A revision of Geonoma (Arecaceae)
Author
Henderson, Andrew
text
Phytotaxa
2011
2011-02-18
17
1
271
journal article
24911
10.11646/phytotaxa.17.1
65962ba7-eec1-40e7-aed6-cef94e99ca39
1179-3163
3538362
37.
Geonoma maxima
(Poiteau)
Kunth (1841: 229)
.
Gynestum maximum
Poiteau (1822: 388)
. Type:
FRENCH GUIANA
. Without locality, no date,
A. Poiteau s.n.
(
holotype
P!).
Plants
3.2(1.0–9.0) m tall; stems 2.9(1.0–7.0) m tall, 1.2(0.5–2.3) cm in diameter, solitary or clustered, canelike; internodes 2.4(0.5–8.7) cm long, yellowish and smooth.
Leaves
9(4–19) per stem, undivided or irregularly pinnate, if regularly pinnate the pinnae with 1 main vein only (rarely with several lateral veins), not plicate or plicate, bases of blades running diagonally into the rachis; sheaths 12.6(4.0–30.0) cm long; petioles 34.6(1.0–100.0) cm long, drying green or yellowish; rachis 44.0(7.3–120.0) cm long, 3.6(1.4–7.1) mm in diameter; veins raised and rectangular in cross-section adaxially; pinnae 8(1–31) per side of rachis; basal pinna 43.2(8.2–132.0) cm long, 3.9(0.1–34.0) cm wide, forming an angle of 47(7–87)° with the rachis; apical pinna 32.8(8.5–86.0) cm long, 9.6(0.2–42.5) cm wide, forming an angle of 23(7–42)° with the rachis.
Inflorescences
branched 1–3 orders; prophylls and peduncular bracts not ribbed with elongate, unbranched fibers, flattened, deciduous or persistent; prophylls 10.6(3.7–21.8) cm long, not short and asymmetrically apiculate, the surfaces not ridged, without unequally wide ridges; peduncular bracts 8.7(4.7–13.0) cm long, well-developed, inserted 0.6(0.2–3.0) cm above the prophyll; peduncles 8.2(3.2–19.5) cm long, 4.9(1.5–10.0) mm in diameter; rachillae 19(4–50), 11.4(4.8–24.3) cm long, 2.7(0.7–6.0) mm in diameter, the surfaces without spiky, fibrous projections or ridges, drying brown or yellow-brown, without short, transverse ridges, not filiform and not narrowed between the flower pits; flower pits spirally arranged, glabrous internally; proximal lips with a central notch before anthesis, often the two sides of the notch overlapping, not recurved after anthesis, not hood-shaped; proximal and distal lips drying the same color as the rachillae, not joined to form a raised cupule, the proximal lip margins overlapping the distal lip margins; distal lips well-developed; staminate and pistillate petals not emergent, not valvate throughout; staminate flowers deciduous after anthesis; stamens 6; thecae diverging at anthesis, inserted directly onto the apiculate filament apices; anthers not short and curled at anthesis, usually elongate, spiraled and twisted or sometimes remaining straight; nonfertilized pistillate flowers deciduous after anthesis; staminodial tubes lobed at the apex, the lobes spreading at anthesis, acuminate, those of non-fertilized pistillate flowers not projecting and persistent after anthesis;
fruits
11.8(6.9–18.2) mm long, 9.0(5.5–13.0) mm in diameter, apices not conical, the surfaces not splitting at maturity, without fibers emerging, not bumpy, not apiculate; locular epidermis without operculum, smooth, without pores.
Taxonomic notes:—
Geonoma maxima
is a member of the
G. macrostachys
clade, differing from all other species in its locular epidermis without an operculum. It also has more branched inflorescences (4–50 rachillae) compared to the rest of the clade (1–9 rachillae). It is another variable species which has been treated differently by
Wessels Boer (1968)
and
Henderson
et al.
(1995)
. Unlike other species complexes, for example
G. macrostachys
,
G. maxima
exhibits rather well–defined geographic disjunction and morphological variation, allowing for recognition of various subspecies, as explained below.
Subspecific variation:—
Four traits vary within this species (stem branching, leaf division, leaf plication, pistillate flower persistence). There are very few data for stem branching, and this and leaf division are excluded from the following analyses. Leaf plication and pistillate flower persistence divide the specimens into three groups. However, leaf plication is difficult to score in this species and specimens with persistent pistillate flowers may be of hybrid origin (see below). Furthermore, there is no geographic separation between these groups.
Geonoma maxima
is widespread across the Amazon region, and there are isolated populations in the
Magdalena
valley and Pacific coast of
Colombia
and eastern Andean slopes in
Venezuela
.
Apart from traits, one attribute (leaf division) divides the specimens into two groups. Leaves of one group are regularly pinnate and the pinnae (at least those from the middle part of the leaf) have several main veins, usually three to five. In the second group, all specimens have either undivided leaves, irregularly pinnate leaves (sometimes with 1-veined pinnae present), or leaves with 1-veined pinnae (at least those from the middle part of the leaf).
