First confirmed record of Carex limosa L. (Cyperaceae) and community Caricetum limosae Br. - Bl. for Nevesinjsko polje (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
Author
Perić, Ranko
Institute for Nature Conservation of Vojvodina province, Radnička 20 a, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia
Author
Škondrić, Siniša
Department of Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, University of Banja Luka, Mladena Stojanovića 2, 78000 Banja Luka, Republic of Srpska, Bosnia & Herzegovina
Author
Kneţević, Jelena
text
Ecologica Montenegrina
2018
2018-12-20
19
152
158
http://dx.doi.org/10.37828/em.2018.19.15
journal article
301648
10.37828/em.2018.19.15
e4d1f6b8-5158-4060-8d2a-d02d76863b37
2336-9744
13360071
Carex limosa
L
.,
Sp. Pl.
977 (1753).
Syn
.
Carex elegans
Willd.,
Fl. Berol.
prodr.
34 (1787);
Trasus limosus
(L.) S. F. Gray,
Nat
. Arr. Brit. Pl.
2
: 67 (1821)
;
C. laxa
Dewey,
Amer. J. Sci. Arts.
26
: 376 (1834)
,
nom
.
illeg
.;
Facolos limosa
(L.) Raf.,
Good Book
, 26 (1840);
C. glaucocarpa
St.
–Lag. in A. Cariot,
Étude Fl., ed.
8(2)
: 856 (1889);
C. fusco
–cuprea
(Kük.)
V. Krecz.,
Flora URSS
3
: 599 (1935)
.
Description.
Laxly cespitose, rhizomatous, glaucous–green perennial.
Rhizome
s ± angulate, far–creeping with tufts of fibrous, brown–yellowish, lanate roots produced at the nodes.
Stems
distinctly triquetrous, slender, erect, in upper part ± nodding and usually minutely antrorsely scabrid at the angles.
Basal sheats
persistent, yellowish– to reddish–brown, entire or sometimes disintegrating into fibres.
Leaves
stiff, shorter than stem, sheathed, leaf blades 1–2(2.5) mm wide, canaliculate–folded, scabrid and long–attenuate.
Bracts
shorter than inflorescence, very shortly sheathed (barely
2 mm
), lowest leaf–like
2–2.5 cm
long [in our specimens up to
15 mm
long], upper setaceous.
Spikes
2–3(4), pedunculate, subdistant.
Male spike
1, terminal, (7)10–30(35) × (1)
1.5–3 mm
, usually linear, erect.
Male glumes
ovate–lanceolate to obovate, 3–5 × (0.8)
1–1.7 mm
, brownish with a lighter, viridescent or concolorous middle nerve ending with an acute or obtuse point or short mucro.
Anthers
3,
2–3 mm
long.
Female spikes
1–2(3), lateral, ± approximate, ovate to oblong–ovate, (5)10–20 × 4–8(10) mm, dense, with 8–30 flowers, sometimes with few male flowers at the apex [as is the case with some of our plants], often pendent, peduncles slender,
1–4 cm
long.
Female glumes
ovate to ovate–lanceolate, 3–5(6) × 2–3(4) mm, brown or reddish–brown, usually exceeding utricles, with 3 nerves (middle sometimes lightly coloured), at the apex acute or with hard, somewhat curved mucro c.
1 mm
long.
Utricles
glaucous–green, suberect, 3.5–4(4.5) × (1.2)
1.8–2.6 mm
, ellipsoid to ovate, compressed– trigonous (sometimes wrinkled to a certain degree), prominently 7–9 veined, very finely papillose, at the base shortly stipitate and rounded, apex abruptly narrowed into short–cylindric beak c.
0.1–0.5 mm
long. Mouth brownish, entire, truncate or scarcely emarginate.
Stigmas
3, c.
2 mm
.
Nutlet
s elliptic, compressed– trigonous, apiculate at the apex, c. 2(4) mm long. 2n=52, 56, 58, 61–64 (
Chater 1980
; Randjelović 1999;
Luceño 2007
;
Rotreklová
et al
. 2011
). Reproduction time: V–VII. Pollination: anemophilly (Randjelović 1999). Seed dispersal: hydro– and endozoochoria (endoornithochoria) (
Soó 1980
; Randjelović 1999).
Type
in London: LINN, no. 1100.56 (designated by
Egorova 1999: 359
) (
Fig. 1
).
Distribution.
A circumpolar species native to lowland Arctic and boreal areas of Eurasia and North America with isolated southern stations through a mountain ranges in Europe and Transcaucasia as well as in the Korean peninsula and
Japan
(
Krechetovich 1935
; Randjelović 1999;
Dai
et al
. 2010
). It was described from boreal parts of Europe [„
Habitat in Europae frigidae paludibus sylvaticis
“] (
Linnaeus 1753: 977
). In Europe it has been known from
Iceland
,
Denmark
,
Sweden
,
Norway
,
Finland
,
Ireland
, Britain,
Netherlands
,
Belgium
,
Luxembourg
,
Spain
,
France
,
Germany
,
Switzerland
,
Italy
, Czech,
Slovakia
,
Poland
,
Estonia
,
Latvia
, Litvania,
Belarus
,
Russia
,
Austria
, †
Hungary
,
Slovenia
,
Croatia
,
Montenegro
,
Serbia
,
Greece
,
Romania
,
Bulgaria
and
Ukraine
(
Chater 1980
; Jiménez–Mejías & Luceño 2011).
