A revision of Geostachys (Zingiberaceae: Alpinioideae) in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, including a new species, G. aristata
Author
Leong-Škorničková, Jana
0000-0003-4490-3490
The Herbarium, Singapore Botanic Gardens, 1, Cluny Road, 259569 Singapore & jana _ skornickova @ nparks. gov. sg; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 4490 - 3490
jana_skornickova@nparks.gov.sg
Author
Bình, Nguyén Qu ốc
0000-0002-6267-839X
Vietnam National Museum of Nature, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 18, Hoàng Qu ṍc Vi ệt Street, Cǻu Giǻy, 122300 Hà N ội, Vietnam & binhzing @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 6267 - 839 X
binhzing@gmail.com
Author
Đăng, Tr ần H ữu
Becamex Institute of Research and Development, Becamex IDC Corp., 08, Hùng Vuõng Street, Hòa Phú Ward, Th ủ Dǻu M ột City, Bình Duõng Province, Vietnam & Southern Institute of Ecology, Institute of Applied Materials Science, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 1 D, TL 29 Street, District 12, H ồ Chí Minh City, Vietnam
Author
Trư ờng, Lưu H ồng
0000-0002-7036-7081
Southern Institute of Ecology, Institute of Applied Materials Science, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 1 D, TL 29 Street, District 12, H ồ Chí Minh City, Vietnam & hongtruongluu @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7036 - 7081
hongtruongluu@gmail.com
Author
Nuraliev, Maxim S.
Joint Russian-Vietnamese Tropical Scientific and Technological Center, Nguy ễn Vãn Huyên street, Cǻu Giǻy, Hà N ội, Vietnam Department of Higher Plants, Biological Faculty, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, 1, 12, Leninskie Gory, 119234 Moscow, Russia
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-03-07
585
4
245
260
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.585.4.1
journal article
57380
10.11646/phytotaxa.585.4.1
aa4b6a5e-18fa-4915-a746-95d1cb74d648
1179-3163
7703837
Geostachys pierreana
Gagnepain (1906a: 147)
(
Fig. 1
,
5
,
6
)
Type:
—
Country unknown [S. Vietnam, Cambodia or Thailand], 1865–1877,
J.B.L. Pierre
5851
(
lectotype
, designated here,
P
:
P00686635
!;
isolectotypes
P
:
P00686634
! and
P032698
!; flowering)
.
Clump-forming herb up to
1 m
tall.
Rhizome
supported by stilt roots, sheathed by dry brown scales.
Leafy shoots
with 6–13 leaves per pseudostem, bladeless at basal 1/3;
bladeless sheaths
2–6; most basal (outermost) sheaths very short, soon becoming dry and brown, inner sheaths distally gradually longer, green with reddish tinge, abaxially glabrous, striate (more prominent in dry material);
leaf sheaths
similar to bladeless sheaths;
ligule
ca.
3 mm
long, triangular with obtuse apex, green with reddish to brown tinge (darker at base), glabrous;
petiole
5–10 mm
long, shallowly canaliculate, mostly green, adaxially puberulent and abaxially glabrous to sparsely puberulent;
leaf blade
narrowly elliptic,
25–35 cm
long,
4–6 cm
wide, weakly plicate, adaxially green to dark green, somewhat shiny, glabrous, abaxially paler green, glabrous, base narrowly obtuse, apex acuminate, midrib adaxially sunken, pale green to ochraceous, glabrous, abaxially protruding, pale green, glabrous.
Inflorescence
radical;
peduncle
erect, covered by 5–7 sheathing bracts;
sheathing bracts
distichous, ovate to narrowly ovate, overlapping, basal ones shorter, distal ones significantly longer (sometimes developing blade vestiges at the apex, see
Fig. 5D
on the right), soon becoming brown and papery, striate, glabrous on both sides;
thyrse
lax, many-flowered;
rachis
4–8 cm
long, decurved, dull green with dark red tinge (turning dark red to maroon in fruiting stage), hirsute, shortly branched;
bracts
ovate, broadly ovate to semi-circular,
1–3 mm
long,
2–3 mm
wide, brownish-maroon at base, greenish to whitish distally, glabrous, caducous, each subtending cincinnus of 1–5 flowers on
4–15 mm
long branch;
branches
secund, of the same colour as rachis, hirsute;
bracteoles
broadly ovate to broadly elliptic, spathaceous, enveloping the flower with the rest of the cincinnus,
13–30 mm
long,
4–17 mm
wide, pale pink-orange with greenish apex when young, soon scarious and pale brown to ochraceous, somewhat striate (visible in dry material), mostly glabrous, apex mucronate and puberulent.
