Nephoanthus (Melastomataceae: Sonerileae), a new genus segregated from Phyllagathis s. l., with a new species from Southern Vietnam
Author
Lin, Che-Wei
0000-0002-8564-5793
Botanical Garden Division, Taiwan Forestry Research Institute, Taipei 10066, Taiwan & varalba @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8564 - 5793
varalba@gmail.com
Author
Hsu, Tian-Chuan
Botanical Garden Division, Taiwan Forestry Research Institute, Taipei 10066, Taiwan & Department of Life Sciences, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung 40227, Taiwan
Author
Luu, Hong Truong
0000-0002-7036-7081
Southern Institute of Ecology, Institute of Applied Materials Science & Graduate University of Science and Technology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam & hongtruongluu @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7036 - 7081
hongtruongluu@gmail.com
Author
Yang, Tsung-Yu Aleck
Biology Department, National Museum of Natural Science, Taichung 40453, Taiwan & Department of Life Sciences, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung 40227, Taiwan
Author
Li, Chia- Wei
0000-0002-6280-0877
Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu 30013, Taiwan & cwli @ life. nthu. edu. tw; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 6280 - 0877
cwli@life.nthu.edu.tw
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-05-17
547
1
66
76
journal article
55493
10.11646/phytotaxa.547.1.6
7b100ae6-1e4b-4da3-bb71-1c1cd01ea70c
1179-3163
6555995
Nephoanthus
C.W.Lin & T.C.Hsu
gen. nov.
Type
:
—
Phyllagathis prostrata
Hansen (1990: 39)
.
Diagnosis:
—
Nephoanthus
resembles
Tigridiopalma
in the herbaceous habit, ovate leaves and stamens with the decurrent connective of anthers forming an spur dorsally and two erect lobes ventrally. However, it is distinct from
Tigridiopalma
in its much smaller foliage by 3–11 ×
1.7–7 cm
(vs. 20–51.8 ×
13.6–44.9 cm
), umbellate (vs. scorpioid) inflorescences, terete or slightly 8- or 10-ribbed (vs. 5-winged) hypanthia, isomorphic (vs. dimorphic) anthers, and old capsules with distally horned (vs. not horned) placental columns and thready (vs. non-thready) placentas.
Herbs
caulescent, perennial.
Stems
slender, terete or ribbed, basally creeping, rooting at nodes and branched, apically creeping or ascending, velutinous or hirsute.
Leaves
opposite, isomorphic, equal to subequal, 7-nerved, ovate to broadly ovate, velutinous or hirsute, trichomes
0.5–1.5 mm
long, upper surface flat to rugose, base cordate, apex acuminate to rounded, margin denticulate or crenulate, ciliate.
Petioles
subterete and slightly grooved adaxially, pilose, trichomes
2–5 mm
long.
Inflorescences
terminal or rarely axillary, umbellate, nearly capitate, peduncles short, glabrous or sparsely hirsute, bracts persistent, deltoid, ovate to cordate, apex attenuate to obtuse, abaxial surface hairy, margin ciliate.
Flowers
4- or 5-merous, shortly pedicellate.
Hypanthium
cup-shaped, terete or slightly 8- or 10-ribbed, pilose.
Sepals
triangular and keeled, apex aristate, each with a subapical fleshy trichome, trichomes multi-branched,
1.5–2.5 mm
long; sepals connate at the base and forming a ring, hirsute; perishing with the tubular part of hypanthium shortly after flowering.
Petals
oblique, elliptic, obovate to oblong, rosy pink, apex mucronate-apiculate, glabrous or with a few apical glandular trichomes dorsally.
Stamens
isomorphic, filaments slightly flat, white to purplish-red, anthers subulate, apex attenuate, slightly curved ventrally, pale pink to purplish, pore 1, connective extended below anther sacs and forming an ovate, yellow or orangish-red spur dorsally and two erect narrowly triangular, yellow or orangishred lobes ventrally.
Style
white to pink, stigma capitulate; Ovary
ca.
1/2 as long as the hypanthium, crown with fully connate lobes, margin entire or denticulate with some minute uni-seriate glandular trichomes, anther pockets shallow, placentae stalked.
Capsules
shortly pedicellate, hypanthium cup-shaped, 8 or 10-ribbed, placental column distally horned, placentas thready.
Seeds
numerous, pale brown, cuneate, 0.3–0.4 ×
0.15–0.2 mm
.
Etymology:
—The generic epithet is derived from Greek
nephos
, cloud, and
anthus
, flower, referring to the cloud forest habitat where species of this genus grow.
Distribution:
—
Vietnam
and
China
(
Hainan
Island) (
Fig. 1
).
FIGURE 1.
Distribution map of
Nephoanthus nubigenus
(yellow star) and
N. prostratus
(pink circle).
FIGURE 2.
Two taxa morphologically similar to
Nephoanthus
:
Phyllagathis rotundifolia
(A & B);
Tigridiopalma magnifica
(C−E).
A.
Habit;
B.
Inflorescence;
C.
Habit;
D, E.
Flower, face and side views. A & B by Che-Wei Lin; C−E by Wei-Yen Chen.
Taxonomic remarks:
—The gross morphology of
Nephoanthus
is somewhat similar to
Phyllagathis rotundifolia
, the
type
species of
Phyllagathis
, as they share dwarf herbaceous habits, basally creeping stems and nearly capitate inflorescences embraced by large persistent bracts (
Fig. 2
, A & B). However,
Nephoanthus
is distinguishable by the absence of stellate minute brown glands on vegetative organs, pink to purplish anthers, and also by the presence of a pair of ventral appendages at the base of the anther sac. Because molecular data (
Zhou
et al.
2019a
;
2019b
;
2019c
;
Zeng
et al.
2021
) strongly supports the fact that
Nephoanthus
and
P. rotundifolia
are in different major clades within
Sonerileae
, their morphological similarities are either symplesiomorphies or the result of parallel evolution. Within the superclade recognized in
Zhou
et al.
(2019c
; also see INTRODUCTION),
Nephoanthus
is morphologically most similar to
Tigridiopalma
(
Fig. 2
, C–E) but it is easily distinguished by its much smaller foliage by 3–11 ×
1.7–7 cm
(vs. 20–51.8 ×
13.6–44.9 cm
), umbellate (vs. scorpioid) inflorescences, terete or slightly 8- or 10-ribbed (vs. 5-winged) hypanthia, isomorphic (vs. dimorphic) anthers, and old capsules with distally horned (vs. not horned) placental columns and thready (vs. non-thready) placentas. A detailed comparison between
Nephoanthus
and phylogenetically allied taxa (
Fig. 3
) is presented in
Table 1.