Figure 1
.
Carex limosa
in the study area. – Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nevesinjsko polje, Srednja Voda, 16–July–2017, Photo by Jelena KneŢević.
Across Balkans it is principally confined to the secluded boreal refugia on high mountains:
Bosnia and Herzegovina
: Sutjeska National Park, Gornje bare [34T CN09];? mt. Zelengora, Kotlaničko jezero [34T BP90] (
Milanović 2017: 80
);
Montenegro
: Durmitor mt. [34T CN47] (
Košanin ap.
Malý 1931
–32: 64;
Rohlena 1942: 452
);
Serbia
: Vlasina plateau [34T FN02 FN12 FN13] (data summarized by Randjelović 1999: 248), Ostrozub mt. [34T FN04] (
Adamović 1904: 161
) and Rogozna mt. [34T DN66, rough position] (
Ratknić
& al
. 2011: 439
);
Bulgaria
: Vitosha mt. [34T FN82] and Central Rhodopes mt. [35T LG00] (
Jordanov 1964: 102–103
;
Stoeva 2015
) and
Greece
: Voras mt. [34T EL74] (
Strid & Franzén 1982: 26
;
Voliotis 1982
).
According to
Topić & Stančić (2006: 3374)
it seems that
C. limosa
has disappeared from its historical finding places in
Croatia
[33T WL47 WL56 XL29 YL11] (Schlosser & Farkaš–Vukotinović 1869: 1187;
Pavić ap
.
Horvat 1939: 74
) while its supposed records from very atypical habitats near lowland mediterranean small lakes
viz
. Kuti [33T YH15], Modro oko [33T YH07] and Baćinska lake [33T XH97] (
Topić 1995
according to
Glasnović
et al
. 2015: 170
) are likely to be erroneous (
Fig. 2
).
Figure 2
. Distribution of
Carex limosa
in the Balkans.
Distribution in
Bosnia & Herzegovina
.
Despite the fact that this species has been recorded in neighbouring countries for decades ago and that favourable habitats are present in Bosnia and Herzegovina, this species has been reported for Bosnia & Herzegovina recently (
Đug 2011: 106
; Anonymous 2011: 455;
Đug 2015: 96
). In above mentioned publications
C. limosa
is listed as one of numerous species characteristic for habitat
type
„7140 Transitional mires“. Whether this data are originating from original field work or they are merely included under the abovementioned habitat description in a manner
per analogiam
to other, similar manuals in neighbouring countries (
Topić & Vukelić 2009
;
Anonymous 2013
), the fact is that there are no cited particular localities nor voucher herbarium specimens in accessible herbarium collection supporting this claim, which is unfortunately not contributing to the scientific value of it. First published record of this species for Bosnia & Herzegovina with cited precise location emerged just recently (
Milanović 2017
), but without supporting voucher specimens in some publicly accessible herbarium collection. Author of this paper also indicates one more locality for Bosnia & Herzegovina (mt. Zelengora), but without any further details needed for its verification.
In this regard, according to our knowledge, the second confirmed habitat of
C. limosa
in
Bosnia & Herzegovina
is limited to the southern edge of transitional mire called Srednja Voda close to Nevesinje. The next records of
C. limosa
is ca.
40 km
and
80 km
east on Maglić and Durmitor mt. (
Montenegro
) respectively (
Malý 1931
–32;
Rohlena 1942
,
Milanović 2017
).
Voucher specimens:
Bosnia and Herzegovina
:
Nevesinje
:
Srednja Voda
,
43. 29998° N
,
018. 11333° E
, [34
T
BN69
],
851 m
(
Perić,
R
.
,
Škondrić,
S
.
,
KneŢević,
J
.
03–May–2017
;
16–Jul–2017
,
PZZP
)
.
Habitat.
Sphagnum
bogs and mires, margin of peat–lakes, swamp meadows, shores and watersides (
Chater 1980
;
Ball & Reznicek 2003
; Dai
et al
. 2011). Its habitat near Nevesinje can be described as acidic transitional
Sphagnum
–mire developed on Lower Triassic (Werfen) strata fractions (Riter–Studnička 1954). There individuals of
C. limosa
densely occupy no more than a few dozen square meters at the southern edge of mire forming numerous, small, scattered tufts of community
Caricetum limosae
Br.–Bl. which develop at the very top of
Sphagnum
hummocks. Accompanying species are
Drosera rotundifolia
L. and
Sphagnum
spp.
Conservation status.
As is the case with many other Arctic–boreal (glacial) relic species at warmer temperate latitudes of Northern Hemisphere, their rather rambling and rare occurrence in those areas appears to be profoundly influenced not only by the long–time changes in glaciation cycles and climate changes but also by various anthropogenic impacts and accompanying vegetation succession, which additionally contribute to the further decreasing and loss of boreal species stands across the warmer parts of Europe (
Hegi 1923
; Riter–Studnička 1956;
Topić & Stančić 2006
;
Topić & Vukelić 2009
). Threat status for this species published by
Milanović (2017)
as „endangered“ (EN) (B2a, B2biii) is based on obsolete 2001 IUCN criteria. According to the most recent IUCN criteria (http://www.iucnredlist.org) threat status of
C. limosa
in
Bosnia & Herzegovina
can be estimated as critically endangered (CR B1a+ 2a).