New Lepidium (Brassicaceae) from New Zealand
Author
Lange, P. J. de
Science & Capability Group, Terrestrial Ecosystems, Department of Conservation, Private Bag 68908 Newton, Auckland 1145, New Zealand
Author
Heenan, P. B.
Allan Herbarium, Landcare Research, P. O. 69, Lincoln 7640, Canterbury, New Zealand
Author
Houliston, G. J.
Ecological Genetics Group, Landcare Research, P. O. 69, Lincoln 7640, Canterbury, New Zealand
Author
Rolfe, J. R.
Science & Capability Group, Terrestrial Ecosystems, National Office, Department of Conservation, P. O. Box 10420, Wellington 6143, New Zealand
Author
Mitchell, A. D.
Otago School of Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, PO Box 4345, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
text
PhytoKeys
2013
2013-06-17
24
1
147
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.24.4375
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.24.4375
1314-2003-24-1
563EFFD7FFA3FFC47235FFE0B16B4658
576237
Lepidium oblitum
sp. nov.
A L. panniformo habitu effuso, foliis saepe nitentibus sparse leviter dentatis ab apicibus surculorum confertis et a serie rDNA ETS differt. A. L. oleraceo habitu effuso aestati-virenti, siliculis valde incisuris et a serie rDNA ETS differt
.
Holotype
.
Chatham Islands (
Fig. 57
):
Chatham Is., Mangere Island, Mangere Island Nature Reserve, South of Hut Landing, 14 February 2006, P.J. de Lange CH876 & P.B. Heenan, AK 300342! Isotypes: CHR 552303A-C!
Figure 57.
Holotype of
Lepidium oblitum
Houliston, Heenan et de Lange.
Etymology.
The epithet "
oblitum
" from the Latin meaning "forgotten, disregarded or neglected" refers to the circumstances in which this species was first discovered. At an early stage of this revision
Lepidium oblitum
had been included within the range of
Lepidium panniforme
, with some plants treated as possible hybrids between
Lepidium panniforme
and
Lepidium oleraceum
. It was only following critical analysis of plants grown in New Zealand from samples collected from Mangere Island that the distinctive nature of this species was realized using DNA and morphological data.
Description
(
Figs 58
-62
)
. Tap-rooted, strongly pungent, sprawling, laxly though much-branched, leafy perennial shrub, forming patches up to 1.0
x
0.9 m. Tap-root up to 700 mm long,
+/-
napiform, branched 1-2 or more times. Rootstock 6-14 mm diam., woody, exposed portion
+/-
smooth, often covered in dried leaf remnants and withered branch stubs. Plants usually dying down to rootstock and/or previous seasons stem nodes, towards end of growing season. Stems mostly seasonal, a few
+/-
persistent (i.e. lasting 2 or more years), arising from rootstock base and basal portion of main central stem, widely and unevenly spaced or closely packed, woody, lax and sprawling, sometimes arching and subascendent, weakly angled to
+/-
terete, glabrous; mature stems 2.1-4.6 mm diam., 0.3-0.8 m long; green to yellow-green, brittle, bases bearing numerous leaf abscission scars, otherwise devoid of leaves for at least the first ⅔ with the final ⅓ distinctly leafy and often much branched when vegetative, with the leaves tending to fall at flowering and fruiting; upper stems similar, though distinctly leafy and pliant. Leaves coriaceous, fleshy, green to dark green, often glossy. Rosette leaves 5-14(-20), mostly present in autumn - early spring usually not persisting (very rarely so) at fruiting; petioles distinct, up to 40
x
2 mm, flat or slightly concave in cross-section, succulent; lamina oblanceolate, cuneiform, obovate-oblong to spathulate up to 60
