Reassessment of the Psychotria speciosa G. Forst. (Rubiaceae) complex in Tahiti, Society Islands, with a new combination and description of new species, Psychotria paulae J. - Y. Meyer, Lorence & J. Florence, sp. nov.
Author
Lorence, David H.
Author
Florence, Jacques
Author
Meyer, Jean-Yves
text
Adansonia
2017
2017-06-30
39
1
41
53
journal article
10.5252/a2017n1a4
e3b7fac8-3c2f-4c1d-8329-4e876e7ecde2
1639-4798
4599027
Psychotria speciosa
G. Forst.
(
Fig. 2
)
Florulae Insularum Australium Prodromus
: 16, taxon 89 (1786). —
Cephaelis speciosa
(G. Forst.)
, Spreng.,
Systema vegetabilium
1: 749 (1824). —
Uragoga speciosa
(G. Forst.) Drake,
Illustrationes Florae Insularum Maris Pacifici
15: 38 (1890). —
Lectotype
, here designated: Society Islands,Tahiti, without locality or date (fl. buds),
G. Forster 57
(GOET[GOET012552]!). The sheet is annotated “57.
Psychotria speciosa Prodr.
89” perhaps in handwriting of G. Forster; on a second blue label is written “Original Forster” with a det. slip by F. R. Fosberg “57.
Psychotria speciosa Forst.
f. in 1986”. Due to the poor condition of the
lectotype
, we also designate the following specimen as epitype.
EPITYPE. — Here designated:
Society Islands
. Tahiti, plateau deTaravao, captage de l’Hamoa,
17°47’S
,
149°15’W
,
950 m
,
9.II.1983
, (fl.),
J. Florence 4492
(epi-, P[P02286909]!; isoepi-, BISH, P[P02286910]!, PAP).
DISTRIBUTION, HABITAT AND ECOLOGY. —
Psychotria speciosa
occurs as isolated plants in mid-elevation forests at
700-1500 m
. Its ecology is poorly known, but collectors’ notes indicate it is rare in high valleys along streams associated with species of
Cyathea
Sm.
and
Cyrtandra
J. R. Forst. & G. Forst. Many
of these areas are invaded by
Miconia calvescens
DC.
REPRESENTATIVE SPECIMENS. —
Society Islands
. Tahiti,
Plateau
de Taravao
, captage
de l’Hamoa
,
930 m
,
17°47’S
,
149°15’W
,
9.II.1983
,
J
. Florence 4487
(
P
[
P02286904
]!)
.
Without precise locality: bel arbrisseau dans les hautes vallées, fl. & fr., s.d.,
Vieillard s.n.
(
P
[
P00701046
]!)
;
b. fl.,
Vieillard s.n., s.d.
(
P
[
P02286905
]!)
.
DESCRIPTION
Shrubs or treelets
2-4 m
tall, sparsely branched, vegetative parts glabrous; twiglets cylindrical, fistulose. Leaves of a pair equal or subequal; stipules caducous, united into a calyptra
2-2.5 cm
long, terminated by a narrowly elliptic appendage
0.4-0.8 cm
long, ± bifid at the tip; petiole stout,
1.2-5.2 cm
long; blade when fresh light green to bright green above, paler below, subcoriaceous, obovate, elliptic or oblong-elliptic,
5.3-19.2 cm
long,
6.2-9.3cm
wide, base cuneate to very narrowly decurrent, apex obtuse or rounded to acute or short acuminate, abaxially with whitish or reddish brown domatia sometimes present in secondary vein axils, costa flattened adaxially, prominulous abaxially, secondary veins 8-13 on each side, prominulous abaxially, tertiary vein network inconspicuous. Inflorescence terminal, in bud enclosed in a stipule-like calyptra
3.3-4.5 cm
long, bifid at apex, enclosing 3-9 densely clustered sessile or subsessile flowers, inflorescence becoming pseudo-axillary by development of sympodial vegetative branch. Flowers fragrant when fresh, monomorphic. Hypanthium glabrous, turbinate,
2.5-4.2 mm
long,
2-3.3 mm
wide, calyx pale green, tube
2.5-4.2 mm
long,
2.8-4 mm
wide, flared; calyx lobes linear to triangular-ovate, narrowly oblong, or spathulate,
2.8-5.2 mm
long,
1-1.8 mm
wide (
Fig. 2
A-D). Corollas white, fleshy, hypocrateriform, tube
2.8-3.5 cm
long, 2.0-
2.5 mm
in diam., straight or slightly curved, glabrous without or the lobes sparsely puberulent, lobes narrowly oblong-triangular,
1.3-1.5 cm
long,
2.1-2.5 mm
wide, recurved at maturity, papillose to tomentellose within, more densely so at the throat, apex acute, uncinulate at tip.Stamens inserted below top of tube; anthers sessile, linear,
2.8-3 mm
long. Style
2.8-3.3 cm
long, reaching throat, pubescent in distal third, stigmatic branches
c.
2 mm
long, scarcely exserted or exserted for
2-3 mm
, spreading at maturity, ventrally with white hairs
0.3 mm
long, apex disciform-lobed; nectary disc glabrous. Infructescence terminal or lateral by displacement. Fruits sessile or scarcely pedicellate, clustered, ellipsoid-ovoid to subglobose,
1.5-2.2 cm
long,
0.8-1.1 cm
wide, red at maturity, apex umbonate.Pyrenes ellipsoid,
1.4-1.7 cm
long, 0.7-1.0 cm wide,
0.2-0.4 cm
thick, ventral surface plane, dorsal surface with two marginal and one central crests; preformed germination slit ventral, extending ¼-1/3 distance from apex (
Fig. 5B
). Endosperm not ruminate, lacking reddish alcohol-soluble pigment.
IDENTITY OF
PSYCHOTRIA TRICHOCALYX
,
COMB. NOV.
Drake Del Castillo(1886)
considered Nadeaud’s “Var.D
cymosa
” of
P.speciosa
to represent a distinctive species with inflorescences having villous peduncles and calyces and described it as
Uragoga trichocalyx
Drake
, citing two specimens
(Lépine 184
and
Nadeaud 343
). He later (Drake Del Castillo 1892) transferred it to
Calycosia
A. Gray
as
Calycosia trichocalyx
(Drake) Drake.
Calycosia
is a genus of six to eight species distributed in
Fiji
,
Samoa
, the
Solomon Islands
, and New
Guinea
. It is closely related to
Psychotria
(
Smith & Darwin 1988
;
Andersson 2002
) and is distinguished morphologically by the capitular or capitular-cymose inflorescences with conspicuous, often numerous, pale green to white, free or united, involucrate stipule-like deciduous bracts, and flowers with a large, infundibular calyx limb, deciduous in fruit (
Smith & Darwin 1988
). However,
Smith & Darwin (1988)
stated these characters are not reliable in separating the genus from all groups of
Psychotria
. Our observations reveal that young inflorescences of many Pacific
Psychotria
species are enveloped by stipules or stipule-like bracts. Capitular-cymose inflorescences occur in several Marquesan and Micronesian
Psychotria
species (
Fosberg & Sachet 1991
;
Lorence &Wagner2005
;
Lorence &Wood 2012
). Furthermore, calyx limb size and lobing varies considerably between
Psychotria
species. For these reasons we believe
C. trichocalyx
is best placed in
Psychotria
and make the following new combination.