Italian alien species in Caryophyllaceae: nomenclatural remarks
Author
Iamonico, Duilio
Laboratory of Phytogeography and Applied Geobotany, Section Environment and Landscape, Department PDTA, University of Rome Sapienza, 00196 Rome, Italy.
text
Phytotaxa
2020
2020-06-03
446
5
291
300
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.446.5.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.446.5.3
1179-3163
13878680
Dianthus glumaceus
Bory & Chaubard
in
Chaubard & Bory (1838: 26)
.
Lectotype
(designated here):—
GREECE
, Morée, 1836, Bory s.n. (P05343938!, plant on the name). Image of the
lectotype
available at http://mediaphoto.mnhn.fr/media/1441387062927iPakaoIqPsGLMuq3
FIGURE 1.
Lectotype of the name
Cerastium biebersteinii
(≡
C. repens
) (LE01042985!).
Note:—
Chaubard & Bory (1838: 26)
published the name
Dianthus glumaceus
providing a diagnosis, some greek localities of
Peloponnese
(... a Karithène, a Gortys, etc. ...), and a morphological comparison with
D. prolifer
L. [currently accepted as
Petrorhagia prolifera
(L.) P. W. Ball. & Heywood)]; moreover the authors cited an illustration (“... Voyez la vignette ui termine le supplément, a la page 343 de l’Expedition en Morée et la fin de la Phanérogamie de la present édition [N° 664]”, image available at http://digital.slub-dresden.de/werkansicht/?id=5363&tx_ dlf%5Bid%5D=93030&tx_dlf%5Bdouble%5D=1&tx_dlf%5Bpage%5D=79) that is original material for the name.
According to
Stafleu & Cowan (1976: 488)
, Chaubard’s collection referred to Nouvelle flore du
Péloponnèse
et des Cyclades is preserved at P and PC. I checked the online database of the Paris Herbarium (Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris), and traced
one specimen
including original material (P05343938). Of the three plants mounted on the sheet the one in the middle is a later collection not representing
Dianthus glumaceus
and thus is not relevant for typification. The other two plants are probably part of the same gathering and were collected at “Morée”. The right hand plant has been collected by Bory, is annotated with collection date (1836) and, therefore here designated as
lectotype
. The left hand individual most likely merely is a duplicate of Bory´s collection that was in Chaubards working herbarium and hence got a copied label in his hand.