Nine new species of Australian Nicotiana (Solanaceae)
Author
Bruhl, Jeremy J.
Author
Andrew, Damien D.
Author
Palsson, Ruth
Author
Jobson, Richard W.
Author
Taseski, Guy M.
Author
Samuel, Rosabelle
text
Australian Systematic Botany
2023
2023-07-07
36
3
167
205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb23001
journal article
295738
10.1071/SB23001
e7223c67-ed37-4d87-8f2d-b949ff711207
1446-5701
11122967
Nicotiana erytheia
M.W.Chase & Christenh.
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 30
,
31
.)
Type
:
Western Australia
.
North West Coastal Highway
(1), ~
8 km
north of entrance to
Eurardy Station
, on both sides of road,
165 m
,
27°30′20″S
,
114°43′9″E
,
21 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19126
(holo:
PERTH
; iso:
CANB
)
.
Diagnosis
Nicotiana erytheia
is closely related to
N. salina
and an undescribed species we have preliminarily been calling
N
.
sp. nov. Eagle Bluff (
Fig. 1
a
). These three species are similar in their relatively short habit with many branches from the base of the plant, but the calyx in
N. erytheia
does not reflex at maturity and its leaves are narrower for their length than those of
N. salina
(1:3
v
. 1:2). The ecology and ranges of these three species distinguish them most readily (see below).
Fig. 30.
Nicotiana erytheia
based on living plants cultivated at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, grown from seeds associated with
Chase & Christenhusz 19119
, North West Coastal Highway, north of the Billabong Roadhouse, Western Australia. Painted by Deborah Lambkin (reproduced from
Curtis’ Botanical Magazine
with permission).
Fig. 31.
Nicotiana erytheia
based on living plants cultivated at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, grown from seeds associated with
Chase & Christenhusz 19119
, Highway 1, ~14 km north of the Billabong Roadhouse, Western Australia. (
a
)
Corolla
limb, face-on. (
b
) Ovary, style and stigma. (
c
)
Corolla
, split to show positions of anthers. (
d
) Flower, side view. (
e
) Upper stem. (
f
) Pubescence on leaf lamina. (
g
) Stem leaf. (
h
) Habit. (
i
) Fruit, calyx removed. (
j
) Mature capsule. (
k
) Pubescence on lower stem. Drawn by Deborah Lambkin (reproduced from
Curtis’ Botanical Magazine
with permission). Scale bars: 1 cm (
a–d
,
i
,
j
); 3 cm (
g
); 5 mm (
e
,
f
,
k
). Plant in (
h
) is 78 cm tall.
Erect, herbaceous, annual
herbs
, up to
80 cm
tall, forming a loose rosette with many leaves on the stems, producing several thin, wiry stems simultaneously.
Leaves
with petioles up to 3.0 cm long with a wing up to
1.8 cm
wide, blades ovate-lanceolate, 3.8–22.5 ×
1.6–9.2 cm
including petiole, becoming sessile on the stems, gently attenuate, the apex obtuse to acute, margins entire, ciliate, undulating.
Vestiture
on stem bases and major leaf veins composed of dense long, hairs that are often slightly twisted and bearing a minute gland, leaf surface densely covered with mostly shorter, gland-tipped hairs, stems progressively less woolly and more predominantly covered with shorter hairs with a prominent ellipsoidal gland and a few longer, sometimes slightly bent with a small peduncle with some longer hairs, but more commonly moderate length and shorter hairs, all with a gland, calyx with short hairs, all gland-tipped,
corolla tube
exterior densely covered with short, straight to slightly recurving, small gland-tipped hairs.
Inflorescence
bracts sessile, linear, ~0.5–1.0 cm long, the apex acuminate.
Calyx
0.9–1.4 ×
0.1–0.2 cm
, one lobe slightly longer and one shorter, the tips acuminate, appressed to ovary to slightly flaring,
0.3–0.4 cm
longer than and surrounding the fruit, slightly wider, persistent and clasping to slightly reflexed in the fruit.
Corolla tube
0.3–0.8 cm
long (from end of the calyx),
0.15–0.20 cm
in diameter, with a slight throat cup with a pinched apex, the limb
1.1–1.5 cm
across, the lobes minutely cleft, sinus
0.4 cm
, deep, four
stamens
in stamen cup,
0.15–0.20 cm
deeper than tube entrance, the fifth
0.3–0.4 cm
deeper in tube.
Fruit
a capsule, 0.7–1.0 cm long, splitting in four lobes.
Distribution
Restricted to
Western Australia
in the narrow transition zone from the more humid areas along the coast to the dry interior from just south of the Wooramel River to the Murchison River along the North West Coastal Highway (
Fig. 19
).
Habitat and ecology
In shaded sites under mulga and occasionally in the open.
Phenology
Flowering August to November.
Etymology
Named for Erytheia, one of the Hesperid nymphs of Greek mythology, who were the ‘daughters of the evening’ or ‘nymphs of the west’, a reference to the occurrence of this species in the far west of
Western Australia
. The species epithet is a noun in apposition.
Chromosome number
Unknown.
Notes
Specimens of
Nicotiana erytheia
are similar to those of
N. hesperis
and are likely to have been confused with the latter. Both have small flowers, but they are not closely related, although both are members of the
N. occidentalis
clade and bear the characteristic short, gland-tipped hairs covering all parts.