x
22 mm, margins finely to deeply incised in upper
1/4
-⅓, teeth in 3-6(-8) pairs running to praemorse apex, basal few teeth pair usually asymmetric, base narrowly attenuate. Middle stem leaves mostly persisting at fruiting; petiole up to 32 mm long, mostly flat in cross-section, sometimes slightly concave, usually winged; lamina narrowly oblanceolate, oblanceolate, spathulate, oblong, obdeltoid, 15.0-32.0(-56.2)
x
12-16.8(-18.6) mm; margins finely to deeply incised in distal
1/4
-⅓, teeth in 3-6(-8) pairs running to the usually praemorse apex, basal few teeth pairs usually asymmetric, lamina base narrowly attenuate, extending as a wing (0.8-1.2 mm wide) usually to petiole base. Upper stem leaves petiolate, petiole 12 mm long, flat or slightly concave, usually broadly winged; lamina narrowly oblanceolate, narrowly lanceolate, narrowly spathulate, to linear-cuneiform, 10.2-20.0(-29.0)
x
2.4-3.5(-4.8) mm; margins entire or deeply dentate, if dentate then usually asymmetrically tridentate (rarely with 1-4 teeth), lamina base narrowly attenuate, extending as a wing (0.3-1.7 mm wide) almost to petiole base. Racemes (30-)50(-76) mm long, usually congested, elongating up to 100 mm at fruiting, terminal and axillary; rachis and pedicels glabrous (pedicels very rarely bearing a few minute, caducous, glandular hairs near base); pedicels, erecto-
patent
to patent, 0.4-0.8(-1.0) mm long, elongating to 0.8-1.2(-2.0) mm long at fruiting. Flower buds dark green to green, apex glabrous. Flowers sweetly fragrant, 1.6-1.8(-2.0) mm diam. Sepals 4, saccate, pale to dark green with a broad white,
+/-
undulose margin, pale to dark green with a broad white,
+/-
undulose margin, deeply concave, adaxially weakly keeled or not; lateral sepals 0.9
x
0.6 mm, broadly ovate to oblong,
+/-
overlapping at base, apex rounded to obtuse, adaxial surface glabrous (sometimes diffusely papillate), abaxial surface usually glabrous, sometimes hairy near base, hairs patent, weakly flexuous, 0.1-0.3 mm long, eglandular, shedding at anthesis; median sepals 1.0
x
0.9 mm, broadly ovate to oblong, apex rounded to obtuse, adaxial surface glabrous, abaxial surface glabrous. Petals overtopping sepals, white, 0.9-1.15(-1.3)
x
0.5-0.6(-0.8) mm, patent, clawed; limb broadly obovate, apex weakly retuse. Stamens 2-4, equal. Anthers c. 0.10 mm long. Pollen bright yellow. Nectaries 2, subulate, 0.3-0.42 mm long. Silicles cartilaginous when fresh, coriaceous when dry, orbicular, orbicular-ovate to
+/-
rhomboid, (2.8-)3.0(-3.3)
x
(2.4-)2.6(-3.0), margin winged, notably more so toward apex, apex notched, base obtuse, valves green maturing yellow-green, glabrous, dried surface
+/-
coarsely reticulate; style 0.1-0.2(-0.3) mm long, free from the narrow wing, usually exceeding the notch; stigma 0.18-0.22 mm diam, capitate. Seeds 2, ovoid to ellipsoid, orange-brown to dark red-brown, not winged, 1.8-1.9
x
0.9-0.93 mm. FL Nov-Mar. FR Jan-Jun.
Figure 58.
Wild plant of
Lepidium oblitum
showing growth habit of plant associated with
Myosotidium hortensium
,
Disphyma papillatum
and
Festuca coxii
in petrel colony on Mangere Island (image: G.A.S. Taylor).
Figure 59.
(From left to right) rosette and basal- to mid-stem leaves of
Lepidium oblitum
. (AK 300342). Scale bar = 20 mm.
Figure 60.
Cultivated plant of
Lepidium oblitum
showing rosette leaves.
Figure 61.
A
Upper stem leaves and inflorescence of
Lepidium oblitum
B
flowers showing arrangement of sepals, petals, androecia and gynoecia
C
close-up of flower.
Figure 62.
