Rediscovery of Artemisia nortonii (Asteraceae, Anthemideae) and clarification of its type locality and geographical distribution
Author
Guo, Xin-Qiang
0000-0003-2206-5297
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & Center of Conservation Biology, Core Botanical Gardens, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China & guo 2015 @ scib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2206 - 5297
guo2015@scib.ac.cn
Author
Wang, Long
0000-0001-6059-0020
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & Center of Conservation Biology, Core Botanical Gardens, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & lwang @ scib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 6059 - 0020
lwang@scib.ac.cn
Author
Yang, Qin-Er
0000-0002-6261-0731
Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & Center of Conservation Biology, Core Botanical Gardens, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, Guangdong, China & qeyang @ scib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 6261 - 0731
qeyang@scib.ac.cn
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-10-28
570
3
283
288
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.570.3.3
journal article
173913
10.11646/phytotaxa.570.3.3
59457915-eb5e-42fb-abf0-5e1bbb675674
1179-3163
7260261
Artemisia nortonii
Pampanini (1927: 683)
.
Figs. 1–3
.
Type
:—
CHINA
.
Xizang
:
Tingri county
,
Dzaka Chu
(=
Zhaga Qu
), stony ground, alt.
3840 m
,
6 July 1922
,
E
.
Norton
(
Mt. Everest Exped.
1922
)
325
(
holotype
K000891832
!).
Fig. 3
.
Description
:—Herbs, perennial,
5–25 cm
tall. Rhizome woody, robust, to
1 cm
in diameter. Stems few or numerous, erect, rarely branched, gray pubescent. Basal stem leaves pedunculate, leaf blade oblong or oblong-ovate,
1.5–2 cm
long,
0.5–1.5 cm
broad, 1-pinnatisect, 2 or 3 segments on each side, segments usually 3-partite, with lobules ovate, gray tomentose on both surfaces; middle stem leaves shortly pedunculate, leaf blade oblong or ovate-oblong, 1- pinnatisect, with oblong or ovate segments 1 or 2 on each side,
0.5–1.5 cm
long,
0.2–0.5 cm
broad, gray tomentose on both surfaces; uppermost leaves 1-pinnatisect or 3-partite, and leaflike bracts entire, gray tomentose on both surfaces. Synflorescence a raceme or narrow panicle. Capitula obovoid or subglobose,
2–3 mm
in diameter, sessile or subsessile. Phyllaries ovate or ovoid, abaxially gray tomentose, midribs green when fresh, with membranous margin. Marginal female florets 3–7, fertile,
2–4 mm
long, corolla tubular, apex 2-toothed, style exerted; disk florets 5–10, sterile,
2–3 mm
long, corolla tubular, apex 5-toothed. Achenes obovoid.
FIGURE 3
. Holotype sheet of
Artemisia nortonii
. Inset: disk floret, sterile.
Distribution and habitat
:—
Artemisia nortonii
is currently known only from Dinggyê and Tingri counties in southwestern
Xizang
,
China
(
Fig. 4
). It grows on stony slopes at altitudes of
3800–5000 m
above sea level.
Phenology
:—Flowering from July to August; fruiting in August.
Additional specimens examined
:—
CHINA
.
Xizang
: Dinggyê,
L. Wang et al. 2827
(IBSC).
Notes
:—In the protologue,
Pampanini (1927)
referred
Artemisia nortonii
to
A
. sect.
Abrotanum
(
Duhamel 1755: 19
)
Besser (1829: 222)
.
Ling (1991)
noted that the disk florets in the
type
specimen of
A
.
nortonii
were sterile and thus he moved the species to
A
. sect.
Dracunculus
Besser (1835: 8)
. Our observations on specimens and living plants in the wild have confirmed the sterility of the disk florets in
A
.
nortonii
(
Figs. 1L
,
3
). We therefore agree with
Ling (1991)
on the sectional placement of
A
.
nortonii
.
In the protologue,
Pampanini (1927)
stated that
Artemisia nortonii
was related to
A. turczaninoviana
Besser (1834: 23)
, but differed by having smaller plants only
15–20 cm
tall, sparsely tomentose, densely and diminutively villous (absolutely not adpressed sericeous), smaller capitula, and particularly, ovate-acuminate (not rounded) innermost bracts and narrower corolla of hermaphrodite florets. The latter has been placed in synonymy with
A. rutifolia
Stephen ex
Sprengel (1826: 488)
by
Poljakov (1961)
, a treatment also accepted by
Ling (1991)
and
Ling
et al
. (2011)
. According to
Poljakov (1961)
,
A. rutifolia
belongs to
A
. sect.
Absinthium
(
Miller 1754
: without pagination)
Candolle (1838: 189)
by having pubescent receptacles, and differs from
A. nortonii
by having fertile (vs. sterile) disk florets and pubescent (glabrous) receptacles.
Artemisia rutifolia
is widely distributed in China’s Xinjiang, and also in
Afghanistan
,
Mongolia
,
Russia
(Siberia) and western Himalayas (
Poljakov 1961
).
According to Ling (1988, 1991), the plants from eastern and southern Xizang referred to
Artemisia salsoloides
Willdenow (1803: 1832)
by
Hooker (1881)
should partly belong to
A
.
nortonii
, but actually Hooker did not mention any material from eastern and southern Tibet under this species. He just followed
Clarke (1876)
to record the occurrence of
A
.
salsoloides
in western Tibet. In fact,
Poljakov (1961)
had pointed out that
Hooker’s (1881)
report about the occurrence of
A. salsoloides
in western Tibet is erroneous and that the plants in question should belong to
A. wellbyi
Hemsley & Pearson (1902: 183)
, a species occurring in Xizang and northern
India
(
Ling
et al
. 2011
). Morphologically
A. nortonii
is readily distinguishable from
A
.
wellbyi
by, among other characters, having 1-pinnatisect (2-pinnatisect) stem leaves with ovate (vs. linear or linear-lanceolate) lobules, and abaxially tomentose (vs. puberulent or glabrescent) phyllaries (
Ling
et al
. 2011
).