A taxonomic revision of the genus Noronhia Stadtm. ex Thouars (Oleaceae) in Madagascar and the Comoro Islands
Author
Hong-Wa, Cynthia
Missouri Botanical Garden P. O. Box 299 St. Louis MO 63166 - 0299 U. S. A & Claude E. Phillips Herbarium Delaware State University 1200 N. DuPont Hwy, Dover DE 19901 - 2277 U. S. A.
chwa@desu.edu
text
Boissiera
2016
2016-10-21
70
1
292
journal article
22287
10.5281/zenodo.7599432
f2ceb54b-e71d-4433-9e67-b75b62f8a902
978-2-8277-0086-8
0373-2975
7599432
20.
Noronhia cuspidata
Hong-Wa, spec. nova (
Fig. 12C
,
13
).
Typus:
M
ADAGASCAR. Prov.
Toamasina
: Alaotra-Mangoro,
Zahamena PN
, Antanandava, sur la piste entre
Ankosy
et Antenina,
17°29’03”S
48°44’48”E
,
900 m
,
13.VII.2000
,
Rakotondrajaona et al. 126
(holo-: MO-6615563!; iso-:
CNARP
,
G
[
G00341624
]!,
K
,
P
[
P03559027
]!,
TEF
)
.
Diagnosis
Noronhia cuspidata
Hong-Wa can be distinguished from other species of this genus by the presence of domatia on its stems, its reddish petioles, its broadly elliptic leaf blades terminated by a short cusp and its subcrustaceous, ovoid fruits.
Description
Trees
to
16 m
tall, trunk to
20 cm
diameter; young twigs cylindrical,
1-2 mm
diameter, glabrous; bark medium gray, smooth.
Leaves
opposite, persistent; bud scales deciduous; blades medium green above, lighter below, broadly elliptic, 6-11
3
3-5 cm
, subcoriaceous, glabrous, domatia casual, present also on stems, base attenuate, margin flat, apex cuspidate, the cusp
7-14 mm
long, midrib slightly sunken above, distinctly raised below, secondary veins conspicuous, 8-12 per side,
6-16 mm
apart, looping
2-4 mm
from the margin; petiole red, 5-9
3
1-2.7 mm
, rarely woody, glabrous.
Flowers
unseen, but infructescence thyrsoid.
Fruiting
pedicel 3-12
3
1.2-2.7 mm
; young fruits green, purplish green when mature, ovoid, 17.5-23
3
14.5-19 mm
, surface smooth, apex bluntly pointed; dry pericarp
0.6-1 mm
thick; endocarp subcrustaceous; seed 12.5-16
3
7-14.5 mm
.
Etymology
A cuspidate leaf blade is one of the prominent features of this species, from which its name was derived.
Distribution, ecology and phenology
Noronhia cuspidata
occurs in low- to high-elevation humid forests on basement rocks in the east, from Mangoro to Zahamena (
Fig. 9
). It fruits from July to October.
Conservation status
Noronhia cuspidata
is currently known only from three collections representing three localities. With an EOO of
6,658 km
2
, an AOO of
12 km
2
, and three subpopulations representing three locations, all of which occur within protected areas (Analamazaotra, Masoala, and Zahamena) where rapid continuing decline is not expected in the near future,
N. cuspidata
is assigned a preliminary status of “Least Concern”.
Notes
Noronhia cuspidata
is similar to
N. decaryana
H. Perrier
, but can be distinguished by its broadly elliptic (vs. oblong to elliptic) leaf blades, often covered with domatia (vs. rarely so) on the lower surface, and its subcrustaceous (vs. crustaceous) endo-carp. Distinctive features of this new species include the presence of domatia on its stems, as well as its reddish petioles, broadly elliptic leaf blades terminated by a short cusp, and subcrustaceous, ovoid fruits.
86
Boissiera 70
Fig. 13.
Noronhia cuspidata
Hong-Wa.
A.
Fruiting branch;
B.
AbaxiaL side of Leaf bLade;
C.
Fruit.
Paratypi
MADAGASCAR
. Prov.
Toamasina
: Andasibe,
Analamazaotra RS
,
18°56’12”S
48°25’09”E
,
953 m
,
2.
V
.2010,
Hong-Wa & Ortiz 643
(
MO
,
P
,
TAN
); Ambatondradama (env.
10 km
au
NE
d’Ankovona), Navana,
15°17’08”S
,
50°01’14”E
,
400 m
,
1-6.X.1997
,
Ralimanana et al. 123
(
G
,
K
,
MO
,
P
,
TAN
)
.