Aspidistra albovillosa (Asparagaceae), a new species from Guangxi, China
Author
Ding, Tao
0009-0005-7566-8448
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Plant Conservation and Restoration Ecology in Karst Terrain, Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Chinese Academy of Sciences, CN- 541006, Guilin, Guangxi, China & dingtao @ gxib. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0009 - 0005 - 7566 - 8448
dingtao@gxib.cn
Author
Pan, Bo
0000-0003-0996-524X
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Functional Phytochemicals Research and Utilization, Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Chinese Academy of Sciences, CN- 541006, Guilin, Guangxi, China & panbo @ gxib. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0996 - 524 X
panbo@gxib.cn
Author
Lin, Chun-Rui
0000-0002-3539-5490
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Functional Phytochemicals Research and Utilization, Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Chinese Academy of Sciences, CN- 541006, Guilin, Guangxi, China & chunruilin @ tom. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3539 - 5490
chunruilin@tom.com
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-10-17
620
3
244
250
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.620.3.5
journal article
273165
10.11646/phytotaxa.620.3.5
d4b6830d-c1b4-452d-a846-5362e2d3b5bb
1179-3163
10012445
Aspidistra albovillosa
T. Ding, B. Pan & C.R. Lin
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
,
2
)
Type:
—
China
.
Guangxi
,
Luizhou City
,
Luijiang District
,
Luoman Town
,
Qiaomu Village
, in the crevices of the stones on shady, at the foot of the limestone hill, not common,
109°11’ E
,
24°22’ N
, alt.
130 m
,
27 April 2023
,
Tao Ding
&
Bo Pan
2703
(
holotype
:
IBK
!, Isotype:
IBK
!)
.
FIGURE 1.
Aspidistra albovillosa
sp. nov.
: (A) flowering plant; (B) flower, lateral view; (C) flower, apical view; (D) flower, dissected opened to show pistil and stamens; (E) stigma, abaxial view (6-merous); (F) pistil; (G) stigma, apical view (8-merous); (H) stigma, apical view (6-merous). (Drawn by Qiu-Lan Lv).
Diagnosis:
—The new species is morphologically similar to
A. ovatifolia
, but clearly distinguished by its perianth lobes basely with purplish red appendages, which sometimes white and slightly rolled upwards at apex, tube adaxially densely with white villous, stigma slightly undulate and 6 (or 8) lobed at margin.
FIGURE 2.
Aspidistra albovillosa
sp. nov.
: (A) habit; (B) flowering plant; (C) flower, dissected opened to show pistil and stamens; (D) flower, lateral view; (E) stigma, apical view (8-merous); (F) stigma, apical view (6-merous); (G) apical view of flower with 6 lobes; (H) pistil; (I) stigma, abaxial view; (J) apical view of flower with 8 lobes.
FIGURE 3.
Aspidistra ovatifolia
: (A) habit; (B) flower, lateral view; (C) flower, apical view; (D) flower, dissected opened to show pistil and stamens; (E) pistil; (F) stigma, apical view; (G) stigma, apical view.
Herbs
perennial, evergreen, rhizomatous.
Rhizome
creeping, subterete,
6–8 mm
thick, covered with scales, nodes dense.
Roots
numerous.
Vagina
leaves 4–5, purple-red,
1–10 cm
long, enveloping base of petiole, becoming blackbrown when dry.
Leaves
solitary, ca.
1cm
apart;
petiole
stiff, upright,
12–24 cm
long,
2–3 mm
thick, adaxially sulcate;
leaf blade
broad ovate to ovate,
14–17 cm
long,
8–13 cm
wide, dark green, base cordate to suborbicular, abruptly narrow into petiole, inequilateral, apex cuspidate to acuminate, margin entire.
Peduncle
decumbent, pale green slightly with purplish red spots,
2–4 cm
long, with 4–5 bracts, terminal 1 or 2 close to flower; the
bracts
at the base of perianth broadly ovate, white with purple spots, ca.
8–10 mm
long,
10–12 mm
wide, apex subobtuse.
Flowers
solitary at the top of the peduncle;
perianth
urceolate, fleshy, slightly 6 (or 8) lobed apically;
lobes
suberect, triangular,
2–3 mm
long and
2–4 mm
wide at base, abaxially whitish and slightly purplish mottled, adaxially pale yellow, densely with purplish red speckles at base, each lobe basally with an adaxial, purplish red, toothlike appendage, ca.
2 mm
long,
2–4 mm
wide, apex with 2–3 denticulate, and sometimes white, slightly rolled upwards, appendages protruding horizontally or obliquely over tube opening and reducing the opening to
2–4 mm
;
tube
8–10 mm
long, greatest
12–15 mm
in diam., abaxially white and sometimes slightly with purplish red spots, adaxially deep purple to nearly purplish black, densely white villous.
Stamens
6 (or 8), opposite to lobes, inserted at ca.
2mm
from the base of perianth tube, positioned conspicuously lower than stigma;
anther
subsessile, ovate, ca.
2 mm
long and ca.
1 mm
wide, pollen yellow;
Pistil
7–8 mm
long,
ovary
indistinct,
style
cylindrical, ca.
2 mm
long,
stigma
peltate, enlarge, round,
10–12 cm
in diam.,
5–6 mm
high, upper surface yellow to yellowish white, glabrous, the central part slightly convex with 3 or 4 radial, 2–3 forks lines,
slightly
undulate and 6 (or 8) lobed at margin, lower surface dark purplish red, with 12 (or 16), alternating large and small longitudinal ribs. Flowering from April to May.
Etymology:—
The specific epithet ‘
albovillosa
’ is derived from the perianth tube adaxially densely with white villous. The Chinese name is given as ‘
ǝfflÑṞffifi
’(Chinese pinyin: bái máo zhî zhű bào dàn).
Distribution and ecology:
—
Aspidistra albovillosa
is currently only known from the
type
locality in Luijiang District, central
Guangxi
,
China
. It grows under broad-leaved evergreen forests, in shaded rocky limestone slopes at elevation range of
120–
240 m
. Living plants introduced from the
type
locality are currently cultivated in Guilin Botanical Garden of
Guangxi
Institute of Botany.
Conservation status:
—
In the field investigations,
Aspidistra albovillosa
was only found from the
type
locality with one populations with about 80 individuals. All discovered individuals were occurring in the natural scenic spot, where the habitat was in good condition. The further detailed investigation of the same habitats is also needed to give a better understanding of its natural distribution and abundance, and the status of new species is currently considered as Data Deficient (
DD
), following the
IUCN
Red List Categories and Criteria (
IUCN 2022
)
.
Similar species:—
Aspidistra albovillosa
is similar to
A. ovatifolia
Yan Liu & C. R. Lin
in
Lin
et al.
(2014: 287
,
Fig. 3
) in the urceolate perianth and ovate leaf blade, but differs by the widerleaf blades (
8–13 cm
vs.
6–9.5 cm
wide), the purplish red (vs. pure white) and slightly rolled upwards at apex (vs. flat) appendages at the base of the perianth lobes, surface of the perianth tube (adaxially densely villous vs. with 8 longitudinal grooves), thre ovate (vs. oblong) anther, structure of the stigma (margin slightly undulate and 6 (or 8) lobed vs. margin bent upwards, with 16 longitudinal ribs). A detailed morphological comparison between the two species is provided in
Table 1
.