Hidden biodiversity of Amazonian white-sand ecosystems: two distinctive new species of Utricularia (Lentibulariaceae) from Para, Brazil
Author
Gonella, Paulo Minatel
Universidade Federal de Sao Joao del-Rei, Departamento de Ciencias Exatas e Biologicas, Campus Sete Lagoas, Rodovia MG- 424, km 47, Sete Lagoas, MG, 35701 - 970, Brazil & Instituto Nacional da Mata Atlantica, Av. Jose Ruschi, 4, Santa Teresa, ES, 29500 - 000, Brazil
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8332-5326
pmgonella@gmail.com
Author
Barbosa-Silva, Rafael Gomes
Instituto Tecnologico Vale, Rua Boaventura da Silva 955, Nazare, 66055 - 090, Belem, PA, Brazil & Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Coord. Botanica, Av. Perimetral 1901, 66077 - 830, Belem, PA, Brazil
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0668-4840
Author
Fleischmann, Andreas S.
Botanische Staatssammlung Muenchen, Menzinger Strasse 67, D- 80638, Munich, Germany
Author
Zappi, Daniela C.
Instituto Tecnologico Vale, Rua Boaventura da Silva 955, Nazare, 66055 - 090, Belem, PA, Brazil & Programa de Pos-Graduacao em Botanica, Instituto de Ciencias Biologicas, Universidade de Brasilia, DF, 70910 - 900, Brazil
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6755-2238
Author
Baleeiro, Paulo Cesar
University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia
Author
Andrino, Caroline Oliveira
Instituto Tecnologico Vale, Rua Boaventura da Silva 955, Nazare, 66055 - 090, Belem, PA, Brazil & Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Coord. Botanica, Av. Perimetral 1901, 66077 - 830, Belem, PA, Brazil
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1107-5692
coliveiraandrino@gmail.com
text
PhytoKeys
2020
169
75
98
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.169.57626
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.169.57626
1314-2003-169-75
1CEAFE2AA4835B9F8005C8F92A069688
Utricularia jaramacaru Gonella, Baleeiro & Andrino
sp. nov.
Figs 1
, 4
, 5
, 6
Type.
Brazil.
Para
:
Obidos
; Floresta Estadual de Trombetas, Ariramba, Rio Jaramacaru; 10 Jun. 2019; C.O. Andrino, R.G. Barbosa-Silva, D.C. Zappi & C. Maurity 559 (holotype MG; isotypes M, SPF).
Figure 4.
Utricularia jaramacaru
a
habit, in flower
b
base of plant with stolons with traps, rhizoids, leaves with traps, and peduncle base
c
leave with traps
d
utricle, side view
e
scale
f
base of the pedicel, and bract
g
flower, in anterior
h
flower, in posterior view
i
flower, in lateral view
j
upper lip of the corolla
k
stamens
l
pistil
m
fruit
n
seed. All based on the holotype. Illustrations by
Joao
Silveira.
Diagnosis.
Utricularia jaramacaru
belongs to
U. sect. Setiscapella
(Barnhart) P.Taylor but is distinct from all other members of this section by the traps with reduced, denticulate appendages (vs. subulate, branched), white corolla (vs. yellow or lilac), the upper corolla lip with bilobate apex (vs. obtuse, rounded, truncate or retuse), and the lower corolla lip narrowly rhombic (vs. cuneate, trullate, rhombic to very broadly rhombic in outline).
Description.
Small-sized, probably annual, terrestrial.
Rhizoids
2-4, from the base of peduncle, terete, with short papillose branches, up to 1 cm long, c. 0.25 mm in diameter.
Stolons
numerous, capillary, sparsely branched, up to 1 cm long (in the available material), up to 0.1 mm in diameter.
Leaves
numerous, at the base of the peduncle and on the stolons, lamina narrowly linear, simple, the base narrowing gradually into a short petiole, apex obtuse to acute, green to reddish, 1-nerved, 2-6
x
0.2-0.5 mm.
Traps
numerous on the stolons and leaves, ovate, stalked, 0.1-0.2 mm long, the mouth lateral with two dorsal and very short denticulate, simple appendages.
Inflorescence
a bracteose raceme, erect, solitary, 60-130 mm tall.
Peduncle
capillary, terete, simple or eventually laterally simple-branched, glabrous, 0.2-0.3 mm in diameter, wine red.
Scales
numerous, peltate, ovate to narrowly ovate, inferior apex rounded to obtuse, superior apex acute, 0.5-0.9 mm long, similar to the bracts.
Bracts
ovate, basisolute, peltate, 0.5-0.7
x
0.4-0.5 mm, amplexicaul, the inferior apex rounded, the superior apex rounded to obtuse.
Bracteoles
absent.
Flowers
4-13, the rhachis elongate, flexuous, without sterile bracts; pedicels ascending, capillary, terete, 3-9 mm long (longer towards the base of the inflorescence), pedicels with a mucilage droplet at their base in living specimens.
Calyx
lobes unequal, glabrous, nerves inconspicuous, simple, not extending to the margin; upper lobe ovate, with apex obtuse, convex, 0.9-1.1 mm long in flower, up to 1.3 mm in fruit; lower lobe obovate, with apex emarginate to rounded, convex, equal in length with the upper lobe in flower, slightly longer in fruit, up to 1.7 mm in fruit.
Corolla
5 mm long, lower lip white with a pale yellow mark on the gibbose palate, spur pale yellow, upper lip pale yellow with reddish marks; upper lip oblong with apex bilobed, the basal sac with an eglandular pubescent marginal rim, the pubescence spreading towards the apex, c. 1.5 mm long; lower lip limb narrowly rhombic in outline, the base with a very prominent bilobed swelling, the apex 3-lobed, 0.3-4.5 mm; palate pubescent; spur cylindrical, apex rounded, equal to or slightly longer or shorter than the lower lip, 0.35-0.40 mm long.
