New species and species reports of Croton L. (Euphorbiaceae) from the eastern forest corridor of Madagascar
Author
Kainulainen, Kent
Herbarium, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 3600 Varsity Drive, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108, U. S. A.
Author
Ee, Benjamin van
Department of Biology, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Recinto Universitario de Mayagüez, Mayagüez, PR 00680, Puerto Rico, U. S. A.
Author
Antilahimena, Patrice
Missouri Botanical Garden, B. P. 3391, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar.
Author
Razafindraibe, Hanta
Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza, rue Kasanga Fernand, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar.
Author
Berry, Paul E.
Herbarium, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 3600 Varsity Drive, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108, U. S. A.
peberry@umich.edu
text
Candollea
2016
2016-11-23
71
2
327
356
journal article
2894
10.15553/c2016v712a17
3ba10b86-da39-40e8-898c-ee3dfa6f0f05
2235-3658
5721805
Croton radiatus
P.E. Berry & Kainul.
,
spec. nova
(
Fig. 1C
,
11
).
Typus
:
MADAGASCAR
.
Prov.
Toamasina:
Alaotra- Mangoro Region
,
Moramanga Distr.
,
Commune Ambohibary
,
Fokontany Ampitambe
,
Forêt Sahaevo
,
18°49’59”S
48°17’47”E
,
1118 m
,
11.XII.2006
,
Razanatsoa
&
Marcellin
279
(
holo-
:
MICH
[
MICH1458525
]!;
iso-:
MO
!,
TAN
!).
Croton radiatus P.E. Berry & Kainul.
is similar to
Croton incisus Baill.
, but differs in its leaves that are entire to shallowly serrulate or undulate (vs incised), and in the foliaceous, glabrous sepals (vs. densely stellate-pubescent). In its tightly clustered, medium-sized leaves that are separated by long internodes it resembles
Croton hypochalibaeus Baill.
, but differs in its sparser pubescence with scattered stellate trichomes on the leaves (vs. densely silvery white-lepidote and brown punctulate leaves).
Shrubs
to
0.8-2 m
tall, dichotomously or trichotomously branching, with elongate internodes
2-7 cm
long separating clusters of opposite or ternate leaves at the nodes, giving the appearance of whorled branches.
Branches
terete, pale gray, the young growth densely covered by scurfy, brownish, fasciculate to multiradiate trichomes, the longest rays
1.5-2.5 mm
long, the other rays
1.5-2 mm
long, interspersed with smaller, whitish stellate-lepidote trichomes with a porrect, brownish central radius
1-1.5 mm
long.
Stipules
absent or
1-1.5 mm
long and subulate.
Leaves
congested and ± whorled at apex and at nodes. Petioles
1-5 mm
long, pubescent like the stems. Leaf blades papyraceous, entire, serrulate, or with shallow irregular undulations, elliptic, 15-50 ×
7-20 mm
, apex and base acute; adaxial surface medium green and subglabrous, abaxial surface much paler olive-green, mostly glabrous but with widely scattered fasciculate and stellate trichomes, especially along the nerves; venation faint, with 5-7 pairs of brochidodromus, ± penninerved secondary veins; basilaminar glands present in some leaves (but absent in over half of them), when present emerging from the abaxial side several mm from the base of the blade, usually in pairs, sometimes single, stipitate (1.0-
2.5 mm
), discoid (1.0-
1.8 mm
diam.), concave.
Inflorescences
racemose,
8-12 mm
long, axillary at leafy nodes, axis pubescent like the stems, usually with two basal pistillate flowers and 5-10 distal staminate flowers, bracts lanceolate, pale, c.
1 mm
long.
Staminate flowers
with subglobose buds
0.8- 1.7 mm
diam., pedicels
2.5-4 mm
long; sepals 5, lobes broadly triangular to ovate, c. 1.4 × 1.2. mm, apex acute to rounded, abaxially with scattered whitish stellate-lepidote trichomes with a porrect brownish radius, adaxially glabrous, white; petals 5, white, spatulate, c. 1.5 ×
0.5 mm
, abaxially papillate, adaxially glabrous, margins densely ciliate; disc glands/ nectaries 5, opposite the sepals, sessile, broadly triangular and truncate, c. 0.4 ×
0.4 mm
, yellowish; stamens 8-12, white to pale yellow, filaments c. 2.0 mm long, ciliate, anthers elliptic, c.
