A nomenclatural and taxonomic review of the names and new combination published between 1886 and 1931 in Kalanchoe (Crassulaceae subfam. Kalanchooideae) by British botanist Nicholas Edward Brown (1849 - 1934)
Author
Smith, Gideon F.
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-12-21
630
4
266
280
https://phytotaxa.mapress.com/pt/article/download/phytotaxa.630.4.2/51381
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.630.4.2
1179-3163
10417649
13.
Kalanchoe insignis
(
Brown 1905b
: t. 8036)
N.E.Br. in
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (1931: 109)
.
Basionym
:—
Cotyledon insignis
Brown (1905b
: t. 8036).
Type
:—[Nyasaland]
MALAWI
.“Raised from seeds sent to Kew by John Mahon in 1898 from Nyasaland.Cultivated at Kew Gardens”, specimen prepared on
11 February 1905
,
N.E. Brown s.n
. (
lectotype
, K barcode K000232908 [image available at http://specimens.kew.org/herbarium/K000232908]!),
here designated
.
Taxonomic notes
:—At present the name
K. insignis
is treated as a synonym of
K. elizae
Berger (1903: 69)
(
Fig. 1H
) (see for example
Fernandes 1980: 362–366
,
1983: 56
,
Descoings 2003: 155
, and
Berger 2020: 229
). N.E. Brown was not the first to confuse a species of
Kalanchoe
with a species of
Cotyledon
. Earlier, his colleague John G. Baker published the name
C. pannosa
Baker (1881: 269)
for what proved to be a redescription of
K. eriophylla
Hils. & Bojer ex
Tulasne (1857: 149)
(see
Smith & Figueiredo 2023b: 278–279
).
Later, Raymond-Hamet (1916: 83–84) and
Boiteau & Mannoni (1949: 113)
and, more recently,
Boiteau &Allorge-Boiteau (1995: 114)
also reflected on the relationship between
Kalanchoe
and
Cotyledon
. In the case of Raymond-Hamet (1916: 83–84) he linked the two genera especially in terms of
K
. [subg.
Kalanchoe
] sect.
Raveta
Smith (2022d: 210)
(see also
Smith 2022e
, f). In contrast,
Boiteau & Mannoni (1949: 113)
and
Boiteau & Allorge-Boiteau (1995: 114)
suggested a link between “
K
. [subg.
Bryophyllum
] [unranked]
Streptanthae
”
Boiteau & Mannoni (1949: 113)
,
nom. inval
. (
Turland
et al
. 2018
: Art. 39.1), i.e.,
K
. [subg.
Bryophyllum
] sect.
Streptanthae
Smith (2023d: 278)
, in which they included
K. streptantha
Baker (1887: 472)
only, and
Cotyledon
(see
Smith
2022g
: 168–169
).
Nomenclatural notes
:—When describing
Cotyledon insignis
, the basionym of
K. insignis
,
Brown (1905b
: t. 8036) stated that: “This fine
Cotyledon
is one of the most distinct in the genus, differing in habit from all other known species. Its flowers have some resemblance to those of
C. curviflora
, Sims
(B. M. t. 2044) [i.e.,
Sims (1819
: t. 2044)], but in all other respects it is entirely different. It was discovered on one of the mountains of
Nyasaland
, British Central Africa [
Malawi
], at an elevation of
7000 feet
[~
2133 m
], by Mr. John Mahon, who sent seeds of it to Kew in 1898, where it first flowered in February of this year [1905].”
Brown (1905b
: t. 8036) did not cite any specimens.
Fernandes (1983: 56)
lists a “
J. Mahon
” specimen held at Herb. K as the “
holotype
” of the name
C. insignis
. However, since
Brown (1905b
: t. 8036) did not cite any material when he described the species, and since there is no indication that
Brown (1902b: 110)
used only the
lectotype
designated here, the Herb. K-held
N.E. Brown s.n
. with barcode K000232908, when publishing the name (Turland
et al
. 2028: Art. 9.1(
b
)), the name
C. insignis
does not have a
holotype
. The sentiment that the name
K. insignis
has a “
holotype
” was echoed on a determinavit label attached to the Herb. K specimen, K000232908, but this is not correct.
The Herb. K specimen, K000232908, was distinctly not prepared by Mahon, who rather is credited as having introduced seed to Kew from “
Nyasaland
” in 1898, seven years before the specimen was prepared, and to prevent further confusion, the name
K. insignis
is here lectotypified on
N.E. Brown s.n
., barcode K000232908, which may or may not have been the “
J. Mahon
” specimen that
Fernandes (1983: 56)
had in mind.
The Herb. K-held specimen
N.E. Brown s.n
., with barcode K000232908, has a label attached that states: “Raised from seeds sent to Kew by John Mahon in 1898” and gives the country of origin as “
Nyasaland
[
Malawi
]. Cultivated at Kew Gardens.” Since
C. insignis
, i.e.,
K. insignis
, was raised from seed it is very likely that Brown had multiple specimens at his disposal.
N.E. Brown s.n
. (barcode K000232908) is therefore regarded as
lectotype
of the name
C. insignis
, the basionym of
K. insignis
.