The inclusion of Akeassia in Grangea (Asteraceae) and description of a new species from Gabon: Grangea ogoouensis
Author
Beentje, Henk
Author
Lachenaud, Olivier
text
Candollea
2020
2020-11-10
75
2
311
319
journal article
20541
10.15553/c2020v752a12
479dd8b7-51b3-425e-b74b-6ba4a5e46f35
2235-3658
5724909
Grangea ogoouensis
O. Lachenaud & Beentje
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 1
,
2
).
Holotypus
:
GABON
.
Moyen-Ogooué
:
Lac Onangué
,
22.X.2014
,
Bidault et al.
1822
(
BR
[
BR0000016174702
]!; iso-:
BRLU
!,
LBV
!,
MO
!,
P
[
P00854719
]!,
WAG
!).
Grangea ogoouensis O. Lachenaud & Beentje
is closest to
G. grangeoides
(J.-P. Lebrun & Stork) Beentje & O. Lachenaud but differs by its mostly pinnatif id leaves (vs. leaves all shallowly toothed), larger phyllaries 1.2 –2.5
×
0.5 –1.2 mm
(vs. 1.2 –1.5(–2)
×
0.3 –0.4 mm
) and fewer pappus bristles,
6 –16 in
outer florets and
12 –18 in
inner florets (vs. 0 –3(–5) and 4–9(–12), respectively). It also resembles
G. maderaspatana
(L.) Desf., but differs from this species by its pappus with free bristles (vs. pappus a coroniform ring), smaller phyllaries
1.2 –2.5 mm
long (vs.
3 –7 mm
long) and capitula mostly terminal and in groups of 2–5 (vs. mostly solitary and axillary).
Annual
herb
, clambering or erect,
5 – 40 cm
tall; stem branched from near base, hispid-pubescent with multicellular hairs to
1 mm
.
Leaves
obovate in outline, 15–50(–100) × 5–23(–54) mm, mostly lyrately pinnatilobed to pinnatifid (deepest and to
12 mm
in proximal part, the lobes dentate) but the upper ones more shallowly dentate, base long-attenuate but the very base slightly widened and clasping the stem; apex mucronate-acute; sparsely hispid-pilose, more densely so near margins.
Capitula
solitary and stalked in upper leaf axils, or more commonly in groups of 2–5 near stem apex (the whole may look like a several-headed cyme when leaves are closely set); peduncle or stalk
1–5 mm
long; capitula
2.5–4.5 mm
high,
4– 7 mm
in diameter; phyllaries
22– 24 in
number, in 2 rows, 1.2 –2.5 ×
0.5– 1.2 mm
, pilose and pectinate to ciliate; receptacle convex, domed.
Florets
many (50+), corollas yellow; outer florets female, in 1–3 rows, cylindrical to narrowly infundibuliform, corolla
0.8–1.1 mm
long, with a few trichomes (but no glands), (3–)4-lobed, lobes
0.15–0.3 mm
long; inner florets many, bisexual, funnel-shaped, corolla
0.8–1.3 mm
long, of which the lobes
0.2–0.3 mm
, with a few hairs (and sometimes a few glands).
Achenes
3-angular or (?when young) flattened,
0.8–1.2 mm
long, slightly pilose, with a few glands; the
outer
with caducous pappus of 6–16 bristles
0.2– 0.3 mm
long; the
inner
with pappus of 12– 18 slightly broad-based bristles
0.3–0.6 mm
long.
Fig. 1. –
Grangea ogoouensis
O. Lachenaud & Beentje.
A.
Entire plant in habitat;
B.
Capitula and upper leaves;
C.
Capitula. [
Bidault et al. 1822
] [Photos: E. Bidault]
Uses
. – The plant sap is used to treat sinusitis (
Quiroz-Villareal et al. 1523
).
