Revision of the Malagasy species of Homalium sect. Eumyriantheia Warb. (Salicaceae)
Author
Wendy L. Applequist
text
Candollea
2016
2016-03-14
71
1
33
60
journal article
10.15553/c2016v711a7
508bebc5-39aa-4f9c-b544-171e992dbbea
2235-3658
161516
1.
Homalium boinense
H. Perrier
in Mém. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat. 13: 297. 1940.
Lectotypus
(first step, designated by
Sleumer, 1973: 318
):
Madagascar
. Prov.
Mahajanga
:
Beritzoka
entre
Maevatanana
et
Andriba
,
X.1892
, fl.,
Perrier de la Bâthie
338
(
P
).
Lectotypus
(second step, designated here):
Madagascar
.
Prov.
Mahajanga
:
Beritzoka
entre
Maevatanana
et
Andriba
,
X.1892
, fl.,
Perrier de la Bâthie
338
(
P
[
P04679008
]!;
isolecto-
:
G
[
G00018416
] image seen,
L
[
L0010885
] image seen,
P
[
P04679009
]!).
Syntypi:
Madagascar
. Prov.
Mahajanga
:
sine loc.
,
1898
, fl.,
Perrier de la Bâthie
699
(
P
[
P04679004
]!,
S
[
S10-10098
] image seen)
;
env. de
M[a]evatanana
,
1900
, fl.,
Perrier de la Bâthie
6729
(
P
[
P04679005
]!,
PRE
[
PRE0602253
-0] image seen,
US
[
US00603577
] image seen)
;
Mahamavo
, W du
Namakia
,
IX.1922
, fl.,
Perrier de la Bâthie
14833
(
K
[
K000231474
] image seen,
P
[
P04679006
,
P04679007
]!).
Tree
to
20 m
tall; large twigs brown; young twigs brown, glabrous or sparsely and minutely pubescent; stipules broadly deltoid (deltoid),
1-1.6 mm
, minutely pubescent or glabrous.
Leaves
alternate; petiole
5-15 mm
, glabrous or sparsely minutely pubescent; blade elliptical to broadly elliptical or obovate, 5.7-13.6 ×
3.4-6.6 cm
; base rounded (minutely attenuate at petiole attachment) to convex (cuneate in immature leaves); apex rounded to rounded-obtuse or cuspidate; margins subentire or shallowly wavy or toothed, then with small glands in tooth apices at margin; abaxial surface glabrous or bearing few small hairs on midrib, drying brown; adaxial surface glabrous, drying dark or pale grayish brown.
Inflorescences
narrowly paniculate, with flower clusters usually borne on short branches or flowers solitary distally, occasionally racemiform, lateral,
6.5-15 cm
, short-pubescent; peduncle (0.8-)
2-5.5 cm
, moderately thick; pedicel 1-2(-2.5) mm, densely short-pubescent; bracts ovate to broadly deltoid or suborbicular,
1.3-3.4 mm
, densely (to sparsely) pubescent; bracteoles lanceolate (ovate),
1-2 mm
, pubescent.
Flowers:
sepals 5(-6), narrowly oblong to narrowly elliptical or oblong-ovate with acute to rounded-acute (rounded) apex,
3-5.7 mm
, abaxial surface moderately pubescent; calyx cup shortly funnelform, densely short-pubescent especially basally; sepal glands irregularly trapezoid to rectangular with a depressed center, 0.6-1.3 ×
0.5-0.8 mm
, upper surface usually densely short-pubescent; petals white, obovate to oblanceolate, with rounded apex, 5.2-8 ×
2.3-4 mm
, conspicuously longer than sepals, abaxial surface densely short-pubescent especially basally, adaxial surface glabrous; stamens in groups of 5; filaments
3-4 mm
, glabrous; anthers
0.4 mm
; ovary raised conic, densely short-pubescent; styles 4,
1.4-2.3 mm
, short-pubescent at base.
Seeds
not seen.
Uses.
– The wood is said to be white, of good quality, and much used
(Perrier de la Bâthie 14833).
Distribution, ecology and conservation status. –
Homalium boinense
is confined to dry forest in
Mahajanga province
. It is known from fewer than 5 locations; its native range is unprotected and highly degraded, and it has not been collected for over 90 years. A preliminary conservation status assessment of “Endangered” [EN B2ab(iii)] following IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria probably underestimates the level of threat.
Notes. –
Sleumer (1973)
designated
Perrier de la Bâthie 338
at P as the
lectotype
of
Homalium boinense
; there are two sheets of this collection at P, both of which he marked “Syn &
Lectotype
”. Art. 9.17 of the ICN (
McNeill et al., 2012
) recommends that a second-stage lectotypification be published to select one of these sheets; the selected sheet is in better condition and includes a fragment packet and what is probably Perrier de la Bâthie’s original label.
Homalium boinense
is notable for its stamens in groups of five, rather than three, and its habitat in dry regions of
Mahajanga province
, where no other species of sect.
Eumyriantheia
occur.