0.6 mm
long; receptacle pilose.
Pistillate flowers
with pubescent pedicels
2-7 mm
long; sepals 5, light green, ± foliaceous with longitudinal veins evident, oblong to spatulate, somewhat unequal, apex acute to rounded, spreading at anthesis, 2-5 ×
1.5-2 mm
, abaxially with a few scattered stellate trichomes, adaxially glabrous; disc glands/nectaries 5, opposite the sepals, sessile, rounded, c. 0.5 ×
0.4 mm
, pale yellow; glandular filaments 5 (in petal position alternating with sepals), c.
0.9 mm
long; ovary globose, 1.5-2.0 mm diam., densely stellate, styles 3, 10-
16 mm
long, terete, ascending, each bifurcating twice (yielding 4 stigmatic tips per branch, or c. 12 overall), abaxially with a few scattered stellate trichomes; ovary densely hirsute, with stiff, light brown fasciculate trichomes with radii
1.2- 1.5 mm
long.
Capsules
and
seeds
not seen.
Etymology.
–
The specific epithet refers to the radiate nature of the prominent trichomes, which are rather sparsely scattered on the abaxial leaf surface but much denser along the young shoots.
Fig. 4. –
Croton droguetioides
Kainul. & Radcl.
-Sm.
A-B.
Staminate flower;
C.
Staminate flower with stamens removed to show the nectaries;
D-E.
Pistillate flower;
F.
Pistillate flower with ovary removed to show the nectaries. Note the glandular filaments in the petal position. [
A-C:
van Ee et al. 2243;
D-F:
van Ee et al. 2247
]
Phenology
. – Of the four known specimens, one was collected in flower in December and the others in April and late July, which indicates the species is probably aseasonal in its flowering.
Distribution, habitat and ecology
. –
Croton radiatus
is known so far from four collections, in dense, humid, montane forests along the eastern escarpment of
Madagascar
in the Ankeniheny-Zahamena forest corridor in the Alaotra-Mangoro and Analanjirofo Regions of
Toamasina Prov.
, at elevations of
900-1120 m
(
Fig. 1C
).
Notes. –
Croton radiatus
shows a similar sylleptic growth pattern to other species like
C. hypochalibaeus
, in which long internodes separate nodes where the leaves are clustered (
Fig. 11A
,
13A
). This may just represent growth spurts stimulated by periodic periods of rains following warmer, dry periods. The new species is distinctive in the ± foliaceous sepals of the pistillate flowers along with the stiffly hirsute ovary.
According to the classification of foliar trichomes in WEBSTER et al. (1996), the larger brownish trichomes of
C. radiatus
are fasciculate or multiradiate, with the radii ascending rather than in one plane, and they vary from up to 8 radii per trichome (fasciculate) to more than 8 per trichome (radiate). The smaller, interspersed, whitish trichomes are stellate-lepidote with a larger, porrect, and brown central radius (see
Fig. 11
C-D). Similar, but much shorter trichomes are also characteristic of
C. ankeranae
and
C. indrisilvae
.
Paratypi
.
–
MADAGASCAR
.
Prov. Toamasina
:
Alaotra-Mangoro Region
,
Ambatondrazaka Distr.
,
env. du Lac Alaotra (S-39)
,
IV.1939
,
Cours
1257
(
P
);
chutes du Maningory
,
Lac Alaotra (
S
-39)
, s.d.,
Herb. Jard. Bot.Tan.
3769
(
P
);
Analanjirofo Region
,
Vavatenina Distr.
,
Ambodimangavalo
,
Antevibe
,
Sahandrazana à
3 km
au NW d’Antevibe, hors du Parc National de Zahamena
,
17°32’S
48°48’E
,
900 m
,
31.VII.2003
,
Rakotondrajaona et al.
298
(
CNARP
,
MICH
,
MO
,
P
,
TEF
).