A generic monograph of the Hyacinthaceae subfamily Urgineoideae
Author
Martínez-Azorín, Mario
Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & E-mail: mmartinez @ ua. es; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 2605 - 9575
mmartinez@ua.es
Author
Crespo, Manuel B.
Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & E-mail: crespo @ ua. es; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3294 - 5637
crespo@ua.es
Author
Alonso-Vargas, María Ángeles
Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & E-mail: ma. alonso @ ua. es; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 3768 - 9203
ma.alonso@ua.es
Author
Pinter, Michael
Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & Institute of Biology, NAWI Graz, Division Plant Sciences, Karl-Franzens University Graz, Holteigasse 6, A- 8010 Graz, Austria. & E-mail: michael. pinter @ uni-graz. at; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 6055 - 6989
michael.pinter@uni-graz.at
Author
Crouch, Neil R.
BRAM, South African National Biodiversity Institute, P. O. Box 52099, Berea Road 4007, South Africa. & School of Chemistry and Physics, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 4041, South Africa. & E-mail: N. Crouch @ sanbi. org. za; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4938 - 5840.
rouch@sanbi.org.za
Author
Dold, Anthony P.
Selmar Schonland Herbarium, Department of Botany, Rhodes University, Makhanda, 6140, South Africa. & E-mail: t. dold @ ru. ac. za; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 9497 - 7503
t.dold@ru.ac.za
Author
Mucina, Ladislav
Harry Butler Institute, Murdoch University, 90 South Street, Building 390, Murdoch WA 6150, Perth, Australia. & Dept. of Geography & Environmental Studies, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X 1, Matieland 7602, Stellenbosch, South Africa. & E-mail: ladislav. mucina @ murdoch. edu. au; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0317 - 8886
ladislav.mucina@murdoch.edu.au
Author
Pfosser, Martin
Biocenter Linz, J. - W. - Klein-Str. 73, A- 4040 Linz, Austria. & E-mail: martin. pfosser @ ooelkg. at; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2050 - 4997
martin.pfosser@ooelkg.at
Author
Wetschnig, Wolfgang
Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & Institute of Biology, NAWI Graz, Division Plant Sciences, Karl-Franzens University Graz, Holteigasse 6, A- 8010 Graz, Austria. & Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain. & E-mail: wolfgang. wetschnig @ uni-graz. at; ORCID: https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 9245 - 029 X * Author for correspondence & Depto. Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales (dCARN), Universidad de Alicante, P. O. Box 99, ES- 03080 Alicante, Spain.
wolfgang.wetschnig@uni-graz.at
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-08-31
610
1
1
143
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.610.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.610.1.1
1179-3163
8308556
15.
Rhadamanthus
Salisb., Gen. Pl.
[Salisbury]: 37 (1866)
(
Figs 36–38
). Typus generis:—
R. convallarioides
(L.f.) Baker (
holotype
).
=
Drimia
sect.
Rhadamanthus
(Salisb.) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
in
Strelitzia 40: 129 (2018)
.
Typus
sectionis:—
R. convallarioides
(L.f.)
Baker (
holotype
).
=
Drimia
sect.
Sclerophyllae
J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
in
Strelitzia 40: 101 (2018)
.
Typus
sectionis:—
D. sclerophylla
J.C.Manning &
Goldblatt ≡
Urginea rigidifolia
Baker
(
holotype
).
Description
:—Bulbous geophyte.
Bulb
hypogeal, ovoid to globose, with compact white, scales, rarely loose and pink.
Leaves
1‒20 per bulb, hysteranthous,
1.5‒30 cm
long, filiform and subterete or ovate-lanceolate to suborbicular and flat or cucullate, leathery, green, sometimes purplish at base, smooth, glabrous or rarely ciliate, sometimes surrounded by transversally barred cataphylls at base.
Inflorescence
racemose, usually elongated,
2‒22 cm
long, with 5‒50(–70) flowers; peduncle terete, erect,
5‒30 cm
long, smooth or commonly scabrid-puberulous at base; pedicels subpatent, straight to arquing,
3‒20 mm
long, glabrous or rarely minutely scabrid. Bracts narrowly lanceolate,
1‒2 mm
long, lowermost with spur
0.5‒1.5 mm
long; bracteoles absent.
Flowers
stellate, campanulate or urceolate, erect-patent to nodding, diurnal. Tepals 6,
3‒10 mm
long, white, yellow, brown or pinkish, with darker longitudinal band, free and patent to reflexed or connate for up to
3 mm
and then campanulate or urceolate.
