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 karara
M.W.Chase & Christenhusz
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 27
,
28
.)
Type
:
Western Australia
,
Mungada Road
to the
Karara Mine
, near junction with
Lochada Road
,
280 m
,
29°11′42″S
,
116°23′16″E
,
23 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68280
(holo:
PERTH
; iso:
CANB
)
.
Fig. 27.
Nicotiana karara
, based on living plants cultivated at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, grown from seeds associated with the holotype,
Chase & Christenhusz 68280
(PERTH), Mungada Road to the Karara Mine, Western Australia. Drawn by Deborah Lambkin. (
a
)
Corolla
split to show positions of didynamous anthers. (
b
) Floral limb, face-on. (
c
) Carpel, style and stigma. (
d
) Flower, side view. (
e
) Pubescence, leaf lamina. (
f
) Pubescence, leaf margin. (
g
) Pubescence, upper stem. (
h
) Pubescence on middle stem. (
i
) Pubescence on lower stem. (
j
) Mature capsule. (
k
) Capsule with calyx removed. (
l
) Stem leaf. (
m
) Habit. Scale bars: 1.0 cm (
a–d
,
e–k
); 3.0 cm (
l
); plant in (
m
) 88 cm tall.
Fig. 28. Variation in habits of
Nicotiana karara
. (
a
) Habit of
Nicotiana karara
, at the type locality, Mungada Road to the Karara Mine, Western Australia,
Chase & Christenhusz 28280
. (
b
) Habit of
Nicotiana karara
, Bowgada
–Mullewa road, Western Australia,
Chase & Christenhusz 28288
. Note the strict rosette in this small plant in nature; the same accession has stem leaves in cultivation (Fig. 27). The plant in (
b
) has stem leaves in nature. Photographs by Maarten Christenhusz.
Diagnosis
Nicotiana karara
is morphologically similar to and related to
N. rosulata
and the
N. rotundifolia
species complex (
Fig. 1
b
). Like
N. rosulata
, it has an inflorescence that is pubescent basally but becomes glabrous in the upper portions.
Nicotiana karara
differs in its more highly branched inflorescences and smaller flowers with didynamous stamens and generally leafy stems (no rosette, but small plants of nearly all species of
N
.
section
Suaveolentes
, including this one, can
form strict
rosettes if the plants are small at the time of flowering or grow in full sun;
Fig. 28
a
).
Erect herbaceous, annual to short-lived perennial
herbs
, up to 1.0 m tall, generally with no rosette and numerous large leaves in the basal portion of the stems with few in the upper portions, the major branches from near the base with many side branches in the upper half of the stem.
Leaves
with narrowly winged petioles, up to 1.0 cm wide and
3.5 cm
long, blades 3.4–19.8 ×
1.1–7.8 cm
(including petiole), ovate-oblanceolate, the apex acute in the basal leaves to acuminate in those higher up, base gradually attenuate, uppermost leaves nearly sessile, bract-like, margins entire, undulate, ciliate, often basally bullate.
Vestiture
composed of long, somewhat curly, non-glandular hairs on the leaf margins and main veins, dense on the bases of stems, but becoming nearly glabrous on the upper stems, calyces and peduncles densely covered with short, often broadly based glandular hairs.
Calyx
0.8–1.0 ×
0.10–0.15 cm
, one lobe slightly longer and one shorter than the others, the tips acuminate, clasping the floral tube, slightly longer than and surrounding the mature fruit with the apices reflexed.
Corolla tube
white to pale green,
0.6–0.8 cm
long (from tip of the calyx),
0.2 cm
in diameter, with a throat cup, the
limb
white, 0.7–1.0 cm across, the lobes cleft, sometimes with a small mucro, cleft
0.1 cm
deep, sinus
0.1–0.2 cm
deep, lobe
0.4–0.5 cm
long;
stamens
mostly didynamous,
0.1 cm
inside throat of the floral tube and the fifth ~
0.2–0.3 cm
deeper in the tube, all with the
filaments
0.2–0.3 cm
long.
Fruit
a capsule,
0.5–0.8 cm
long, splitting in four lobes.
