A synopsis of the Neotropical species of Sticherus (Gleicheniaceae), with descriptions of nine new species
Author
Gonzales, Jasivia
Herbario Nacional de Bolivia, Casilla 10077, La Paz, Bolivia. Systematic Botany, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH- 8008 Zurich, Switzerland. E-mail: michael. kessler @ systbot. uzh. ch
Author
Kessler, Michael
text
Phytotaxa
2011
2011-12-31
31
1
54
journal article
6085
10.11646/phytotaxa.31.1.1
2185a8cf-c15c-448b-b8c0-6055976408ed
1179-3163
4894648
Sticherus underwoodianus
(Maxon)
Nakai (1950: 31)
Dicranopteris underwoodiana
Maxon (1909a: 59)
.
Type:—
MEXICO
.
Chiapas
:
Ghiesbreght
271
(
holotype
NY
, isotypes
BM
,
GH
,
K
,
NY
,
PH, US
).
Distribution and ecology:—
Mountains of Mexico,
Guatemala
,
Honduras
,
El Salvador
,
Cuba
,
Jamaica
, and
Puerto Rico
. In wet montane cloud forests, pine-oak forests, clearings, and along roadsides, often forming large colonies on rocky ground, at
1600–3000 m
, down to
1350 m
in the Greater Antilles.
Notes:—
Two collections from
El Salvador
(
Santa Ana
, Cordillera Miramundo, mountain of Montecristo,
2000–2200 m
,
27–31 January 1966
,
Molina
16747
, GH;
Santa Ana
, Parque Nacional Montecristo, Cordillera de Metapan,
14°27’N
,
89°22’W
,
2100–2250 m
,
27 January 1998
,
Davidse 37269
, BM) are similar in appearance to
S. underwoodianus
, but are larger, more densely scaly, especially on the midveins, have bud scales with matte bases and translucent margins (
vs
. matte throughout), and have midvein scales that are linear to branched and hairlike (
vs
. linear and fringed). Superficially similar specimens, especially with respect to the branch and midvein scales, are also known from
Bolivia
(La Paz, Murillo, SW of Zongo,
2300–2400 m
,
5 March 1983
,
Molau & Solomon 667
, S) and southeastern
Brazil
(
São Paulo
, Estação Biologica Alto da Serra,
23°47’S
,
46°19’W
,
800–900 m
,
14 February 1929
,
Smith L.B. 1908
, S,
US
), but whether these are related to each other and to the collections from
El Salvador
is uncertain. In the Bolivian specimen, the bud scales are more densely fringed, whereas in the Brazilian collection the scales have fewer, stiffer cilia, thus approaching
S. squamosus
. The Brazilian collection has been identified as
S. subflagellaris
Christ
, but the application of this name is uncertain (see under doubtful names).