Seven new species of Polystichum (subg. Haplopolystichum; Dryopteridaceae) from southern China
Author
Han, Meng-Qi
Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuangzu Autonomous Region and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guilin, Guangxi 541006, China & College of Life Sciences, Guangxi Normal University, 541004, Guilin, China
Author
Liu, Yan
Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuangzu Autonomous Region and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guilin, Guangxi 541006, China
gxibly@163.com
Author
Zhang, Li-Bing
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, China
gxibly@163.com
text
Phytotaxa
2016
2016-10-21
280
3
201
221
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.280.3.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.280.3.1
1179-3163
13645631
Polystichum multispinulosum
Li Bing Zhang, M.Q.Han & Yan Liu
,
sp. nov.
(
Figures 7
,
8
)
Type
:—
CHINA
.
Guizhou
:
Zhijin County
,
Houzhai Town
,
Chuandong Village
, elev.
1980 m
,
26°37
′
22
″
N
,
105°35
′
12
″
E
, inside a limestone cave,
25 May 2015
,
Mengqi Han
&
Jinquan Huang
HMQ482
(
holotype
IBK
!;
isotypes
CDBI
!,
MO
!)
.
Diagnosis:—
Polystichum multispinulosum
is most similar to
P. lanceolatum
(
Baker 1880: 494
)
Diels (1900: 193)
in having long spinules on the pinna margin, but the former has pinnae of
0.4–0.5 cm
wide and blackish brown rachis scales, while the latter has pinnae of
0.2–0.3 cm
wide and brown rachis scales.
Plants perennial, evergreen,
20–23 cm
tall. Rhizomes ascending,
1.4–1.8 cm
long, ca.
1 cm
diam., with remnant bases of old stipes; roots dull brown when dried,
3–8 cm
long, ca.
0.3 mm
diam. Leaves in tufts, 10–15 per rhizome; petioles
1.5–2.5 cm
long, ca.
1 mm
diam., basal portions densely covered with scales, scales ovate-lanceolate, 3–4.5 ×
1–2 mm
, papery, darkish brown, margins lighter in color and with short outgrowths to nearly entire, apex caudate; distal petiole scales similar but narrower and shorter, deltoid or ovate-lanceolate, 2–3.5 ×
0.4–0.8 mm
, membranous, margins irregularly erose or short-ciliate, apex caudate. Laminae oblanceolate, 1-pinnate, 15–20 ×
2.3–2.7 cm
, apex acuminate, green when dried; rachises
0.7–1 mm
diam., scales deltoid, subulate or ovate-lanceolate, dull brown,
2–2.7 mm
long including tip,
0.4–0.6 mm
wide at base, margins sparsely ciliate, apex long-caudate. Pinnae 25–30 pairs, oblong, 0.7–1.3 ×
0.4–0.5 cm
, basalmost 4–6 pairs smaller toward lamina base, basalmost pair nearly half as large as middle ones,
0.6–0.7 cm
apart, middle pairs
0.5–0.6 cm
apart, all pinnae papery, alternate, basiscopic proximal margins entire, acroscopic margins and basiscopic distal margins toothed, teeth with spines of
0.6–0.8 mm
long, basiscopic margins forming a 60–90° angle with rachis, apex acute, base cuneate and asymmetric with acroscopic sides being much broader, petioles ca.
0.6 mm
long, abaxially sparsely with microscales, microscales subulate, light brown,
1–1.7 mm
long,
0.4–0.6 mm
wide at base, margins with irregular outgrowths; adaxially glabrous; veins visible abaxially but somewhat obscure adaxially, lateral veins free, single or forked. Lower 1–3 pairs of pinnae sterile; sori terminal on lateral veins of fertile pinnae, 1–6 on acroscopic side of fertile pinnae, 0–3 on distal basiscopic side of fertile pinnae, ca.
1.5 mm
diam., approximately in middle of pinna margins and midrib (centers of sori
0.8–1.8 mm
from pinna margins,
0.8–1.1 mm
from midrib), centers
1.6–2 mm
apart from one another; indusia rounded, ca.
0.4 mm
diam., margins lacerate. Spores round in polar view and elliptic in equatorial view; perispore sculpture cristate and shallowly reticulate.
FIGURE 7.
Polystichum multispinulosum
.—A. Inside view of the cave where the new species was discovered.—B, C. Habitats and plants.—D. Portion of abaxial lamina.—E. Portion of adaxial lamina.—F. Lower portion of plant.—G. Portion of pinna showing sori.—H. Equatorial view of spore under SEM.—I. Polar view of spore under SEM.
FIGURE 8.
Polystichum multispinulosum
.—A. Habit.—B. Portions of abaxial and adaxial lamina.
Geographical distribution
:—
Polystichum multispinulosum
is only known from a single cave in northwestern
Guizhou
, Southwest
China
. It is likely endemic to that limestone cave.
Ecology
:—
Polystichum multispinulosum
grows inside a limestone cave at an elevation of
1980 m
with humid and shady conditions.
IUCN Red List category
:—CR-Critically Endangered: Only one population with about 100 plants was seen in the field.
Etymology
:—The species epithet is based on the Latin prefix,
multi-
, many, and the Latin adjective,
spinulosum
, spinulose, referring to the many spinules the species has on pinna margin.
Taxonomic notes
:—Morphologically
Polystichum multispinulosum
has no close relatives in
P.
subg.
Haplopolystichum
. It is superficially similar to
P. lanceolatum
in having long spinules on the pinna margin. It is also somehow similar to
P. liui
Ching
in
Ching & Liu (1983: 28)
but it has longer spinules on the pinna margin. The blackish scales on the rachis distinguishes the new species from all other similar species too. In addition, the perispore sculpture is cristate with numerous shallow reticular formation, not known in any other species of the genus.