Chase and Christenhusz (2021
a
)
described
N. insecticida
M.W.Chase & Christenh.
and noted that its geographical range was especially large, stretching from the western coast of the Pilbara Craton in
Western Australia
to the central
Northern Territory
. There are probably only a few species of
N
.
section
Suaveolentes
(e.g.
N. heterantha
Symon & Kenneally
) with such a large range. Given their generally highly inbred nature (
Cauz-Santos
et al
. 2022
), maintenance of genetic cohesion over such large distances is unlikely, and when we added many more accessions to the matrix, we saw that there is a clear geographic structure in
N. insecticida
that is consistent with approximately six genetically distinct species (
L
.
A
. Cauz-Santos and
M
.
W
. Chase, unpubl. data), among them material collected at the
type
locality of
N. hesperis
(
Chase & Christenhusz 68258
,
PERTH
;
Fig. 1
a
).
In
September 1959
, Nancy Burbidge visited Rocky Pool, ~
40 km
west of Carnavon in
Western Australia
and collected what she designated as the
type
specimen of
N. hesperis
(
Burbidge 6494
A
!,
CANB
236744). In 2015, we visited this location and found several species of
Nicotiana
growing there, one of which was similar to the Burbidge’s specimen of
N. hesperis
. This accession (
Chase & Christenhusz 68258
,
PERTH
;
Fig. 1
a
) is clearly distantly related to those that
Chase and Christenhusz (2021
c
)
ascribed to
N. hesperis
from sites further south along the North West Coastal Highway. Furthermore, this accession appears to be highly introgressed with another species of the
N. insecticida
species complex, and if this is the case then the
type
material of
N. hesperis
collected by Burbidge in
1959 may
also have been a hybrid or introgressed individual. In 2023,
M
.
W
. Chase,
M
.
J
.
M
. Christenhusz and
L
.
A
. Cauz-Santos made a return trip to Rocky Pool and collected another plant similar to the
type
specimen of
N. hesperis
, which we plan to examine genetically. We also travelled further east in the Gascoyne River basin, as far east as the Great Northern Highway, and we collected several other small-flowered accessions that are like those at Rocky Pool. We think these additional accessions also correspond to
N. hesperis
, which would make this a widespread species, but confined to this river basin further north (
120 km
) of the area where
N. erytheia
occurs (
Fig. 29
), starting at the Wooramel River. We have found no material of
N. erytheia
further inland than the transition zone along the coastal plain and the inland scrub between the Murchison and Wooramel rivers.
A
study of the species limits in the larger
N. occidentalis
clade is underway (
L
.
A
. Cauz-Santos and
M
.
W
. Chase, unpubl. data), and these more detailed analyses will include greater sampling of accessions. In this paper, we have shown that the accessions of
Chase and Christenhusz (2021
c
)
included in
N. hesperis
, except for that from the Rocky Pool
type
locality, are members of what we describe here as
N. erytheia
.
The three closely related species of the
N. occidentalis
complex, including
N. erytheia
(
Fig. 1
a
), are similar morphologically and most readily distinguished by their ecologies and distribution. These three are
Nicotiana
sp. nov.
Eagle Bluff, which is found in exposed sites in the Tamala eolianite limestone heathlands on the offshore Abrolhos Islands and the coast from just north of Geraldton north to Lake Macleod,
N. salina
, associated with salt lakes and rivers in the interior from Lake Weelhamby south to Jibberding and east to the Goldfields, where it grows near the salt vegetation but not directly in it, and
N. erytheia
, found under mulga and other acacias in a narrow, nearcoastal range from the Murchison River just to the south of the Wooramel River. Specimens of
N. erytheia
collected near the Shark Bay Road (
Chase & Christenhusz 68273
,
68274
) are much laxer in habit, with primarily cleistogamous flowers (at least in cultivation).
Specimens examined
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
.
Hamelin Pool Road
off
Shark Bay
Road,
10 m
,
26°24′11″S
,
114°9′59″E
,
22 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68273
(
PERTH
)
;
Hamelin Pool Road
off
Shark Bay
Road,
10 m
,
26°24′11″S
,
114°9′59″E
,
22 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68274
(
PERTH
)
;
North West Coastal Highway
,
2 km
south of
Billabong Roadhouse
,
150 m
,
26°50′37″S
,
114°37′29″E
,
22 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68276
(
PERTH
)
;
North West Coastal Highway
, south of
Nerren Nerren
,
190 m
,
27°8′46″S
,
114°37′11″E
,
22 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68277
(
PERTH
)
;
North West Coastal Highway
, bridge over the
Murchison River
, south-eastern side of bridge,
180 m
,
27°49′40″S
,
114°41′19″E
,
22 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68278
(
PERTH
)
;
North West Coastal Highway
, opposite road to
Eurardy Station
, verge on eastern side of road,
245 m
,
27°34′31″S
,
114°42′3″E
,
19 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19117
(
PERTH
)
; ~
0.6 km
south of turnoff to
Coburn Station
, verge on eastern side of road,
150 m
,
26°42′20″S
,
114°34′24″E
,
20 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19123
(
PERTH
)
; ~
1.9 km
north of
Galatea Bridge on North West Coastal Highway
, eastern side of road,
200 m
,
27°48′39″S
,
114°41′25″E
,
21 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19127
(
PERTH
)
.