KAEMPFERIA JENJITTIKULIAE (KAEMPFERIA SUBG. PROTANTHIUM: ZINGIBERACEAE), A NEW, ENDANGERED SPECIES ENDEMIC TO THAILAND
Author
Nopporncharoenkul, Nattapon
Author
Somnoo, Thunchanok
Author
Tanming, Wattana
Author
Maknoi, Charun
text
Edinburgh Journal of Botany
2021
2021-03-19
78
350
1
13
http://dx.doi.org/10.24823/ejb.2021.350
journal article
286818
10.24823/EJB.2021.350
e3a27aa3-0681-42b5-b19d-bd786eb7a21a
1747-0036
10572730
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
Noppornch.
,
sp. nov.
Similar to
Kaempferia lopburiensis
Picheans.
and
K. udonensis
Picheans. & Phokham
in its habit and leafy shoot, but differs by its upright to slightly arcuate lateral staminodes, deflexed distal half of the labellum, flat labellum base, and incision around half the length of the labellum (compared with horizontal staminodes and labellum, involute labellum base enclosing the anther, and incision more than two-thirds the length of the labellum in
K. lopburiensis
and
K. udonensis
). It is also similar to
Kaempferia rotunda
L. in its floral shape, but differs in its broadly ovate to suborbicular leaves adpressed to the ground and ovate, broadly elliptic to obdeltoid anther crest with irregular trilobed to tetralobed apex (compared with lanceolate-oblong to elliptic, upright leaves and oblong to ovate anther crest with bifid to bilobed apex, usually with 1–3 small teeth between the lobes in
K. rotunda
). –
Type:
Thailand
,
Phetchabun Province
,
Chon Daen District
,
Sap Phutsa
,
270 m
elevation,
19 v 2020
,
N. Nopporncharoenkul
NNSB-760 (
holotype
QBG
!, including flowers preserved in spirit as part of a single specimen;
isotype
BK
!, including flowers preserved in spirit,
BKF
!,
E
!,
SING
!).
Figures 1
,
2
,
3
.
Rhizomatous herb, adpressed to the ground.
Rhizome
subglobose to ovoid,
1–2 cm
long,
1–1.8 cm
in diameter, brown externally, cream white internally;
roots
fascicled, tuberous with fibrous roots,
9–15 cm
long;
root tubers
ovoid to fusiform,
1.5–3.5 cm
long,
1.2–2 cm
in diameter.
Leafy shoot
with 3 or 4 leaves;
pseudostem
buried in ground,
6–12 cm
tall;
leafless sheaths
1 or 2,
5–12 cm
long, green to reddish, apex acute, sparsely villous;
leaf sheaths
green to reddish, conspicuously longitudinally ridged, densely villous;
ligule
broadly triangular with rounded to obtuse apex,
1.5–3 cm
long, opaque, reddish, sparsely villous;
lamina
sessile, broadly ovate to suborbicular, 18–46
×
16–40 cm
, adaxially light green to dull green, sparsely villous at base of midvein, abaxially light green, pubescent, base rounded, margin entire, reddish band along the margin, apex acute to acuminate.
Inflorescence
lateral, emerging from rhizome,
peduncle
1–2.2 cm
long, with a few sparse hairs; fusiform to ovoid,
6–8 cm
long,
1–2 cm
in diameter, composed of up to 30 bracts each supporting a single flower;
bracts
broadly ovate to trullate, 2.5–6.5
×
0.4–3 cm
(outer bracts larger), apex acute, cream white to pale yellow, with a few sparse hairs;
bracteoles
linear to narrowly lanceolate, 2–2.8
×
0.2–0.3 cm
, apex acute, hyaline, with a few sparse hairs.