Flower
gullet-type;
pedicel
negligible;
calyx
tubular,
12–15 mm
long, apex with single lobe ending with prominent ciliate mucro, semi-translucent pale yellow with red tinge, mostly glabrous, apex puberulent;
floral tube
yellow;
dorsal corolla lobe
elliptic-oblong with cucullate apex, yellow with white semi-translucent veins, glabrous;
lateral corolla lobes
elliptic-oblong with obtuse apex, yellow with white semi-translucent veins, glabrous;
labellum
obovate, apex slightly bilobed, yellow with semitranslucent veins, adaxially with short glandular hair, abaxially glabrous;
lateral staminodes
irregularly obovate with round apex, nearly entirely connate to labellum, yellow with semi-translucent veins;
stamen
yellow;
filament
dorso-ventrally compressed, pale yellow with glandular hair;
anther connective
yellow, with glandular hair;
crest
2–3 mm
long, bluntly obscurely three-lobed, yellow;
anther thecae
dehiscing through the entire length;
ovary
trilocular with central placentation, cylindrical, greenish or with reddish tinge, glabrous;
epigynous glands
two;
style
filiform, cream white;
stigma
capitulate, cream white; ostiole transverse, forward-facing, ciliate.
Fruit
(immature) ellipsoid hesperidium, ca.
10 mm
long, ca.
6 mm
in diam., red, glabrous, with persistent calyx;
seeds
unknown.
FIGURE 5.
Geostachys pierreana
.
A.
Leafy shoot (from above).
B.
Basal part of plant with inflorescences.
C.
Detail of ligule.
D.
Inflorescences.
E.
Flower with labellum removed (staminodes remain attached to floral tube).
F.
Cincinnus with one open flower (side view).
G.
Flower (front view). All from
Netopilová & Faltová s.n
. Photo by M. Netopilová.
Eponymy:
—This species is named after a French botanist Jean Baptiste Louis Pierre (
23 October 1833
–
30 October 1905
) who made the
type
collection.
Distribution & IUCN preliminary assessment:
—Currently known only from Bokor National Park,
Cambodia
.
Geostachys pierreana
is currently assessed as Data Deficient on IUCN Red List (
Olander 2019b
). Although the only known location in Bokor National Park is under legal protection, there is no information about the number or size of populations. The Popokvil Waterfall is accessible to public, and the effect of tourism on the vegetation surrounding this area needs to be assessed first for an evidence-based assessment. We therefore suggest continuing to treat this species as Data Deficient (DD).
FIGURE 6.
Geostachys pierreana
.
A.
Leafy shoot (view from below).
B.
Pseudostem with ligules and leaf bases.
C.
Basal part of plant with inflorescences.
D.
Cross section of cincinnus showing total of five flowers/fruits.
E.
Stamen (adaxial and abaxial view).
F.
Inflorescence, top view. All from
Luu s.n
. Photo by
H.T. Luu
.
Ecology & phenology:
—Growing in broadleaved evergreen forest, including its edges and slightly disturbed areas, at elevations of ca.
1000 m
a.s.l. Flowering has been observed in April and June.
Additional specimens examined:—
CAMBODIA
.
Kampot province
:
[
Bokor National Park
],
Popokvil
, April [year not given, inferred as 1967?],
P. Dy Phon
1157
(
P
:
P02203163
, flowering);
Bokor National Park
, ca.
1.5 km
east of Popokvil waterfall
, ca.
970 m
a.s.l.
,
1 June 2017
,
M. Netopilová
&
I. Faltová
s.n.
(mounted over 2 sheets, Accession Nos.
02602KBFR1
and
02526KBFR6
, herbarium of the Department of Botany and Plant Physiology of the Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources of the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Czech Republic, flowering)
.
Other field records:—
CAMBODIA
.
Kampot province
:
Bokor National Park
,
5 June 2014
,
H.T. Luu
s.n.
(flowering, photo uploaded to
LE
:
LE01093259
; see also
Fig. 6
)
.
Nomenclatural notes:
—
Gagnepain (1906a)
included a single gathering,
Pierre 5851
, in the protologue of
G. pierreana
. From the title of Gagnepain’s paper it is evident that the specimens examined by him were located at P. Although the three available sheets at P are currently labelled as type (sensu
holotype
) and two isotypes, with this perception repeated by
Saensouk & Saensouk (2021)
, they have to be considered
syntypes
. All
three syntypes
are of good quality, each including leafy shoot and one or two inflorescences. One of the sheets (P00686635) also has several flower buds and one neatly pressed flower in an enclosed envelope, which was most likely used in the preparation of pencil drawing attached to the sheet P032698, and subsequently reproduced in Fig.
10 in
Gagnepain (1908)
. We designate this particular specimen (barcode P00686635) as the
lectotype
; the remaining two sheets (barcodes P00686634 and P032698) are isolectotypes.
