Trichocline maxima (Compositae, Mutisieae) a rare Pampean daisy rediscovered after 70 years in Uruguay
Author
Pasini, Eduardo
Author
Bonifacino, José Maurício
Author
Torchelsen, Fábio Piccin
text
Iheringia, Série Botânica
2021
e 2021006
2021-05-07
76
1
6
https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c0909dd8-229f-3ad1-9dbc-030240f5a74c/
journal article
10.21826/2446-82312021v76e2021006
2446-8231
10627148
Trichocline maxima
Less., Linnaea
5: 290. 1830
.
Type:
BRAZIL
. “
Brasilia meridionalis
. s.l., s.d.,
Sellow s.n.
”. (
Lectoype
, designated here
K-504286
[image!];
Isolectotypes
G-308259
[image!],
HAL-113007
[image!],
P-703278
[image!]).
Figs. 1
,
2
.
Perennial, scapose herbs with rosulate leaves, up to
85 cm
high. Xylopodium up to
12.5 cm
long, more or less cylindrical. Leaves petiolate; petiole
2–7 cm
long, blade 20–30
×
3–4 cm
, obovate or oblanceolate, base attenuated to cuneate, apex acute or obtuse, margin entire or lobate, lobes (when present) 3–5-paired,
0.5–3 cm
long, rounded, glabrous, papyraceous. Floral scape
45–80 cm
long, erect, ebracteate, glabrescent to glabrous. Involucres 2–3
×
1.5–2.5 cm
, hemispheric, phyllaries 5–8-seriate, adaxial surface tomentose; outer 6–7
×
5–7 mm
, ovate, apex obtuse to acute, adaxial surface woolly; middle ovate-lanceolate, 9–12
×
4–6 mm
, apex obtuse, tomentose on the adaxial surface; inner 13–16.5
×
4–6.5 mm
, ovate-lanceolate, apex acute, glabrous. Florets dimorphic; ray florets female, uniseriate, yellow, outer conspicuous, spreading, apices very short 3-toothed, inner of two long linear spiraled lobes, ca. 25, corolla bilabiate-liguliform, yellow, tube
7–10 mm
long, abaxial lip 10–21
×
2.5–3 mm
, linear to lanceolate, tomentose, adaxial lip ca.
4.5 mm
long, staminodes 5,
3–4 mm
long, apex acute, base attenuate or sagittate; style
8–12 mm
long, style branches ca.
1 mm
long; disc florets bisexual, corolla bilabiate-tubulose yellow, tube
11.7–14.5 mm
long, abaxial lip 3-toothed,
3–4 mm
long, recurvate, adaxial lip 2-toothed,
3–3.5 mm
long, anthers
9.4–12 mm
long, basal appendages papillose, style
17.5–19 mm
long, style branches ca.
1 mm
long. Achenes ca.
1 cm
long, cylindrical or ovoid; twin hairs densely set; pappus uniseriate,
13–15.7 mm
long, bristles barbellate.
Distribution and ecology:
South
Brazil
(
Rio Grande do Sul State
) and
Uruguay
(
Fig. 3
). The species inhabits rocky outcrops and sandy soiled grasslands at low elevation areas of the Pampean phytogeographic province (
Cabrera & Willink 1973
). Previous studies indicated that the species was probably extinct in
Brazil
(
Zardini 1975
;
Pasini & Ritter 2012
), and in fact, the only three records in this country were made almost 190 years ago; one of them is the
type
specimen that was indicated by
Lessing (1830)
, and is located at
K
,
G
,
HAL
and
P
. The other two collections were cited by
Malme (1931)
as follows: “
Inter
Rio Pardo
et
Bagé (
F
. Sellow
1831);
etiam ab Isabelle lecta, loco non indicato
(
A
. Isabelle
1835)”, of which we were not able to find. The species records in
Uruguay
are also scarce and are restricted to the northern region of the country (Departments of
Rivera
and
Tacuarembó
), which shares the same floristic characteristics with the southern extreme of
Brazil
(State of
Rio Grande do Sul
). Prior to our rediscovery, the latest record was almost 70 years ago (
Osorio s.n.
MVM
13902). We could track the species habitat, following the information of its records from
Uruguay
, and locate it in the department of
Tacuarembó
, Paso Ataques. The subpopulation was found in shrubby grassland with rocky outcrops and sandy soil. The species habitat is extremely endangered due to human impact, like intensive silviculture and uncontrolled use of grazing. In fact, the whole population was surrounded by
Eucaliptus
sp. plantation.
