A Monograph of Conostegia (Melastomataceae, Miconieae)
Author
Kriebel, Ricardo
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 430 Lincoln Drive Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA
kriebelr@gmail.com
text
PhytoKeys
2016
2016-07-20
67
1
326
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.67.6703
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.67.6703
1314-2003-67-1
D846EB3F7746FFFE4A469751FFEF3B22
133270
Conostegia
volcanalis Standl. & Steyermark
Fig. 111
Conostegia volcanalis
Standl. & Steyermark, Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. sere 23: 136. 1944. Type: Guatemala. Quetzaltenango: Damp forest, Chiquihuite, 1410 m, 8 March 1939, P. Standley 68152 (holotype: F!, isotypes: A!, NY!).
Description.
Trees 2-20 m tall with tetragonal and ridged branches that are generally sparsely to copiously covered with a mixture of caducous, sessile stellate and stalked-stellate hairs; nodal line present. Leaves of a pair equal to somewhat unequal in length. Petioles 0.7-7 cm. Leaf blades 6-32
x
2.6-20 cm, 3-5 plinerved, with the innermost pair of primary veins diverging 1-3.5 cm from the mid vein in opposite to alternate fashion, ovate to elliptic, the base acute or obtuse, the apex acute or obtuse and short acuminate, the margin undulate dentate, the adaxial surface glabrous or glabrescent with sessile or stipitate trichomes which are branching or stellate,the abaxial surface with with sessile or stipitate trichomes which are branching or stellate especially on the veins. Inflorescence a terminal panicle 3.7-16 cm long branching above the base but sometimes appearing branched at the base because of multiple inflorescences arising at opposing meristems at the terminal node, accessory branches present or absent, the rachis glabrescent with few scattered stellate trichomes, bracts and bracteoles to 5 mm long, linear, early deciduous. Pedicel 1.5-15 mm. the hypanthium 2.25-3
x
2.5-3 mm, smooth and mostly glabrous. Flowers 6-10(-12) merous, calyptrate. Floral buds 6-14
x
4-9 mm, spherical, the base rounded or flattened, the apex obtuse to flattened and apiculate, not constricted. Petals 7.5-15
x
4.5-10 mm, white, obovate, spreading, rounded-truncate to emarginate, glabrous. Stamens18-30, 7-8 mm long, radially arranged, to slightly bilateral apparently because of the downward bending style, the filaments 3.75-4.5 mm, white, lacking a geniculation, anthers 2.75-4
x
1-1.25 mm, oblong, straight or recurved, laterally compressed, yellow, the pore 0.1-0.3 mm wide, terminal. Ovary 9-16 locular, inferior, apically glabrous and forming a collar around the style. Style ca. 7 mm long, curving downward, vertical distance from the anthers to the stigma ca. -0.5 - -0.25 mm, horizontal distance ca. 1-2 mm; stigma crateriform, consisting of 9-16 laterally compressed lobes, ca 3-4 mm wide. Berry 10-13
x
8-10 mm, blue-black or purple. Seeds 0.5-0.75 mm, obliquely pyramidal, the testa smooth.
Figure 111.
Conostegia volcanalis
.
A
Leaf abaxial surface
B
Inflorescence with flower buds
C
Longitudinal section of a flower bud
D
Lateral view of a flower at late anthesis
E
Petal
F
Stamen. Photos from specimen vouchered
R. Kriebel 5565
.
Distribution
(Fig.
112
). From Mexico through Guatemala to Honduras, 500-2200 m in elevation.
Figure 112.
Distribution of
Conostegia volcanalis
.
In general,
Conostegia volcanalis
can be recognized on the basis of its mostly spherical flower buds and broad leaves with undulate dentate margins.