Filaments
curved, 0.8-1.0 mm long, the anther thecae sub-distinct, anther 0.4-0.5 mm long.
Ovary
globose, 0.8-0.9 mm long; style very short; stigma lower lip nearly circular, upper lip obsolete.
Capsule
globose, c. 1.2 mm in diam., shorter than the calyx lobes, dehiscing by an elliptic ventral pore.
Seeds
obovoid to angulate-ellipsoid, 0.20-0.25 mm long, 0.13-0.20 mm wide, testa cells c. 0.01 mm wide, elongate, anticlinal boundaries deeply sunken and more or less straight, periclinal walls convex, smooth.
Etymology.
The epithet "
jaramacaru
" is a noun in apposition (hence it is invariant), referring to the
Jaramacaru
river, where the new species was discovered.
"Jaramacaru"
comes from the Tupi language "
iamandakaru
", referring to species of the genus
Cereus
Mill. (
Cactaceae
). However, no cactus of this genus was located during the field trip undertaken by COA, RGBS, and DCZ in 2019.
Phenology.
Utricularia jaramacaru
was collected with flowers in April, May, and June.
Distribution and habitat.
So far, only known from two very close localities near the Jaramacaru waterfall, in the Campos do Ariramba, part of the FLOTA Trombetas, western
Para
, N Brazil. The species occurs on white sandy soils with outcrops of sandstone, in
campinarana
vegetation.
Conservation status.
Vulnerable: VU D2. Similarly to that described for
U. ariramba
,
U. jaramacaru
is known from only two localities (AOO=8 km2) near the limits of FLOTA Trombetas and the threats the populations are subject to are fully explained in the above species. Therefore, based on available data,
U. jaramacaru
is to be assigned to the category of Vulnerable based on criterion D2 of
IUCN (2012)
.
Taxonomic notes.
The basisolute, peltate scales and bracts, and the calyx and seed morphology (Figs
4
-
6
) undoubtedly place this species in
U. sect. Setiscapella
, representing the tenth species of the section (following the species circumscriptions of
Taylor 1989
). However, based on morphology alone, it is not possible to assign the closest affinity of
U. jaramacaru
, as it bears several apomorphic characteristics, most remarkably regarding its trap and corolla morphology.
Figure 5.
Utricularia jaramacaru
a
inflorescence apex with open flowers and bud
b
detail of inflorescence apex showing mucilage droplet in the axil of a pedicel
c
inflorescence apex with a flower in posterior view, highlighting the calyx (
c1
)
d
flower in anterior view;
e
, peduncle bases with stolons and leaves.
Figure 6.
SEM microphotographs of seeds of
Utricularia jaramacaru
at 420
x
magnification, in dorsal, lateral and oblique view (from the holotype).
Up to now,
U. sect. Setiscapella
was composed of nine species (
Taylor 1989
), of which eight have yellow corollas (regarding the phylogenetic switch from lilac to yellow corolla color in
Utricularia
and
Genlisea
, see
Fleischmann et al. 2010
). One exception in terms of color is
U. physoceras
P.Taylor, also endemic to the state of
Para
, but with larger (7-10 mm long vs. 5 mm) pink to lilac corolla. The whitish corolla of
U. jaramacaru
is, therefore, a second exception among the species of the section.
Utricularia physoceras
also shares the short spur with rounded apex with
U. jaramacaru
and similar seed morphology.
Utricularia physoceras
occurs in the
cangas
(ferruginous
campo rupestre
) of the Serra dos
Carajas
(
Taylor 1989
;
Mota and Zappi 2018
;
Giulietti et al. 2019
), distant ca. 815 km to the southeast from the area where
U. jaramacaru
was collected. For photos of
U. physoceras
, see
Mota and Zappi (2018
: 129, Fig.
4a-e
) and
Giulietti et al. (2019
: 369, fig. 7 bottom three images).
Traps of
U. jaramacaru
are unlike any other species of
U. sect. Setiscapella
in that the appendages are reduced to two denticulate structures (Fig.
4d
). All other species of the section bear subulate or filiform appendages near the trap door that are sparsely to copiously branched. Reduced appendages are found in different sections of
Utricularia
, which suggests it is a homoplastic character in the genus.
Taylor (1989)
enumerates a few species with reduced trap appendages, such as
U. cornuta
Michx. and
U. juncea
Vahl (both of
U. sect. Stomoisia
(Raf.) Komiya),
U. nana
A.St.-Hil. & Girard (
U. sect. Benjaminia
P.Taylor),
U. guyanensis
A.DC. (
U. sect. Stylotheca
A.DC.) and
U. viscosa
Spruce ex Oliv. (
U. sect. Sprucea
P.Taylor), all presenting only a small prolongation of the body of the trap on the dorsal side of the door.
The presence of a droplet of mucilage at the insertion of the pedicel in the peduncle (Fig.
5b
) is shared with
U. flaccida
,
U. nigrescens
Sylven
and
U. pusilla
Vahl (P.M. Gonella and A. Fleischmann, pers. obs.), and its function remains unclear.
Additional specimens examined
(paratypes)
. Brazil •
Para
; [
Obidos
]; Rio Jaramacaru, entre o acampamento e a cachoeira; 26 May 1957; G.A. Black, W. Egler, P. Cavalcante & A. Silva 57-19500 (IAN 95620) •
ibid
.; trilha
apos
a ponte do rio Jamaracaru [
sic
], em
direcao
a
cachoeira;
01°10'12.99"S
,
055°41'50.69"W
; 80 m; 27 Apr. 2018; J.A. Siqueira Filho 4112 (HVASF 23703).