A new generic circumscription of Hydrochorea (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, mimosoid clade) with an amphi-Atlantic distribution
Author
Vinicius Batista Soares, Marcos
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2660-1771
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Programa de Pos-Graduacao em Botanica, Av. Bento Goncalves 9500, Bloco IV, Predio 43433, 91501 - 970, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Author
Mathieu Koenen, Erik Jozef
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4825-4339
Rua dos Bandeirantes 1020, Caranazal, 68040 - 329, Santarem, Para, Brazil
erikk_botany@gmx.com
Author
Ricardo Vieira Iganci, Joao
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5740-3666
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Programa de Pos-Graduacao em Botanica, Av. Bento Goncalves 9500, Bloco IV, Predio 43433, 91501 - 970, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil & Evolutionary Biology & Ecology, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Faculte des Sciences, Campus du Solbosch - CP 160 / 12, Avenue F. D. Roosevelt 50, 1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
Author
Morim, Marli Pires
Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal de Pelotas, Campus Universitario Capao do Leao, Travessa Andre Dreyfus s / n, 96010 - 900, Capao do Leao, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
text
PhytoKeys
2022
2022-08-22
205
401
437
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.205.82775
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.205.82775
1314-2003-205-401
71D1ED9CE6165A94A2A330D2DA4D6DD9
9.
Hydrochorea rhombifolia (Benth.) E.J.M. Koenen
comb. nov.
Figs 1A
, 3M
Feuilleea rhombifolia
(Benth.) Kuntze, Revis. Gen. Pl. 1: 189 (1891).
Cathormion rhombifolium
(Benth.) Keay, Kew Bull. 8(4): 489 (1953).
Basionym.
Albizia rhombifolia
Benth.,
London
J. Bot. 3: 87 (1844).
Type material.
Guinee
, Conakry,
Heudelot 735
(lectotype designated here from amongst the syntypes: K [K000043955]!; isolectotypes: K [K000043954]!, K [K000043949]!, P [P00418271] digital image!, P [P00418272] digital image!, P [P00418270] digital image!).
Description.
Trees
or
shrubs
up to 12 m tall, the young stems, all leaf-axes and peduncles puberulent-tomentulose with rusty brown hairs.
Stipules
deltoid, c. 1 mm long, puberulent-tomentulose, caducous.
Leaves
with 2-3 pairs of pinnae, petiole pulvinate, ventrally flattened above pulvinule and with central groove in upper half, 2-3.5(-8.5) cm long, rachis ventrally grooved, 1.5-4(-12.5) cm long, pinna rachises pulvinate, ventrally grooved, (3.2-)4-6(-12) cm long. Nectaries present at the petiole apex just below the first pair of pinnae as well as just below each further pair of pinnae, sessile or shortly stipitate on stipe to 0.5 mm, cupular or sometimes concave, circular and 0.8-2.2 mm in diameter, and between the upper 2-3 pairs of leaflets, trumpet-shaped and then on a short stipe 0.5 mm or cupular and (sub)sessile, the lower ones circular and the upper ones elliptical, 0.8-1.5
x
0.8-1.1 mm. Minute paraphyllidia sometimes present at the apex of the pinna-pulvinus. Leaflets in 4-6 pairs per pinna, closely spaced, bicoloured leaflets often with partly overlapping margins, bright green above and pale green beneath, dull on both surfaces, rhomboid with a pulvinate sessile oblique base and rounded to slightly emarginate apex, increasing in size towards pinna apex, (1.1-)1.7-3.5(-5.1)
x
(0.5-)1.2-1.8(-2.3) cm, except for the apical pair which has a less oblique to nearly acute base, (2.1-)2.5-4.5(-5.7)
x
(1.1-)1.5-2.5(-3.2) cm; venation pinnate with 8-12(-18) secondary veins brochidodromous, tertiary venation reticulate, prominulous on both surfaces, midribs ciliate on both sides, the lower leaflet surface pilose with a variable density of brownish to white hairs, rarely almost glabrous, sometimes villose particularly near the midrib giving a rusty orange-brown appearance.