Stamens
6, connivent to style or spreading; filaments free and
2‒3 mm
long or adnate to tepals for up to
2 mm
from base and free portions
0.3‒1.5 mm
long; anthers medifixed, dehiscing by apical slits to their whole length, oblong to sagittate, sometimes basally apendiculate.
Ovary
ovoid, trigonous, 1.5‒4.0 mm long, pale green to yellowish, well differentiated from style. Style erect,
0.5‒2.5 mm
long. Stigma trigonous, papillose.
Capsule
ovoid to subglobose,
3‒7 mm
long, valves completely dehiscing from base; tepals cohering and inrolled above ovary after anthesis, circumcissile from base and persisting as a cap at the top of the developing capsules.
Seeds
subellipsoid to subtrigonous, flattened with prominent central embryo and wide, flat wings,
2‒5 mm
long, black to dark brown, with sinuous anticlinal cell walls.
FIGURE 36.
Species of
Rhadamanthus
Salisb.
1.
Rhadamanthus convallarioides
(L.f.) Salisb. ex Baker from
Jacquin (1797
: t. 81, as
Hyacinthus convallarioides
L.f.);
2.
Rhadamanthus urantherus
R.A.Dyer
from
Dyer (1934
: t. 3247);
3.
Rhadamanthus cochlearis
(Mart.- Azorín
et al.
) Mart.-Azorín
et al.
from Martínez-Azorín
et al.
(2013: 333, as
Drimia cochlearis
Mart.
-Azorín
et al.
).
Number of species and distribution
:—
Rhadamanthus
includes twelve species, occurring in southern and western
South Africa
and southern
Namibia
(
Fig. 29
), and restricted to the Cape, Karoo-Namib and Uzambara-Zululand Regions, and the Southern Section of the Zambezian Subregion (sensu
Takhtajan 1986
and
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
2023a
). For further information on
Rhadamanthus
see
Dyer (1934)
,
Nordenstam (1970)
,
Jessop (1977)
,
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
(2013b)
, and
Manning & Goldblatt (2018)
.
Karyology
:—2n=18 (
Speta 1998a
, with no reference). 2n=20 (
De Wet 1957
, as
Rhadamanthus convallarioides
Salisb.
).
History, diagnostic characters, and taxonomic relationships
:—
Salisbury (1866)
described
Rhadamanthus
to include a single species,
Rhadamanthus convallarioides
(Linnaeus f. 1782: 204) Salisb. ex
Baker (1871: 434)
, based on the nodding urceolate to campanulate flowers with the tepals fused for their basal portion, the stamens connivent to the gynoecium and the anthers dehiscing by apical pore-like slits.
Baker (1897)
described
R. cyanelloides
Baker (1897: 444)
, and later
Dyer (1934)
described
R. urantherus
Dyer (1934
: t. 3247), both sharing the peculiar dehiscence of anthers.
Nordenstam (1970)
presented a revision of
Rhadamanthus
in which he accepted the previous three species and added six further new species, namely
R. albiflorus
Nordenstam (1970: 177)
,
R. arenicola
Nordenstam (1970: 166)
,
R. fasciatus
Nordenstam (1970: 174)
,
R. montanus
B.Nord. in
Martínez-Azorín & Crespo (2014: 1331)
,
R. platyphyllus
B.Nord. in
Martínez-Azorín & Crespo (2014: 1332)
, and
R. secundus
Nordenstam (1970: 168)
. The genus was characterised by the anthers dehiscing incompletely by introrse, longitudinal slits, and it was also reported that in
R. fasciatus
and
R. albiflorus
the sutures reached down below the middle of the thecae. In that concept,
Rhadamanthus
includes a wide range of morphological variation such as bulb scales compact or loose; leaves filiform, numerous and erect or few, wide, flat and appresed to the ground; flowers nodding to patent, stellate to urceolate-campanulate; tepals from nearly free to fused about half of their length; and stamens free or fused along the anthers. Later,
Obermeyer (1980a)
described two further species,
Rhadamanthus namibensis
and
R. karooicus
, and proposed
R.
subgenus
Rhadamanthopsis
(here accepted at genus rank), based on the loculicidal anther dehiscence, to seggregate the two latter species from typical
Rhadamanthus
.
Speta (1998b)
transferred all nine known species of
Rhodocodon
, a genus endemic to
Madagascar
, into
Rhadamanthus
based on the similarities in flower morphology and anthers dehiscence. However,
Knirsch
et al.
