Further discoveries in the ever-expanding genus Begonia (Begoniaceae): fifteen new species from Sumatra
Author
Hughes, Mark
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20 a Inverleith Row, EH 3 5 LR, UK. & Corresponding author: m. hughes @ rbge. ac. uk
m.hughes@rbge.ac.uk
Author
Girmansyah, Deden
Herbarium Bogoriense, Botany Division, Research Center for Biology, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Cibinong Science Center (CSC), Jl. Raya Jakarta-Bogor Km 46, Cibinong, Bogor 16911, Indonesia. & Email: deden _ bo @ yahoo. com
deden_bo@yahoo.com
Author
Ardi, Wisnu Handoyo
Center For Plant Conservation-Bogor Botanic Garden, Jl. Ir. H. Juanda No. 13, P. O. Box 309, Bogor 16003, Indonesia. & Email: wisnu. handoyo. ardi @ lipi. go. id
handoyo.ardi@lipi.go.id
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2015
2015-12-21
167
1
40
journal article
22343
10.5852/ejt.2015.167
72b00f76-b85d-47c0-877f-511110a6a0f4
2118-9773
3805815
Begonia olivacea
Ardi
sp. nov.
§.
Reichenheimia
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77151649-1
Figs 4
,
14
Diagnosis
The nearest species morphologically to
Begonia olivacea
is
B. nurii
Irmsch. (
Irmscher 1929
)
from
Kelantan
in Peninsular
Malaysia
, the former differing in being a slightly smaller plant (leaves 2.7–4.5 ×
2.6–3.7 cm
, not
c.
4 ×
4–6 cm
), having 3 (not 2) tepals in the female flowers, sparsely hairy petioles (not red-woolly), and duller green leaves (
Kiew 2005
). Also similar is
B. droopiae
Ardi (
Ardi & Hughes 2010
)
from limestone in West Sumatra, which has more asymmetric leaves with darker variegation, and which is smoothly bullate between the veins (not mostly flat). See under
B. simolapensis
for a comparison with that species.
Etymology
The epithet reflects the dull greenish brown olive colour of the leaves.
Type
SUMATRA
:
North Sumatra Province
, Leuser National Park, Simolap,
250 m
,
9 Jul. 2011
,
Carmen Puglisi 230
(holo-:
BO
; iso-:
E
).
Additional material
SUMATRA
:
Aceh
, Gajolandan,
600 m
,
25 Feb. 1937
,
Van Steenis 9273
(
BO
); ibid.,
600 m
,
26 Feb. 1937
,
Van Steenis 9321
(
L
); Ketambe Research Station, Gunung Leaser Nature Reserve,
300–350 m
,
9 Jun. 1979
,
de Wilde & de Wilde Duyfjes 18002
(
L
).
Description
Lithophytic acaulescent herb. Stem rhizomatous, internodes very short
c.
1–2 mm
long.Stipules persistent, with
2 mm
long hairs on the keel,
10 mm
long, narrowly oblong, with a
3.5 mm
long filiform extension at the apex. Leaves: petiole
2.5–9 cm
long, terete, sparsely hairy; lamina suborbicular, asymmetric, 2.7–4.5 ×
2.6–3.7 cm
, basifixed, base cordate with lobes sometimes slightly overlapping, abaxially mid green on the veins, dark purplish green between, occasionally all green with a faint purplish tinge between the veins, glabrous, slightly prominent between the veins, coriaceous, adaxially with sparse hairs on veins only, primary veins 5–7, margin crenate and fringed with sparse short hairs and recurved stiff teeth at the end of the veins, apex rounded. Inflorescences axillary, cymose, branching 2 times, few flowered, bisexual, protandrous; peduncle
7.5–10.5 cm
long, glabrous,; bracts minute, caducous. Male flowers: pedicel
10–15 mm
long, glabrous; tepals 4; outer tepals broadly ovate, 7–8 ×
6–7 mm
, white, glabrous, slightly cordate at the base becoming truncate when open, margin entire; inner tepals narrowly obovate or elliptic,
c.
7 ×
2 mm
, white; androecium pale yellow, symmetric, globose, on a
1.5 mm
long column; stamens 35–40. Female flowers: pedicel
c.
14 mm
long; ovary green, glabrous, total size including wings
c.
5 ×
11 mm
; capsule ellipsoid, 5 ×
3 mm
, locules 3, placentae entire; wings 3, equal, rounded at base and sub cuneate at the apex, widest point at the middle,
c.
4 mm
; tepals 3; outer tepals 2, 6.5–7 ×
6 mm
, sub orbicular, white, glabrous; inner tepal 1,
c.
5 ×
2.5 mm
, elliptic; stigmas 3, pale yellow-green, forked and once spirally twisted, caducous. Fruit recurved on a
17 mm
long pedicel; total size
c.
5 ×
16 mm
including the wings, wings
5 mm
wide; apex obtuse.
Distribution and habitat
North Sumatra
and
Aceh
, Gunung Leuser National Park (
Fig. 4
). This species grows in meagre, dusty soil on limestone rock at
250–600 m
altitude.
Fig. 14.
Begonia
olivacea
Ardi
sp. nov.
A
. Habit, showing petiole elongation in older leaves.
B
. Green colour form.
C
. Female flower bud and ovary.
D
. Plant with male flower.
E
. Male flowers. A, B, D photographed at the type locality of Simolap; C, E taken from a plant in cultivation at Bogor Botanic Garden (accession B2013070037, derived from material collected at the type locality). Scale bars on insets: B, D = 5 cm; C, E = 1 cm.
Conservation status
The limestone habitat of the Gunung Leuser National Park in the Simolap area where this species occurs is relatively intact. As long as this remains the case,
B. olivacea
can be considered as belonging to the IUCN category of Least Concern.