An evaluation of the endemic bryophyte flora of Guadeloupe
Author
Gradstein, S. Robbert
Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle - Sorbonne Universités, Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité (UMR 7205), BP 39, 57 rue Cuvier, 75005 Paris (France) robbert. gradstein @ mnhn. fr (corresponding author)
gradstein@mnhn.fr
Author
Bernard, Elisabeth Lavocat
Moreau, 97128 Goyave, Guadeloupe, F. W. I. Corresponding member of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité, 75005 Paris (France) lisalavocat @ hotmail. com
lisalavocat@hotmail.com
text
Cryptogamie, Bryologie
2020
2020-10-14
20
15
205
214
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4878.3.2
journal article
10.5252/cryptogamie-bryologie2020v41a15
1776-0992
7822144
Trichosteleum glaucinum
(Besch.) A.Jaeger
(
Fig. 5
)
Berichte über die Thätigkeit der St. Gallischen Naturwissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft
1876-1877: 416 (1878).
—
Basionym:
Rhaphidostegium glaucinum
Besch.,
Annales
des Sciences naturelles
,
Botanique
, sér. 4, 3: 253 (1876)
. —
Type
:
Guadeloupe
, without locality,
l‘Herminier s.n
., “in herb. Schimp., no 28” (lecto-, designated here, PC[PC0121060!]; isolecto-, PC[PC0733118!], NY n.v.).
Remarks
According to
Buck (1998)
T. glaucinum
is characterized by oblong-triangular, shortly acuminate leaves with plane to
FIG. 2. — Lectotype of
Riccardia innovans
(Steph.) Pagán
(G).
FIG. 3. —
Riccardia innovans
(Steph.) Pagán.
A
, habit;
B
, main axis in cross section (from the lectotype).Scale bars:A, 1 mm;B,50 µm. Photographs by C.Reeb.
slightly twisted apices, obscurely serrulate margins, cells with a conspicuous papilla in the upper ⅓, and leaf bases rather abruptly constricted to a narrow insertion. Buck considered
T. glaucinum
probably most closely related to
T. vincentinum
(Mitt.) A.Jaeger
, a species widely distributed in the West Indies, but the leaves in the latter species are narrower and more longly acuminate, with subulate and more conspicuously twisted apices. Moreover, the leaves are presumably more gradually narrowed to the base.
We have examined the
two isotype specimens
of
Trichosteleum glaucinum
in Bescherelle’s “Antillean Bryophytes” herbarium in PC. Both have leaves with shortly acuminate tips and fit the prologue very well. The specimen PC0121060 in this herbarium is chosen as the
lectotype
as it refers to the Schimper herbarium. A portion of the type kept in the general bryophyte herbarium of Paris (PC0099421!), however, has longly acuminate leaves with twisted, piliferous tips and does not belong to
T. glaucinum
; instead it represents typical
T. vincentinum
. This suggests that the original collection of
T. glaucinum
may have been a mixture of
T. glaucinum
and
T. vincentinum
. A close examination of leaves of the two species showed that the piliferous, twisted tips measured about ¼-⅓ of total leaf length in
T. vincentinum
and ¹⁄₁₀-¹∕₅(-¼) in
T. glaucinum
. Moreover, the upper part of the leaf (beyond the widest portion of the lamina) was about twice longer than the lower part in
T. vincentinum
and only about 1.5× longer in
T. glaucinum
. We could not confirm the difference in leaf base constriction mentioned by Buck. In both species the leaves seemed to be gradually narrowed to the base. Since the two species essentially differ only in the length of the piliferous tips,
T. glaucinum
should probably be treated as a variety of
T. vincentinum
.
According to
Buck (1998)
Trichosteleum glaucinum
is only known from the
type
from
Guadeloupe
. Recently, however, the species has been reported from three different states of
Brazil
:
Bahia
(
Evangelista
et al.
2018
),
Maranhão
(Silva 2018) and
Mato Grosso
(www.splink.croia.org.br). However, all three Brazilian records appear to be erroneous. According to Dr Denilson Peralta (pers. com.) the material from
Maranhão
belongs to
T. subdemissum
(Besch.) A.Jaeger.
and that from
Mato Grosso
to an undescribed species (det. A. Leal & P. Camara). Furthermore, based on images sent by Dr Cid J. P. Bastos we found that the material from
Bahia
belongs to
T. intricatum
(Thér.) J.Florsch. It
thus appears that
T. glaucinum
does not occur in
Brazil
and is endemic to
Guadeloupe
.