Inflorescences
umbelliform capitula, axillary to co-eval leaves on peduncles (4.5-)5-9.5 cm long, dimorphic with 6-16 peripheral flowers and 1-2 terminal flower(s) with elongated exserted staminal tubes. Bracts spatulate, c. 1.8 mm long, puberulent with minute rusty hairs, caducous. Peripheral flowers on pedicels of 1-4 mm, calyx pentamerous, white, 3-3.5 mm long, fused, the deltoid lobes 1-1.3 mm long, glabrous or with few minute hairs, corolla pentamerous, white, 6-8 mm long, fused in the lower half, glabrous, pilose to villose in the upper half, androecium 1.6-2.3 cm long, consisting of 20-28 stamens with white filaments fused at the base into a short tube of c. 2 mm, anthers dorsifixed, pollen in 16-celled plano-compressed disc-shaped polyads, gynoecium with a c. 2 mm long ovary, pubescent on the upper half, the 1.6-2.5 cm long white style emerging from it at an angle of c. 45°, with a funnel-shaped stigma, extending beyond the stamens. Terminal flower(s) similar but larger and more robust in appearance, calyx c. 4.5 mm long with c. 1.5 mm long lobes, corolla c. 9 mm long, androecium with 30-36 stamens that are thicker and fused into a tube 7-10 mm long, exserted well beyond the corolla tube, and with a sunken nectariferous disk below the base of the ovary, gynoecium otherwise similar to that of the peripheral flowers.
Pods
straight to falcate, 6-12-seeded with a thin papery fruit wall and thickened rim, dark brown outside when ripe, whitish grey inside, (4.5-)7-12.5
x
1.4-1.9 cm, breaking up into 1-seeded articles 0.6-1.1 cm long, seed c. 7
x
4.5
x
2 mm, the testa hard, light brown with a wide lighter brown closed pleurogram.
Distribution and habitat.
Known from the tidal riverine systems near the coast from Senegal to Sierra Leone.
Hydrochorea rhombifolia
occurs often abundantly, in permanent or tidal swamp forest, including on the edge of mangrove swamps, and in gallery forests.
Notes.
Bentham (1844)
described
Albizia rhombifolia
, before designation of holotypes was required by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.
Keay (1953)
made the new combination
Cathormion rhombifolium
and cited the holotype as being at Kew. However, there are three specimens of
Heudelot 735
at K, the type that was cited by Bentham, leaving it ambiguous as to which one of these represents the holotype. Therefore, the specimen from Herbarium Benthamianum (the oldest deposited specimen dating to 1854) is here designated as a lectotype: it has leaves and flowers, and is more richly annotated than the other two specimens.
Hydrochorea obliquifoliolata
and
H. rhombifolia
are morphologically very similar and have sometimes been confused in herbaria, despite their clearly different geographical distributions. The species are readily separated by the darker appearance of the leaflets of
H. obliquifoliolata
, which have a distinct shine on the upper surface and the lower surface usually (sub-)glabrous (vs. a usually rusty pilose lower leaflet surface in
H. rhombifolia
). The leaflets of
H. rhombifolia
are also more closely spaced than those of
H. obliquifoliolata
, the latter not having overlapping margins. Furthermore, the flower colour of the two species is clearly different (as per the key), a characteristic which remains apparent when comparing dried flowering specimens in the herbarium, and the corolla lobes of
H. obliquifoliolata
are glabrous or with a few short apical hairs (vs. pilose to villous on the upper half in
H. rhombifolia
).
Selected specimens examined.
Sierra Leone
:
Mange
,
7 February 1939
,
F.C. Deighton
3618
(K), Rokupr,
25 May 1953
,
F.C. Deighton
5925
(K), Kasanko (Mafore),
3 December 1950
,
T.S. Jones
52
(K), near Tassin and Kukum,
17 January 1892
,
G.F. Scott Elliot
4418
(K)
;
Guinee-Bissau
:
Gabu
,
Ponte
do
rio Colufe
,
10 June 1949
,
Espirito Santo
2500
(K)
.