Aloestrela Molteno & Gideon F. Sm. (Asphodelaceae: Alooideae), a new alooid genus with A. Suzannae (Decary) Molteno & Gideon F. Sm. As the only species
Author
Smith, Gideon F.
0000-0002-5417-9208
Department of Botany, P. O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, 6031 South Africa.
smithgideon1@gmail.com
Author
Molteno, Steven
0000-0002-0481-7355
1 Drift Road, Kenwyn, Cape Town, 7780 South Africa
smithgideon1@gmail.com
text
Bradleya
2019
2019-05-01
37
3
7
https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/372e3fce-fd3a-39a6-a841-669dc65bb048/
journal article
10.25223/brad.n37.2019.a2
a7d60bed-46f0-41e9-99d4-2447dc6cfe46
7876171
Aloestrela
Molteno & Gideon F.Sm.
,
gen. nov
.
Photographer unknown. ©The National Herbarium of South Africa (PRE), South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria. Reproduced with the permission of the Curator.
Type
:
Aloestrela suzannae
(Decary) Molteno & Gideon F.Sm.
(≡
Aloe suzannae
Decary
).
Number of species: one.
Diagnosis: Solitary, very large, tall-growing, single-stemmed, aloe-like perennial, reaching a height of
4m
.
Leaves
erect to gracefully curved upwards, glaucous-green (
Figure 4
);
surface
rough to the touch,
margins
dentate;
apices
blunt-rounded.
Inflorescence
araceme, to
3m
tall.
Flowers
tubular, perigone apices recurved.
Description: Perennial, solitary, very large, single-stemmed, leaf succulent.
Stem
to 3–4(– 7?)m tall, up to
25cm
in diameter, brown, rough, usually unbranched, less frequently branched.
Leaves
100 ×
8–10cm
, amplexicaul, succulent, nu-merous, erect to gracefully curved upwards, cymbiform in cross-section, remains of old leaves persistent for a short time;
surface
dull glaucous green, roughened, lacking spots and scattered teeth, leathery;
margins
armed with small, triangular teeth;
apices
blunt- to obtuse-rounded, small-toothed.
Inflorescence
asimple, erect, densely flowered, cylindrical, brush-like raceme, to
3m
tall including peduncle;
peduncle
to
1m
long;
pedicels
to
30mm
long;
bracts
to
15mm
long, not exceeding pedicels, ± elongated-deltoid.
Flowers
30–40(–45)mm long, with aslight basal swelling, nocturnal;
tepals
spreading to strongly recurved apically, white to creamy white, orangey pink-infused;
anthers
well-exserted, spreading fan-like beyond mouth of flower;
filaments
pinkish orange;
ovary
cylindrical;
ovules
placed almost horizontally, 24–30 per locule (Steyn & Smith, 1998: 195).
Fruit
a loculicidal capsule.
Seed
shortly winged.
Chromosome number
: 2
n
= 14 (
Brandham, 1971: 387
).
Genome size
(2
C
/pg) 33.3 picograms (
Zonneveld, 2002: 8
).
Figure 3.
A young flowering specimen of
Aloestrela suzannae
.Reproduction of ablack-&-white photograph mounted on aherbariumsheet, labelled: “[G.W. Reynolds] 7802 A. Suzannae R. Decary. Young plant, near Amboasary, 29
th
June 1955. G.W. Reynolds. Madagascar
Figure 4.
The glaucous-green leaves of
Aloestrela suzannae
are borne erectly; the leaf apices are blunt-rounded. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.
.”.
Photographer unknown, presumably G.W. Reynolds. © The National Herbarium of South Africa (PRE), South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria. Reproduced with the permission of the Curator
.
Distribution: Toliara Province (formerly Toliary or Tuléar), aformer province of Madagascar (endemic).
Conservation: The species is of conservation concern (
Smith & Swartz, 1997
, 1999;
Castillon & Castillon, 2010: 274
) and is regarded as Critically Endangered (
Rakotoarisoa
et al
., 2014: 89
).
Etymology:The genus
Aloestrela
is named for Professor Dr Estrela Figueiredo of the Department of Botany of the Nelson Mandela University in Port Elizabeth, South Africa (
Figure 1
). Estrela has a longstanding interest in succulent plants and authored or co-authored over 100 scientific papers and several books on aloes alone.
The specific epithet
suzannae
commemorates Mademoiselle Suzanne Decary, daughter of Raymond Decary. Decary first described the species as an aloe (
Decary, 1921: 26
, foot note no. 2).