Atlas Florae Europaeae notes, 35. Further critical notes on Cytisus sect. Tubocytisus (Fabaceae) in Europe
Author
Sennikov, Alexander N.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6664-7657
Botanical Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00014, Finland
alexander.sennikov@helsinki.fi
Author
Tikhomirov, Valery N.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1822-0557
Belarusian State University, Minsk, Belarus
text
PhytoKeys
2024
2024-02-23
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199
230
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.238.118032
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.238.118032
1314-2003-238-199
2C202838490D5F6CA2296FE1958BBBE2
8.
Cytisus pygmaeus Willd., Sp. Pl., ed. 4, 3(2): 1127 (1802)
- Chamaecytisus pygmaeus
(Willd.) Rothm. in Feddes Repert. 53: 144 (1944) -
Chamaecytisus austriacus subsp. pygmaeus
(Willd.) Ponert in Feddes Repert. 83: 619 (1973).
= Cytisus tmoleus
Boiss., Diagn. Pl. Orient., ser. 1, 2: 11. 1843, syn. nov. -
Cytisus eriocarpus subsp. tmoleus
(Boiss.) Cristof. in Webbia 45(2): 207 (1991) -
Chamaecytisus tmoleus
(Boiss.) Rothm. in Feddes Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 53: 144 (1944). Type. Turkey. "Asia Minor",
P.
Aucher-Eloy
1101
(syntypes K 000829770, P 02952916, 02952919).
= Cytisus chrysotrichus
Boiss., Diagn. Pl. Orient., ser. 1, 2: 12 (1843). Type. Turkey. Bursa Province: "In dumosis Olympi Bithyniae" [=
Uludag
Mt.], 06.1842,
E. Boissier
(syntypes K 000829766, 000829767, LE 01207296-01207299, NY 1843152).
= Cytisus thirkeanus
K.Koch in Linnaea 19(1): 61 (1846). Type. Turkey. Trabzon Province: "Asia minor. Litus australis Pontus Euxini", [1843],
Thirke
(lectotype LE 00013761, designated here; isolectotypes LE 00013760, G-Boiss 00365031). Fig.
12
.
Type
.
Turkey
. [Galatia],
D. Sestini
(
lectotype
B-Willd 13632-010, designated by
Pifko
and Barina (2016
: 172);
isolectotype
HAL 0100154)
.
Figure 12.
Lectotype
of
Cytisus thirkeanus
K.Koch.
Distribution.
European and Asiatic Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece (
Kuzmanov 1976
;
Cristofolini 1991
;
Assyov and Petrova 2012
), Romania (Fig.
13
). Other European records, from North Macedonia and Serbia (
Diklic
1972
;
Micevski 2001
), seem to belong mostly to
C. jankae
or
C. calcareus
. A record of
C. jankae
from Romania (
Grintescu
1957
) is treated as belonging to
C. pygmaeus
here.
Figure 13.
Distribution of
Cytisus pygmaeus
Willd.
Notes on taxonomy.
The leaves of this species may vary slightly from oblong-lanceolate to oblanceolate. Plants with the leaves looking more lanceolate were described as
C. pygmaeus
and
C. chrysotrichus
, whereas plants with rather oblanceolate leaves were named
C. tmoleus
and
C. thirkeanus
. This difference, albeit very subtle, led
Cristofolini (1991)
to classify
C. pygmaeus
as a subspecies of
C. austriacus
, whereas he placed the plants described as
C. tmoleus
to
C. eriocarpus
. Having examined some material from Asiatic Turkey, we observed both types of leaves in the same plants; this makes the distinction practically impossible.
The pubescence on calyces of
C. pygmaeus
is variable, ranging from semi-patent to subappressed. The type collection of
C. pygmaeus
has clearly semi-patent hairs.
Niketic
(2021)
provisionally accepted the occurrence of
C. pygmaeus
in Serbia, although the relevant materials have not been examined.
Micevski (2001)
listed it among doubtful records in North Macedonia. The collections identified as
C. pygmaeus
which we examined from the Balkans belong to
C. jankae
, and we assume that the distribution of
C. pygmaeus
in Europe may be much more limited than it is currently believed.
Notes on nomenclature.
Willdenow (1802)
described the species without mentioning floral characters. His indication of
"Galatia"
in the protologue corresponds to the fruiting specimen of D. Sestini in
Willdenow's
personal collection. A duplicate of this collection was separated to HAL, which allowed
Pifko
and Barina (2016)
to designate a lectotype at B.
The synonymy above was established already by
Boissier (1872)
, except for the placement of
C. tmoleus
, which he considered to differ in a denser, sericeous indumentum of the plant. According to our observations, the density of indumentum in
C. pygmaeus
may look variable, depending on ecological conditions, and the plants described as
C. tmoleus
can be regarded as an extreme variant.