Distribution
Found in the eastern edge of the wheatbelt from the Galatea bridge over the Murchison River south to Wubin and nearly as far east as the Weld Range and Lake Barlee in
Western Australia
(
Fig. 29
).
Fig. 29. Map of distributions of
Nicotiana karara
(red circles),
N. rosulata
(purple circles) and
N. erytheia
(green circles) in Western Australia. Created by Maarten Christenhusz from data downloaded from the Australasian Virtual Herbarium website.
Habitat and ecology
In lightly shaded sites under mulga, occasionally in the open or in vegetation on the margins of salt lakes but not in the salt vegetation. In the eastern part of its range, it often occurs near
N. salina
M.W.Chase, M.F.Fay & Christenh.
, but not close to the salt vegetation.
Phenology
Collected in flower September to November.
Etymology
Named for the former Karara Station in the Shire of Perenjori, where the
type
was collected. The name is of Aboriginal origin, perhaps referring to
Acacia
bushland (
Acacia tetragonophylla
is common in this region and has the common name,
kurara
; http://www.flora.sa.gov.au/ cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?form=speciesfacts&name=
Acacia_tetragonophylla
). The species epithet is a noun in apposition.
Chromosome number
Unknown.
Notes
Specimens of
Nicotiana karara
resemble those of
N. rosulata
and have been confused with the latter, but the flowers are generally smaller. Plants of
N. karara
are not rosulate with several to many leaves in the lower half of the stems, unless they are small and growing in full sun, in which case the two species are almost impossible to distinguish because they are both likely to be strictly rosulate (
Fig. 28
a
). Larger plants of
N. rosulata
retain their rosulate habit, whereas those of
N. karara
develop sometimes numerous stem leaves (
Fig. 28
b
). Both occur in similar sites and have nearly glabrous upper stems, which distinguishes them from the species of the
N. rotundifolia
complex, to which they are both closely related (
Fig. 1
b
).
Nicotiana rosulata
is mainly found in the Goldfields area from Leonora as far west as Dalgaranga Station just to the north-west of Mount Magnet, whereas
N. karara
is slightly disjunct and occurs in the Salt River and Murchison River drainages.
Selected specimens examined
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
. Great
Northern Highway
(95), north of
Jibberding
,
315 m
,
29°28′0″S
,
117°11′56″E
,
5 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68152
(
PERTH
)
;
Mungada Road
to the
Karara Mine
,
Boiada Camp
,
300 m
,
29°11′37″S
,
116°30′35″E
,
23 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68285
(
PERTH
)
;
Bowgada–Mullewa
road to
Wubin
,
340 m
,
29°20′22″S
,
116°10′2″E
,
23 Aug. 2015
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
68288
(
PERTH
)
;
Great
Northern Highway
(95), ~
5 km
north of
Mount Magnet
, in the
Granites
,
465 m
,
28°0′25″S
,
117°51′27″E
,
18 Sep. 2016
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
16185
(
PERTH
)
;
Yalgoo–Paynes Find
road, south-east of
Yalgoo
,
335 m
,
28°28′52″S
,
116°49′21″E
,
19 Sep. 2016
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
16193
(
PERTH
)
;
Yalgoo–Paynes Find
road, south-east of junction with track to
Thundelarra Station
,
320 m
,
28°51′8″S
,
117°4′39″E
,
19 Sep. 2016
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
16197
(
PERTH
)
;
Yalgoo–Paynes Find
road, north-west of
Paynes Find
, abundant on verges,
330 m
,
29°1′21″S
,
117°14′27″E
,
19 Sep. 2016
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
16199
(
PERTH
)
;
Great
Northern Highway
(95), near salt ponds north of
Jibberding
,
290 m
,
29°50′55″S
, 116°56′19
117°11′56″E
,
19 Sep. 2016
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
16203
(
PERTH
)
;
1.9 km
north of
Galatea Bridge on Highway
1, eastern side of road,
200 m
,
27°48′39″S
,
114°41′25″E
,
21 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19136
(
PERTH
)
;
Morawa–Yalgoo
road,
Barnong Station
, western side of road, ~
47 km
south-west of
Yalgoo
,
290 m
,
28°38′2″S
,
116°19′1″E
,
22 Sep. 2019
,
Chase
&
Christenhusz
19136
(
PERTH
)
.