Synopsis and lectotypification of Solanum (Solanaceae) species endemic in the West Indies
Author
Madrid, Anales del Jardín Botánico de
Author
2009
Author
Knapp, Sandra
text
Anales del Jardín Botánico de Madrid
2009
2009-07-07
66
1
65
84
journal article
10.3989/ajbm.2209
c4363035-d9cd-4166-a623-4e29d85a4be9
6326308
Solanum bahamense
L. var.
rugelii
D’Arcy, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 61: 839. 1974
Type:
USA
.
Florida
:
Monroe Co.
,
Key West
,
F. Rugel
s.n
. (
holotype
,
MO
)
.
Distribution.
Widespread in the West Indies in coastal forests, forest margins and on beach margins, often on coral or calcareous soils, from 0-100 m. Absent from Hispaniola, but found on Ile la Tortue and Ile la Navasse off the NW coast of Haiti.
Representative specimen.
Bahamas, Bimini, Cat Cay, Correll & Correll 45600 (F, NY).
In describing
Solanum fruticosum,
Miller (1768)
cited “
Solanum fruticosum
bacciferum, spinosum, flore caeruleo Sl. C. 108
” and made reference to the collector William Houstoun. The specimen selected here as the lectotype for this name in BM is annotated with the same reference to Sloane, and bears a label in Houstoun’s hand (
Fig. 1a
). It is also a good match for the description.
Solanum varginstonicum
was named by Buc’hoz in honour of George Washington, with a spectacular misspelling of the name. No specimens have been traced for Buc’hoz’s names, so the plate (
Fig. 1b
) is selected here as the lectotype.
In his description of
Solanum persicifolium,
Dunal (1813)
cites two pre-Linnean sources;
Plumier’s (1703)
catalogue (“Plumier cat. 4”) bound with the
Nova Plantarum Americanarum
(
Plumier, 1703
) and the larger compilation of Plumier’s American plants illustrated by Johannes Burman from tracings of Plumier’s originals held in Paris (“Burm., Plant. Amer. p. 240, t. 244, fig. 2”; Plumier, 1755-1760, see
Jarvis, 2007
for a discussion of Plumier’s plates). On page 4 in
Plumier’s 1703
catalogue is the polynomial “
Solanum fruticosum
, persicae foliis,
aculeatum
”; this same polynomial is associated with plate 244 in the illustrated edition (
Plumier, 1757
). In the
Prodromus
(
Dunal, 1852
)
, Dunal cites several specimens, stating that the Burman plate was “mala”. The Burman plate, however, is the only verifiable element associated with the original description (although Dunal may have seen the originals in Paris) and is thus here selected as the lectotype (
Fig. 1c
).
Fig. 1.
Solanum bahamense
L.
a,
Lectotype of
S. fruticosum
Mill.,
Houstoun s.n.
(BM000815974);
b,
lectotype of
S. varginstonicum
Buc’hoz, Buc’hoz, Pl. Nouv. Découv. 48., t. 46, 1784. Reproduced with permission of the Natural History Museum Botany Library;
c,
lectotype of
Solanum persicifolium
Dunal, Plumier, Plant. Amer.
t. 245, f. 2, 1763. Reproduced with permission of the Natural History Museum Botany Library;
d,
lectotype of
S. bahamense
var.
lanceolatum
Dunal, Sloane, Voy.
Jamaica t. 145, fig. 3, 1707. Reproduced with permission of the Natural History Museum Botany Library;
e,
epitype of
S. bahamense
var.
lanceolatum
Dunal
(BM000589942). Reproduced with permission of the Natural History Museum, London;
f,
lectotype of
S. persicifolium
var.
belloi
O.E. Schulz,
Heller 4605
(F-80757). Reproduced with permission of the Field Museum of Natural History.
Solanum igneum
var.
inerme
was described by Dunal using two sheets in G-DC (
Dunal, 1852
), one without a collector from Cuba and the other a cultivated specimen from seeds send by Wydler from St. Thomas. He speculates that the un-armed nature of the plant is due to it being cultivated (
Dunal, 1852
), and places
S. subarmatum
tentatively in synonymy. The only unambiguously identifiable sheet cited is
Wydler 90
from St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands; it is here selected as the lectotype (not illustrated).
In describing
Solanum bahamense
var.
lanceolatum
, Grisebach
unambiguously cites a plate from Sloane as part of the diagnosis, and additionally assigned some of the specimens cited (without herbarium attribution) to this variety. I feel that he is specifically referring to the Sloane plate as the element on which he is basing his name, and merely identifying the other collections as belonging to one or the other variety, thus these specimens are probably not type material. Two specimens at GOET annotated “? lanceolatum” in Grisebach’s hand are potential original material, but the Sloane plate is the only element unambiguously linked to the variety. I therefore have chosen the plate in Sloane’s
A voyage to the islands Madera … Jamaica
(1707-1725) labelled
Solanum fruticosum
bacciferum spinosum, flore caeruleo” as the lectotype of the variety (
Fig. 1d
). The epitype of this name with the same polynomial designation is found in the Sloane herbarium at BM (BM000589942,
Fig. 1e
).
Five collections were cited in the protologue of
Solanum persicifolium
var.
belloi; Heller 4605, Sintenis 1260, Sintenis 1919
p.p.,
Eggers 35
and
Benzoin
s.n
. Of these,
Heller 4605
is the most widely distributed and has several sheets in very good condition and the sheet at F (
Fig. 1f
) is here selected as the lectotype.