Rhaponticoides nuriae (Asteraceae), a stunning new species from Morocco
Author
Bakali, A. Homrani
0000-0003-0719-7267
Regional Center of Agricultural Research of Errachidia, National Institute of Agricultural Research, Avenue Ennasr, PO BOX 415 Rabat Principale, 10090 Rabat, Morocco
abdelmonaim.homranibakali@inra.ma
Author
Susanna, A.
0000-0003-4717-9063
Institut Botànic de Barcelona (IBB, CSIC-Ajuntament de Barcelona), pg. del Migdia, s / n, Parc de Montjuïc, ES- 08038 Barcelona, Spain
asusanna@ibb.csic.es
text
Phytotaxa
2024
2024-07-09
659
1
97
104
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.659.1.8
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.659.1.8
1179-3163
13217814
Rhaponticoides nuriae
Homrani-Bakali & Susanna
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1–4
)
Diagnosis
Rhaponticoides nuriae
is easily distinguished by its entire leaves, fully leafy glabrous stem, and distinct appendages with very wide scarious margins. It is quite different from the two species of the genus reported from
Morocco
(
Rhaponticoides africana
(Lam.) M.V. Agab. & Greuter
and
Rhaponticoides eriosiphon
(Emb. & Maire) M.V. Agab. & Greuter
) by its longer achenes and peculiar appendages that resemble
Centaurea margaritacea
aggr.
Description
Annual herbs with pivoting stump or narrowly napiform underground parts. Stems erect up to
30‒50 cm
tall, wingless, simple or branched, section ± quadrangular, longitudinally striate, glabrous, very leafy especially at the base. Basal leave rosulate, the rest scattered and smaller towards the upper part with increasingly spaced internodes from the base to the top. Basal leaves oblanceolate to spathulate, limb (4‒) 6–20 (‒25) ×
2–8 cm
, cauline leaves elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate, distal leaves oblanceolate to linear oblanceolate. Leaves entire, narrowly serrate especially from the middle superior, green and glabrous on both faces, sometimes sparsely pubescent, ciliate in the margin, sessile, with conspicuous pinnate venation. Basal leaves wither earlier than cauline and distal leaves. Inflorescence branched or solitary. Capitula heterogamous, radiant, terminal on peduncles
3–8 cm
long, subtended by the cauline leaves. Involucre globose to broadly ovoid, (2‒) 3–6 (‒7) × 2–5 (‒6) cm, slightly umbilicate at base, glabrous, clearly surpassed by the flowers of the periphery at anthesis. Involucral bracts adpressed, ± coriaceous, imbricated and apparently arranged in 7–8 rows, gradually increasing in length inwards, generally greenish and yellowish at the base, with (8‒) 9‒14 (‒16) marked nerves at maturity and scarious margin of
0.1–0.2 mm
wide; distinct terminal appendages present, whitescarious, striate, concave, dentate, eroded in the inner bracts, not reflexed and never spinose, with a brown-black triangle in the middle part of the base of the appendage; outer bracts
1.5–2.5 cm
with an appendage of
6–10 mm
, generally larger than the bract, middle bracts
2.7–3.8 cm
with an appendage of
7–11 mm
, inner bracts
4.2–4.6 cm
with an triangular or eroded appendage of
5–8 mm
. Receptacle
1.5‒4 cm
. Corolla
7–9 cm
large, yellow with purple hermaphrodite florets, outer florets
3.6–4.5 cm
, yellow funnel-shaped, ± actinomorphic, with 5 ± equal lobes, central florets
3.5–4.5 cm
, tubular hermaphrodite, ± zygormorphic, with a clearly differentiated tube and blade, with five unequal lobes. Stamens with filaments free, papillose, inserted at the base of the corolla blade, with purple anthers. One style with two branches, with glabrous smooth receptive surface. Achenes homomorphic, 12–16 ×
3–6 mm
, prismatic, obovoid, with a ± quadrangular rhombic section, with four marked longitudinal ribs and a striate surface, glabrous, with a slightly concave apical plate and an entire edge, with a ± resalted cartilaginous ring
0.4–0.6 mm
; nectary central; adaxial-basal carpic insertion areole 0.4–0.7 × 0.3‒0.5, pentagonal, with remarkable yellow elaiosome. Pappus double, persistent, with 3–7 linear or setaceous scales, uneven, larger inward, antrorse-scabride, erect-patent, white-brown, flattened at the apex, the inner one with a row of narrowly triangular and erect scales. Flowers from March to May.
FIGURE 1.
Holotype specimen of
Rhaponticoides nuriae
in RAB Herbarium.
Type
:—
MOROCCO
. Rabat-Salé-Kénitra
Region
,
Sidi Kacem Province
,
Zegota
,
Douar Lakerimate
, elev.
370 m
, coordinates (WGS84):
34.17558
,
–5.54481
,
April 2023
,
A
. Homrani Bakali
(
holotype
RAB-114357,
Fig. 1
;
isotypes
RAB-114358, RAB-114359)
.
Eponymy:
—The specific epithet honours Núria Garcia-Jacas (1961–2023), the wife of the second author (A.S.) and a monographer of tribe
Cardueae
who worked extensively on the
Centaurea
species
in
Morocco
. She was the first botanist who demonstrated on molecular grounds that
Rhaponticoides
is a genus different from
Centaurea
.
Distribution and ecology
:—
Rhaponticoides nuriae
has been found well-established around crops (especially cereals and fallow fields) in Sidi Kacem Province exclusively on clay soil, usually associated with
Arisarum vulgare
,
Carduus tenuiflorus
and many other species that grow on clay soils. This plant was found at very few points scattered around crop fields from Zegota to Jorf el Malha in Sidi Kacem Province. One GPS point was found on the borders of the province of Sidi Kacem next to the province of Taounate (
Fig. 3
). This region is known for some endemic plants like
Salvia mouretii
Batt. & Pit.
and
Stachys durandiana
Coss. We
wonder how this plant, remarkable for its dazzling flowers, escaped the attention of botanists.
FIGURE 2.
Rhaponticoides nuriae
: plants (A), root (B), stem (C), basal leaves (D), leaf margin (E), capitula (F), corolla (G), receptacle (H), involucral bracts (I), appendage of inner involucral bract (J), appendage of outer involucral bract (K), outer sterile flower (L), inner fertile flower (M), achenes (N), achene elaeosoma (O), achene cartilaginous ring (P).
Conservation:
—Populations of
Rhaponticoides nuriae
are strictly confined to the specific clay soil in Sidi Kacem province, which is a very much cultivated area with very little land that has been set aside. This population is very limited, the overall number of individuals counted at three points exceeds 200. The population is not protected; the parcel that housed the majority of individuals belonged to a farmer who did not practice breeding, the adjacent parcels were engaged in breeding and no individuals were found. The farmer said when we were collecting plants that “if I had cattle, you would not have found any individuals”. That is why conservation measures are necessary; around 800 seeds were collected and stored in the INRA gene bank in Settat,
Morocco
. Since populations are of very small sizes and occur scattered at small areas, we provisionally propose a conservation status of “critically endangered” until additional investigation efforts are completed to circumscribe the distribution of the species.