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
12.
Pauridia breviscapa
Snijman
,
sp. nov.
Fig. 21
A new species similar to
P. umbraticola
with which it shares thin-textured leaves, an ancipitous, pale green scape, yellow flowers and 3-locular ovary but distinguished by the shortened scape (up to
20 mm
versus
25–65 mm
long), longer pedicels (
50–175 mm
versus
20–55 mm
) and shorter filaments (outer
1.2–1.5 mm
and inner
1.5–1.7 mm
versus outer 2.5–3.0 mm and inner 3.0–
3.5 mm
).
Type
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
:
Sutherland
,
Houthoek
[QDS: 3220
CA
],
10 September 1971
,
Hanekom
1564
(
NBG
!, isotype
PRE
!)
.
Plants
6–19 cm
tall, sometimes in small clumps. Corm somewhat globose,
6–14 mm
diam., with a leathery, fibreless, brown covering or softly fibrous; roots loosely spreading. Cataphylls membranous, up to
35 mm
long. Leaves 2–6, sheathing at base up to
4 cm
, suberect to recurved, linear to narrowly lorate, 60–180 ×
1–4 mm
, shallowly canaliculate, pale green, soft-textured, margin smooth. Inflorescences 1 or
2 in
flower at a time, (1)2- flowered, as long as or longer than leaves; scape up to 20 ×
2 mm
, flattened, usually hidden amongst leaves; bracts (1)2, clasping pedicels up to ¾ of length, lanceolate, attenuate towards apex, 14–40 ×
1–5 mm
, pale green, translucent-edged or entirely translucent, soft-textured. Flowers pedicellate, stellate, yellow, backed with green in outer whorl, unscented; pedicels suberect, remaining so in fruit, 50–175 × 0.7–1.0 mm, green to reddish brown; tepals 6, narrowly elliptical, 3.5–12.0 mm long, outer
1.5–3.5 mm
wide, minutely mucronate, inner 0.7–3.0 mm wide. Stamens 6, erect, outer often slightly shorter than inner, yellow; filaments inserted on ovary rim, outer
1.2–1.5 mm
long, inner
1.5–1.7 mm
long, both whorls usually as long as anthers; anthers oblong, latrorse, 1.2–2.0 ×
0.5 mm
, basal lobes up to
0.3 mm
long; pollen yellow. Ovary narrowly to broadly obconical, 4.5–9.0 × 2.0–5.0 mm, 3-locular; style ca.
1 mm
long; stigma branches erect, narrowly triangular, 2.2–3.0 × ca.
0.7 mm
, with recurved basal lobes, 0.5–1.0 mm long, shorter than to equalling stamens, yellow, densely papillose. Capsules obconical, sometimes curved, up to 14 ×
3.5–5.5 mm
, dehiscence circumscissile. Seeds depressed ellipsoid, 0.4 ×
0.4 mm
; testa glossy or matt black, of transversally widened cells in ca. 31 longitudinal rows, outer periclinal cell walls shallowly conical with obtuse apex. Flowering period: late-August–September.
Distribution and habitat
:—Small and localized populations are found in shrubby, mesic, succulent veld in
Northern Cape
, along the foothills of the Roggeveld Escarpment and on the slopes below the Escarpment’s rock face (
Fig. 22A
).
Pauridia breviscapa
favours partially shaded habitats in damp, shallow, mostly loamy soils on south-facing slopes and seepages at the base of rocks, often in association with localized patches of moss.
Diagnostic features
:—A feature that most easily distinguishes
Pauridia breviscapa
is the very short scape (up to
20 mm
long) which is usually entirely hidden by the leaves, often leading to the inflorescence bracts being mistaken for newly emerging leaves. The softly fibrous corm, together with the thin-textured leaves and lanceolate bracts, and black seeds in which the testa has longitudinally arranged rows of laterally widened cells, suggest a close alliance with
P. umbraticola
, found on the mountains of the Olifants River Valley to the west. The two species differ from each other in the relative lengths of the scape, pedicels and filaments. In
P. breviscapa
the scape reaches up to
20 mm
long, the pedicels are
50–175 mm
long, the outer filaments are
1.2–1.5 mm
and the inner are
1.5–1.7 mm
long. The contrasting states in
P. umbraticola
are: scape
25–65 mm
long, pedicels
20–55 mm
long, outer filaments 2.5–3.0 mm long and inner filaments 3.0–
3.5 mm
long.
Discussion
:—
Pauridia breviscapa
was first collected in 1927 by Robert Harold Compton, Director of the National Botanic Gardens of
South Africa
from 1919 to 1953,who made extensive collections in the Whitehill District, near Laingsburg, over a seven year period from 1923 to 1929 (
Compton 1931
).
Additional specimens examined
(
paratypes
)
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
:
Tankwa National Park
, S slopes of
Elandsberg
(QDS: 3219
BB
),
6 August 2007
,
Bester
7788
(
PRE
!)
;
Sutherland District
,
Farm Windhoek
112,
Roggeveld Escarpment
below
Sneeukrans
(QDS: 3220
AA
),
14 September 2008
,
Clark
&
O’Connor
259
(
NBG
!)
;
Roggeveld
,
Soekop
, old
Soekop
camp (QDS: 3220
AA
),
3 September 2004
,
Rosch
229
(
NBG
!)
;
Roggeveld
,
Koornlandskloof
70, ridge
Nof Kruiskloof
(QDS: 3220
AB
),
26 September 2009
,
Helme
6215
(
NBG
!)
;
Ceres District
,
Farm Thyskraal
80 (QDS: 3220
CC
),
7 September 1986
,
Cloete
&
Haselau
289
(
NBG
!)
;
Koedoes Mtns
(QDS: 3220
CC
),
14 September 2009
,
Goldblatt
et al. 13326
(
NBG
!)
;
Sutherland District
,
Thyshoogte on Ceres
road (QDS: 3220
CC
),
2 September 1990
,
Oliver
9680
(
NBG
!)
;
Sutherland
,
Farm Meintjisplaas
,
Klein
Roggeveld (QDS: 3220DC),
30 August 2007
,
Goldblatt
&
Porter
12918
(
NBG
!)
;
Klein Roggeveld,
Farm De Hoop
(QDS: 3220
DC
)
,
14 September 2004
,
Snijman 1937
(
NBG
!)
;
Laingsburg Division,
Whitehill Ridge, Sside
(QDS: 3320
BA
)
,
3000 ft
[
914 m
],
8 August 1927
,
Compton
3241
(
BOL
!)
.