A foundation monograph of Ipomoea (Convolvulaceae) in the New World
Author
Wood, John R. I.
Author
Munoz-Rodriguez, Pablo
Author
Williams, Bethany R. M.
Author
Scotland, Robert W.
text
PhytoKeys
2020
143
1
823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.143.32821
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.143.32821
1314-2003-143-1
F6F11A6EE4FF5A1885CEA2B60AE965A5
146.
Ipomoea volcanensis
O'Donell
, Lilloa 26
: 398. 1953. (
O'Donell
1953a: 398)
Type.
ARGENTINA. Jujuy, [Dept. Tumbaya],
Volcan
, Toma de la Laguna, 2200 m,
R. Schreiter
2619 (holotype LIL001290).
Description.
Twining perennial herb with tuberous roots; stems glabrous. Leaves petiolate, 6.5-8.5
x
5-7 cm, ovate-deltoid (often shallowly 3-lobed), subtruncate with rounded auricles, long-acuminate, mucronulate, margin somewhat undulate, glabrous on both surfaces; petioles 3-8 cm. Inflorescence of 1-5-flowered, pedunculate axillary cymes; peduncles 4-14 cm, relatively stout; bracteoles fugacious; secondary peduncles 1-2 cm; pedicels 20-35 mm; sepals subequal, convex, coriaceous, obtuse, glabrous, outer 6-8
x
4-6 mm, inner 8-9
x
6 mm, slightly larger, suborbicular; corolla 6-7 cm long, deep pink, glabrous, funnel-shaped, limb 3-3.5 cm diam., shallowly lobed. Capsules and seeds not seen.
Illustration.
Figure
85
;
O'Donell
(1959b: 252).
Figure 85.
Ipomoea volcanensis
.
A
habit
B
outer sepal
C
inner sepal
D
corolla opened out to show stamens
E
ovary and style. Drawn by Rosemary Wise from
T. Meyer
16958.
Distribution.
In moist Tucuman-Bolivian forest in Andean Argentina and Bolivia at around 1500-2100 m.
ARGENTINA. Jujuy
: Belgrano,
O. Morrone et al.
2251 (SI, MO); Yala,
A. Rotman
1010 (CTES);
T. Meyer
16958 p.p. (US, LIL); Tumbaya,
Volcan
,
S. Venturi
4951 (LIL, MO, US),
Cildella et al.
517 (CTES); Vallegrande
,
Fabris
3554
(CTES).
Salta
: Rosario de Lerma,
L.J. Novara
7605 (G, S).
BOLIVIA. Tarija
: Entre
Rios
, on road to Palos Blancos,
J.R.I. Wood et al.
28059 (LPB, USZ).
Note.
Very similar to
Ipomoea austrobrasiliensis
differing in the slightly longer corolla, the subdeltoid, basally subtruncate, often shallowly lobed, consistently smaller leaves. It is also similar to the
I. batatoides
, which differs in the smaller, acuminate, ovate leaves and the fewer-flowered inflorescence. It also lacks the distinctive punctate abaxial leaf surface commonly found in that species.