Flowers
8–10(–12.2) cm long;
floral plane
perpendicular, with lateral staminodes upright to slightly arcuate and deflexed distal half of the labellum;
calyx
5–5.5 cm
long,
0.8–1 cm
in diameter, with unilateral incision
1.2–1.4 cm
long from apex, apex bilobed with two small teeth between lobes, hyaline, semi-translucent white, almost glabrous, but with a few villous hairs at apex;
floral tube
4.5–6 cm
long,
0.2–0.3 cm
in diameter, narrowly cylindrical at base above ovary, narrowly funnel-shaped distally, white, glabrous;
dorsal corolla lobe
elliptical to elliptic-oblong, 3–3.5(–5.7)
×
0.6–0.8(–1) cm, apex hooded, mucronate, mucro 5–6(–10) mm long, concave, white, glabrous;
lateral corolla lobes
elliptic-oblong to oblong, 2.5–3(–5)
×
0.4–0.5(–0.7) cm, apex mucronate, mucro c.
1 mm
long, concave, white, glabrous;
lateral staminodes
elliptic-oblong to obovate, 2.8–3.5(–4.6)
×
1–1.4 cm
, apex rounded, obtuse to acute, white, sometimes with purple at the apex;
labellum
broadly obovate to obdeltoid, 2.6–3(–4.8)
×
1.8–3(–4) cm, bilobed, with incision around half of labellum length, each lobe suborbicular to broadly obovate, 1.4–1.6(–3)
×
1.2–1.6(–2) cm, apex obcordate to slightly crenate, partly overlapping, white basally with central pale yellow band surrounded by two dark purple stripes from base towards centre of lobes, purple distally including entire area of lobes;
stamen
12–21 mm
long;
filament
1.5–2 mm
long,
1.5–2 mm
wide, white, puberulent with very short glandular hairs dorsally and laterally;
anther
10–17(–19) mm long including straightened anther crest, connective tissue white, puberulent with very short glandular hairs dorsally and laterally,
anther thecae
4–5(–7)
×
1–1.5 mm
, white to cream white, dehiscing along their entire length, pollen white;
anther crest
ovate, broadly elliptic to obdeltoid, 6–12
×
4–7 mm
, apex irregularly trilobed, middle lobe wider than side lobes, middle lobe sometimes deeply divided to two small lobes (making crest appear tetralobed), apex of each lobe obtuse to acute;
pistil
57–66 mm
long;
ovary
cylindrical,
5–6 mm
long, c.
2 mm
in diameter, cream white, sparsely villous, ovules numerous, placentation axile;
epigynous glands
2, subulate,
5–7.5 mm
long, pale yellow;
style
52–60 mm
long;
stigma
crateriform, c.1
×
0.5 mm
, ostiole ciliate.
Fruits
obovoid to ellipsoid, 2.8–3.6
×
1–1.2 cm
, white to cream-white with strips of reddish to light purple spots from apex towards ridges, sparsely villous at apex, with 15–24(–32) seeds;
seeds
subglobose, obovoid to ellipsoid, 3–5
×
2–3 mm
, cream-white to light brown, enclosed in a fleshy semi-translucent white, laciniate aril.
Figure 1
.
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
Noppornch.
,
sp. nov.
A, Habit (vegetative part); B, rhizome and inflorescence; C, flower (front view); D, flower (front and side views); E, calyx and detail of apex; F, dorsal corolla lobe; G, lateral corolla lobe; H, lateral staminode; I, labellum; J, detail of stamen (front and side views) and four apices of anther crest, showing variation in shape; K, detail of stigma with upper part of style (front and side views); L, ovary with epigynous glands and lower part of style (front and side views); M, fruit; N, seed with laciniate aril. Drawn from the holotype, accession
N. Nopporncharoenkul
NNSB-760 (QBG), by N. Nopporncharoenkul.
Figure 2
.
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
Noppornch.
,
sp. nov.
A and B, Plants in habitat (type locality, Chon Daen District, Phetchabun Province, Thailand); C–E, flowers with various shapes of anther crest (accession 20130454, QBG-living collections). Photographs taken by N. Nopporncharoenkul and T. Somnoo.
Figure 3
.
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
Noppornch.
,
sp. nov.