Distribution and ecology
. – This species is endemic to west-central
Gabon
, where it is mostly found in the lower Ogooué basin (
Fig. 3
). It occurs in ephemeral vegetation on seasonally flooded rocky or sandy banks of rivers and lakes,
10–106 m
in elevation, and is locally common in this habitat, in association with other annual herbs such as
Oldenlandia capensis
L.f. and
Pentodon pentandrus
(Schumach. & Thonn.) Vatke (
Rubiaceae
)
,
Melochia corchorifolia
L. (
Malvaceae
) and
Euploca katangensis
(Gürke ex De Wild.) E.L.A.N. Simons & Wieringa (
Boraginaceae
)
. It has been collected in flower from March to May and from August to October, corresponding to periods of moderate water levels.
Conservation status
. – The extent of occurrence of
Grangea ogoouensis
is estimated to be
25177 km
², above the limit for Vulnerable status under criterion B1, and its area of occupancy to be
44 km
², within the limit for Endangered under criterion B2. The species is endemic to
Gabon
and occurs in ephemeral vegetation along lakes and rivers, mostly in the Ogooué river system. It is known from
13 specimens
representing 11 occurrences, only one of which occurs in a protected area (Lopé National Park). One occurrence is in a mining concession (Mabounié) where its habitat is at risk from the building of infrastructure associated with mining activities, and another in an oil concession (near Rabi) where similar disturbance is expected due to oil exploitation. Furthermore, there are projects to dredge the Ogooué river between Lambaréné and Port-Gentil to facilitate navigation, which would seriously affect the water regime and consequently the habitat of the species. For all these reasons, a decline in habitat extent and quality and number of mature individuals is projected. The 11 occurrences represent eight locations in the sense of
IUCN (2019)
– all occurrences on the Ogooué downstream of Lambaréné being treated as a single location since they are at risk from the same event – and the species thus qualifies for “Vulnerable” [VU B1ab(iii,v)+B2ab(iii,v)] using the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria (
IUCN, 2012
).
Notes
. – The earliest collections of this species were cited as
Akeassia grangeoides
by LEBRUN & STORK (1993); see the note under
G. grangeoides
. The plant illustrated as
G. maderaspatana
in WHITE & ABERNETHY (1996: 21, fig. a) is presumably
G. ogoouensis
.
Grangea ogoouensis
is, as far as known, the only species of
Asteraceae
endemic to
Gabon
. SOSEF et al. (2006) record
Erlangea plumosa
Sch. Bip.
as endemic to the country, but this species also occurs in the
Republic of Congo
.
Paratypi
. –
GABON
.
Moyen-Ogooué
:
env. village
Olamba
,
9.VIII.2011
,
Boupoya et al.
461
(
BRLU
,
WAG
)
;
Lambaréné
,
21.III.1989
,
Bourobou
55
(
LBV
)
;
Ogooué river
3–4 km
downstream from
Ndjolé
,
28.IX.1994
,
Breteler
&
Breteler
13066
(
BR
,
LBV
,
WAG
)
;
Mabounié
,
10.V.2012
,
Stévart
&
Boupoya
4501
(
BRLU
,
LBV
,
MO
)
;
env. de
Lambaréné
, sur
l’Ogooué
,
1.VIII.1912
,
Fleury in Chevalier
26242
(
P
)
;
Ndjolé
, banks of now very low
Ogooué
,
4.IX.1992
,
Wieringa
&
van de Poll
1585
(
LBV
,
WAG
).
Ogooué-Ivindo
:
Booué
,
26.VIII.1957
,
Anton-Smith
278
(
P
)
;
Lopé
, en-dessous du pont sur
l’Ogooué
,
0°06'17"S
11°24'56"E
,
9.III.2010
,
Bissiengou et al.
1088
(
LBV
,
WAG
)
;
PN de la Lopé
, gallery forest of the
Ogooué river
,
0°05'02"S
11°36'43"E
,
1.IX.2012
,
Quiroz-Villarreal et al.
1523
(
WAG
)
;
Lopé
,
Ogooué-Airstrip beach
,
29.VIII.1993
,
L. White
1019
(
LBV
).
Ogooué-Maritime
:
M’Paga
(or
M’Paya
),
banks of Ogooué
,
12.IV.1986
,
Pauly
257
(
BR
)
;
near
Echira oilfield
,
30.IX.1994
,
Wieringa
&
Nzabi
2817
(
BR
,
LBV
,
P
,
WAG
).