Some distinctive new species of Psychotria (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae) from Madagascar
Author
Taylor, Charlotte M.
Author
Gereau, Roy E.
Author
Schmidt, Heidi H.
text
Candollea
2020
2020-10-29
75
2
159
182
journal article
20368
10.15553/c2020v752a1
1b2f3915-6b17-4a42-9895-d8a11f37fd81
2235-3658
5724844
Psychotria notopleuroides
C.M. Taylor
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 1L–N
).
Holotypus
:
MADAGASCAR
.
Reg. SAVA
[Prov.
Antsiranana
]:
Masoala Peninsula
,
3 km
SW of “Tamany Fred”
, watershed of
Anaovandrano riv
.,
15°45'30"S
50°11'45"E
,
50 m
,
15.X.1996
,
Schatz et al
. 3666
(
MO-4848658
!;
isotype
:
TAN
)
.
Psychotria notopleuroides C.M. Taylor
differs from other species of this genus in
Madagascar
by the combination of its prostrate habit, elliptic leaves that are apically obtuse to truncate and dark green adaxially, shortly cymose inflorescences with well developed peduncles, four-merous flowers, fruits that are red at maturity, and seeds with the endosperm entire except for a T-shaped adaxial intrusion.
Subshrubs
or fleshy
herb
s, little-branched, with main stems prostrate and rooting, producing ascending, leaf-bearing, erect stems up to
0.3 m
tall; stems glabrous or when young densely hirtellous or pilosulous with trichomes
0.2–0.5 mm
, flattened becoming subterete.
Leaves
opposite;
petiole
6–31 mm
, densely tomentulose to pilosulous or hirtellous with trichomes
0.2– 0.5 mm
;
blade
elliptic to obovate, 5– 12 ×
2.3 – 6.6 cm
, drying papyraceous to chartaceous, adaxially glabrous, abaxially densely hirtellous on veins and sparsely hirtellous on lamina with trichomes
0.1–0.5 mm
; secondary veins 5 to 12 pairs, looping broadly to interconnect near margins, without intersecondary veins, without domatia, adaxially venation plane or costa prominulous, abaxially costa and secondary veins prominent and remaining venation not visible.
Stipules
interpetiolar or shortly united around stem, caducous, abaxially hirtellous with trichomes
0.2–0.5 mm
, ovate,
3–6 mm
, adaxially glabrous, bilobed, lobes linear,
1–2 mm
, glandular at tip.
Inflorescence
terminal, shortly cymose, pedunculate, sparsely to densely hirtellous with trichomes
0.3–1 mm
, green; peduncle
3–5.5 cm
; branched portion corymbiform, 0.6–2 ×
1–2 cm
, 10- to 30-flowered, branched to 1 or 2 orders; bracts narrowly triangular,
0.5–2 mm
, acute, at tip glandular; pedicels
0.1 – 1.5 mm
.
Flowers
subsessile to pedicellate with both arrangements mixed in cymose to umbelliform groups of 3 to 9, 4-merous; hypanthium obconic to cylindrical, c.
1 mm
, glabrous or puberulous with trichomes
0.2–0.3 mm
;
calyx
limb
1–1.2 mm
, externally glabrous, shallowly lobed, lobes broadly triangular, obtuse, marginally with 2 or 3 glands on each lobe;
corolla
tubular to funnelform, white, externally glabrous, tube c.
3 mm
,
1.2– 2 mm
diam. near middle, internally in upper part and throat with dense ring c.
1 mm
wide of pilosulous trichomes
0.3–0.5 mm
, lobes ligulate,
1.2–1.5 mm
, obtuse to rounded, adaxially plane or with minute galeate projection, abaxially smooth;
stamens
inserted in upper part of corolla tube, filaments c.
0.5 mm
, anthers c.
0.8 mm
, included or partially exserted;
style
c.
3.5 mm
,
stigmas
c.
0.3 mm
, exserted.
Infructescences
similar to inflorescences, except becoming displaced to pseudaxillary by stem growth from one axillary bud.
Fruits
ellipsoid, c. 6 ×
5 mm
, glabrous, red, apparently fleshy;
pyrenes
2, hemispherical, adaxially plane, abaxially with 4–5 rounded longitudinal ridges;
endosperm
entire abaxially, adaxially with 1 medial, longitudinal, T-shaped intrusion.
Etymology
. – This new species resembles several species of the neotropical genus
Notopleura
(Benth.) Bremek.
, and the species epithet refers to this similarity.
Notopleura
has been commonly confused with Neotropical species of
Psychotria
but these genera are not closely related (
RAZAFIMANDIMBISON et al., 2014
). Terrestrial species of
Notopleura
differ from
Psychotria
in their consistently pseudoaxillary inflorescences, stipules with well developed glands on the margins and/or a medial appendage, lack of persistent colleters at the stipule insertion, and molecular sequences that indicate their relationships are in another tribe,
Palicoureeae
.
Habitat, distribution and phenology
. –
Psychotria notopleuroides
has been collected in perhumid evergreen forest at
0–200 m
on the
Masoala Peninsula
in eastern
Madagascar
(
Antsiranana
,
Toamasina
), with flowers in
October
and
November
and with fruits in
June
and
September
.