(2015)
presented solid morphological and molecular differences and reinstated
Rhodocodon
. The latest species described in the genus is
Rhadamanthus involutus
J.C.Manning & Snijman
in
Snijman
et al.
(1999: 113)
.
FIGURE 37.
Species of
Rhadamanthus
Salisb.
displayed in horizontal rows of images.
1.
Rhadamanthus arenicola
B.Nord.;
2.
Rhadamanthus ciliatus
(L.f.) Mart.-Azorín
et al.
;
3.
Rhadamanthus cochlearis
(Mart.-Azorín
et al.
) Mart.-Azorín
et al.
;
4.
Rhadamanthus convallarioides
(L.f.) Salisb. ex Baker.
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
(2013a)
excluded
R. cyanelloides
as
Sagittanthera cyanelloides
on the basis of the anthers connate in a cone around the style, among other distinguishing characters. Recently,
Manning & Goldblatt (2018)
recognised
Drimia
sect.
Rhadamanthus
(
Salisbury 1866: 37
)
Manning & Goldblatt (2018: 129)
, including nine species mostly corresponding to the concept of
Nordenstam (1970)
, and followed
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
(2013b)
in excluding
R. cyanelloides
as their monotypic
D.
sect.
Sagittanthera
(
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
2013a: 46
)
Manning & Goldblatt (2018: 73)
. Even with the exclusion of
S. cyanelloides
,
D
. sect
Rhadamanthus
sensu
Manning & Goldblatt (2018)
is paraphyletic according to previous studies by
Pfosser
et al.
(2012)
and the present one, in which
R. platyphyllus
and
Drimia oliverorum
J.C.Manning
in
Manning & Oliver (2009: 225)
are aberrant in the genus in having 1‒2 velutinous leaves that are ovate, flat and adpressed to the ground showing distinct longitudinal furrows, and they form an independent well-supported clade positioned far from the
Rhadamanthus
clade, a fact that favours acceptance of
Striatula
to include the latter two species (
Pinter
et al.
2019
).
FIGURE 38.
Species of
Rhadamanthus
Salisb.
displayed in horizontal rows of images.
1.
Rhadamanthus fasciatus
B.Nord.;
2.
Rhadamanthus rigidifolius
(Baker) Mart.
-Azorín
et al.
;
3.
Rhadamanthus secundus
B.Nord. (Photographs in flower by H. Kolberg);
4.
Rhadamanthus urantherus
R.A.Dyer.
The phylogenetic studies by
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
(2023a)
include 21 samples that form a well supported clade that is here assimilated to
Rhadamanthus
, comprising
R. arenicola
,
R. convallarioides
,
R. fasciatus
,
R. montanus
,
R. urantherus
together with samples of
Urginea ciliata
(Linnaeus f. 1782: 199)
Baker (1873b: 218)
,
U. rigidifolia
Baker (1878: 323)
,
U. muirii
Brown (1933: 334)
, and
Drimia cochlearis
Mart.
-Azorín, M.B.Crespo & A.P.Dold in
Martínez-Azorín & Crespo (2014: 1329)
. The latter four species form a distinct group that is included by
Manning & Goldblatt (2018)
in
D.
sect.
Sclerophyllae
based on their nodding globular buds before anthesis and patent to suberect stellate flowers borne on pedicels longer than tepals, the spreading filaments, and the anthers dehiscing along their entire length. Our phylogenetic results show
D.
sect.
Rhadamanthus
sensu
Manning & Goldblatt (2018)
as paraphyletic without the inclusion of
D.
sect.
Sclerophyllae
, which however forms a strongly supported subclade within
Rhadamanthus
(
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
2023a
)
. We preliminarily include taxa of
D
. sect.
Sclerophyllae
in
Rhadamanthus
,
based on the obtained phylogenetic results. Moreover, the stellate flowers with long, spreading stamens of
D.
sect.
Sclerophyllae
are atypical for
Rhadamanthus
s.str.
, which has short stamens connivent to the gynoecium. However, there exists an apparent transition from flowers of
R. albiflorus
and
R. fasciatus
(
Nordenstam 1970
)
that are subpatent with nearly free and spreading tepals, to the nodding, urceolate flowers of
R. arenicola
,
R. convallarioides
,
R. secundus
, and
R. urantherus
, with various degrees of tepal connation. In our analyses, three samples of
R. fasciatus
with sub-stellate flowers form a clade that is sister to the remaining samples and taxa in the genus, indicative of the primitive stage of stellate flowers and early swifts in flower morphology within this lineage. In this sense,
Rhadamanthus
includes twelve species restricted to
South Africa
and southern
Namibia
. No samples of
R. albiflorus
,
R. involutus
, and
R. secundus
were available for the present study. Further studies including a complete sampling in the genus are necessary to evaluate possible alternative classifications within
Rhadamanthus
.