The first group
—
with regularly pinnate leaves with 3–5-veined pinnae
—
can be divided into four separate subgroups based partly on geography and partly on variables. ANOVA shows that for pair wise comparison probabilities, 18 variables (plant height, stem diameter, internode length, petiole length, rachis length, rachis width, basal pinna length, basal pinna width, apical pinna length, apical pinna angle, prophyll length, interbract distance, peduncle length, peduncle width, rachilla length, rachilla width, number of rachillae, fruit diameter) differ significantly (
P
<0.05) between at least one pair of subgroups, although no variable differs amongst all four subgroups. Based on these results and geography, these four subgroups are recognized as subspecies (subspp.
hexasticha
,
maxima
, multiramosa, sigmoidea
).
The second group
—
with leaves undivided, irregularly pinnate (sometimes with 1-veined pinnae present), or regularly pinnate with 1-veined pinnae
—
can be divided into six separate subgroups based partly on geography, partly on variables, and on one trait (leaf plication). ANOVA shows that for pair wise comparison probabilities, 22 variables (plant height, stem diameter, leaf number, petiole length, rachis length, rachis width, number of pinnae, basal pinna length, basal pinna width, basal pinna angle, apical pinna length, apical pinna width, apical pinna angle, prophyll length, interbract distance, peduncle length, peduncle width, rachilla length, rachilla width, number of rachillae, fruit length, fruit diameter) differ significantly (
P
<0.05) between at least one pair of subgroups, although no variable differs amongst all six subgroups. Based on these results and geography, these six subgroups are recognized as subspecies (subspp.
ambigua
,
chelidonura
,
camptoneura
, compta, dispersa,
spixiana
).
Key to the subspecies of
G. maxima
1 Prophylls 5.6(3.7–7.0) cm long; north of the Amazon region on the Pacific coast and
Magdalena
valley in
Colombia
, and eastern Andean slopes in
Venezuela
................................................................................................
subsp.
dispersa
- Prophylls 10.9(4.0–21.8) cm long; Amazon region...................................................................................................... 2
2 Leaves regularly pinnate with 3–5-veined pinnae (except for basal and apical ones); rachis 68.4(25.5–120.0) cm long; pinnae 19(4–31) per side of rachis ..................................................................................................................... 3
- Leaves undivided, irregularly pinnate (sometimes with 1-veined pinnae present), or regularly pinnate with 1-veined pinnae; rachis 36.6(7.3–98.0) cm long; pinnae 5(1–29) per side of rachis................................................................... 6
3 Rachillae 36(21–47); Amazonian
Ecuador
and adjacent
Colombia
(
Caquetá
,
Putumayo
) and
Peru
(
Loreto
) .............. ........................................................................................................................................................
subsp.
multiramosa
- Rachillae 21(6–50); Amazonian
Colombia
,
Venezuela
,
Peru
,
Brazil
,
Bolivia
, and the Guianas ................................. 4
4 Rachillae 28(16–42), 1.0(0.7–1.2) mm in diameter; Amazonian
Colombia
(Amazonas,
Caquetá
)..
subsp.
sigmoidea
- Rachillae 21(6–50), 2.5(1.5–3.6) mm in diameter; Amazonian
Colombia
(
Guainia
),
Venezuela
,
Brazil
,
Bolivia
, and the Guianas................................................................................................................................................................... 5
5 Rachillae 13(6–25); southern
Venezuela
and adjacent
Colombia
(
Guainia
) and
Brazil
(Amazonas) ............................ ............................................................................................................................................................
subsp.
hexasticha
- Rachillae 31(9–50); central and eastern Amazon region of
Brazil
and the Guianas .............................. subsp. m
axima
6 Leaves regularly pinnate with 1-veined pinnae; rachis 44.5(11.0–87.0) cm long; basal pinna 0.3(0.1–0.5) cm wide; mostly south or west of the Amazon in
Colombia
,
Brazil
,
Peru
, and
Bolivia
........................................
subsp.
compta
- Leaves undivided or irregularly pinnate (sometimes with 1-veined pinnae present); rachis 35.6(7.3–98.0) cm long; basal pinna 6.1(0.2–34.0) cm wide; widespread .......................................................................................................... 7
7 Leaves plicate; basal pinna forming an angle of 13(4–20)° with the rachis; central–western Amazon region of
Brazil
and adjacent
Colombia
..........................................................................................................................
subsp.
spixiana
- Leaves not plicate; basal pinna forming an angle of 41(10–87)° with the rachis ........................................................ 8
8 Rachis 51.9(38.0–70.0) cm long; western Amazonian
Brazil
(
Acre
),
Peru
, and
Bolivia
..............
subsp.
camptoneura
- Rachis 28.4(7.3–63.0) cm long; central-western Amazon region of
Brazil
and adjacent
Colombia
,
Peru
, and
Bolivia
, and the Guianas ............................................................................................................................................................ 9
9 Rachis 40.0(13.0–59.0) cm long;
Guyana
and adjacent
Venezuela
and
Brazil
.....................................
subsp.
ambigua
- Rachis 25.0(7.3–63.0) cm long; central-western Amazon region of
Venezuela
,
Colombia
,
Brazil
,
Peru
, and
Bolivia
. ..........................................................................................................................................................
subsp.
chelidonura