Three new species of Erycibe (Convolvulaceae) from Malesia
Author
Kochaiphat, Phongsakorn
0000-0001-7152-4846
Department of Plant Science, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Rama VI Road, Ratchathewi, Bangkok 10400, Thailand. & phongsakorn. s @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 7152 - 4846
phongsakorn.s@gmail.com
Author
Traiperm, Paweena
0000-0001-8051-5722
Department of Plant Science, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Rama VI Road, Ratchathewi, Bangkok 10400, Thailand. & paweena. tra @ mahidol. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 8051 - 5722
paweena.tra@mahidol.edu
Author
Utteridge, Timothy M. A.
0000-0003-2823-0337
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW 9 3 AE, UK. & t. utteridge @ kew. org; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2823 - 0337
t.utteridge@kew.org
text
Phytotaxa
2021
2021-03-31
494
1
103
112
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.494.1.6
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.494.1.6
1179-3163
5423344
3.
Erycibe brunneopilosa
Kochaiph. & Utteridge
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
and
4
)
Type:—
MALAYSIA
.
Borneo
:
Sarawak
, 5
th
Division
, along
Sungai Masia
in the
Maligan Range
,
Lawas
[
4°37’42.0”N
,
115°33’22.5”E
],
3100 ft.
[
1030 m
],
8 March 1973
(fl.),
Tong
S
.32819
(
holotype
K
!; isotypes
BO
!,
KEP
!,
L
[
L
.2734271]!,
SAN
)
.
Diagnosis:—Unique in the genus
Erycibe
for the combination of the climbing habit with all parts hairy, the leaves covered with stellate 5–8 branched hairs, the longest central hair branch up to
0.75 mm
, the sepals densely hairy abaxially and fruits densely covered with red-brownish hairs up to
2 mm
long.
Climber up to
30 m
; stems terete, young branches densely brownish stellate-hirsute with 6–8-branched hairs, mature stem nearly smooth, greyish, not lenticellate. Leaves simple, petioles
0.6–1.1 cm
long, densely dark-brownish hairy; lamina coriaceous, elliptic, elliptic-oblong to lanceolate 4–17.5 ×
1.7–6.5 cm
, base obtuse, apex acuminate-caudate, margin entire, revolute, adaxially nearly glabrous, abaxially stellate-hirsute with 6–8-branched hairs, the longest central branch up to
0.75 mm
long; midrib appressed adaxially, prominent abaxially; veins 5–10 on either side, inconspicuous adaxially, prominent abaxially; intercostal veins reticulate, inconspicuous adaxially, prominent abaxially. Inflorescences axillary, comprising short, 3–10-flowered glomerules, up to
1.5 cm
long; floral bracts lanceolate,
1–3.5 mm
long; pedicels very short, up to
1.5 mm
long, densely stellate-hairy with 6–8-branched hairs, the longest central branch
0.3–0.7 mm
long; sepals equal, deltate or ovate, 2.0–3.0 × 1.5–3.0 mm, densely stellate-hairy abaxially, glabrous adaxially, margin ciliate; corolla tube
1–1.5 mm
, midpetaline bands densely stellate-hairy abaxially, longitudinal veins inconspicuous, lobule c. 2.5 ×
1.5 mm
, margin entire; stamens c.
2 mm
long, filaments broader at the base, anthers yellowish when dry, c.
1.3 mm
long, base cordate, apex acuminate; ovary (dry) ovoid, c. 1 ×
1.5 mm
, covered with hairs on upper half below stigma, stigma 5-ridged, c.
0.7 mm
tall. Fruit a berry, ±ovoid, c. 1.8 ×
2.4 cm
, covered with red-brownish hairs up to
2 mm
long.
Distribution:—
Endemic to Borneo and the Malaysian states of
Sarawak
and
Sabah
.
Habitat:—
Climber reaching
100 ft
[
30 m
] high on trees, on open hill slopes with sandy soil in mixed deciduous forest or lowland forest in logging areas; elevation
300–1030 m
.
Preliminary conservation assessment:—
Endangered (EN) [B1a+b(iii, iv)] based on
IUCN (2012)
categories. It has an Extent of Occurrence (EOO) of
2,751 km
2
(<
5,000 km
2
, fulfilling the B1 criterion), and is known to exist at no more than five locations. The estimated Area of Occupancy (AOO) for this species is
16 km
2
using a
2 km
2
grid base. The species has been collected in logging areas, and the quality of the habitat will decline in such areas with a projected decline in the number of locations, especially as the species has not been re-collected from the Bintulu location since 1972 and satellite imagery shows the effects of oil palm plantations and logging in that locality.