Mature silicle of the holotype of
Lepidium oblitum
(AK 300342). Scale bar = 1 mm.
Representative Specimens.
Chatham Islands:
Rabbit Island, 14 February 2006, P.J. de Lange CH878 & P.B. Heenan, (AK 300344). Mangere Island, Mangere Island
Nature
Reserve, Above Hut, 14 February 2006, P.J. de Lange CH874 & P.B. Heenan, (AK 300340; CHR 552373); Mangere Island, Mangere Island Nature Reserve, 'Top
Plateau'
, 22 February 2011, B. Gibb s.n., (AK 331585).
Distribution
(
Fig. 63
).
Endemic. New Zealand, Chatham Is., Mangere and Rabbit Islands.
Recognition.
Lepidium oblitum
is recognised by its sprawling growth habit (
Fig. 58
); by the branches often widely spaced, trailing and mostly devoid of foliage except for the ends which are typically densely terminated by foliage (
Fig. 57
); and by the prominently notched silicles (
Fig. 62
). Of those species with which it grows (
Lepidium oligodontum
,
Lepidium oleraceum
,
Lepidium panniforme
and
Lepidium rekohuense
), it can be easily distinguished from
Lepidium oleraceum
by its sprawling growth habit, flowers with 2-4 stamens, and distinctly notched silicles (
Figs 58
, 61
, 62
).
From
Lepidium oligodontum
,
Lepidium oblitum
is easily distinguished by
it's
more upright, though somewhat, untidy, sprawling growth habit (
Fig. 58
), and longer lived, persistently leafy branches. The foliage of
Lepidium oblitum
(
Figs 59
, 60
) has leaf margins that are consistently toothed (never sparingly-toothed or entire), while the flower
ing
racemes are distinctly longer ((30-)50(-76) mm cf. (5.0)-9.7(-28.9) mm in
Lepidium oligodontum
)) and on fruiting they may elongate up to 100 m (rather than 60 mm). In
Lepidium oblitum
the flowers have 2-4 rather than 2-4-6 stamens (
Fig. 61B, 61C
), while the silicles are never fleshy or turgid, rather they are distinctly cartilaginous and prominently (rather than weakly) notched (
Fig. 62
).
Lepidium oblitum
also has consistently shorter styles ((0.1-0.2(-0.3) mm long) than
Lepidium oligodontum
((0.2-0.8(1.2) mm long)).
Lepidium oblitum
and
Lepidium panniforme
grow together on Mangere Island (
Fig. 63
). As they have similar silicles and flowers with 2-4 stamens but very different foliage,
Lepidium oblitum
was initially thought to be hybrid between
Lepidium panniforme
and
Lepidium oleraceum
. At that time it was not realised how widespread
Lepidium oblitum
is, nor that it comprised stable, true-breeding populations (G. Houliston unpubl. data). It was only following DNA-based investigations undertaken for this paper that the putative hybrid status was rejected and its status as a species recognised. Nevertheless,
Lepidium oblitum
is still closely allied to
Lepidium panniforme
, and both also share a relationship to the extinct
Lepidium obtusatum
, a relationship evident by all three species sharing prominently notched silicles.
Lepidium oblitum
has widely spreading, lax (rather than erect to suberect), sprawling stems and rosette leaves that distinguish it from
Lepidium panniforme
(
Figs 82
, 83
). The leaves of
Lepidium oblitum
are shallowly toothed but they are never as deeply serrated or lacerate as those of
Lepidium panniforme
(
Figs 81
, 83
, 84
). DNA data suggests that gene flow between
Lepidium oblitum
and
Lepidium panniforme
has occurred at some sites on Mangere Island (G. Houliston unpubl. data).
Figure 63.
Distribution of
Lepidium oblitum
,
Lepidium oligodontum
,
Lepidium panniforme
and
Lepidium rekohuense
.
