SYNOPSIS OF BEGONIA (BEGONIACEAE) FROM THE NORTHERN ARM OF SULAWESI AND SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA, INCLUDING THREE NEW SPECIES
Author
Ardi, W. H.
Research Center for Biosystematics and Evolution, National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN), Jalan Raya Jakarta-Bogor Km 46, Cibinong, Kabupaten Bogor, Jawa Barat 16911, Indonesia. E-mail: wisn 005 @ brin. go. id.
wisn005@brin.go.id
Author
Thomas, D. C.
Research and Conservation, Singapore Botanic Gardens, National Parks Board, 1 Cluny Road, Singapore 259569.
text
Edinburgh Journal of Botany
2022
2022-08-18
79
405
1
50
http://dx.doi.org/10.24823/ejb.2022.405
journal article
10.24823/EJB.2022.405
1747-0036
10524193
10.
Begonia kinhoi
Ardi & D.C.Thomas
,
sp. nov.
§
Petermannia
Most similar to
Begonia macintyreana
M.Hughes
in its erect growth habit, glabrous stems and leaves, and compound thyrse with monochasial partial inflorescences, but it can be easily distinguished by the much shorter peduncles of the female inflorescences (c.
1 mm
long vs
14–20 mm
long); smaller female flower tepals (12–16 ×
7–9 mm
vs c.20 ×
13 mm
) with rounded apex (vs apex acute); cylindrical ovary (vs ovary ellipsoid to obovoid); and longer, pendulous fruit pedicels, which are
13–23 mm
long (vs fruit pedicel c.
15 mm
long, stiff and not pendulous).
– Type:
Indonesia
,
Sulawesi
, North Sulawesi,
Gunung Klabat
,
30 i 2019
,
W.H. Ardi
W.I.
386 (
holotype
BO
;
isotypes
CEB
,
FIPIA
,
SING
).
Figure 8
.
Perennial, monoecious herb, erect, up to c.
60 cm
tall.
Stem
branched; internodes
3–13 cm
long, swollen at the nodes, brownish-reddish, glabrous except for the microscopic glandular hairs.
Leaves
basifixed, alternate;
stipules
semi-persistent, 7–14 ×
4–6 mm
, ovate to oblong, with an abaxially slightly prominent midrib, apex narrowed into bristle projecting up to
3 mm
, margin entire and recurved, pale green, translucent at the margin, abaxially hairy;
petioles
3–9 cm
long, terete, not channelled, concolorous with the stem, glabrous;
lamina
9.5–19 ×
3–7 cm
, asymmetrical, ovate to elliptic, base cordate and lobes not or just slightly overlapping, apex acuminate, margin scalloped, denticulate, adaxial surface green, with red veins, glabrous, abaxial pale green, glabrous;
venation
palmate-pinnate, primary veins 6–8, actinodromous, secondary veins craspedodromous.
Inflorescences
protogynous;
female inflorescences
basal to male, 2-flowered, peduncles c.
1 mm
long;
male inflorescence
a compound thyrse with up to 3 lateral partial inflorescences (thyrses or the upper partial inflorescences developed as simple cymes), each with up to 3 monochasial cymes, each with 2–5 flowers, peduncle of partial inflorescence c.
15 mm
long, bracts caducous.
Male flowers
:
pedicels
10–15 mm
long, white-pinkish, glabrous;
tepals
2, white to white tinged with pink, 7–11.5 ×
6–11.5 mm
, ovate to broadly ovate, base slightly cordate, apex obtuse, outer surface glabrous;
androecium
of c.75 stamens, yellow, filaments up to c.
1 mm
long, slightly fused at the very base, anthers up to c.
1 mm
long, oblong to narrowly obovate, dehiscing through unilaterally positioned slits that are c.1/2 as long as the anthers.
Female flowers
:
pedicels
8–12 cm
long, pale green, glabrous;
tepals
5, white, subequal, 12–16 ×
Figure 8.
Begonia kinhoi
Ardi & D.C.Thomas
,
sp. nov.
A, Habit; B, lamina; C, stipule; D, male inflorescence; E, female inflorescence; F, female flower (front view); G, infructescence; H, ovary (crosssection of middle part). A–H from
W.H. Ardi
WI390. Photographs: W. H. Ardi.
7–9 mm
, ovate to elliptic, outer surface glabrous;
ovary
(excluding wings) 9–13 ×
3–4.5 mm
, cylindrical, pale green, glabrous, locules 3, placentation axile, placentae bilamellate, wings 3, equal, pale green, base mostly cuneate, sometimes rounded, apex truncate to subtruncate, up to
4 mm
at widest point (apically or subapically);
style
c.
3.5 mm
long, basally fused, 3-branched, each stylodium bifurcate in the stigmatic region, stigmatic surface a spirally twisted papillose band, orange.
Fruits
:
peduncles
c.
1 mm
long;
pedicels
13–23 mm
long, pendulous;
seed-bearing part
cylindrical, 12–22 ×
3.5–4.5 mm
(excluding the wings), glabrous, dehiscent, splitting along the wing attachment, wing shape as for ovary, up to
10.5 mm
at the widest point (apically or subapically).
Seeds
barrel-shaped, c.
0.2 mm
long.
Distribution
.
Indonesia
: endemic to
Sulawesi
,
North Sulawesi Province
(eastern North biogeographical region), Gunung Klabat, Gunung Lokon (see
Figure 2
).
Habitat
. Strongly disturbed lowland to upland secondary forest at
350–900 m
elevation.
Etymology
. The specific epithet of
Begonia kinhoi
is in honour of Julianus Kinho, researcher at the Forestry Research Institute of Manado,
North Sulawesi
.
Proposed IUCN conservation category
. Critically Endangered (CR), B2ab(iii).
Begonia kinhoi
is known from only two localities (Gunung Klabat and Gunung Lokon), and two small populations were observed on Gunung Klabat. The
type
locality is a popular mountaineering track in
North Sulawesi
. The forests of Gunung Klabat and Gunung Lokon have no legal status as protected areas, and potential threats, such as tourism and agriculture, were observed in the area. Gunung Klabat is relatively poorly collected, and this species is likely to have a wider range in the forests of Gunung Klabat and Gunung Lokon. However, even if this is the case, its small EOO and AOO, in combination with the observed threats and anthropogenic disturbances (including coconut and vegetable plantations) would still support a Critically Endangered status (
IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee, 2019
).
Additional specimen examined
.
INDONESIA
.
Sulawesi
.
Northern
arm of
Sulawesi
.
Eastern North Sulawesi
:
Gunung Klabat
,
30 i 2019
,
W.H. Ardi
WI390 (
BO
,
FIPIA
,
SING
)
;
Gunung Lokon,
D
. Girmansyah
DG1298 (
BO
)
.
Generative characters such as the shortly pedunculate female inflorescences and infructescences and pendulous fruit differentiate this new species from the similar species
Begonia macintyreana
(see diagnosis). This character combination can also be found in
Begonia
johntania
, which can be easily distinguished, however, by its densely hairy stem and petioles, compressed paniculate-cymose male inflorescences, and smaller male flowers with tepals that are hairy on the abaxial surface.