A monograph of Daviesia (Mirbelieae, Faboideae, Fabaceae)
Author
Crisp, Michael D.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Cayzer, Lindy
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & Present address: Australian National Herbarium, Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: lcayzer @ netspeed. com. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Chandler, Gregory T.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & Present address: Department of Agriculture and Water Resources, 1 Pederson Road, Eaton, Northern Territory 0812, Australia. Email: gregory. chandler @ agriculture. gov. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
Author
Cook, Lyn G.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au & School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia. Email: l. cook @ uq. edu. au & Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Acton, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia. Email: mike. crisp @ anu. edu. au
mike.crisp@anu.edu.au
text
Phytotaxa
2017
2017-03-24
300
1
448
450
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1
1179-3163
13688467
7.
Daviesia wyattiana
Bailey (1880: 102)
,
Stanley & Ross (1983: 253)
, Crisp (1995: 1245),
Crisp (2002: 527)
,
Jeanes (1996: 756)
. Type: ‘... which I found about eighteen months ago growing among rocks at the Eight-mile Plain, a locality to the south of Brisbane.’
Lectotype
(Crisp 1995: 1245): Eight-mile Plain amongst rocks,
F.M. Bailey s.n.
,
October 1878
(MEL 72493);
isolectotype
: BM, BRI
Sparse
shrubs
,
1–2.5 m
tall, glabrous.
Root anatomy
unknown.
Branchlets
triquetrous, angular,
1.5–3 mm
broad.
Phyllodes
scattered, spreading to ascending, linear, apically acute or obtuse, tapered to articulate base, decurrent, 40–370 × 2–8(–10) mm, grey-green, glabrous; midrib prominent; venation pinnate, obscure.
Unit inflorescence
1(– 3) per axil, umbelliform, 4–7-flowered;
peduncle
7–37 mm
long;
barren basal bracts
triangular becoming oblong further up peduncle, keeled, to
1 mm
long;
subtending bracts
oblong, keeled, spreading at tips,
1.5–2 mm
long.
Pedicels
filiform,
6–17 mm
long.
Calyx
3.7–5 mm
long including
0.75–1.5 mm
receptacle, green except for dark red margins in the sinuses; lobes subequal, acute, ca.
1.5 mm
long; upper 2 lobes united slightly higher than the lower 3, apices scarcely recurved.
Corolla
: standard
depressed-ovate, emarginate, 6.5–8.5 ×
6.5–9 mm
including the
1–1.5 mm
claw, with 2 small calli at the base of the lamina, yellow with red or purplish veins radiating from a ring surrounding the pale yellow centre;
wings
obovate with a rounded apex, strongly auriculate, 5–6.5 ×
1.5–2.5 mm
including the ca.
1.5 mm
claw, basally red grading to orange or yellow at apex;
keel
half transversely elliptic, acute, auriculate, saccate, 4.5–5 ×
1.5–2 mm
including the
1–1.5 mm
claw, light red.
Stamens
strongly dimorphic: inner whorl of 5 with slender, terete filaments and shorter, round, versatile anthers with confluent thecae; outer whorl of 5 with broader, compressed filaments and longer, oblong, basifixed, 2-celled anthers; filaments free.
Pod
obliquely shallowly obtriangular, acuminate to acute, ± compressed, 7–11 ×
4–6 mm
; upper suture slightly sigmoid to slightly recurved; lower suture acute.
Seed
ellipsoid,
4.1–5.2 mm
long,
2–2.5 mm
broad,
1.4–1.7 mm
thick, light brown with black mottling;
aril
2.3–3 mm
long. (
Fig. 8
).
Common name:—
Long-leaf Bitter-pea.
Flowering period:—
Rarely in April, mostly August to November.
Fruiting period:
Rarely in May, mostly September to December.
Distribution:—
From the central sandstone ranges of
Queensland
, extending southward to the north coast of
New South Wales
almost as far as Coffs Harbour, then disjunct to the ranges of the NSW south coast and extending south to East Gippsland,
Victoria
.
