A taxonomic revision of the Neotropical genus Cremastosperma (Annonaceae), including five new species
Author
Pirie, Michael D.
Author
Chatrou, Lars W.
Author
Maas, Paul J. M.
text
PhytoKeys
2018
112
1
141
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.112.24897
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.112.24897
1314-2003-112-1
FFAEFFCDFF940F55FFCCFFB2A07D303B
1911101
6.
Cremastosperma bullatum Pirie
Figs 12
, 13
, Map 5
Cremastosperma bullatum
Pirie, Arnaldoa 11: 8 f. 2, 3-5. 2004.
Type.
PERU, Amazonas: Bagua, Distr. Imaza, community Yamayakat, trail to Putuim, 360 m a.s.l., 22 Nov 2003,
Pirie, M.D. et al. 71
(holotype: U! [two sheets U0121238, U0121239]; isotypes: AAU!, AMAZ!, CUZ!, E! [E00268265], F! [V0047939F], HAO!, HUT!, K! [K000580475], MO! [MO-1459050], MOL!, NY! [NY00689082], US! [US00901687], USM! [USM000035], WU! [WU0038419]).
Description.
Tree
2-10 m tall; young twigs and petioles densely covered with mainly erect golden hairs up to 1 mm long.
Leaves
: petioles 3-7 mm by 2.5-3 mm; lamina elliptic or narrowly so to slightly obovate, 17-28 by 6-11 cm (index 2.4-3.5), chartaceous, mid-brown, occasionally slightly grey above (immature leaves drying black), sparsely covered with mainly erect golden hairs up to 1 mm long or glabrous above, densely so on edge of lamina and on all veins below, base rounded to subcordate, apex acuminate (acumen 5-20 mm long), primary, secondary and tertiary veins sunken in depressions in leaf surface, primary vein 1.5-2 mm wide at widest point, densely covered with mainly erect golden hairs up to 1 mm long above and below, secondary veins 15-20 (intersecondary veins rare), distance between from 6 mm at the base to 16 mm closer to the apex, angles with primary vein consistently around 60-70°, occasionally branching, forming distinct loops, smallest distance between loops and margin 1-1.5 mm; tertiary veins mostly percurrent.
Inflorescences
of single, successively produced, flowers, axillary on leafy branches, on leafless branches and produced from the main trunk (then on brachyblasts); peduncles and pedicels sparsely to rather densely covered with mainly erect golden hairs up to 1 mm long, peduncles 17-20 by 1-1.5 mm (in flower), 18-25 by 1.5 mm (in fruit); pedicels up to 120 by 1 mm at the base (in flower), 110-150 by 1.5 mm (in fruit); bracts densely covered with mainly erect golden hairs up to 1 mm long, single lower bract, elliptic to ovate, ca. 2.5 by 1 mm, acute, persistent or falling off; upper bract within central third of pedicel length, elliptic to ovate, 2-3 by 1-2 mm, acute; flower buds depressed ovoid, developing to ovoid before opening; flowers green, maturing to yellow with a basal orange patch on the outside of the outer petals
in vivo
, golden brown
in sicco
, outer sides and apical portion of the inner sides of petals and outer sides of sepals densely covered in appressed golden hairs up to 1 mm long, inner sides otherwise glabrous; sepals basally connate, deltate, 5-7 by 6 mm, acute, soon falling off, outer petals broadly ovate, ca. 18 by 15 mm, inner petals ovate, concave, ca. 25 by 12 mm; androecium ca. 5 mm diam., stamens 1-1.5 mm long, connective appendage ca. 0.5 mm wide; gynoecium [ca. 2.5] mm diam., glabrous. Monocarps 8-10, dark brown
in sicco
, ellipsoid, slightly asymmetrical, ca. 15 by 11 mm, often with an excentric apicule; stipes 14-16 by 1.5 mm; fruiting receptacle 5-6 mm diam., monocarps, stipes and receptacle sparsely to moderately densely covered with erect golden hairs up to 0.2 mm long.
Seeds
ellipsoid, orange-brown, shallowly pitted, ca.13 by 10 mm, raphe raised, regular.
Distribution.
Ecuador (Morona-Santiago) and Peru (Amazonas).
Habitat and Ecology.
Primary forest, on red clay. At elevations of 300-500 m. Flowering: February and November; fruiting: November and June.
Notes.
Cremastosperma bullatum
can easily be distinguished from all other species of
Cremastosperma
by any one of the number of unique and striking characteristics it displays. The leaf blade has a corrugated (bullate) appearance, both in the field and when pressed, which is due to the deeply sunken nature of the primary, secondary and tertiary venation. The indument present on many of its parts is far longer than in any other species in the genus and, also uniquely in the genus, densely inserted in a halo-like formation around the leaf margin. Other notable characteristics are the unusually long pedicel, the orange colouring of the base of the outer petals of mature flowers, the inner petals considerably longer than the outer petals and the rounded to subcordate shape of the leaf base.
Preliminary conservation status.
Cremastosperma bullatum
is known from a small number of locations, within a limited area of northern Peru and adjacent Ecuador outside of protected areas. Endangered [EN] (Table
1
).
Selected Specimens Examined.
ECUADOR. Morona-Santiago
:
Region
de la Cordillera del
Condor
,
3°05'13"S
,
78°04'23"W
, 380 m a.s.l., 1 Jun 2006,
Wisum
&
Kajekai 446
(US).
PERU. Amazonas
: Bagua, Yamayakat,
4°55'S
,
78°19'W
, 320 m a.s.l., 20 Jan 1996,
Jaramillo et al. 942
(MO, U); Bagua, Yamayakat, trail to Putuim,
5°03'09"S
,
78°20'58"W
, 343 m a.s.l., 22 Nov 2003,
Pirie et al. 66
(HAO, U, USM); Bagua, Putuim,
5°01'44"S
,
78°22'43"W
, 339-359 m a.s.l., 25 Nov 2003,
Pirie et al. 94
(AMAZ, CUZ, HAO, HUT, MO, U, USM).
Map 5.
Distribution of
Cremastosperma bullatum
Pirie;
C. cauliflorum
R.E.Fr.;
C. cenepense
Pirie & Zapata; and
C. longicuspe
R.E.Fr.
Figure 13.
a-b
Cremastosperma brevipes
(DC.) R.E.Fr.
a
flowers (
Maas et al. 8064
; photo PJMM)
b
fruit (
Mori et al 22721
; photo Scott Mori)
c-e
C. bullatum
Pirie
c, e
Flowering specimen (
Pirie et al. 94
; photos
c
MDP
e
Robin van Velzen)
d
leaf base showing bullate corrugations of the lamina and long golden indument (Pirie et al. 71; photo: MDP)
f, g
C. cauliflorum
R.E.Fr. Flowering specimens (
f
Maas et al. 9029
, photo PJMM
g
Chatrou et al. 224
, photo LWC)
h-j
C. dolichocarpum
Pirie. Flowering and fruiting specimen (
Pedraza et al. 2146
; photos:
Maria
F.
Gonzalez
).