Taxonomic notes:
—
Larsen (1986)
stated that
G. pierreana
is described from
Vietnam
, whereas
Newman
et al.
(2007)
assumed it to be collected in
Laos
.
Saensouk & Saensouk (2021)
produced three conflicting statements within a single paper that the
type
locality is in
Laos
(as stated in the figure legend on p. 3059), in
Thailand
,
Chantaburi
(as stated in species citation on p. 3064) or in
Cambodia
(as implied in the notes p. 3065). In spite of the previous guesses, the original collection locality of
G. pierreana
remains unknown as already clearly noted by
Gagnepain (1906a)
in the protologue: ‘INDO-CHINE.—
No
5851 [
Pierre
] sans désignation de localité, ni date’. In
Flore Generale de L’IndoChine
, the distribution is given, with no further explanation, as “Cochinchine” (
Gagnepain 1908: 102
).
There are three sheets of
Pierre
5851
in P. They all have standard label common to herbarium collections of L. Pierre, with pre-printed locality given as Indochina; however, there is remark on all of them ‘etiquette perdue’ indicating that the original label was lost. The date of the collection is accordingly given as 1865–1877, i.e., the entire 12-year long period when Pierre was based in
Saigon
(now
Ho Chi Minh City
) as the Director of the Jardin Botanique et Zoologique. It is known that during this period Pierre made many expeditions not only in southern
Vietnam
, but also in neighbouring
Cambodia
and even
Thailand
(former
Siam
) (
Gagnepain 1906b
). The numbering of the specimens is of no help to deduce the location or date as it appears that final numbers on Pierre’s standard labels were applied as the collections were sorted/worked through, and these differ from his provisional field numbers. We assume this based on examination of several sheets of collection numbers close to 5851 (i.e. 5848, 5852, 5854), which all belong to
Zingiberaceae
, but all were collected at different locations and in different years. There is no sheet of
Geostachys
from
Vietnam
present in any herbaria we have examined, which would be in good match with the
type
of
G. pierreana
. The only specimens which we consider to be in good match with the
type
is collection by
Dy Phon 1157
and collection and photographs made by
Netopilová & Faltová s.n
., both from Bokor National Park,
Cambodia
. These two collections match the
type
and the protologue in all major aspects, such as the shape and indumentum of leaf blades and ligules, short petioles, length and decurvation of the rachis and secund arrangement of the flower-bearing branches, number of flowers in cincinnus, as well as more specific details such as hirsute rachis and flower-bearing branches, shape and size of bracts, spathaceous glabrous bracteoles with mucronate puberulent apices and calyx with a single lobe ending in a sharply mucronate apex. From other labelled collections, it is known that Pierre visited and made collections in the same area (
Kampot
city and surrounding hills). Thus with all the evidence listed above, the most likely origin of the
type
of
G. pierreana
is
Cambodia
. The above description, although based on the protologue and the three original sheets, is therefore also supplemented with observations from
Dy Phon 1157
and
Netopilová & Faltová s.n.
The indication of
G. pierreana
by
Phạm (2003)
as present in
Vietnam
originated from the uncertainty regarding the
type
collection, as follows from his reference to Gagnepain. The same is probably true for Nguyễn (2005). Nguyễn (2017) listed several additional Vietnamese collections under
G. pierreana
whose identifications remained preliminary as they were based solely on the herbarium material that does not show important features of floral structure. For two collections from
Ninh BÌnh province
,
Averyanov et al. HAL 1638 & HAL 1639
, photographic material appeared to be available, which allowed to identify them as
Wurfbainia
sp. (Zingiberaceae)
and
Tropidia angulosa
(Lindl.) Blume (Orchidaceae)
, respectively. The other collections listed by Nguyễn (2017), all from Lâm Đồng province (
Hà Tuḗ 458
,
Nhan 785
,
Tṵ 82
,
Biên 1228
), are re-identified here as
G. annamensis
(see above).
Saensouk & Saensouk (2021)
have reported
G. pierreana
as a new record for
Thailand
, based on a single collection made by
Nai Noe 77
(BK, K, P: P00599363) in
Chanthaburi province
. Although the specimen has been previously annotated as
Geostachys
cf.
pierreana
on the sheet deposited in P, it is clearly visible that the inflorescence is erect, with cincinni/flower-bearing branches evenly distributed around the rachis and thus fails to fit
G. pierreana
, which has decurved inflorescences with secund arrangement of flower-bearing branches. Although determination to the species level with absolute certainty is challenging on the herbarium material, the collection
Nai Noe 77
matches well
G. tratensis
, a species described from a location distanced only about
80 km
(air distance) from it. We therefore conclude that there is currently no evidence, that
G. pierreana
occurs in
Thailand
.