Bomarea pastazensis (Alstroemeriaceae), an exceptionally small new species from the eastern Andean slopes of Ecuador Author Clark, John L. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1414-6380 Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 1534 Mound Street, Sarasota, FL 34236, USA jclark@selby.org Author Fierro-Minda, Alisson https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7169-2989 Herbario QUSF, Colegio de Ciencias Biologicas y Ambientales, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, USFQ, Quito, Ecuador & Herbario QCA, Escuela de Ciencias Biologicas, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador & Reserva: The Youth Land Trust, Washington DC, USA Author Exe, Nolan https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8847-7978 Reservas de Fundacion EcoMinga, Fundacion EcoMinga, Banos, Tungurahua, Ecuador Author Johnson, Mia https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4822-0606 Reservas de Fundacion EcoMinga, Fundacion EcoMinga, Banos, Tungurahua, Ecuador Author Tribble, Carrie M. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7263-7885 School of Life Sciences, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA Author Jost, Lou https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5850-0716 Reservas de Fundacion EcoMinga, Fundacion EcoMinga, Banos, Tungurahua, Ecuador text PhytoKeys 2023 2023-11-10 235 31 42 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.235.110525 journal article http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.235.110525 1314-2003-235-31 A22591C65BDA5F3EAC53EE06CC2BBD8A Bomarea pastazensis J.L.Clark, Fierro-Minda & N.Exe sp. nov. Figs 2 , 4 Diagnosis. Similar to Bomarea pumila Griseb. ex Baker, differing in plant height reaching 10-14 cm (vs. 5-8 cm high in B. pumila ), pubescent stem (vs. glabrous stem in B. pumila ), the presence of ciliate leaf margin (vs. glabrous leaf margin in B. pumila ), and the presence of dark spots on the petals (vs. no spotting on the petals in B. pumila ). Type . Ecuador . Tungurahua : Canton Banos , Parroquia Rio Verde , Cerro Candelaria Reserve ( Fundacion EcoMinga), upper Pastaza watershed, 1°28'39.33"S , 78°17'53.61"W , 3642 m , 10 Mar 2016 , J.L. Clark 14839 ( holotype : QCA! [245371]; isotype: SEL! [079072]) . Description. Terrestrial or epiphytic herb. Rhizome short with multiple underground fusiform to globose root tubers, pale and heavily stippled with dull reddish-purple spots, 5-9 x 3-4 mm, surface striate, yellowish-brown with red spots (Fig. 2H ). Stem erect, 10-14 cm long, ca. 0.13 cm in diameter, slender, terete, base pubescent, apex puberulous, internodes 0.6 cm long. Leaves alternate; blade ovate, 1.4-1.8 x 0.4-0.7 cm, base rounded to obtuse, apex acute, abaxially glabrous, adaxially light green, suffused with whitish-translucent trichomes, ca., 0.2 mm long, clustered along veins; blades with 5-7 prominent parallel veins, raised below and slightly raised above; margin hyaline, slightly revolute with unicellular trichomes to 0.2 mm long; petioles resupinate and canaliculate, 0.1-0.4 cm long, basal leaves reduced to scales. Flowers produced from the stem apex, usually one (rarely two) apical flower(s) per stem.; pedicels 1-1.4 cm long, terete, with brownish red to dark purple trichomes, bisexual, actinomorphic, epigynous. Sepals 3, 1.0-1.3 x 1.0-1.2 cm, each sepal with 6 parallel veins, broadly ovate, apically rounded, bright red to orange-red with a 1 mm green to black claw, inner and outer surfaces glabrous. Petals 3, basally constricted and caniculate, distally obovate to broadly spathulate, 1.5-1.6 x 0.6-0.7 cm, greenish yellow, puberulous at base, inner surface with 3 large reddish-brown spots, outer surface uniformly yellow (occasionally yellow suffused with red from the inner spots). Androecium of 6 free stamens, 0.8-0.9 cm long, thickened near center of filaments; anthers pseudo-basifixed, 0.3 x 0.1 cm, fusiform; pollen grains lilac. Gynoecium comprised of three fused carpels, ovary 0.5 x 0.4 cm with surface covered with glutinous trichomes, style ca. 1 cm long, stigma with three circinate lobes. Fruits not observed. Ecology. Found growing on Sphagnum and mossy cushions at ground level and epiphytically (up to 2.5 m high) in high elevation cloud forest and paramo (observed from 3235 to 3700 m). Plants growing in partially shaded areas to full sunlight. Stems erect to hanging, with flowers often found on or slightly above ground level. Flowers protandrous, commonly with one flower per stem but occasionally two. Phenology. Observed in flower in January, March, July, and November. Approximately 20 individual plants with mature flowers were located during an expedition in November of 2022 and fewer individuals with mature flowers were observed in January of 2022. Fruits not documented. Etymology. The specific epiphyte, pastazensis , reflects the watershed of the type locality that includes Rio Pastaza and adjacent tributaries. Distribution and preliminary assessment of conservation status. Bomarea pastazensis is endemic to the upper Pastaza watershed, located in the eastern Andean slopes of Ecuador. The first documented population was inside Cerro Candelaria Reserve in Tungurahua province (Fig. 3 ). The Cerro Candelaria Reserve is a private reserve of 2800+ hectares managed by Fundacion EcoMinga. It is bordered on the north by EcoMinga's Naturetrek Reserve, and the south by Parque Nacional Sangay. Along with Fundacion EcoMinga's Machay and Naturetrek Reserves to the north, it forms a protected corridor between Parque Nacional Sangay and Parque Nacional Llanganates. Cerro Candelaria Reserve was founded by Fundacion EcoMinga in 2007 and financed by the World Land Trust (UK); the majority of the reserve is undisturbed by anthropogenic activity. A diverse flora and fauna has been recorded here, including many endemic species and species of high conservation priority ( Jost 2004 ; Reyes-Puig et al. 2013 ), such as Blakea attenboroughii Penneys & L.Jost ( Melastomataceae ) which is endemic to the lower elevation forests of Bosque Protector Cerro Candelaria. Several recently described species in the Orchidaceae share a similar geographic distribution to Bomarea pastazensis (Fig. 3 ), include Teagueia barbeliana L.Jost & Shepard, T. puroana L.Jost & Shepard, T. kostoglouana L.Jost & Shepard, T. lizziefinchiana L.Jost & Shepard, and T. anitana L.Jost & Shepard ( Jost and Shepard 2011 ; 2017 ). Additional surveys in Cerro Candelaria and in the surrounding upper Rio Pastaza watershed are likely to yield many more undescribed species, and potentially additional populations of Bomarea pastazensis . The distribution of this species highlights the importance of the Llanganates-Sangay corridor for allowing species gene flow and connectivity among populations ( Rios Alvear and Reyes-Puig 2015 ). A second documented population of Bomarea pastazensis was provided by digital images from EcoMinga's park guard Eduardo Pena (July 2023) in the Llanganates National Park, north of Rio Pastaza (Fig. 3 ). We calculated the AOO=12 km2 from Pena's observation and the type collection (Fig. 3 ). Based on the available information and according to the IUCN Red List criteria ( IUCN 2012 ; IUCN Standards and Petitions Committee 2022 ), Bomarea pastazensis is preliminarily assessed as Vulnerable (VU) based on a limited area of occupancy (IUCN criterion D2 where AOO <20 km2) and dependence on conservation efforts for its continued survival. The only documented populations of Bomarea pastazensis are located inside protected areas, at elevations that are used for agriculture in unprotected parts of the Pastaza province. Effective conservation of this and the other unique species of the Pastaza watershed will require constant vigilance. Comments. Bomarea pastazensis differs from other congeners by a distinctive pattern of three dark spots on the petals (Fig. 2D ), widely opened flowers, and small size. Bomarea pumila and B. pastazensis share similar traits such as their small size in comparison with the rest of Bomarea species, the presence of pubescence throughout their above-surface organs, and the color patterns of the flowers (Figs 2 , 5 ; Table 1 ). B. pastazensis is slightly bigger in size (10-14 cm tall) than B. pumila (5-9 cm tall). In contrast, B. pastazensis is sparsely pubescent at the base of the sepals, while the sepals of B. pumila are uniformly densely pubescent (Fig. 5 ). The petals of B. pumila are not spotted, which differentiates it from B. pastazensis which has a three-spotted pattern on the petals (Fig. 2B ). The two species are geographically isolated with B. pastazensis endemic to the Pastaza watershed on the eastern Andean slopes in central Ecuador (Tungurahua province) and B. pumila from Central Peru to northern Bolivia. Table 1 provides a summary of distribution and useful characters for differentiating B. pastazensis and B. pumila . Table 1. General geographic distribution (names in parentheses indicate Ecuadorian province) and comparison of morphological characters between Bomarea pastazensis and B. pumila .
- Bomarea pumila Bomarea pastazensis
Habit erect erect to hanging
Plant height 5-9 cm long 10-14 cm long
Stem surface glabrous pubescent
Leaf - relative size leaves not uniform on stem; central leaves relatively larger compared with basal and apical leaves leaves relatively uniform on stem
Leaf margin glabrous ciliate
Pedicel length 1.5-4 cm long 1-1.4 cm long
Flower length 0.8-1.5 cm long 1.5-1.6 cm long
Flower width during anthesis 2-3 cm wide 1.5-2 cm wide
Sepal surface conspicuously pubescent sparsely pubescent at base only
Sepal horn white to reddish horn at apex green to black horn at apex
Petal coloration (=inner tepals) yellow with a red stripe and green tip. green suffused with yellow with three prominent red spots at the base
Distribution Peru and Bolivia Ecuador (Tungurahua)
Figure 4. Holotype of Bomarea pastazensis , J.L. Clark 14839 (QCA). Figure 5. Bomarea pumila A-D field images from Peru E syntype (K! [K000400912]) of Bomarea pumila of W. Lechler 2240 from Sachapata, Peru. Photos A-D from Lucely L. Vilca Bustamente E from The Herbarium Catalogue, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. The Board of Trustees of the RBG, Kew.
Additional specimens examined. Ecuador . Tungurahua : Canton Banos , Parroquia Rio Verde , Bosque Protector Cerro Candelaria ( Fundacion EcoMinga), upper Pastaza watershed, Cerro Candelaria summit trail, just below paramo, 1°28'39.33"S , 78°17'53.61"W , 3150-3827 m , 1 Jan 2022 , N. Exe , M. Johnson & A. Fierro-Minda 2 (GUAY) .