Dryopteris sukungiana (Dryopteridaceae), a new species of the D. sparsa complex from Southwest China
Author
Zuo, Zheng-Yu
0000-0002-8334-6132
School of Life Sciences, Yunnan University, Kunming, Yunnan, 650500, China & Germplasm Bank of Wild Species, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China & Kunming College of Life Science, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China & zuozhengyu @ mail. kib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8334 - 6132
zuozhengyu@mail.kib.ac.cn
Author
Lu, Jin-Mei
0000-0002-5721-7812
Germplasm Bank of Wild Species, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China & lujinmei @ mail. kib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 5721 - 7812
lujinmei@mail.kib.ac.cn
Author
Wang, Yue-Hua
0000-0002-7272-0264
School of Life Sciences, Yunnan University, Kunming, Yunnan, 650500, China & wangyh 58212 @ 126. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7272 - 0264
Author
Li, De-Zhu
0000-0002-4990-724X
Germplasm Bank of Wild Species, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China & Kunming College of Life Science, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China & dzl @ mail. kib. ac. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4990 - 724 X
dzl@mail.kib.ac.cn
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-02-18
533
5
256
266
journal article
20592
10.11646/phytotaxa.533.5.2
33442ac8-5c6b-46fa-86b7-c1401fb503c6
1179-3163
6144962
Dryopteris sukungiana
Z. Y. Zuo
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
&
2
), in Chinese
云Dzfl毛ƃ
(yún nán lín máo jué).
Type:—
CHINA
.
Yunnan
:
Maguan
,
103°59’ E
/
22°50’ N
,
1950 m
alt.,
22 June 2021
,
Z
.
Y
. Zuo 4660
(
holotype
KUN-1519949; isotypes HITBC-0061304, KUN-1519950, PE-02354809)
.
Diagnosis:—
The scales of
Dryopteris sukungiana
are blackish brown and spreading (
Fig. 3E
), which is different from all other species in the
D. sparsa
complex (
Fig. 3D, 3F
).
Dryopteris sukungiana
is similar to the ‘typical’ Sino-Himalayan
D. sparsa
with erect rhizomes, deltoid or pentagonal tripinnatifid to tripinnate lamina, basal pinnae abruptly broadened toward the base (
Fig. 3A, 3B
), but differs in having glandular hairs and small fibrillose scales on the abaxial surface of the lamina and the indusia (
Fig. 3G, 3H
). It resembles the Sino-Japanese
D. sparsa
in the catadromous pinnules of the second pair of pinnae and glandular hairs on the indusia and the abaxial surface of the lamina (
Fig. 3H, 3I
); however, the lamina of the Sino-Japanese
D. sparsa
is ovate-deltoid, and the basal pinnae are gradually broadened (
Fig. 3C
).
Dryopteris sukungiana
also looks like
D. angustipalea
Darnaedi, M. Kato & K. Iwats. (1989a: 308)
; however, the latter is endemic to
Indonesia
, and in which the lamina is ovate-deltoid, the basal pinnae are gradually broadened toward the base, rachis and costae are glabrous.
Plants
30–60 cm
tall.
Rhizome
erect, up to
8 cm
long and
2 cm
in diameter, clothed with blackish brown, linear- or ovate-lanceolate, spreading, entire scales.
Stipe
slightly shorter than lamina, ca.
17–38 cm
, covered with glandular hairs when young, brown at base, with blackish brown linear- or ovate-lanceolate, spreading, entire, scales.
Lamina
papery, glossy, deltoid or pentagonal, ca. 26–53 ×
18–35 cm
, tripinnatifid to tripinnate, base not narrowed, apex acuminate, with glandular hairs on abaxial surface.
Pinnae
9–17 pairs, deltate-lanceolate, up to 16 ×
6 cm
, apex caudate-acuminate; Basal 1–3 pairs opposite and alternate upward, oblique, stalked approximately
1–2 cm
. Basal pinnae abruptly broadened toward the base.
Pinnules
9–23 pairs, margin serrate to lobed, opposite at base and alternate upward, lanceolate to rounded, base broadly cuneate, asymmetrical, apex obtuse to truncate. Basal basiscopic pinnules of basal pinnae longest, ca. 5–8 ×
2–3 cm
, base widest, 2-pinnate. Pinnules of the second pair of pinnae catadromous.
Rachis and costa
clothed with glandular hairs and small fibrillose scales.
Veins
pinnate, forked, distinct on both surfaces.
Sori
close to costa on pinnules, with a wide sterile belt on both sides of costa distal to sori.
Indusia
orbicularreniform, entire, with glandular hairs. Reproductive mode and ploidy level: sexual tetraploid.
Additional specimens examined (
paratypes
):
—
CHINA
.
Yunnan
:
Baoshan
,
Z
.
Y
. Zuo 1615 & 4937
; Cangyuan,
Z
.
Y
. Zuo 2862
; Kunming,
J
.
M
. Lu 179
;
Longling,
X
. Cheng et al.,
FB581
; Tengchong,
Z
.
Y
. Zuo 1498, 1520 & 4949
.
Ecology and geographical distribution:
—
Dryopteris sukungiana
was found in mountain forests at alt.
1900‒ 2450 m
in the central, southern, and southwestern parts of
Yunnan Province
,
China
, and perhaps in other neighboring areas.
FIGURE 2.
Illustration of
Dryopteris sukungiana
.
A. Plant. B. Ultimate pinnule. C. Indusium. D. Scales of stipe. (Drawn by Ling Wang, based on the holotype (
Z.Y. Zuo 4660
))
FIGURE 3.
Morphological comparison of the Sino-Himalayan
Dryopteris sparsa
(A, D & G),
D. sukungiana
(B, E & H), and the Sino-Japanese
D. sparsa
(C, F & I). A–C. Frond. D–F. Scales of stipes. G–I. Details of ultimate pinnule.
FIGURE 4.
Maximum likelihood phylogram of
Dryopteris
sect.
Diclisodon
based on nine plastid regions. ML bootstrap support (MLBS) values and the posterior probabilities of Bayesian inference (BIPP) are indicated near nodes, with MLBS over the branches and BIPP under the branches. The thickened branch indicates MLBS=100% and BIPP=1.00.
FIGURE 5.
Maximum likelihood phylogram of
Dryopteris
sect.
Diclisodon
based on nuclear gene
AK1
. ML bootstrap support (MLBS) values and the posterior probabilities of Bayesian inference (BIPP) are indicated near nodes, with MLBS over the branches and BIPP under the branches.
Etymology:—
In honor of late Prof. Su-Gong Wu (Su-Kung Wu in Wide-Giles transliteration) (1935-2013), for his contributions to the taxonomic studies on ferns in
China
, and especially the contributions to collections and studies on the ferns of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. He also edited some sections of
Dryopteris
in
Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae
and
Flora of
China
.