A, Inflorescence and rhizome; B, habit (inset: detail of ligule and base of midrib [left] and detail of leaf sheath [right]); C, flower (front and side views); D, calyx and floral tube with ovary and stamen (front and side views); E, flower dissection (dc, dorsal corolla lobe; l, labellum; lc, lateral corolla lobe; ls, lateral staminode); F, detail of anther and anther crest (front and side views); G, detail of pistil (from left to right: pistil, stigma and style [front and side views], and ovary with epigynous glands); H, fruit and seeds with a fleshy semi-translucent white, laciniate aril. Photographs of the holotype, accession
N. Nopporncharoenkul
NNSB-760 (QBG), taken by N. Nopporncharoenkul.
Distribution
.
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
is strictly endemic to the limestone area of Chon Daen District,
Phetchabun Province
, Central–Northeastern
Thailand
.
Ecology
. It grows in fine loam soil with rocks under semi-shaded mixed deciduous forest with bamboo, close to the foothills at
250–270 m
a.s.l.
Phenology
. Flowering starts at the beginning of the rainy season (April) and lasts until mid-May. Fruit and seeds mature in late May. Leafy shoots usually emerge in mid-May. The plants enter dormancy in November.
Provisional
IUCN Red List
category
. This endemic species is known only from the
type
locality in Chon Daen District,
Phetchabun Province
. The area of occupancy (AOO) is estimated
to be less than
4 km
2
, where it occurs as two small subpopulations with few mature individuals (fewer than 300 plants).
Currently
, the suitable habitats, especially the limestone area in
Phetchabun
and adjacent provinces in
Central
Thailand
, are severely fragmented geographically and continue to decline in area due to quarrying for the construction industry (limestone and cement materials) and urban development.
Moreover
, the
type
locality is
not under any legal protection and the population is at the edge of a forest and a cassava plantation. It is likely to be directly threatened by expansion of agriculture contributing to the deterioration of the population. The current information on the AOO and population size leads us to provisionally propose that
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
be treated as Critically Endangered (CR B1ab (i, ii, iii, iv) + B2ab (i, ii, iii, iv)), in accordance with the
IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria
, version 14 (
IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee, 2019
).
Etymology
. The specific epithet,
jenjittikuliae
, is designated in honour of Dr Thaya Jenjittikul, a ginger specialist at the Department of Plant Science, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, who has been working on Thai
Zingiberaceae
, especially the genus
Kaempferia
, for over 20 years.
Vernacular name
. We propose the Thai name
dok din Thaya
(
dok din
= flower that occurs on the ground, Thaya = the first name of Dr Thaya Jenjittikul).
Specimens examined
.
THAILAND
.
Phetchabun
:
Chon Daen
, Sap Phutsa,
250 m
elevation,
23 vi 2013
, 20130454 (living collections of
Queen Sirikit Botanic Garden
, Chiang Mai);
ibid.,
270 m
elevation,
19 v 2020
,
N. Nopporncharoenkul
NNSB-760 (living collections of
Queen Sirikit Botanic Garden
, Chiang Mai).
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
has the largest adpressed foliage of any species belonging to subg.
Protanthium
. It is closely similar to
Kaempferia lopburiensis
and
K. udonensis
morphologically. They share the huge size of the broadly ovate to suborbicular leaves lying flat on the ground (
Figure 4
). These three species can be easily distinguished, however, by their floral planes as well as by differences in the position of the lateral staminodes and labellum.
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
has a perpendicular floral plane with upright to slightly arcuate staminodes and a deflexed distal half labellum; in contrast, the lateral staminodes and labellum of
K. lopburiensis
and
K. udonensis
are horizontal, arranged in the same plane, and usually parallel to the ground (
Table
, see
Figure 4B,E
). In its floral shape,
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
also resembles
K. rotunda
, but the differences in habit and the shape of the lamina distinguish the two species fairly clearly. The large adpressed leaves of
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
differ obviously from the upright leaves of
K. rotunda
(see
Table
,
Figure 4
). During our observations in the
type
locality, we found good fruit set with numerous viable seeds at the end of the flowering season. This evidence indicates that
Kaempferia jenjittikuliae
has high fertility and sexual productivity in its natural habitat.