Two new species of endemic Ecuadorean Amaryllidaceae (Asparagales, Amaryllidaceae, Amarylloideae, Eucharideae) Author Meerow, Alan W. USDA-ARS-SHRS, National Germplasm Repository, 13601 Old Cutler Road, Miami, Florida 33158, USA Author Jost, Lou EcoMinga Foundation, Via a Runtun, Banos, Tungurahua, Ecuador Author Oleas, Nora Universidad Tecnologica Indoamerica, Centro de Investigacion de la Biodiversidad y Cambio Climatico, Machala y Sabanilla, Quito, Ecuador text PhytoKeys 2015 2015-04-02 48 1 9 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.48.4399 journal article http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.48.4399 1314-2003-48-1 FFA7BC4E920A0637FF8DCD091979FFD8 576254 Eucharis ruthiana Jost, Oleas & Meerow sp. nov. Fig. 3 Diagnosis . Eucharis ruthiana appears closely related to Eucharis moorei (Baker) Meerow ( Meerow 1987a ), placing it in Eucharis subg. Heterocharis Meerow, characterized by large campanulate, fragrant flowers, numerous ovules per locule, and green mature capsules ( Meerow 1989 ). It differs from this species by the narrower leaves and tepals, mild (vs. strong) fragrance, deeply cleft staminal corona with long marginal teeth, the incurved free filaments, and the short style (Table 2 ). From the putative hybrid Eucharis x grandiflora Planch. & Lind., (1853) it differs by the long staminal teeth and its fertility. Table 2. Contrasting features of Eucharis ruthiana and Eucharis moorei .
Character Eucharis ruthiana Eucharis moorei
Leaf/width ratio 3:1 <2:1
No. flowers 8-16 4-7
Tepal width 15-19 mm 17-27 mm
Staminal corona Deeply incised Connate for most of its length
Length of staminal teeth 7.5-8 mm 2.5-3 mm
Habit of free staminal filament Incurved Straight
Style length 2.3-2.6 cm 6-7 cm
Floral Fragrance Mild Strong
Type. ECUADOR: Zamora-Chinchipe, near Zamora, on rocky soil in the understory of lower montane forest ca. 1100 m elevation, June 2006, Jost 8278 (Holotype: QCA!, Isotypes: QCNE!). Description. Geophytic, evergreen perennial from tunicate bulbs, tunics reddish brown, thin; immature bulb ca. 3 cm x 2.5 cm. Leaves (Fig. 3A-C ) 2-5 per bulb, glabrous, tapering at base to a 19-18 cm long pseudopetiole that is 6-8 mm thick; lamina elliptical, ca. 28 cm x 9 cm, dark green adaxially and shallowly plicate, light green abaxially, acute at apex. Inflorescence scapose, scape 8-16 flowered, ca. 40 cm tall, 4 mm diam, terete, glaucous, solid, terminated by 2 greenish-white, eventually marcescent ovate-lanceolate bracts enclosing the buds in the early stages of elongation, ca. 3 cm long, ca. 5 mm wide at base, acute at apex. Flowers (Fig. 3D-G ) slightly declinate, white, mildly fragrant, 4.5-5.0 cm long; pedicels 2-6 cm long, the last flowers to reach anthesis with the longest, with a narrow bracteole subtending each. Perianth (Fig. 3D, E ) actinomorphic, funnelform-campanulate, consisting of six tepals in two whorls, fused below the throat into a slightly curved tube that is 15-2.0-2.2 cm long 2.7-3 mm diam, white for its entire length, cylindrical in the proximal 1.3-1.5 cm, then funnel-form distally, dilating to 0.85-10.0 mm at throat, limb spreading ca. 60° from the throat, 5-6 cm wide; outer tepals 28-36 mm x 15 mm, acute, with a white, ca. 3 mm long papillose apiculum; inner tepals 27-35 x 17-19 mm, minutely apiculate. Stamens joined at base into a 2.5-3.0 x 1.5-2.0 cm staminal corona deeply divided into six pairs of lanceolate, free, tooth-like processes, such that only the lower 2.6-3.0 mm of the corona is connate, stained yellowish-green along the filamental traces, most prominently on the inside surface; each tooth 7.5-8 mm long, acute at the apex and slightly recurved above the middle, with the six free filaments inserted between the teeth of each pair; free filaments narrowly subulate, slightly incurved towards center of the corona, 3-4 mm long, anthers oblong, 3-4 x <1 mm, white, dorsifixed, introrse; pollen white. Style 2.3-2.6 cm long, not exserted past stamens, white; stigma tri-lobed, papillate, ca. 2 mm wide. Ovary ellipsoid, 4-5 mm long, ca. 3.2 mm wide , ovules 16-20 per locule, superposed, axile in placentation. Ripe fruit green, seed globose, bluish-black. Figure 3. Eucharis ruthiana . A Plant in cultivation B-C Leaves B Adaxial view C Abaxial view D-H Flowers D Upper portion of inflorescence showing flower habit E Flower cut and spread to show staminal corona F Dorsal-ventral view of limb showing the spread of the androecium G Lateral view H Lateral view with three tepals removed to show androecium I Ovary dissected to show numerous, superposed, globose ovules J Distribution of Eucharis ruthiana in Ecuador (black stars). Map courtesy of www.freeworldmaps.net. Distribution and ecology. Eucharis ruthiana is only known from the type locality and a private reserve in southern Ecuador (Fig. 3I ), in lower montane rain forest where it grows on stony soil in the understory of dense forest at ca. 1100 m elevation. A large population occurs on the Copalinga private reserve near Zamora according to the property owner. Etymology. The species is named in honor of the late Ruth Moore, ardent supporter of conservation efforts in Ecuador. Notes. Eucharis subg. Heterocharis was erected by Meerow (1989) , even though it appeared paraphyletic in his cladistic analysis of morphological characters. The large, fragrant flowers; numerous ovules per locule, and mature green fruits were considered symplesiomorphic for the genus. The subgenus previously included only two fertile species, Eucharis sanderi Baker (1883) , endemic to the Choco region of Colombia, and Eucharis moorei (Baker) Meerow (1987a) , found on both the eastern and western declivities of the Ecuadorean Andes. The group also contains two apparently sterile taxa, Eucharis x grandiflora Planch. & Lind. (1853), a putative hybrid of Eucharis moorei and Eucharis sanderi , found in southern Colombia and northern Ecuador ( Meerow 1989 ), most often in cultivation, and Eucharis amazonica Lind. ex Planch. ( Meerow and Dehgan 1984 ). The latter, most commonly found in the lower Huallaga Valley of Peru, never sets seed, has a triploid-derived chromosome number (2 n = 68), and impaired pollen fertility ( Nagalla 1979 ; Meerow 1987b ). Eucharis ruthiana appears most closely related to Eucharis moorei , but is easily separable (Table 2 ) by the narrower leaves and tepals, the deeply cleft staminal cup with long marginal teeth, the short, nearly filiform, incurved free filaments, and the relatively short style.