Lepidium
oblitum
also grows with
Lepidium rekohuense
on Rabbit Island. From that species it is easily separated by its smaller growth habit; by the glabrous rather than sparsely papillate-hairy upper branch stems, and glabrous rather than finely hairy inflorescences (the pedicels of
Lepidium oblitum
may, very rarely, bear a few caducous glandular hairs). Fur
thermore
, the flowers of
Lepidium oblitum
have 2-4 rather than 2 stamens, while the silicles of
Lepidium rekohuense
are also mostly orbicular (rarely obovate) and slightly larger (up to 4.1
x
4.0 mm cf. 3.3
x
3.0 mm).
Ecology.
Lepidium oblitum
is one of three
Lepidium
species recorded from Mangere and Rabbit islands. On these islands, it is frequently found growing in association with petrel burrows, and on exposed, often wind eroded cliff faces, associated soil blowouts and ephemeral drainages and seepages. On Mangere Island, it is perhaps most common among the boulders and rocks forming the northern summit of the Top Plateau. In these habitats,
Lepidium oblitum
commonly grows with
Asplenium obtusatum
,
Festuca coxii
(Petrie) Hack.,
Disphyma papillatum
Chinnock,
Puccinellia chathamica
(Cheeseman) Allan et Jansen and
Senecio radiolatus
F.Muell. subsp.
radiolatus
. On Mangere Island, it is also associated with
Aciphylla dieffenbachii
(F.Muell.) Kirk,
Hebe chathamica
(Buchanan) Cockayne et Allan,
Hebe dieffenbachii
(Benth.) Cockayne et Allan (and hybrids between these two
Hebe
),
Myosotidium hortensium
(Decne.) Baill., and, on occasion,
Lepidium oleraceum
and
Lepidium panniforme
. On Rabbit Island it is associated with
Atriplex australasica
Moq.,
Critesion murinum
(L.)
A.Loeve
subsp.
murinum
,
Malva arborea
L.,
Lepidium oligodontum
and
Lepidium rekohuense
.
Conservation Status.
Lepidium oblitum
is so far known only from the Chatham Islands group where it has been collected from Mangere and Rabbit Islands (
Fig. 63
). On Mangere Island (a Nature Reserve, with strict permit controlled access) it is known from several populations, the largest of which occurs along the northern western cliff faces of 'Top
Plateau'
. That population may number in the tens of plants; the only other ones known occur in steep runnels draining the western cliffs south of the main Landing area. When visited by PdL and PBH in 2006, there were fewer than 10 adults in total. Subsequent visits to Mangere Island by Department of Conservation rangers suggest that there has been little change in the population sizes on that island. However, hard data is unavailable and so it would inappropriate to infer from these observations that
Lepidium oblitum
populations on Mangere Island are stable. On nearby privately owned Rabbit Island, two plants of
Lepidium oblitum
were seen in 2006 and the island has not been visited by Department of Conservation staff since.
Therefore
, based on available information
Lepidium oblitum
is known from two sites, totalling 4 populations, which collectively are unlikely to exceed 100 mature individuals. Further, the total area of occupancy is considerably less than 1 ha. On the basis of that data, using
Townsend et al. (2008)
,
Lepidium oblitum
qualifies as
"
Nationally Critical" (using either criterion A(1) or A(3)) because there are fewer than 250 mature individuals known and the total area of occupancy is ≤ 1 ha. We favour criterion A(3) because a precise survey of the numbers of plants of
Lepidium oblitum
has yet to be carried out, and available data (beyond that obtained by PdL and PBH) is unreliable because of understandable past confusion with
Lepidium oleraceum
s.s. and
Lepidium panniforme
.
This conservation assessment should also be qualified
'CD'
(Conservation Dependent) because Mangere Island is subject to ecological restoration, and ongoing surveillance to ensure it remains predator-free. Should rodents establish on the island, they will affect that
island's
Lepidium
species, both directly through browse and indirectly through predation of the sea birds that maintain this species habitat. Other necessary qualifiers include
'DP'
(Data Poor) because of the lack of precise information on population size and trend data,
'IE'
(Island Endemic), and
'RR'
(Range Restricted) because of its precise habitat requirements and geographically narrow-range.