Conservation status
. –
Psychotria notopleuroides
is known from
four specimen
collections representing four unique occurrences in perhumid evergreen forest at
0–200 m
elevation. The EOO of the species is
69 km
², within the limits for “Critically Endangered” under IUCN Red List Criterion B1; and the AOO is
16 km
², within the limits for “Endangered” under Criterion B2 (
IUCN, 2012
). Three occurrences are within the Masoala PA. Two of these occurrences are in the Anaovandrano river watershed and may be particularly sensitive to disturbances. The interior of Masoala PA is well protected but parts close to villages are impacted by exploitation of timber and, to a lesser extent, shifting cultivation (C. Birkinshaw, pers. comm.). A fourth occurrence is the westernmost point, at Ambanizana, and is approximately
800 m
outside Masoala PA. Forested areas without formal protection in the vicinity of Masoala PA are subject to degradation by small-scale slash and burn agriculture and resource exploitation including logging, hunting and mining (
GOODMAN et al., 2018
). The westernmost collection site is along the Androka River and it constitutes one location (sensu
IUCN, 2012
) with respect to the known threats. This location’s disappearance would reduce EOO, AOO, the number of locations, and the number of mature individuals. The two easternmost occurrences, within the Anaovandrano River watershed, constitute a second location with regard to known threats, and the remaining occurrence, within Masoala PA, south of the unprotected occurrence, is a third location. With three locations, the sensitive nature of watershed habitats at two of the locations, and given general habitat degradation in unprotected sites, the Red List status of
P. notopleuroides
is assessed as “Endangered” [EN B1ab(i,ii,iii,iv,v)+2ab(i,ii,iii,iv,v)].
Notes. –
Psychotria notopleuroides
is characterized by its unusual prostrate habit, triangular caducous stipules, mediumsized to rather small leaves that are obtuse to usually rounded or truncate at the apex, shortly cymose inflorescences that are initially terminal but quickly displaced to pseudoaxillary by subsquent growth from an axillary bud, somewhat small four-merous corollas, medium-sized red fruits, pyrenes that are shallowly ridged abaxially, and endosperm that lacks ruminations except for a well developed, medial, T-shaped intrusion on the adaxial face. The specimens dry with a brown or reddish brown color, and the dried trichomes are dark reddish brown. The prostrate stems root along their length, and produce new stems sympodially. The leaves appear to be similar to those of some other
Rubiaceae
found in dark humid understory, with the epidermis composed of relatively large cells, the upper surface dark velvety green in life, and the lower surface light-colored and perhaps silvery. The collection data of
one specimen
(
Zjhra & Hutcheon 378
) note that the leaves are brittle. Most of the leaves on the dried specimens have revolute margins, but it is not clear if this is a character found in life or an artifact of drying. The corolla lobes of
P. notopleuroides
are distinctive in being rounded at the tips, similarly to the leaves, rather than acute as in most species of this genus. Two flowering collections have been seen, and both agree with the long-styled form of distylous
Psychotria
species
; whether this new species is distylous cannot yet be determined. This new species is not similar to any other
Psychotria
known from
Madagascar
.
The pyrenes of
Psychotria notopleuroides
have the form
BREMEKAMP (1963)
used to diagnose
Apomuria
. All the Malagasy species of that group, however, differ from this new species in their erect shrub habit and five- or six-merous flowers. At first glance
Psychotria notopleuroides
is similar in aspect to the
Rubiaceae
genera
Geophila
D. Don
and
Puffia
Razafim. & B. Bremer
, but both of those differ in their cordiform leaves, subcapitate inflorescences, and seeds with endosperm that lacks any rumination or intrusions.
Psychotria notopleuroides
is also similar to
P. decumbens
(Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts
, which is not well known but can be separated by its hirtellous bilobed stipules and oblanceolate leaves with acute to deltate tips that appear, based on herbarium specimens, to be similarly colored on both surfaces. The number of
P. decumbens
’s corolla lobes was not described and cannot be discerned from the on-line
type
images. Bremekamp classified
P. decumbens
in
Mapouria
, which was diagnosed by its seed with the endosperm ruminate to some degree, but he did not actually see its seeds so this character has also not been confirmed.
Paratypi
. –
MADAGASCAR
.
Reg. Sava
[Prov.
Antsiranana
]:
Antalaha-CR Vinanivao
,
CAP Masoala Grand Parc
,
15°44'S
50°10'E
,
50 m
,
15.IX.2003
,
Wohlhauser
et al. 503
(
G
,
MO
,
NEU
).
Reg. Analanjirofo
[Prov.
Toamasina
]:
Masoala Peninsula
,
Tampolo
,
15°41'52"S
49°57'56"E
,
22.X.2001
,
Labat
&
Andrianjafy
3377
(
BR
,
G
,
K
,
MO
,
TAN
,
TEF
);
Ambanizana
,
along Androka River south of MBG house
,
15°39'30"S
49°57'30"E
, 0 m,
VI.1993
,
Zjhra
&
Hutcheon
378
(
MO
)
.