New species of Ceropegia (Apocynaceae) from the Horn of Africa
Author
Bruyns, Peter V.
0000-0002-9368-7184
Bolus Herbarium, University of Cape Town, 7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
peter.bruyns@uct.ac.za
Author
Klak, Cornelia
0000-0001-9271-7065
Bolus Herbarium, University of Cape Town, 7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
cornelia.klak@uct.ac.za
Author
Mazuch, Tomáš
0000-0001-9352-4927
Dřiteč 65, 53305, Czechia
somalia@ceznam.cz
Author
Gelle, Faysal Jama
0000-0001-7143-6942
Biodiversity Museum, University of Hargeisa, Hargeisa, Somaliland
faisaljama24@gmail.com
Author
Elmi, Hassan Sh Abdirahman
0000-0002-1810-8170
Amoud University, Borama, Somaliland
habdirahman@gmail.com
Author
Hanáček, Pavel
0000-0002-9807-1370
Department of Plant Biology, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czechia
pavel.hanacek@mendelu.cz
text
Phytotaxa
2020
2020-05-04
441
2
195
202
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.441.2.6
journal article
303950
10.11646/phytotaxa.441.2.6
c0e268e7-9b0c-4b44-8bb8-49abc9ec743c
1179-3163
13872670
Ceropegia pseudorhynchantha
Bruyns
,
spec. nov
.
Type
:—
ETHIOPIA
. Sidamo Region,
60 km
SE of Negele on track to Welensu ranch,
1350 m
,
May 1982
,
Friis et al. 2751
(
holotype
ETH!,,
isotype
K!).
Figs 1
,
4
.
This new species differs from
C. somalensis
Chiovenda (1916: 427)
by the shorter corolla-tube with proportionally much longer basal inflation, the tube only slightly widening towards its mouth and by the lack of fine hairs on the outside of the tube.
Slender climbing succulent perennial arising from cluster of swollen fusiform roots.
Stem
usually solitary from rootstock, slightly fleshy, climbing to
1–2 m
,
2–4 mm
thick, twining and sometimes branching above, glabrous, grey-green;
leaves
20–40 ×
12–20 mm
, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acute, flat, not fleshy, glabrous except for fine marginal hairs, green, with petiole
8–12 mm
long.
Inflorescence
glabrous, bearing several flowers in gradual succession on slender spreading peduncle
10–25 mm
long with several small bracts at apex;
pedicel
5–8 × ±
1 mm
, grey-green, ascending;
sepals
1.5–2.5 mm
long,
1 mm
broad at base.
Corolla
28–33 mm
long, tubular with lobes remaining fused at tips and twisted together in slender column above tube; outside pale green, glabrous and finely papillate; inside tube with prominent maroon lines on pale green and glabrous in basal inflation, above basal inflation with red lines and fine paler hairs, on lobes pale green along midrib (brownish near base) and rest white with irregular red veins, with short cilia ±
0.5 mm
long on margins of lobes and longer hairs ±
1.5 mm
long along midrib near mouth of tube;
tube
±
16 mm
long, with ovoid basal inflation ± 10 ×
7 mm
, narrowing to
3 mm
diam. then widening gradually to ±
5 mm
at mouth;
lobes
±
17 mm
long, folded longitudinally for lower
4 mm
where ±
4 mm
broad then narrowing to ±
0.25 mm
broad and gradually widening to
0.5 mm
broad at tips.
Corona
± 2.5 ×
3 mm
, with slight basal stipe;
outer lobes
<
1 mm
tall, spreading to
form broad
bays around guide-rails, notched in middle to half of height into two obtuse lobules, translucent with dark purple-black margins and yellow patches inside this, with many straight white hairs <
1 mm
long inside;
inner lobes
±
1.7 mm
long, ±
0.5 mm
broad above middle, adpressed to backs of anthers then rising together in column over centre of gynostegium, yellow in upper third then pale red below, obtuse, glabrous.
Follicles
and
seed
unknown.
Distribution & Habitat
:—This species is known in southern
Ethiopia
in Harerghe near Babile and in Bale around Sof Omar and further south in Sidamo along the track from Negele southwards to Welensu. It occurs at altitudes of
1300–1600 m
, with rainfall probably between 400 and
600 mm
annually, falling mainly in summer.