Accepted species and required new combinations:—
Rhadamanthus albiflorus
B.
Nord.
in
Bot. Not. 123: 177 (1970)
≡
Drimia albiflora
(
B.Nord.
)
J.C.Manning
&
Goldblatt in
Strelitzia
9: 711 (2000)
.
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Western Cape
.
Bredasdorp
(3420):
Hesquaspoort
, (–AA), elev.
245 m
,
20 December 1962
,
J.P.H. Acocks
23242
(PRE0051091-0! holo.)
.
=
Rhadamanthus montaguense
Oberm.
,
nom. nud
.
in sched
.: near Montagu Baths,
December 1892
,
H. Bolus 2797
(NBG 72561!).
Rhadamanthus arenicola
B.
Nord.
in
Bot. Not. 123: 166 (1970)
≡
Drimia arenicola
(
B.Nord.
)
J.C.Manning
&
Goldblatt in
Strelitzia
9: 711 (2000)
(
Figs 3.5
,
37.1
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
.
Hondeklipbaai
(3017):
0.5 miles
S of Wallekraal
, (–BC),
October 1924
,
Pillans s.n.
sub BOL18253 (BOL140332! holo.)
.
Rhadamanthus ciliatus
(L.f.) Mart.-Azorín, M.B.Crespo & M.Á.Alonso
comb. nov.
≡
Ornithogalum ciliatum
L.f.,
Suppl. Pl.: 199 (1782)
, basionym ≡
Urginea ciliata
(L.f.)
Baker in
J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 13: 218 (1873)
≡
Drimia ciliata
(L.f.)
J.C.Manning & Goldblatt in
Bothalia 33(1): 111 (2003)
(
Figs 3.6
,
37.2
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
. Caput bonae Spei,
Thunberg s.n.
(UPS-THUNB [8281] lecto. designated as “
type
” by
Jessop in
J. S. African Bot. 43: 279. 1977
; S-G 79 06 [image!] probl. iso.).
Rhadamanthus cochlearis
(Mart.-Azorín, M.B.Crespo & A.P.Dold) Mart.-Azorín, M.B.Crespo & M.Á.Alonso
comb. nov.
≡
Drimia cochlearis
Mart.
-
Azorín, M.B.Crespo & A.P.Dold in
Taxon 63(6): 1329 (2014)
, basionym ≡
Drimia cochlearis
Mart.
-
Azorín, M.B.Crespo & A.P.Dold in
Syst. Bot. 38(2): 334 (2013)
,
nom. inval
. (
Figs 3.7
,
36.3
,
37.3
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Western Cape
, ca.
11 km
SW of Calitzdorp, Gamkaberg Nature Reserve (former Groenefontein Nature Reserve), elev.
408 m
,
29 September 2011
,
M. Martínez-Azorín, A.P. Dold, J. Vlok & A. Martínez-Soler MMA941
(GRA holo.: only the bulbs with leaves; ABH iso.).
Rhadamanthus convallarioides
(L.f.) Salisb. ex
Baker in
J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 11: 434 (1871)
≡
Hyacinthus convallarioides
L.f.,
Suppl. Pl.: 204 (1782)
≡
Drimia convallarioides
(L.f.)
J.C.Manning & Goldblatt in
Strelitzia 9: 711 (2000)
(
Figs 3.8
,
36.1
,
37.4
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
. Sutherland (3220): karroo below Roggeveld, (–CA),
Thunberg s.n. UPS-THUNB8519
(UPS-THUNB! lecto. designated by
Nordenstam in
Bot. Not. 123: 159. 1970
).
Rhadamanthus fasciatus
B.
Nord.
in
Bot. Not. 123: 174 (1970)
≡
Drimia fasciata
(
B.Nord.
)
J.C.Manning
&
Goldblatt in
Strelitzia
9: 711 (2000)
(
Fig. 38.1
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
.
Kimberley
(2824):
Nooitgedacht
, c.
10 miles
SE of Barkly West
, (–DA), elev. c.
3800 ft.
,
15 October 1960
,
O.A. Leistner
1983
(PRE0051090-0! holo.; K000257232!, LD iso.)
.
