Prodromus of a fern flora of Bolivia. XLII. Update I.
Author
Kessler, Michael
Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH- 8008 Zurich, Switzerland.
Author
Smith, Alan R.
University Herbarium, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Bldg. # 2465, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 - 2465.
Author
Øllgaard, Benjamin
Department of Biology - Ecoinformatics and Biodiversity, Ny Munkegade 116, building 1137, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
Author
Matos, Fernando B.
Centro de Referência em Informação Ambiental (CRIA), Rua João Carlos do Amaral 500, 13070 - 111, Campinas, SP, Brasil.
Author
Moran, Robbin C.
New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, New York, 10458 - 5126, USA.
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-12-20
630
3
183
210
https://phytotaxa.mapress.com/pt/article/download/phytotaxa.630.3.2/51376
journal article
282876
10.11646/phytotaxa.630.3.2
c8e39cd6-3a27-4e8d-b502-e890c64fd6bb
1179-3163
10409920
Elaphoglossum neglectum
F.B.Matos & R.C.Moran
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 2A–H
,
3A
).
Type:
—
BOLIVIA
.
La Paz
: Prov.
Abel Iturralde
,
Parque Nacional Madidi
, campamento de guardaparques Sadiri, camino Sadiri-Tumupasa, por la senda a las antenas de Entel,
14°10’S
,
67°53’W
,
990 m
,
7 July 2004
,
I. Jiménez
&
H. Huaylla
2658
(
holotype
:
LPB
[sheet without number];
isotypes
:
GOET-
053791
,
NY-
01402723
)
Diagnosis:—
Resembling
Elaphoglossum ambiguum
Alston
in leaf shape and size but differing by the presence of phyllopodia, conspicuous costal scales, free veins, and spiny perines.
Plants terrestrial or rarely epiphytic; rhizomes short-creeping, to
1.5 cm
in diameter, densely scaly, the scales 2–6 ×
0.3–1.3 mm
, dark brown to black, lanceolate, with irregular marginal processes; phyllopodia
0.8–2.5 cm
, blackish; leaves approximate, 28–85 ×
3.5–8 cm
; petioles 1⁄4–1/3 the sterile leaf length,
1–3.5 mm
thick, stramineous to tan, microscales ca.
0.05 mm
, brown to black, appressed, branched, sparse to abundant, often forming a scurf, scales 1–5 ×
0.3–1.5 mm
, brown to black, spreading, lanceolate, with irregular marginal processes, sparse, more abundant towards the petiole bases; blades 20–65 ×
3.5–8 cm
, 5–11 times longer than wide, narrowly elliptic or oblong, chartaceous, bases cuneate, apices acuminate, margins narrowly cartilaginous; veins evident, free,
1–1.5 mm
apart, ca. 75° to costae, hydathodes lacking; blades on both sides with brown, lanceolate to irregularly divided,
0.5–1.5 mm
long scales along the costae, grading into dissected to dotlike, brown to blackish microscales on the blade surfaces; fertile leaves to
55 cm
long, about 3/4 the length of the sterile ones, petioles ca. 1⁄2 the fertile leaf length, blades oblong, bases broadly cuneate to truncate, apices acuminate; intersporangial scales lacking; perines non-perforate, spiny, with continuous folds.
Etymology:—
The specific epithet is derived from the Latin
neglectus
, meaning neglected, ignored, overlooked, or passed over. It refers to the fact that this new species was overlooked by Kessler
et al
. (2018), who treated all of its specimens under
E. ambiguum
.
Range:—
Endemic to
Bolivia
(CO, LP).
Ecology:—
Rare; terrestrial or rarely epiphytic in humid montane Yungas forest;
650–1050 m
.
Paratypes
:—
BOLIVIA
.
Cochabamba
: Prov.
Ayopaya
, subiendo hacia la cima en dirección del sub campamento,
16°02’S
,
66°39’W
,
1054 m
,
24 September 2004
,
H. Huaylla
1394
(
NY
,
UC
).
La Paz
: Prov.
Abel Iturralde
,
Parque Nacional Madidi
, campamento de guardaparques Sadiri,
camino Sadiri-San José de Uchupiamonas
, en la unión de los dos rios que forman el rio Yariapu,
14°10’S
,
67°55’W
,
640 m
,
8 July 2004
,
I. Jiménez
&
H. Huaylla
2675
(
GOET
,
LPB
,
NY
)
;
ibid.
, campamento de guardaparques
Sadiri
, subiendo a la cima del Sadiri,
14°10’S
,
67°54’W
,
1000 m
,
9 July 2004
,
I. Jiménez
&
H. Huaylla
2702
(
LPB
,
NY
)
;
ibid.
,
1030 m
,
9 July 2004
,
I. Jiménez
&
H. Huaylla
2708
(
LPB
,
NY
)
.
Notes:—
Nearly all specimens of
Elaphoglossum neglectum
were treated as
E. ambiguum
by Kessler
et al
. (2018). In that publication, we designated a
lectotype
for
E. ambiguum
, classified it in sect.
Elaphoglossum
(based on its glabrous leaves), and considered it ranging from
Costa Rica
to
Venezuela
and
Bolivia
. One year later, however,
Matos
et al
. (2019)
revised many herbarium specimens from throughout the Neotropics and concluded that
E. ambiguum
does not occur in
Bolivia
, being restricted to
the Dominican
Republic, Guadeloupe,
Trinidad
,
Venezuela
, and
Colombia
. Using plastid DNA data, they also discovered that
E. ambiguum
belongs to a clade of seven non-subulate species (i.e., species lacking subulate scales) within the subulate-scaled clade of
E.
sect.
Polytrichia
.
Elaphoglossum neglectum
differs from
E. ambiguum
and its allies by the presence of conspicuous phyllopodia (vs. phyllopodia absent or indistinct), dark brown (vs. orangish to light brown) stem scales, free veins (vs. vein tips expanded laterally and often united to form a submarginal connecting vein), and spiny (vs. non-spiny) perines. In addition to
E. ambiguum
, some herbarium specimens of
E. neglectum
have also been previously identified as
E. buchtienii
, a species presumably endemic to
Bolivia
(CO, LP, SC). These two species belong to
E.
sect.
Elaphoglossum
and are similar by having dark brown stem scales, distinct phyllopodia, and glabrescent leaves with coriaceous, elliptic blades. They also have a narrow strand of cartilaginous tissue along the margins of their sterile blades (not to be confused with the submarginal connecting veins of
E. ambiguum
).
Elaphoglossum neglectum
, however, greatly differs from
E. buchtienii
by stouter, short-creeping stems (vs. long-creeping), stem scales with many irregular marginal processes (vs. entire or nearly so), and non-perforate perines.
In the “Key to the Bolivian species of
E.
sect.
Elaphoglossum
” (Kessler
et al.
2018, p. 11),
E. neglectum
would replace
E. ambiguum
at couplet 8.