Pteris trifoliolata (Pteridaceae), a new brake fern species from karst area in Guangxi, China
Author
Wei, Hong-Jin
Eastern China Conservation Centre for Wild Endangered Plant Resources, Shanghai Chenshan Botanical Garden, Shanghai, 201602, China
Author
Liang, Yong-Yan
Guangxi Forest Resources and Environment Monitoring Center, Nanning, 530028, China
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-09-30
567
1
100
104
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.567.1.10
journal article
156931
10.11646/phytotaxa.567.1.10
eb9f5527-c2df-4515-b214-3fc294c38269
1179-3163
7137870
Pteris trifoliolata
H.J. Wei
,
sp. nov
.
(
Figs. 1
&
2
).
Type
:
—
CHINA
.
Guangxi
:
Du’an County
,
Yong’an Town
, 108°07’N, 24°17’E, under shaded places in mixed forest on limestone mountain, alt.
802 m
,
11 Aug. 2018
,
She-Lang Jin
&
Yong-Yan Liang
JSL6444
(
holotype
, CSH! [No.159999];
isotypes, CSH!, IBK!)
.
Diagnosis:
—
Pteris trifoliolata
resembles
P. nanlingensis
but differs by its frond trifoliate (vs. with 1–3 pairs of lateral pinnae), sterile pinnae usually more than 3.5 (vs. less than 3.5) cm wide, fertile pinnae less than 5 (vs. more than 8) mm wide, and sorus acrostichoid (vs. marginal).
Description
:
Plant
63–80 cm
tall.
Rhizome
short creeping, ca.
5 mm
in diam., with scales at apex;
scales
ca.
2.5 mm
long, narrowly lanceolate, black, with brown narrow edges, glossy, entire.
Frond
dense, dimorphic.
Sterile fronds
thinly leathery, adaxially green-brown, abaxially gray-green, glabrous on both surfaces;
stipe
21–40 mm
long, ca.
1.5 mm
in diam, near middle, stramineous, base with sparse scales same as on rhizome, glabrous above base, grooved adaxially;
lamina
trifoliate, base rounded (sometimes shallowly cordate), 15–25 × (8.5–)
15–20 cm
;
apical pinna
oblong to oblong-lanceolate, 13–22 × (3.5–)
4.5–5.7 cm
, broadest at middle, apex subacute, attenuate into a tip
15–30 mm
long, base cuneate or rounded cuneate, symmetrical, slightly decurrent, entire, stalked, stalk
5–25 mm
, together with lower part of midrib shallowly grooved adaxially, pinna margins cartilaginous, undulate, serrate;
lateral pinnae
similar to apical pinna but smaller, 9.6–21.5 × (2.8–)
3.6–5 cm
, ascending to obliquely spreading, falcate, often broader on basiscopic side, base asymmetrical, acroscopically cuneate to narrowly cuneate, basiscopically rounded cuneate, stalk
2–8 mm
;
veins
free, simple or forked, ascending, parallel, ca. 8 per cm, vein tips enlarged, not reaching cartilaginous margin, faintly visible adaxially, obvious abaxially.
Fertile fronds
herbaceous or thinly papery;
stipe
50–67 cm
,
1.7 mm
in diam. near middle, stramineous at base, upward castaneous–brown, grooved adaxially; Lamina trifoliate, 9.8– 14 ×
4–7 cm
,
apical pinna
linear,
8.4–13 cm
long,
2–3 mm
wide when immature,
3.5–4.5 mm
wide when mature, base rounded cuneate, stalked, stalk stramineous,
5–12 mm
, together with midrib shallowly grooved adaxially, apex mucronate, margins entire, midrib stramineous;
lateral pinnae
same as apical pinna but shorter, stalk
2–4 mm
;
veins
sparse, invisible, apically enlarged and thickened to form oblong-shaped hydathodes, ca. 16 veins per cm, with a marginal black-brown veins connected to each other.
Indusium
linear, membranous, entire, reaching midrib, reflexed or rolling back at maturity.
Sori
acrostichoid.
FIGURE 1
.
Pteris trifoliolata
.—
A. Habitat.—B. Habit (individual plant).—C. Adaxial view of fertile lamina.—D. Sterile lamina.—E. Abaxial view of fertile lamina.—F. Rhizome and stipes.—G. Abaxial view of fertile pinna.—H. Adaxial view of fertile pinna.
FIGURE 2
.
Pteris trifoliolata
.
—A. Habit.—B. Portion of sterile pinna.—C. Portion of fertile pinna.
Geographical distribution:—
Pteris trifoliolata
is only found in Du’an County,
Guangxi
, south
China
(
Fig. 3
).
Ecology:—
Pteris trifoliolata
was discovered growing on a steep forested slope of a limestone mountain, at an elevation of about
800 m
.
IUCN Red List category:—
One small population with ca.15 individuals was found within an area of approximately
30 m
2
at a single locality situated in an unprotected karst area. The status of new species is currently considered as Critically Endangered (CR C2a(i); D) based on IUCN guidelines (IUCN 2019). This population is easily disturbed by human activities from nearby villages and is threatened with extinction at any time. For further assessments, more detailed investigations are needed to confirm if other populations and more individuals exist in similar habitats in karst regions.
Etymology:—
The species epithet is based on the Latin
trifoliolata
, meaning
three-leaved
, referring to the trifoliate frond of the new species.
Chinese name:—三ŢÑAEẫ
(san yu feng wei jue)
Additional specimens examined (
paratype
):—
The same place as the
holotype
,
17 Jun. 2018
,
Yong-Hua Qin JSL6440A
(CSH!).