Systematics of Berberis sect. Wallichianae (Berberidaceae) of Taiwan and Luzon with description of three new species, B. schaaliae, B. ravenii, and B. pengii
Author
Yu, Chih-Chieh
Author
Chung, Kuo-Fang
Author for correspondence; e-mail: kuofangchung @ ntu. edu. tw
text
Phytotaxa
2014
2014-10-31
184
2
61
99
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.184.2.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.184.2.1
1179-3163
5146508
3.
Berberis chingshuiensis
Shimizu (1963: 29)
.
Type
:—
TAIWAN
. Pref.
Hualien
, the summit of
Chingshuishan
, ca.
2400 m
alt.,
1 May 1961
,
T.
Shimizu
12520 (
holotype
KYO-00022300!, isotype TI-02621!) (
Fig. 9A–F
).
Small evergreen shrub
usually
0.5–1 m
tall.
Mature stems
brown or greyish, subterete, inconspicuously verruculose.
Spines
3-fid, concolorous,
0.5–1.2 cm
.
Leaves
subsessile; leaf blade elliptic, abaxially pale green sometimes pruinose, adaxially green; 2.4–5.7 ×
1.1–1.7 cm
, leathery; midvein abaxially raised and adaxially impressed, lateral veins slightly raised, the secondary veins pinnate, jointly looped and multi-festooned, the tertiary veins weakly reticulate if present; base cuneate, margins sometimes revolute and remotely spinose with spinules of 6–11 with
3–7 mm
apart on each side, apex acute or obtuse.
Inflorescence
a fascicle, 3–6-flowered.
Bracts
absent.
Pedicel
red,
1.3–1.4 cm
.
Bracteoles
2 if present, yellow or sometimes with reddish-tinge, triangular, 1.5 ×
1 mm
.
Flowers
yellow.
Sepals
in 3 whorls, outer sepals yellow sometimes with reddish-tinged ovate 2.5 ×
2 mm
, middle sepals yellow elliptic 5.5 ×
3.5 mm
, inner sepals yellow obovate 7 ×
6 mm
.
Petals
elliptic, 5.5 ×
4 mm
, base clawed with a pair of ovoid nectaries close to each other, apex incised and acutely emarginated.
Stamens
pale yellow ca.
4 mm
, anther connective of stamen distinct, apex truncate.
Pistil
4 mm
long.
Ovules
3.
Berries
black, ellipsoid ca. 5.5 ×
4 mm
, not pruinose, estylose.
Distinguishing features:
Most herbarium specimens identified as
B. chingshuiensis
in
Taiwan
are
B. schaaliae
(see below).
Berberis chingshuiensis
can be easily distinguished from
B. schaaliae
by its sparsely to remotely spinose leaves (vs. densely spinose leaf margins in
B. schaaliae
;
Fig. 9F
vs. 9G) and differs from another similar species,
B. tarokoensis
, by its complex-veined leaves, estylose berries, and relative few number (3) of ovules [vs. simple-veined leaves, stylose berries, and more ovules (6 or 8) in
B. tarokoensis
]. When growing on exposed windy slopes, some individuals of
B.
chingshuiensis
develop leaves with more or less revolute margins, rendering them likely misidentified as
B. nantoensis
.
Phenology:
—
Flowering
April–May;
Fruiting
May.
Distribution & habitat:
—
Berberis chingshuiensis
is a rare species restricted to the exposed limestone outcrops of Taroko Gorge of eastern Central Mountain Range (
Fig. 6C
) from
1500 to 2400 m
where it is co-distributed with
B. tarokoensis
(
Fig. 6E
).
Chinese name: Ǐ水山小ª
Proposed IUCN conservation status:
—Critically Endangered [CR B1ac(iv)].
Berberis chingshuiensis
is known only from
type
locality and a few peaks nearby where it is distributed as scattered individuals. The narrow distribution range and low number of mature individuals prompt us to list it at the provisional IUCN category of CR (
IUCN 2012
), despite the area being protected within the range of Taroko National Park.
Notes:
In the protologue,
Shimizu (1963)
notes the deposition of two isotypes in SHIN and TAI; however, no such materials are found in either SHIN (J. Harber, pers. comm.) or TAI.
Additional specimens examined:
—
TAIWAN
.
Hualien
:
Chingshuishan
,
2400 m
,
28 April 1989
,
Lu s.n
. (HAST, TNM),
2300 m
,
11 April 2009
,
Chung 9577
(TAIF); Chuilushan,
1500 m
,
15 May 2009
,
Yu 483
(TAI)
.