Two new Asian species of Carex (Cyperaceae)
Author
Jiménez-Mejías, Pedro
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164 - 4236, USA. & Current address: New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Blvd, Bronx, NY 10458, USA.
Author
Roalson, Eric H.
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164 - 4236, USA.
text
Phytotaxa
2017
2017-03-14
298
3
283
288
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.298.3.8
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.298.3.8
1179-3163
13694274
Carex barbayaki
Jim.Mejías & Roalson
,
sp. nov.
Diagnosis
:—The new species seems to be closely related to
C. dielsiana
Kükenthal (1913:10)
, currently placed in section
Decorae
(Kük.)
Ohwi (1936:338)
, from which it differs by its strongly canaliculate leaves, less than
1 mm
wide (ca.
2 mm
in
C. dielsiana
;
Dai
et al.
2010
).
Type
:—
CHINA
.
Yunnan
. Diqing prefecture, Zhondiang county. Geza to Wengsui,
28° 22’ 07’’ N
99° 45’ 27’’ E
,
3569 m
,
21 Jun 1994
,
Alpine Garden Society China Expedition 554
(
Holotype
: E-424751!).
Figs. 1–2
.
Perennial, cespitose. Stems
20–25 cm
long,
0.4–0.6 mm
wide, cylindrical, sulcate, smooth. Leaves basal or 1 cauline, shorter than stems, the longest ones up to
10 cm
long, the cauline ones with a short blade up to
1.5–3.5 cm
, linear,
0.5– 0.7 mm
wide, flattish or slightly canaliculated, stiff, with the margins antrorsely scabrid; ligule of cauline leaves up to
3 mm
long, pale orange, subacute; basal sheaths cream colored, with a short mucro-like blade or bladeless, old leaves also persistent, with the dry blades curled, brownish. Inflorescence 1–2 spikes, the terminal androgynous, the lower (if present) female, separated from the upper from a
6.5–8.3 cm
internode; terminal spike with a glume-like fertile bract,
4–7 mm
long, with scarious brownish sides, a greenish 3-nerved keel, and hyaline margins, with the apex prolonged into a scabrid mucro or arista; lower spike bract with a short linear bract with a ca.
1.5 cm
long blade and a
1.7–1.9 cm
long sheath with the opening brownish-tinged and the margin hyaline. Terminal spike
23–28 mm
long, cylindrical, the male part 15–19 ×
1.2–2 mm
, the female part 8–12 ×
2–3 mm
, dense, utricles ascending, 8–14. Lower spike 9–9.5 ×
2–2.5 mm
, obovate, erect, with a
5.3–7 cm
peduncle, lax, utricles ascending, 5–6. Male glumes 4.2–4.5 ×
1.2–1.5 mm
, oblong, brownish, with a paler mid nerve and broadly hyaline margins, acute. Female glumes 2.6–3.2 × 1.8–2.4, sub-rhomboid, brownish, with a greenish 1-nerved midrib and broad hyaline margins, acute. Stigmas 3. Utricles 4–5 ×
1–1.2 mm
, narrowly elliptical, obscurely trigonous, flattish, glabrous, shining, with only the two lateral nerves prominent, glabrous, sparsely scabrid on the nerves from the upper half or only on the top, yellowish, attenuated into a beak
0.7–1 mm
long, obscurely bidentate, reddish at the tip and with a scarious border. Achenes 2.5–2.6 × 0.8–0.8, narrowly obovate, trigonous, yellowish, with a 0.3 ×
0.2 mm
cylindrical style base, and attenuating towards the base sometimes contracting into a false stipe.
FIGURE 1.
Holotype of
Carex barbayaki
Jim.
-Mejías & Roalson.
FIGURE 2.
Detailed picture of the holotype of
Carex barbayaki
Jim.
-Mejías & Roalson.
A.
Inflorescence.
B.
Cauline leave.
C.
Male glume.
D.
Female glume.
E.
Achene.
F.
Utricles. Scale bars represent 1 mm.
Etymology
:—From the Latin “
barba
”, beard, and yak (
Bos mutus
), the long-haired bovid found in mountain regions of SE Asia and the Himalayas, in reference to the dry curled old leaves, that resemble the wool of these animals.