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
14.
Begonia pitopangii
D.C.Thomas & Ardi
,
sp. nov.
§
Petermannia
Most similar to
Begonia strachwitzii
Warb. ex Irmsch.
in its growth habit (erect, up to
35 cm
tall), densely hirsute stem, leaf morphology (an ovate to elliptic leaf lamina with palmate-pinnate venation) and female flowers with five tepals, but it differs in having male flowers in a thyrse composed of up to 4 partial inflorescences (monochasia) (vs composed of up to 6 partial inflorescences, which branch dichasially at the base), and a female inflorescence or infructescence with a shorter peduncle (
1–2 mm
long vs
5–10 mm
long).
–
Type:
Indonesia
,
Sulawesi
, Central Sulawesi, Donggala Regency,
Gunung Sojol
,
7 viii 2018
,
W.H. Ardi
WI306 (
holotype
BO
;
isotypes
FIPIA
,
SING
).
Figure 11
.
Figure 11.
Begonia pitopangii
D.C.Thomas & Ardi
,
sp. nov.
A, Habit; B, male inflorescence; C, male flower (front view); D, fruit. A–D from
W.H. Ardi
WI306. Photographs: W. H. Ardi.
Perennial, monoecious herb, erect, up to c.
35 cm
tall.
Stem
branched; internodes
2–8.5 cm
long, densely hairy with short bristly hairs, c.
0.5 mm
long.
Leaves
basifixed, alternate;
stipules
caducous, c.5 ×
1.5 mm
, elliptic, with a slightly prominent midrib on the abaxial surface, apex narrowed into bristle projecting up to
1 mm
, brownish, abaxially hairy;
petioles
4–8 cm
long, concolorous with the stem, hairy, c.
0.5 mm
long;
lamina
5.5–12 ×
3–8 cm
, asymmetrical, ovate to elliptic, base narrowly cordate or almost truncate, lobes rarely overlapping, apex acuminate, margin serrate to double serrate to shallowly lobed (up to 20% of lamina width), teeth bristle-pointed, adaxial surface green, prominent between the veins, glabrous to very sparsely bristly hairy between the veins, abaxial surface pale green, hairy on the veins only;
venation
palmate-pinnate, primary veins 6 or 7, actinodromous, secondary veins craspedodromous.
Inflorescences
: protogynous;
female inflorescences
1(or 2)-flowered, positioned one node below the male inflorescences or single female flowers on multiple successive nodes below the male inflorescence, peduncles
1–2 mm
long, sparsely hairy, bracts caducous;
male inflorescence
a thyrse consisting of 1–4 monochasial partial inflorescences, each with 2–6 flowers, peduncles of partial inflorescences up to
2 mm
long.
Male flowers
:
pedicels
10–17 mm
long, reddish, glabrous;
tepals
2, white, 5–10 ×
9–12 mm
, broadly ovate, base slightly cordate when young, truncate at anthesis, apex rounded, outer surface glabrous;
androecium
of c.31 stamens, yellow, filaments up to c.
0.7 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
c.
6 mm
long, red, moderately hairy with bristle hairs;
tepals
5, subequal, c.5 ×
3 mm
, ovate, creamy reddish, glabrous;
ovary
(excluding wings) c.4.5 ×
2 mm
, cylindrical, red, glabrescent, wings 3, subequal, rounded at base, truncate at the apex, widest point
c.
2 mm
apically.
Fruits
:
peduncles
c.
2 mm
long;
pedicels
10–12.5 mm
long, reddish, hairy;
seed-bearing part
cylindrical, 8–10 ×
3.5–4 mm
(excluding the wings), greenish-reddish, glabrous, dry capsule, dehiscent, splitting along the wing attachment, wing base rounded, apex truncate, up to
9 mm
at the widest point (apically or subapically), wing margins ciliate.
Seeds
barrel-shaped, c.
0.2 mm
.
Distribution
.
Indonesia
: endemic to
Sulawesi
,
Central Sulawesi
(western North biogeographical region), Mount Sojol (see
Figure 2
).
Habitat
. The species grows in lowland secondary forest, in full shade, at
20–250 m
elevation.
Etymology
. The specific epithet of
Begonia pitopangii
is in honour of Professor Ramadanil Pitopang, a plant taxonomist at University Tadulako, Palu, who is an expert on the
Sulawesi
flora and has collected extensively on the island.
Proposed IUCN conservation category
. Data Deficient (DD). This species is known from only a single locality, the Mount Sojol Forest Reserve. The forests in the wider area are botanically very poorly explored and collected. Consequently, we assess this species as Data Deficient (
IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee, 2019
).