Phenology:—
Flowering in March, fruiting in September.
Etymology:—
The epithet is from the Latin, ‘brunneis’ and ‘pilosus’ referring to the brown hairs covering the plant, conspicuous
in vivo
and noted on all collecting labels, for example, ‘Twigs white, while young covered in brown hairs. Under-leaf surface covered in brown hairs. Flowers in bud, covered with brown hairs’
(Tong S.32819
).
Notes:—
Erycibe brunneopilosa
is unique in the genus for the combination of the brown hairs on all parts, the climbing habit, elliptic to lanceolate leaves, the axillary inflorescences with 3–10 flowers and especially the densely hairy fruits with hairs up to
2 mm
long. This new species would key to
E. citriniflora
Griff. (
Griffith 1854: 284
)
in
Hoogland (1953a)
based primarily on the acute anthers, hairy sepals, indumentum
type
and smooth branches.
Erycibe citriniflora
is a commonly encountered species in
Thailand
and Peninsular
Malaysia
but differs from
E. trichogyne
in the usually larger leaves 8–30 ×
3–11 cm
and the glabrous or sparsely appressed-hairy fruit.
Erycibe brunneopilosa
is also similar to
E. magnifica
Prain (1904: 18)
, endemic to Peninsular
Malaysia
, in the climbing habit, densely hairy leaves and fruit, but differs in the stellate-hirsute adaxial leaf surface with appressed midribs, while
E. magnifica
has a stellate-villous adaxial leaf surface with strongly sunken midribs. In addition,
Hoogland (1953c)
uses the thick clubshaped corolla lobules of
E. magnifica
as a key character, but the corolla lobules of
E. brunneopilosa
are much thinner and not club-shaped.
This newly described species is one of the
Erycibe
species
with dense hairs on the fruit. In Borneo, it is only likely to be confused with the climbing taxa with hairy fruits
E. grandifolia
Merr. ex
Hoogland (1953a: 313)
and
E. villosa
.
Erycibe brunneopilosa
differs from
E. grandifolia
in the short (up to
1.5 cm
long) axillary inflorescences (terminal to
20 cm
long in
E. grandifolia
) and the fruits with simple hairs to
2 mm
long (rather than very short stellate hairs on the fruit of
E. grandifolia
); it differs from
E. villosa
in the lamina morphology (elliptic, elliptic-oblong to lanceolate,
4–17.5 cm
long and with scattered hairs below not obscuring the lamina surface versus obovate to elliptic,
8–11.5 cm
long and with the abaxial lamina densely covered with persistent woolly hairs in
E. villosa
) and the much shorter hairs on the fruit, up to
2 mm
long whereas they are c.
6 mm
long in
E. villosa
.
Erycibe brunneopilosa
is also very similar to
E. trichocarpa
by its leaf morphology and the hairs on the stems and fruits, but
E. trichocarpa
differs in the tree habit and also has shorter hairs on the vegetative parts, only
0.15–0.4 mm
long, while the hairs in
E. brunneopilosa
are up to
0.75 mm
long.
The specimens
Tong S.32819
and
Gibot SAN 72913
were cited as possibly similar to the putative, and yet to be formally described, taxon ‘
Erycibe
sp.
A’ in
Staples & Syahida-Emiza’s (2015)
treatment of the genus in Peninsular
Malaysia
, but the ovary indumentum (glabrous distally) differs from
E. brunneopilosa
.
Chai S.32133
was initially distributed as
Annonaceae
and
Gibot SAN 72913
was initially determined as
Sarcostigma
sp. (Icacinaceae)
.
Additional
specimens examined:—
MALAYSIA
.
Borneo
: Sarawak
,
Bintulu
,
Segan Forest Reserve
[
3°04’30.0”N
,
113°01’19.8”E
],
19 Sep 1972
(fr.),
Chai
S
.
32133
(
CANB
,
K
!, L-digital image!,
SAN
,
SING
);
Sabah
,
G
.
Lumaku
,
4°53’ N
115°45’E
,
300 m
.
,
6 March 1969
(fl.),
Nooteboom
1143
(
K
!,
KEP
!, L-digital image!); Sipitang,
5 miles
[
8 km
] from Kampung Modolong to Kampung Maligan [
4°41’15.3”N
,
115°42’01.0”E
],
7 September 1983
(fr.),
Gibot
SAN
72913
(
K
!,
KEP
!, L-digital image!,
SAR
)
.
Vernacular:—
Iban (
Sarawak
): Akar rarak (
fide Chai S.32133
).