Phenology:
The species bloom from late December to March.
Conservation status:
We consider the species Critically Endangered (
CR
) by the IUCN’s (2011) categories, according to the following criteria and subcriteria:
A
4 (c) (e);
B
2 a:
A
4. We project that the subpopulations suffered from a drastic size reduction in the last 100 years, due to decline of habitat quality. This could be related to the human impacts along the species range areas. There are vast areas of
Pinus
spp.
plantation in northern
Uruguay
, which for the genus
Trichocline
as a whole, could lead to local extinctions. Besides that, this particular species presents a large floral scape and conspicuous ray florets, and can be easily spotted in nature, a fact that could potentially be related to its exploitation for ornamental purposes;
B
2 a – the total extent of occurrence of the species was severely fragmented by the agricultural and silvicultural systems. Furthermore, the only register of the species in
Brazil
is from almost 200 years ago.
Taxonomy and lectotypification:
Christian Friedrich Lessing described
Trichocline maxima
in 1830, using a collection of Friedrich Sellow from
Brazil
. This botanist first collected the species around the year
1820 in
the “Plata” region, which today is comprised by the territories of South
Brazil
(State of
Rio Grande do Sul
),
Uruguay
and northeast
Argentina
. Plenty of information is lacking from some of the species collected by this botanist during his stay in South America, in particular for
Brazil
. Some of his informations written on the herbarium sheets are difficult to decipher, and different localities are often informed in the same
syntypes
material. All of this is because the botanist had a tragic and early death in
Brazil
and therefore could not complete the information for each collection made by him. During the revision of the digitalized material of the genus
Trichocline
, we could identify
three syntypes
of this species, one in
K
, one in
G
and another in
P
, all collected by Sellow. In the labels of some of them, the indicated locality is simply
Brasilia
(
Brazil
) (e.g. G-308259), which is in accordance with the protologue of the species in
Lessing (1830)
, however in some other specimens the locality
Brasilia meridionalis
is cited (e.g. K-504286). We do not believe this is a significant difference that indicates that the
syntypes
were collected in different places and times, and therefore we consider they all belong to the same collection. In addition to that, by the time Sellow collected the species, the borders between
Uruguay
and
Brazil
were not the same as today, therefore it could have been first collected in
Uruguay
.
Figure 1. A-G.
Trichocline maxima
.
A.
General view of the species habit;
B.
Capitulum;
C.
Involucre;
D.
Detail of achene and pappus;
E.
Detail of rosette leaves, scapes and xylopodium;
F.
Detail of the rosette and lobate leaves;
G.
Habitat. Photos credits:
A-C, F
and
G
by José M. Bonifacino;
D
by Fábio P. Torchelsen.
Figure 2. A-E.
Illustration of
Trichocline maxima
.
A.
Habit;
B.
Outer to inner phyllaries;
C.
Ray florets;
D.
Disc florets;
E.
Achene.Illustrations
A–E
were made by Edson Luis de Carvalho Soares and adapted from
Pasini & Ritter (2012)
. José M. Bonifacino drew the illustration of the achene
E
.
Since the author did not specified which specimen is the
holotype
, we chose the one deposited in
K
as the
lectotype
(K-504286). This specimen is the one that is most informative and well preserved.
Trichocline maxima
is a conspicuous scapose herb that can be easily distinguished from the other species of the genus by its smooth and glabrous
55–80 cm
long floral scape, ovate phyllaries and glabrous leaves. During the vegetative stage,
T. maxima
can be misidentified by
Trichocline cisplatina
E. Pasini & Ritter
, another Uruguayan species that also presents glabrous leaves with lobate margin and rounded lobes, however the second one has lobes bending backwards and
form secondary
lobes. The epithet
T. maxima
refers to the species large scape.
Additional examined material:
BRAZIL
.
RIO GRANDE DO SUL
: s.l., 1835,
A. Isabelle
s.n.
(
K
, n.s.).
URUGUAY
.
RIVERA
:
Paso Ataques
,
I.1944
,
J. Chebataroff
9112
(
LP
);
XII.1945
,
A. Lombardo
4570
(
MVJB
);
22.IV.2014
,
E. Pasini
,
J.M. Bonifacino
,
F.P. Torchelsen
1019
(
ICN 178180
);
Rincón de La Laguna
,
14.II.1947
,
H. Osorio
s.n.
(
MVM 13902
)
.