FIGURE 4
.
Ceropegia pseudorhynchantha
.
A, plant greatly reduced in length (scale 10 mm). B, bud (scale 3 mm). C, side view of flower (scale 3 mm, as for E). D, corolla-lobe (scale 2 mm). E, side view of base of dissected flower. F, side view of gynostegium (scale 1 mm). G, face view of gynostegium (scale 1 mm). H, pollinarium (scale 0.25 mm). Drawn from
Friis et al. 3679
(K) by P.V. Bruyns.
In both areas in the Bale region it occurs on stony flat areas with shallow soils overlaying limestone. In the second area the vegetation consists of scattered trees, with a uniform cover of other shrubs around
1 m
tall and with many other small succulents, mainly growing under these shrubs. The very inconspicuous
C. pseudorhynchantha
climbs into these other shrubs.
Discussion
:—On account of its swollen roots, slightly fleshy cylindrical stem, deciduous non-succulent leaves that are a slightly paler green than the stem and the broadly basin-like outer corona with relatively low, bifid, pubescent lobes, this species belongs to sect.
Phalaena
Huber (1957: 30)
. Analyses of molecular data also placed it there, where it was annotated as ‘
C. rhynchantha
Ethiopia’ in
Bruyns
et al
. 2015
: fig. 1.
This new species was initially thought to belong to
Ceropegia rhynchantha
Schlechter (1913: 155)
which occurs in West Africa. This was because of the similarly slender flowers, slight basal inflation and the only slight expansion of the tube towards the mouth, as well as the relatively long, narrow lobes. It was listed as an unnamed species that is similar to
C. rhynchantha
by
Gilbert (2003: 164)
. However, molecular data showed that it is more closely allied to
C. affinis
Vatke (1876: 218)
and
C. somalensis
(
Bruyns
et al
., 2015
: fig. 1), which also occur in
Ethiopia
and in other parts of North-east Africa. It differs from
C. somalensis
in the considerably smaller flower (this is
35–44 mm
long in
C. somalensis
) which is not pubescent outside (finely pubescent outside in
C. somalensis
) and has a shorter and less constricted tube, more of which is taken up by the basal inflation (the basal inflation is much smaller relative to the length of the tube and of the flower as a whole in
C. somalensis
, as shown in
Bruyns 1989
: fig. 6) and the only slight widening of the tube towards its mouth (while the tube more than doubles its diameter towards the mouth in
C. somalensis
). The shape of the corolla is different from that in
C. affinis
, which lacks the long extensions to the lobes. In
C. affinis
the lobes are short, rising up briefly above the tube to become nearly horizontally incumbent over it in a small, globose cage. In
C. affinis
the gynostegium is raised on a pedestal above the base of the tube, which is lacking in
C.
pseudorhynchantha
.
Ceropegia rhynchantha
also belongs to Sect.
Phalaena
(
Bruyns
et al
., 2017
)
but it is more distantly related to our new species (
Bruyns
et al
., 2015
). In
C. rhynchantha
the corolla is similar in shape, but the tube is slightly longer above the basal inflation (±
13 mm
long as opposed to around
6 mm
long in
C. pseudorhynchantha
).
Ceropegia rhynchantha
also differs in habit. Many plants have shoots spreading horizontally on the ground from the rootstock and the shoots only ascend and twine slightly when they are about to flower. It usually occurs in shallow pockets of soil on large granitic outcrops and boulders, with the shoots forming runners between adjacent pockets of soil on these rocks and readily rooting when a new pocket of soil is reached.
Additional specimens examined
:
ETHIOPIA
. Harerghe Region, Gursum, west side of Daketa Valley, 5.5. km east of Babile,
1500–1600 m
,
May 1993
,
Kuchar & Kidar 19075
(ETH!). Bale Region, Sof Omar, near Ghinir,
1400 m
,
May 1982
,
Friis et al. 3679
(K!). Sidamo Region,
60 km
SE of Negele on track to Welensu ranch,
1350 m
,
May 1982
,
Friis et al. 2751
(ETH!, K!).
28 km
towards Welensu ranch,
1370 m
,
Nov. 2009
,
Bruyns 11584
(BOL!, E!, MO!).