A taxonomic revision of the genus Pauridia (Hypoxidaceae) in southern Africa
Author
Snijman, Deirdre A.
Compton Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X 7, Claremont 7735, South Africa / Department of Botany and Plant Biotechnology, University of Johannesburg, PO Box 524, Auckland Park, Johannesburg, 2006, South Africa;
d.snijman@sanbi.org.za
text
Phytotaxa
2014
2014-10-14
182
1
1
114
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.182.1.1
1179-3163
8307173
b.
subsp.
nubigena
Snijman
,
subsp. nov
.
New subspecies separated from
subsp.
monticola
by longer tepals,
10–17 mm
versus
6–10 mm
, wider outer tepals, 4.5–5.0 mm versus 2.5–4.0 mm and by flowers frequently white with a yellow centre, even when dry.
Type:
—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
:
Nieuwoudtville
plateau, on road to
Cloudskraal
[QDS: 3119
AC
],
4 August 1994
,
Goldblatt
&
Manning
9908
(
holotype
,
NBG
!)
.
Plants
3–9.5 cm
tall. Corm somewhat ovoid,
10–15 mm
diam., covered with brown, fibrous tunics; fibres firmly attached to basal disc, pectinate proximally, reticulate distally, tips more or less extended into an untidy, sparse bristly neck. Leaves 2 or 3, not forming a sheathing neck, suberect, linear, 35–90 ×
1.5 mm
, compressed terete, sometimes appearing canaliculate when dry, wiry, margin rarely with a few scattered, red, recurved teeth. Inflorescences 2-flowered, shorter to as long as leaves; scape up to 30 ×
1 mm
; bracts 2, clasping pedicels up to narrowed apex, lanceolate, abruptly narrowed at apex, 13–18 × 1.5–3.0 mm, pale green, leathery, margin narrowly membranous proximally. Flowers bright yellow or white with a large, yellow centre, backed with green, occasionally edges of outer tepals reddened; pedicels erect to spreading, more or less deflexing when fruiting, 23–45 × 1.0–
1.3 mm
; tepals narrowly elliptic,
10–17 mm
long, outer 4.5–5.0 mm wide, inner 3.0–
3.5 mm
wide. Stamens suberect, outer slightly shorter than inner, yellow; filaments shorter than anthers, outer
0.7–1.5 mm
long, inner 1.2–2.0 mm long; anthers oblong, 2.5–3.5 ×
0.5 mm
. Ovary shortly obconical, 2.5–4.0 × 2.0–
2.5 mm
; style 1.0–
1.5 mm
long; stigma branches suberect, oblong, 2.0–3.5 ×
0.5–0.6 mm
, equalling stamens, yellow. Capsules curved, obconical, ca. 6 ×
3 mm
. Seeds unknown. Flowering period: June–August.
Distribution and habitat
:—
subsp.
nubigena
is restricted to the edge of the Bokkeveld Escarpment, a flat tableland west of Nieuwoudtville,
Northern Cape
, at an elevation of approximately
820 m
(
Fig. 36A
). Scattered populations occupy open sites, in shallow, seasonally moist sand overlying exposed sandstone pavement, amongst broken stands of Bokkeveld Sandstone Fynbos (Rebelo
et al
. 2006).
Diagnostic features
:—
subsp.
nubigena
is separated from
subsp.
monticola
primarily by flower size, the tepals being consistently longer,
10–17 mm
, compared with
6–10 mm
long, and the outer tepals being broader, 4.5–5.0 mm versus 2.5–4.0 mm wide. The subspecies is easily confused with the similar looking
P. affinis
from the southwestern
Cape
lowlands which previously was more broadly circumscribed to include
P. monticola
sensu lato
. The new subspecies differs from
P. affinis
by its more finely fibrous corm tunics, which are reticulate and untidily spreading distally, the predominantly 2-flowered inflorescence, and the shorter ovary, usually 2.5–4.0 mm versus
4–8 mm
in
P. affinis
. Although the flowers are sometimes yellow, as is characteristic of both
P. monticola
subsp.
monticola
and
P. affinis
, they may also be white with a yellow centre—a feature that often remains evident even when dry. Compared with these other taxa the flowering period of
subsp.
nubigena
is relatively early and brief, between mid-June to early August.
Etymology
:—This subspecies was seemingly first collected by Capt. T.M. Salter in
June 1938
at the summit of Vanrhyn’s Pass, west of Nieuwoudtville. The subspecific epithet, meaning ‘born of the clouds’, takes its name from Cloudskraal Farm on the Bokkeveld Escarpment and describes the sometimes cloud-enveloped habitat in which the subspecies grows.
Additional specimens examined
(
paratypes
)
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
:
Bokkeveld Escarpment
,
Avontuur
641, 2 km
NE of Kromvlei
(QDS: 3119
AC
),
6 August 2008
,
Helme
5550
(
NBG
!)
;
top of
Vanrhyns Pass
(QDS: 3119
AC
),
29 July 1967
,
Marsh
et al. 306
(
NBG
!)
;
Kaiserfontein
,
Bokkeveldberg Escarpment
(QDS: 3119
AC
),
2 July 1995
,
Rourke
2092
(
NBG
!)
;
summit of Van Rhyns Pass (QDS: 3119
AC
),
14 June 1938
,
Salter
7335
(
BOL
!)
.