Rhadamanthus involutus
J.C.Manning & Snijman
in
Novon 9(1): 113 (1999)
≡
Drimia involuta
(J.C.Manning & Snijman) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
in
Strelitzia 9: 712 (2000)
≡
Rhadamanthus involutus
J.C.Manning & Snijman
in
Taxon 63: 1330 (2014)
,
nom. superfl
.
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
. Calvinia (3119): Arendskraal farm, W of Nieuwoudtville, (–AC),
20 December 1995
flowers,
D. Snijman & J.C. Manning 1525
(NBG0158587-0!
lecto. designated here
: the inflorescence on the upper left hand side corner; K!, MO176399!, PRE0461606-0! isolecto.: only the flowering material).
Comments
:—In the light of the recentmost proposal by
Mosyakin & McNeill (2022)
to amend Art. 8 of the ICN, after which the information in the protologue will rule, and considering that the protologue in
Snijman
et al.
(1999)
only indicates a single collecting date (
20 December 1995
) in the
holotype
designation, a lectotypification is needed from the mixed type collection NBG0158587-0. Based on the new considerations, the description made by
Martínez-Azorín & Crespo (2014: 1330)
is therefore nomenclaturally inoperative, since it is either superfluous or not valid.
Rhadamanthus montanus
B.
Nord.
in
Taxon 63(6): 1331 (2014)
≡
Rhadamanthus montanus
B.
Nord.
in
Bot. Not. 123: 162 (1970)
,
nom. inval
.
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Western Cape
.
Cape
Town
(3318):
Jonkershoek Twins
, (–DD), elev.
3000–4000 ft.
,
12 February 1945
,
E. Esterhuysen
11456
(BOL140331! holo.: a bulb with an inflorescence with eight flowers in the upper part; K000257229!, PRE0051072-0!, NBG72562! iso.)
.
Rhadamanthus muirii
(N.E.Br.) Mart.
-
Azorín, M.B
.Crespo &
M.Á.Alonso
comb. nov.
≡
Urginea muirii
N.E.Br.
in Gard. Chron., Ser. 3. 93: 334 (1933), basionym.
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Near Riversdale
, 1933,
J. Muir
4846
(K, first-step lecto. designated by
Jessop
in
J. S. African Bot.
43: 315. 1977
;
second-step lecto. designated here
: K000257341!).
Rhadamanthus rigidifolius
(Baker) Mart.
-Azorín, M.B.Crespo & M.Á.Alonso
comb. nov.
≡
Urginea rigidifolia
Baker
in
J. Bot. 16: 323 (1878)
, basionym ≡
Drimia sclerophylla
J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
in
Strelitzia 9: 712 (2000)
,
nom. nov.
[non
Drimia rigidifolia
Baker
in
J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 11: 420 (1871)
=
D. media
Jacq.
] (
Figs 3.9
,
38.2
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Eastern Cape
. Graaff-Reinet (3224): Karroo, near Graaff-Reinet, (–BC), elev.
2500 ft.
,
September 1873
,
H. Bolus 783
(K000257339! lecto. designated as “holo.” by
Jessop in
J. S. African Bot. 43: 315. 1977
).
Rhadamanthus secundus
B.Nord.
in
Bot. Not. 123: 168 (1970)
≡
Drimia secunda
(
B.Nord.
)
J.C.Manning
&
Goldblatt in
Strelitzia
9: 712 (2000)
(
Fig. 38.3
).
Type
:—
NAMIBIA
. Ļderitz (2615): Ļderitz-Şd,
Kovisberge
, (–CA),
30 September 1959
,
W. Giess
2350
(M holo.;
PRE
0051080-0!,
WIND
iso.)
.
=
Ophioasylon peculiare
Dinter
,
nom. nud. in sched
.:
NAMIBIA
.
Bogenfels
(2715):
Buchuberge
, (–DD),
5 July 1929
,
K. Dinter
6492
(K000257231!, PRE0051078!, SAM).
Rhadamanthus urantherus
R.A.Dyer
in
Hooker’s Icon. Pl.
sér. 5, 33: t. 3247 (1934) ≡
Drimia uranthera
(R.A.Dyer) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt
in
Strelitzia
9: 712 (2000)
(
Figs 3.10
,
36.2
,
38.4
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Western Cape
.
Oudtshoorn
(3322):
1 mile
E of Oudtshoorn
, (–CA),
29 March 1933
[leafing
11 Oct. 1933
ex hort.],
Barker s.n. K933/32
(K000257230! lecto. designated by
Martínez-Azorín
et al.
in
Phytotaxa 201: 169. 2015
: only the bulb with two inflorescences in centre of sheet).