Affinities of the fern genus Ptisana (Marattiaceae) in the Solomon Islands, with descriptions of two new species
Author
Murdock, Andrew G.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7749-2857
Innovative Genomics Institute, University of California, Berkeley, 2151 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, California 94720, USA & University and Jepson Herbaria, University of California, Berkeley, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
andymurdock@berkeley.edu
Author
Chen, Cheng-Wei
No. 37, Lane 656, Chung Cheng Rd., Keelung City, 20246, Taiwan
Author
Huang, Yao-Moan
Taiwan Forestry Research Institute, No. 53, Nanhai Rd, Zhongzheng District, Taipei City, 10066, Taiwan
Author
Glenny, David
Allan Herbarium, Manaaki Whenua, PO Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand
text
PhytoKeys
2020
2020-12-10
170
1
23
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.170.59471
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.170.59471
1314-2003-170-1
FEDFCD1BAB1A5D8D8DE38003D8EBEEDD
Ptisana smithii (Mett. ex Kuhn) Murdock
Figures 5B, D, F
, 6E, J
Marattia smithii
Mett. ex Kuhn, Verh. K.K. Zool.-Bot. Ges. Wien 19: 584. 1869 (lectotype, designated by
Murdock 2008b
, pg. 748: Aneiteum, New Hebrides, Dec 1858,
Herus 5
(lectotype: P!; isolectotype: GH!).
Description.
Fronds 2-pinnate, up to 2.5 m long. Stipe up to 1.2 m long, 2-4 cm diameter at the base, circular in cross-section, surface dark brown to blackish-green, lighter around lenticels, with lacerate rusty scales mixed with broader brown-black scales, base of stipe bearing dense broad brown scales. Fronds bearing 5-8 pairs of pinnae, opposite to subopposite and well-spaced on the rachis, with a single terminal pinna or forking dichotomously at the frond apex, the proximal pinnae somewhat reduced in size (Fig.
5B
). Swollen pulvini present at the base of all segments, pulvini of primary division often with a dorsal ridge, smooth and with a lighter color on secondary divisions (Fig.
5F
). Ultimate segments 15-20 cm long
x
2-2.5 cm wide, narrowly oblong, base rounded but asymmetric, more cuneate acroscopically, apex acuminate (Fig.
6J
). Laminae coriaceous, dark green above, pale below, with sparse tan scales along the veins and midrib abaxially. Leaf margin lightly serrate, often strongly repand. Veins simple, ca. 1.5 mm apart, rarely dividing once near the midrib, curving toward the apex on the marginal side of each synangium (Fig.
6E
). Synangia submarginal, 2.0 mm long
x
0.8 mm wide, 16-20 locules per synangium (Fig.
5D
), receptacles bearing short hairs.
Figure 6.
Comparison of venation and margins (
A-E
) and apices of ultimate segments (
F, G
) of the
Ptisana
species in the Solomon Islands
A, F
P. ambulans
B, G
P. decipiens var. decipiens
C, H
P. decipiens var. delicata
D, I
P. papuana
E, J
P. smithii
. Scale bars: 5 mm.
Selected specimens examined.
Solomon Islands. Vanikoro
: Rain forest, 100 m, 1928,
S.F. Kajewski 677
(F, UC [UC422670, UC1007994], MICH [1177187], US [1916159]); Ngarabu camp, 120-600 m, 17 Jun 2016,
C.-W. Chen & T.-C. Hsu & M. Fanerii SITW10574
(BSIP, TAIF [498575, 520559], TNM); Airport to Uleule River, 20-250 m, 20 Jun 2016,
C.-W. Chen & T.-C. Hsu & M. Fanerii SITW11037
(BSIP, TAIF [498870, 498871, 498872, 498873, 498874], TNM).
Vanuatu. Aneityum
: Southeast, 200 m, 26 Jul 1971, M. Schmid 3905 (L).
Fiji. Rewa Province
: Suva city, I-Suva Forest Park, 17 Sep 2013,
C.-W. Chen Wade3093
(TAIF [439749, 439750, 439751, 439752]).
Habitat and distribution.
Lowland forest, growing along streams and steep hillsides. Solomon Islands: Vanikoro, likely to be found on Nendo; Vanuatu; Fiji; Tonga; Samoa.
Preliminary conservation assessment.
Ptisana smithii
is only known from collections from Vanikoro in the Solomon Islands, but it is widespread in adjacent island groups. It is currently considered Least Concern (LC) based on
IUCN (2012)
.
Note.
The Santa Cruz group is the northern limit of the range of this species. The Salicina clade (Fig.
2
), which includes
P. smithii
, is in need of revision. There are clear sequence and morphological differences from archipelago to archipelago across the Pacific. The Fijian collection sequenced for this study had synangia that were more medial than those from the Solomon Islands.
Brownlie (1977)
described Fijian species as having alternate pinnae, but examination of collections and photographs shows that Fijian plants have opposite or subopposite pinnae as observed in the Solomon Islands. We are retaining the use of the name
P. smithii
here because the morphology agrees so closely with collections from Vanuatu, the type locality, and we anticipate that future work will likely split
P. salicina
into a number of geographically distinct taxa.