Habitat:—
Usually on ridges, on skeletal soils derived from sandstone, granite and acidic volcanic rocks, in the shrubby understorey of dry sclerophyll forest.
Conservation status:—
Not threatened. The species is officially declared Vulnerable in
Victoria
because a small population occurs in the far east of the state; however, this is at the very southern end of its natural distribution and it occurs extensively in
New South Wales and Queensland
.
Selected specimens (90 examined):—
[Approximate locality data given for
Victoria
because the species is rare there].
QUEENSLAND
. Burnett:
Beeron Holding,
5 km
W
of ‘
Toondahra’ Homestead
,
25°59’S
,
151°21’E
,
P
.
I
.
Forster
5746 &
A
.
R
.
Bean
,
9 September 1989
(
BRI
,
CANB
,
NSW
).
Leichhardt
:
Carnarvon National Park
,
550 m
N
of Mt Playfair Road
at
24.7 km
W
of turnoff from
Salvator Rosa
access road,
24°46’S
,
146°56’E
,
M
.
D. Crisp
11733
,
31 August 2016
(
BRI
,
CANB
);
Expedition Range
,
Blackdown Tableland
,
South Mimosa Ck
,
23°48’S
,
149°04’E
,
R
.
J
.
Henderson
717
,
S
.
B
.
Andrews
&
P
.
Sharpe
,
20 April 1971
(
BRI
,
MEL
);
Isla Gorge
, ca.
29 km
SSW of Theodore
,
25°09’S
,
149°57’E
,
S
.
L
.
Everist
8016
,
28 September 1968
(
BRI
).
Darling Downs
:
Amiens
,
NW of Stanthorpe
,
28°34’S
,
151°48’E
,
C
.
R
.
Frazier
s.n.
,
6 October 1966
(
NSW 96043
).
Moreton
:
9.5 km
ESE of Murphys Creek Rail Siding
,
27°29’S
,
152°09’E
,
P
.
I
.
Forster
7093 &
L
.
H
.
Bird
,
13 August 1990
(
BRI
,
MEL
,
CANB
);
Mt Gravatt
,
10 km
S
of Brisbane
,
27°33’S
,
153°04’E
,
M
.
D. Crisp
2554
,
25 May 1977
(
CBG
).
NEW SOUTH WALES
.
North
Coast
:
Barcoongere State Forest
,
40 km
N
of Coffs Harbour
,
30°05’S
,
153°05’E
,
E
.
F
.
A MONOGRAPH OF
DAVIESIA
Phytotaxa
300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press •
31
Constable s.n.
,
18 October 1961
(
NSW 70267
,
NT
).
South
Coast
:
22.5 km
directly
NNW of Nelligen
,
2 km
from
Bimberamala Creek
crossing toward
Mares Hill on Western Distributor
,
35°27’S
,
150°05’E
,
M
.D. Crisp 8361
,
4 October 1990
(
CBG
,
BRI
,
MEL
,
MO
,
NSW
).
VICTORIA
.
Gippsland
:
ca.
37°20’S
,
149°20’E
,
A
.
C
. Beauglehole 34082
,
20 September 1970
(
CANB
,
MEL
)
.
FIGURE 8.
Daviesia wyattiana
.
A. Flowering branchlet. B. Inflorescence. C. Pod. A from
Frazier s.n.
(NSW 96043); B from
Crisp 2911
; C from
Constable s.n.
(NSW 70267). Drawn by B-J. Osborne.
32
•
Phytotaxa
300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press
CRISP
ET AL.
Affinity:—
Daviesia wyattiana
most closely resembles
D. stricta
, which is endemic in the Flinders Ranges,
South Australia
. Though the umbellate inflorescences and triquetrous, winged branchlets are obvious similarities between these two species,
D. stricta
may be easily distinguished by the calyx, which enlarges significantly in fruit, is viscid, and has acuminate, maroon, strongly recurved calyx–lobes. Also,
D. stricta
has shorter peduncles (
3–7 mm
) and pedicels (
2–5 mm
), and longer pods (
9–13 mm
long).