Schnell (1996)
discussed this species as having "three well defined allopatric races". These morphotypes were considered on the
"borderline"
of deserving species status (
Schnell 1996
). The three morphotypes differed in their distribution, habitat preference, indument density, and floral part size. The first morphotype is found in Guerrero and Jalisco and (
Schnell 1996
) noted that as
Conostegia jaliscana
. These plants prefer streamsides in pine forests. The leaves are is more pubescent and have larger floral parts. These trees flower January through April. The second morphotype recognized by
Schnell (1996)
occurs in cloud forests of Chiapas, San Marcos and Quetzaltenango in Mexico. The plants from this morphotype are larger trees with less pubescent leaves and flowering November through March. This morphotype is reminiscent of
Conostegia icosandra
and had been described as
Conostegia sphaerica
Triana. The third race occurs in cloud forests of central Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua. This morphotype
Schnell (1996)
characterized as being like morphotype one in pubescence but morphotype two in inflorescence structure. The southernmost population within the third morphotype occurs in Costa Rica and Panama and was described as
Conostegia orbeliana
Almeda. Very few specimens have been collected of this species and they tend to look dif
ferent
than
Conostegia volcanalis
because of their few-flowered inflorescences. When it was only known from Panama,
Schnell (1996)
noted its flowering time as in January, differing from populations from Guatemala to Nicaragua that flower May through October. Very few specimens are known of this species and Costa Rican specimens remeniscent of
Conostegia orbeliana
have been collected. One of them, was flowering in August, undermining the possible phenological gaps between these populations or possible species. I have chosen not to include
Conostegia orbeliana
under the synonymy of
Conostegia volcanalis
not only because they are allopatric, but also because it might also be a variant of for example
Conostegia oerstediana
or
Conostegia macrantha
which occur in nearby areas. In general,
Conostegia volcanalis
is a complex in need of study to assess habitat and phenological specialization. Perhaps more species can be recognized within this complex in the future.
Specimens examined.
MEXICO
.
Chiapas
: southwest side of Cerro Mozotal
11 km
northwest of the junction of the road to Motozintla along the road to
El Porvenir
and
Siltepec. Municipio de Motozintla de Mendoza
, Breedlove and Almeda 58087
(
CAS, NY); on the ridge above Siltepec on the road to
Huixtla. Municipio de Siltepec
, Breedlove 31999 (CAS, NY);
La Trinitaria
, east of
Laguna Tzikaw
,
Monte Bello National Park
, Breedlove 35147 (CAS, NY); Laguna Salina Montceristo, Matuda 2049 (NY);
Mt. Ovando
, Matuda 2100, 2644 (MO, NY)
.
Jalisco
:
Talpa de Allende
, km 12.8 (
8 mi
) en el camino
de La Cuesta
hacia
Talpa
,
Cowan
and
Nieves
4745 (NY);
San
Sebastian
Arroyo de Santa Gertrudis
,
Mexia
1532 (NY);
San
Sebastian
,
Arroyo Monte Oscuro
,
Mexia
1647 (NY)
.
Guerrero
:
San Antonio-Buenos Aires
,
Montes de Oca
,
Hinton
14026 (NY);
Chilacayote
,
Mina
,
Hinton
14188 (NY)
.
Veracruz
:
Soteapan
,
Mapa
21.0/58.5,
La Azufrera
ca.
18 km
al
E de Lago Catemaco
entre
Bastonal
y
Cerro Campanario
,
Beaman
6108 (NY);
San
Andres
Tuxtla
,
Mapa
23.5/55.0,
Cerro Vigia
al lado E de
Volcan
San
Martin
Tuxtla
,
Beaman
and
Alvarez
6277 (IE, MO, NY)
.
EL SALVADOR
(fide Schnell).
Santa Ana
: Hacienda Montecristo,
Metapan
, Winkler s.n. (F).
GUATEMALA
.
Quetzaltenango
: Above
Mujulia
, between
San Martin Chile Verde
and Colomba, Standley 85672 (NY); slopes and ridges
between Quebrada Chicharro and Montania Chicharro
on southeast facing slopes of
Volcan
Santa
Maria
, Steyermark 34333 (NY)
.
San Marcos
: Finca Nueva Granada,
Montana
de Vista Hermosa
, Kriebel et al. 5565, 5566 (NY, USCG); wet mountain forest near Aldea Fraternidad,
between San Rafael Pie de la Cuesta and Palo Gordo
west facing slope of the
Sierra Madre Mountains
, Williams et. al. 25661 (NY)
.
HONDURAS
.
La Paz
: Bosque mixto
de Cordillera Guajiquiro
5 kms a Sabanetas, Molina and Molina 12906 (NY)
.
Morazan
:
Mt. San Juancito
, Glassman 1986 (NY);
Pena
Blanca,
Montana
La Tigra
, Molina 11056, 14495, 25739 (NY); in cloud forest on
Mt. Leyuca
, Williams 10013 (NY)
.