Three new species of Heliotropium sect. Heliothamnus (Boraginaceae) from Peru
Author
Luebert, Federico
Freie Universität Berlin, Institut für Biologie, Botanik, Altensteinstrasse 6, D- 14195 Berlin, Germany. E-mail: f. luebert @ fu-berlin. de Departamento de Silvicultura, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Author
Weigend, Maximilian
Freie Universität Berlin, Institut für Biologie, Botanik, Altensteinstrasse 6, D- 14195 Berlin, Germany. E-mail: f. luebert @ fu-berlin. de Departamento de Silvicultura, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile. & Current address: Nees-Institut für Biodiversität der Pflanzen, Meckenheimer Allee 170, D- 53115 Bonn, Germany.
text
Phytotaxa
2012
2012-03-26
49
1
35
44
http://biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.49.1.6
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.49.1.6
1179-3163
5060697
Heliotropium pamparomasense
Luebert & Weigend
,
spec. nov.
(Figs. 2A–B, E, H, 4.)
Type:
―
PERU
.
Ancash
:
Prov. Huaylas
, road from
Moro
to
Pamparomas
, [
9º5'S
,
77º59'W
],
2000 m
,
25 October 2000
,
M
.
Weigend
,
H
.
Förther
&
N
.
Dostert
2000/968
(
holotype
USM
, isotypes
BSB
,
HUT
,
MSB
)
.
Erect shrub, densely branched,
3–4 m
tall with the young branches densely pubescent. Leaves alternate, solitary, petiolate, internodes
1–5 cm
; petiole 0.5–2.0(–3.0) cm long; lamina elliptical, discolorous, 4–12(–15) × 1.5–5.0(–6.0) cm on flowering shoots, to 30 ×
15 cm
on vegetative shoots, base attenuate, apex acute, limb with the veins well-marked and cross-venulate on both sides, secondary veins acroscopical, pubescent, reddish-villous on the adaxial surface, lanate-tomentose on the abaxial surface, pubescence homogeneously distributed. Inflorescences terminal, dichotomically branched up to 4(–5) times, up to
17 cm
long overall, with the axes villous and the terminal branches scorpioid. Flowers complete, sessile,
4–12 mm
long. Calyx persistent, not or slightly accrescent, with the sepals divided to 2/3 of their length; calyx lobes lanceolate, hirsute outside, pilose inside, especially towards the apex,
3–5 mm
long,
1.5–2.5 mm
wide at the base, base usually broadened, apex acute, protracted. Corolla infundibuliform, white, mauve or pale pink,
4–12 mm
long,
4–6 mm
wide; lobes rounded, 0.5–1.5 × 0.5–2.0 mm; tube villous outside, glabrous inside. Stamens
3–4 mm
long; filaments 1.5–2.0 mm long, arising from corolla tube with the distal portion free, free portion
0.5– 0.7 mm
long. Anthers included, coherent, linear to sagittate, 1.2–2.2 ×
0.5–0.6 mm
, margins shortly papillose; base rounded, cordate, located above the apex of the stigmatic head; apex incurved, papillose. Ovary glabrous,
0.2–0.3 mm
high,
0.7–0.8 mm
wide; disc nectary well developed, 1.0–
1.2 mm
wide. Style shorter than the stigmatic head,
0.1–0.2 mm
long. Stigmatic head conical, with a basal receptive ring, 0.8–1.0 mm long,
0.8– 0.9 mm
wide at the base, finely papillose. Fruits dry, dehiscent, falling into 4 one-seeded nutlets. Nutlets solid (without cavities), surface reticulate, stipitately glandular, dark brown, 1.5–1.7 ×
1.2–1.3 mm
. Pollen subprolate, ca. 19–24 ×
16–21 µm
, 3-colporate, 3-pseudocolpate, sexine psilate (
Weigend & Skrabal 5890
).
Distribution and habitat:—C
ommon in the quebradas (streams) around Pamparomas (Dept.
Ancash
, Cordillera Negra) at elevations of ca.
2000–2800 m
(
Fig. 3
). It grows together with other tall shrubs of, e.g.,
Salvia, Iochroma, Cleome
and
Alnus acuminata
Kunth
in relatively moist situations along (seasonal) streams and at the base of rocks. On drier sites between the quebradas it is replaced by
H. corymbosum
Ruiz & Pavón (1799: 2)
, which is extremely common in the area. Another set of collections is from Depts.
