New species and combinations in Meniscium (Thelypteridaceae)
Author
Fernandes, Rozijane Santos
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Departamento de Botânica, Caixa Postal 486, 30123 - 970, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Author
Yesilyurt, Jovita Cislinski
Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Rd, SW 7 5 BD London, UK
Author
Salino, Alexandre
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Departamento de Botânica, Caixa Postal 486, 30123 - 970, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
text
Phytotaxa
2014
2014-10-29
184
1
1
11
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.184.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.184.1.1
1179-3163
5153177
Meniscium divergens
R.S.Fernandes & Salino
,
sp. nov.
(Figs. 1A–D; 3A; 4C–D)
Meniscium divergens
is most similar to
M. nesioticum
(
Maxon & Morton
1938: 362
)
Jermy & Walker (1985: 276)
, with which it shares dimorphic fronds, and
M. cocleanum
(
Smith & Lellinger 1985: 918
) R.S.Fernandes & Salino
, with which it shares pinnae that are glabrous abaxially. It differs from these species mainly by the presence of 5–6 pinnae pairs, 5–6 rows of areoles between the costa and pinna margin in sterile pinnae and 3–4 areole rows in fertile pinnae, sori on the cross-veins, sori not confluent at maturity, and sporangial stalks with trichomes.
Type:—
GUYANA
.
Potaro-Siparuni Region
:
Pakaraima Mts
,
Mt. Wokomung
top slope
0.5–2 km
NW from northern escarpment,
05°04’N
,
59°53’W
,
1300–1400 m
,
13 November 1993
,
T
.
W
.
Henkel
et al. 4368
(
holotype
NY
, isotypes
NY
,
US
).
Plants rupicolous or terrestrial. Rhizomes short-creeping. Fronds dimorphic, the fertile with longer petioles and pinnae smaller and narrower than sterile ones; sterile fronds
45–97 cm
long, petiole
21–42 cm
long and
2.5–3.8 mm
in diameter at base, laminae
24–53 cm
long, pinnae 15.0–21.5 ×
2.4–3.6 cm
, oblong-lanceolate; fertile fronds
73–105 cm
long, petioles
53–61 cm
long and
2.3–3.6 mm
in diameter, at base laminae
20–44 cm
long, pinnae 10.5–17 × 1.0–
1.8 cm
, linear lanceolate. Petiole brown at base, stramineous to greenish further up, glabrous. Laminae 1-pinnate, membranaceous. Rachis glabrous. Buds absent. Aerophores absent. Pinnae 5–6 pairs, short–petiolulate (
1.6–3.1 mm
long) to sessile in the distal pinnae, base rounded to cuneate in the basal pinnae, and asymmetric (basiscopic side rounded and acroscopic side excavate and parallel to the rachis) in the distal pinnae, margin entire or undulate, apex acuminate to caudate; adaxial surface of costae glabrous or sparsely pubescent, with acicular to ciliform trichomes mostly
0.2–0.3 mm
long, veins and laminar surface between the veins glabrous, abaxial surface of costae, veins and laminar surface between the veins glabrous; venation regularly anastomosing, forming 5–6 areole rows in sterile pinnae and 3–4 areole rows in fertile pinnae between costae and pinnae margin, veins arising from costae of fertile pinnae ca. 10–12 and sterile 8–9 per
3 cm
; cross-veins arcuate (fertile) or subsinuate (sterile), uniting at an obtuse (fertile) or acute (sterile) angle, giving rise to a free excurrent veinlet. Sori oblong, on the cross-veins, not confluent at maturity, receptacle setose with acicular trichomes; sporangial stalks glabrous or with acicular trichomes to
0.3 mm
long. Spores monolete, ellipsoidal, with echinulate surface with low, dense echinulae.
Distribution and Habitat:—
Meniscium divergens
is endemic to the Guayana Shield, with collections only from the
Potaro-Siparuni Region
(
Guyana
) where it apparently grows inside or along the edges of cloud forests in soils with thick layers of organic matter on brown sand and with occasional sandstone outcrops at
700–1400 m
.
Etymology:—
Epithet refers to the dimorphism of the fronds.
Additional specimens examined (
paratypes
):—
GUYANA
.
Potaro-Siparuni Region
:
Mt. Ayanganna
, east face, base of first of three escarpments.
05°20’04’’N
,
59°55’30’’W
,
712 m
,
4 June 2001
,
H
.D. Clarke
et al. 8961
(
NY
,
US
); same locality,
30 June 2001
,
H
.D. Clarke
et al
.
9677
(
NY
,
US
)
.
Notes:—
In the genus
Meniscium
, only three species have dimorphic fronds—
Meniscium macrophyllum
Kunze (1839: 44)
,
M. nesioticum
,
and
M. divergens
—and they all occur in
Guyana
.
Meniscium macrophyllum
and
M. nesioticum
are distinct from the new species in having acrostichoid sori and pilose abaxial surfaces of costae and veins. In addition,
M. macrophyllum
has sterile pinnae
5.7–7.8 cm
wide, fertile pinnae
2.7–3.2 cm
wide, and oblong to elliptic pinnae.
M. nesioticum
has 7–11 pinnae pairs, fertile pinnae with 6–13 areole rows between costae and margin, fertile lamina with curved trichomes on abaxial side of costae, sori usually appearing to cover the lamina (acrostichoid) and sporangia glabrous. In comparison,
M. divergens
has sterile pinnae
2.4–3.6 cm
wide, fertile pinnae 1.0–
1.8 cm
wide, and linear–lanceolate to oblong pinnae, as well as 5–6 pinnae pairs, fertile pinnae with 3–4 areole rows between costa and margin, fertile laminae glabrous abaxially, sori oblong, on the cross–veins, not confluent at maturity (Fig. 1A–D), and sporangia stalks with acicular trichomes (Fig. 3A).
Although with a distinct geographical distribution (
Panama
,
Costa Rica
and
Nicaragua
),
Meniscium cocleanum
is most similar to
M
.
divergens
in having
both
sides of laminar surface between the veins glabrous but differs by the presence of buds on the axils of the distal pinnae, 7–10 areole rows between costa and margin in fertile pinnae, and glabrous sporangia.
The spores have not been used to distinguish species within
Meniscium
in the past. However, they provide good characters, not only at the generic level (
Tryon & Tryon 1982
) but also for separating closely related species. Spores of
M. divergens
are echinulate (Fig. 4C–D), cristate-reticulate in
M. nesioticum
(Fig. 4E–F) and winged in
M. cocleanum
(Fig. 4A–B).
FIGURE
.
Meniscium divergens
.
A
. Habit.
B
. Detail of the abaxial surface of fertile pinnae showing sori oblong on the cross-veins.
C
. Detail of the abaxial surface of sterile pinnae showing venation.
D
. Detail of a sorus showing acicular trichomes. (A from
H.D. Clarke et al. 9677
NY; B–D from
T.W. Henkel et al. 4368,
NY)
FIGURE
.
Meniscium triangularis
.
A
. Habit.
B
. Detail of the abaxial surface of fertile pinnae showing sori round on the cross-veins.
C
. Detail of the abaxial surface of costae showing trichomes and scales.
D
. Scales of the abaxial surface of costae and veins. (All from
W. D. Rodríguez et al. 4115,
NY)