.
B.
Leaf.
C.
Head.
D.
Phyllary.
E.
Bisexual floret.
F.
Stamens.
G.
Style.
H.
Pistillate floret.
I.
Pistillate floret open showing staminodes (one lobe removed).
J.
Cypsela and pappus. (A, B, C, D, E, F, G and J from
C.R. Carneiro
73, ICN; H and I from
C.R. Carneiro
72, ICN). Drawings by Márcia Vignoli da Silva.
Decumbent, gynodioecious, glaucous and glabrous perennial subshrubs, ascending branches
10–20 cm
tall, deep taproot.
Stems
terete,
1.5–3 mm
in diam., branched and brown, reddish in herbaceous younger portions, nodes conspicuous.
Leaves
entire, alternate or opposite, pseudopetiolate, pseudopetioles
2.2–3.6 mm
long, spatulate, 14–20 ×
2.4–4.2 mm
, with a pair of linear translucent oil glands at the base, a solitary drop-shaped or short-linear gland near the apex and eventually one or few ones irregularly scattered along the margin,
0.4–0.9 mm
long; apex rounded, margins entire, base attenuated, internodes
2.3–14.8 mm
long.
Heads
homogamous discoid, solitary, 16–24 ×
9–15 mm
, florets 52–66; florets and pappus bristles exserted.
Peduncles
28–48(60) mm long, apex obconical, enlarged beneath the head,
3.3–4.3 mm
wide,
0.8–1.2 mm
wide basally.
Receptacle
flat,
2.25–4.6 mm
in diam., naked, alveolate.
Phyllaries
5, free, uniseriate, 12.2–16 ×
3.7–5.4 mm
, oblong with mucronate apex, pruinose, glaucous to slightly wine-tinged, fleshy with hyaline margins, with two irregular rows of longitudinal glands
0.5–4 mm
long each.
Bisexual florets
tubulose,
7.7–12.3 mm
long, light yellow, corolla base inflated,
0.6–0.7 mm
in diam., middle slender,
0.3–0.45 mm
in diam., with sparse short hairs, apex
1.3–2 mm
in diam., expanded and divided into 5 lobes, acute, glabrous, 1.5–1.7 ×
0.5 mm
each; anthers exserted,
2.6–3 mm
long, yellow, apical appendages acute,
0.6 mm
long, basal appendages shortly sagittate; style
13.2–14.6 mm
long, style branches
2–2.2 mm
long, curvate, subulate and papillose.
Pistillate florets
tubulose,
8.6–10.7 mm
long, light yellow, corolla base inflated,
0.6–0.7 mm
in diam., middle slender,
0.3–0.4 mm
in diam., apex
1.3–2 mm
in diam., expanded and divided into 5 lobes, acute, glabrous, ca. 1.7 ×
0.6 mm
each; stamens reduced to staminodes (5), ca. 2 ×
0.2 mm
, filiform, apex lanceolate; style
10.7–11.2 mm
long, style branches
1.6–2 mm
long, curvate, subulate and papillose.
Cypselae
cylindrical, 6.3–9.3 ×
0.45–0.6 mm
, ribbed, dark brown, with sparse short and stiff hairs (puberulent to glabrescent), carpopodium conspicuous,
0.3–0.45 mm
long; pappus 1-seriate,
8–9.5 mm
long, bristles light yellow, barbellate.
FIGURE 2.
Porophyllum spathulatum
C.R.Carneiro & A.A.Schneid.
A.
Habitat.
B.
Habit.
C.
Habit
showing the taproot.
D.
Detail of the leaves.
E.
Bisexual heads showing the enlarged peduncle.
F.
Pistillate head.
G.
Bisexual floret (on the left) and pistillate floret (on the right).
H.
Bisexual floret showing the anthers (on the left) and pistillate floret open, showing staminodes (on the right).
I.
Cypsela and pappus. Photo credits: A–F by C.R. Carneiro and G–I by A.C.O. da Costa and C.R. Carneiro.
Distribution and Habitat
:—
Porophyllum spathulatum
was only found in Balneário Hermenegildo,a neighborhood of Santa Vitória do Palmar municipality in
Rio Grande do Sul State
, southernmost
Brazil
(
Fig. 3
). The occurrence area is situated in the Pampas, characterized by subtropical lowland grasslands and presenting continuous floristic and structural identity with
Uruguay
and
Argentina
(
Boldrini
et al
. 2010
). The species occurs in semi-consolidated dunes along with native grasses such as
Panicum racemosum
(
Palisot de Beauvois 1812: 168
)
Sprengel (1824: 313)
, sedges as
Androtrichum trigynum
(
Sprengel 1824: 216
)
Pfeiffer (1937: 10)
, other composites as
Sommerfeltia spinulosa
(
Sprengel 1826: 510
)
Lessing (1832: 190)
, members of other families as
Hydrocotyle bonariensis
Lamarck (1789: 153)
and, also, exotic species such as
Acacia longifolia
(
Andrews 1802: 207
)
Willdenow (1806: 1052)
.
FIGURE 3.
Map showing the occurrence area of
Porophyllum spathulatum
in southernmost Brazil.
Phenology
:—
Porophyllum spathulatum
flowers and set fruits from November to February.
Conservation Status
:—Critically Endangered:CR B1ab(iii) + 2ab(iii), D (
IUCN 2013
).
Porophyllum spathulatum
presents a low extent of occurrence (<
100 km
2
) and low area of occupancy (<
10 km
2
); number of locations “1”; decline of quality of habitat, due to the presence of exotic species and also due to environmental degradation (houses built near and over the dunes, garbage and sewage dumping). The beach is almost desert in the winter, but it receives a lot of vacationers along summer, which represents a risk to species of rare occurrence such as
P. spathulatum
. Moreover, the only population known is composed of 21 individuals.
Etymology:
—The species name reflects the shape of its leaves.
Additional specimens examined (
paratypes
):
—
BRAZIL
.
Rio Grande do Sul
:
Santa Vitória do Palmar
,
Hermenegildo
,
17 km
ao norte do
Chuí
,
February 1978
, fl.,
Pfadenhauer
671
(
ICN
);
idem
,
December 1987
, fr.,
C
.
Costa
s.n.
(
ICN
86371);
ibidem
,
33º39ʹ26.2ʺ S
,
53º14ʹ50.2ʺ W
,
3 May 2013
, st.,
C
.
R
.
Carneiro
62
(
ICN
);
ibidem
,
33º40ʹ21ʺ S
,
53º16ʹ11ʺ W
,
16 November 2013
, fl.,
C
.
R
.
Carneiro
72
(
ICN
)
.