A monograph of the Anisophylleaceae (Cucurbitales) with description of 18 new species of Anisophyllea
Author
Chen, Xin
Author
He, Hai
Author
Zhang, Li-Bing
1 Department of Botany, College of Boology and the Environment, Nanjing Forestry University, 159 Longpan Rd., Xuanwu Qu, Nanjing, 210037, P. R. China 2 College of Life Sciences, Chongqing Normal University, Shapingba, Chongqing 400047, P. R. China 3 Missouri Botanical Garden, P. O. Box 299, St. Louis, Missouri 63166 - 0299, U. S. A. and Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P. O. Box 416, Chengdu, Sichuan 610041, P. R. China * Authors for correspondence: e-mails: hehaicq @ yahoo. com; libing. zhang @ mobot. org
hehaicq@yahoo.com
text
Phytotaxa
2015
2015-10-02
229
1
448
450
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.229.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.229.1.1
1179-3163
13632375
30.
Anisophyllea griffithii
Oliver (1862: 460)
(
Figure 58
)
Type
:—
MALAYSIA
.
Malacca
:
Without
locality, no date,
Griffith
2439
(
lectotype
K-000493108!,
here designated
,
isolectotype
K-000493109!)
.
Trees
to
25 m
tall,
60 cm
in diam.; bark light-brown, smooth, shallowly ridged, cracked or broken into rugs when old; young branches slender, drooping, pannose (with yellowish hairs mostly to
0.16 mm
long) and pilose in an immixed way (with erect or ascending hairs up to
0.6 mm
long), glabrescent when mature; buds pannose.
Leaves
dimorphic, internodes between similar
types
of leaves 1.1–3.0 cm, between two adjacent different
types
of leaves
5–8 mm
;
small leaves
caducous, only leaving scars on young twigs;
large leaves
petiolate, petiole to
3 mm
long,
1.1 mm
in diam.; leaf blade elliptic to ovate-lanceolate, rarely lanceolate,
5–10 cm
long, 2.0–
3.5 cm
wide, base slightly oblique, acute, apex acute to acuminate, margins often slightly revolute, thinly coriaceous, lustrous and greenish-yellow adaxially and rather duller abaxially when dry, glabrous, rarely pilose with yellowish hairs up to
1 mm
long on both surfaces; main longitudinal veins 3, or rarely 5, arising from blade base, midrib straight and bold, impressed adaxially and raised abaxially, outer 2 (or rarely 4) lateral veins very fine and close to blade margins, slightly prominent on both surfaces; transverse veins irregular, some of those from midrib and curved towards blade apex rather conspicuous and forming a pinnate-like venation; veinlets reticulate, visible on both surfaces or sometimes obscure adaxially and slightly prominent abaxially.
Inflorescence
a supra-axillary spike, in 1–2 serials, rachis to
7 cm
long,
0.6 mm
in diam., pannose with brownish hairs
0.06–0.25 mm
long and more densely covered at base of flowers, remotely flowered with floral internodes 1.5–5.0 mm distant.
flowers
bisexual, 4-merous, sessile,
82
•
Phytotaxa
229 (1) © 2015 Magnolia Press
CHEN
ET
AL.
FIGURE 58.
Anisophyllea griffithii
Oliver.
—A. Flowering branch. —B. Fower. —C. Flower with calyx lobes removed. —D. Longitudinal section of flower. —E. Petal and stamen. —F. Petal. —G. Stamen. —H. Cross section of ovary (Drawn by W. H. Fitch; reproduced and modified from Oliver in
Transactions of the Linnean Society of London
23: pl. 48. 1862).
MONOGRAPH OF
ANISOPHYLLEACEAE
Phytotaxa
229 (1) © 2015 Magnolia Press •
83
green, slightly obovoid, glabrous; receptacle cylindrical,
1.7–1.9 mm
long, same in diam.; sepals deltoid, 1.0–
1.3 mm
long,
1.6–1.8 mm
wide at base, coriaceous; petals shorter than sepals, oblong, ca.
1 mm
long,
0.3 mm
wide, entire or slightly emarginated (rarely 3 shallowly lobed), fleshy; stamens 8, in equal length, filaments fleshy, subulate, 0.7–1.0 mm long, epipetalous 4 ca. l/3 adnate to petals, anthers small, ca.
0.25 mm
long; disk 8-lobed, crenulate;styles 4, free, ca.
1 mm
long, base clavate,
0.2 mm
in diam., distally attenuate, apex recurved.
Fruits
broadly ellipsoid or subglobose, 4.5–5.0 cm long, 3.5–4.0 cm in diam., obtuse at each end, glabrous, smooth; pericarp woody, to
1.5 cm
thick.
Seeds
globose,
1.25–1.50 cm
in diam.
Flowering and fruiting:
—January–November (or December).
Habitat and distribution:
—
In lowland forests; below
400 m
.
Brunei
(
Belait
);
Malaysia
(
Johor, Kedah
, Malacca,
Pahang, Penang
,
Sarawak
,
Selangor
);
Singapore
(
Figure 59
)
.
FIGURE 59.
Geographical distribution of
Anisophyllea griffithii
Oliver.
Vernacular names and local usage:
—
Kempas dadeh, delek tembaga, pelepap, poko kumpao dadeh, seluang berlering
. The heavy durable timber suitable for house beams.
Taxonomic notes:
—When
Oliver (1862)
published
Anisophyllea griffithii
, there were only a few species known under this genus and only
A. disticha
,
A. laurina
, and
A. zeylanica
(=
A. cinnamomoides
) were mentioned in his publication. These latter four species are quite different from this species in the nature of leaves. The pinnate-like venation of
A. griffithii
was first reported and attached importance by
Ridley (1922)
and later by
Ding Hou (1958)
, who used this character in their keys to species.
Ding Hou (1958: 475)
assumed that this species has solitary flowers; in fact, its flowers are remotely located on spike-like inflorescences. Our examination of the available material showed that
Ding Hou (1958)
was correct in claiming that only bisexual flowers were observed in this species. This species is also similar to
A. beccariana
but distinguishable from the latter by having shorter petioles, bisexual flowers, and hairy young branches.
We found two duplicates of the gathering
Griffith 2439
collected from Malacca corresponding to the protologue. Here we designate one of them, K-000493108, as the
lectotype
. The distribution of this species in Borneo (
Brunei and Sarawak
) is based on the
additional specimens
we examined
.
Additional specimens examined:
—
BRUNEI
.
Belait
:
Seria
,
Teraja
F
.
R
,
En
route from
Bt. Teraja
to
Kpg. Mendaram
(east route),
100–350 m
,
22 December 1963
,
Mitsuru Hotta 12934
(
L
)
.
MALAYSIA
.
Malacca
: Without
84
•
Phytotaxa
229 (1) © 2015 Magnolia Press
CHEN
ET
AL.
locality, no date,
Griffiith s.n
. (
K000450759
, computer image). Pahang: Lesong
F
.
R
.,
150 m
,
26 June 1972
,
Y
.
C
.
Chan
19850
(
L
);
Without
locality,
January 1888
,
Curtis 148
(
K
),
24 September 1919
,
J
.
W
.
J 4923
(
K
). Penang: Without locality, no date,
Curtis 1511
(
K
). Sarawak: Ulu Segan,
N
.
Setungan
,
4 November 1964
,
P
.
S
.
Ashton
22005
(
K
,
L
).
SINGAPORE
.
MacRitchie Reservoir
,
20 February 1938
,
E
.
J
.
H
. Corner 34689
(K).