Ceropegia strophanthiflora (Apocynaceae-Asclepiadoideae) - a magnificent and rare new species from South Africa at the brink of extinction
Author
Heiduk, Annemarie
0000-0002-7857-6646
Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X 01, Scottsville, Pietermaritzburg 3209, South Africa.
annemarie.heiduk@gmx.net
Author
Styles, David G. A.
0000-0001-5692-2192
Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X 01, Scottsville, Pietermaritzburg 3209, South Africa.
david@davidstyles.co.za
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-12-27
632
1
27
37
https://phytotaxa.mapress.com/pt/article/download/phytotaxa.632.1.2/51386
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.632.1.2
1179-3163
10435118
Ceropegia cordiloba
Werdermann
, Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 70(2): 209 (1939).
Basionym
:
Ceropegia papillata
N.E.Brown var.
cordiloba
(Werdermann) H.Huber, Mem. Soc. Br.
12: 152 (1957)
.
Type:—
TANZANIA
.
Songea
District:
Matengo Hills at Litembo
,
1500–1600 m
,
20 April 1939
,
H.Zerny
438
(
holotype
B
†;
lectotype
P
[
P00109660
], designated here)
.
Ceropegia tanzaniensis
Peckover, CactusWorld
37(3): 174 (2019),
syn. nov.
Type:—
TANZANIA
.
Njombe Region
: Mlangali village,
February 2015
,
R.Peckover 291
(
holotype
PRU).
Notes:
—Still following the traditional genus concept in
Ceropegieae
,
Ceropegia dodomaensis
was originally described in
Brachystelma
as
B. tanzaniensis
(correctly
“
tanzaniense
”), but in accordance with the current proposals to consider
Brachystelma
as belonging to
Ceropegia
(
Bruyns
et al
. 2017
; Endress
et al
. 2018;
Goyder
et al
. 2020
), the transfer of this taxon to
Ceropegia
has become necessary. Curiously, shortly after publishing
B. tanzaniense
, Ralph Peckover
himself published another name, i.e.,
Ceropegia tanzaniensis
Peckover (2019b: 174)
, for a taxon from
Tanzania
, which he placed in
Ceropegia
based on its kettle-trap flowers typical for
Ceropegia
s.str.
In consequence, this name is no longer available for the transfer of
B. tanzaniense
to
Ceropegia
. We therefore here propose the new name
C. dodomaensis
referring to the area where the
type
specimen was collected. Based on its vegetative (fleshy, disc-like single tuber, short erect stems) and floral characters (short corolla tube, spreading corolla lobes),
C. dodomaensis
clearly belongs in section
Chamaesiphon
.
It appears that the blocking name for the transfer of
Brachystelma tanzaniense
, i.e.,
Ceropegia tanzaniensis
, was superfluously created as the material described under this name belongs to the already existing taxon
C. cordiloba
Werdermann (1939: 209)
—thus,
C. tanzaniensis
is reduced to a synonym of this species.
Ceropegia cordiloba
, described by Erich Werdermann in 1939, was not accepted as a species by
Huber (1957)
who treated it as
C. papillata
var.
cordiloba
(Werderm.)
Huber (1957: 152)
in his revision of
Ceropegia
; also,
Bruyns
et al
. (2017)
did not accept the species status of this taxon. However,
C. cordiloba
(incl.
C. tanzaniensis
) was recollected several times over the last years, and these recollections show little variation and do not differ from the type collection of 1939. The broadened and roof-shaped fused corolla lobe tips are an unmistakable distinguishing feature of this Tanzanian endemic. We therefore follow the proposal by Masinde in
Goyder
et al
. (2012: 236)
that
C. cordiloba
is indeed a good species and hereby reinstate it as such. Finally, lectotypification becomes necessary because the
holotype
was destroyed in Berlin (B). The duplicate specimen lodged in Paris (P) is the only available type material and has to serve as
lectotype
.
Additional material examined
Ceropegia cordiloba
:—
TANZANIA
.
Dodoma Region
:
Mpwapwa District
,
Rubeho Mts
,
Wotta Forest Reserve
,
22 March 2017
,
A.Hemp
6777
(
UBT
)
.