Lambayeque
and
Cajamarca
, but so far no material is known from the intervening area. This latter area is considerably moister and the species is here found all over the mountain sides in forest remnants and hedges.
Etymology:—
The name refers to the town near from where the
type
collection comes.
FIGURE 3.
Distribution of the newly described species in Peru.
FIGURE 4.
Heliotropium pamparomasense
. A, Flowering branch; B, Leaf, adaxial surface; C, Leaf, abaxial surface; D, Flower, outer view; E, Flower, view of the corolla tube; F, Flower, inner view; G, Anther; H, Sepal adaxial surface; I, Sepal abaxial surface; J, Fruit, transversal view; K, Fruit, lateral view. (All from
Weigend & Skrabal 5890
, BSB). Drawn by Stefanie Werner.
Additional specimens examined (
paratypes
):
―
PERU
.
Lambayeque
:
Prov
.
Lambayeque
, km 4.6 road
Olmos-Jaén
, [
5º59'S
,
79º39'W
],
1900–2000 m
,
28 June 1959
,
R
.
Ferreyra
13770
(
MSB
,
USM
)
.
Cajamarca
:
Prov. Santa Cruz
,
Bosque de Monteseco
[
6º52'S
,
79º5'W
],
19 December 1984
,
A
.
Sagástegui
,
E
.
García
&
S
.
Leiva
12371
(
HUT
,
MSB
).
Prov. San Miguel de Pallaques
,
Hacienda Lives
, [
7º5'S
,
79º3'W
],
2300 m
,
27 July 1957
,
A
.
Díaz
s.n.
(
MSB
);
Lives
,
7º4'55''S
,
79º2'51''W
,
1500 m
,
13 October 2000
,
M
.
Weigend
,
E
.
Rodríguez
,
H
.
Förther
&
N
.
Dostert
2000/719
(
BSB
,
HUT
,
MSB
).
Prov. San Pablo
,
San Pablo
, [
7º7'S
,
78º50'W
], 1906,
A
.
Weberbauer
3873
(
G
).
Prov. Contumazá
,
Vicinity of Trinidad
, [
7º21'S
,
79º2'W
]
1950 m
,
6 July 1977
,
A
.
Sagástegui
,
E
.
Alvitez
&
J
.
Moscatero
8939
(
G
,
HUT
);
Way
fom
Guzmango
to
San Benito
,
7º23'24''S
,
78º54'1''W
,
2562 m
,
25 April 2001
,
T
.
Henning
&
C
.
Schneider
36
(
BSB
,
HUT
,
M
,
USM
);
Road
from (
Contumazá
)
Guzmango
to
Jeton
,
3 km
after
Guzmango
,
7º23'31''S
,
78º54'4''W
,
2179 m
,
15 June 2008
,
T
.
Henning
&
J
.
Schulz
37
(
BSB
);
La Monatña
(
Guzmango-Contumazá
), [
6º25'S
,
79º13'W
],
2500 m
,
18 May 1979
,
A
.
Sagástegui
,
E
.
Alvitez
&
J
.
Moscatero
9263
(
G
);
Along
the road from
Cascas
to
Contumazá
, [
7º26ºS
,
78º47'W
],
20 February 2002
,
N
.
Doster
&
R
.
Rodríguez
2002/01 (
BSB
,
HUT
,
M
).
Depto
Ancash
:
Prov. Huaylas
, at the road from
Nepeña
to
Pamparomas
,
2.9 km
before
Pamparomas
, [
9º5'S
,
78º1'W
],
2400–2600 m
,
24 September 2001
,
M
.
Weigend
&
J
.
Skrabal
5890
(
BSB
,
MSB
); from
Pamparomas
to
Moro
,
S 09
°
05,316';
W 077
°
58,853',
2780 m
,
14 October 2007
,
M
.
Weigend
&
H
.
H
.
Hilger
8911
(
USM
)
.
This species is allied to
Heliotropium submolle
Klotzsch (1852: 89)
and
H. rufipilum
(Bentham 1845: 140)
Johnston (1928: 44)
. It differs from
H. submolle
by its glandular fruit and reddish pubescence (versus fruit glabrous and pubescence white in
H. submolle
), and from
H. rufipilum
in its much more robust habit, coriaceous leaves with adaxially impressed veins, and not or only slightly accrescent calyx (versus membranaceous leaves without impressed veins and accrescent calyx in
H. rufipilum
).
Heliotropium pamparomasense
is one of the tallest species of the entire genus and grows as a shrub easily
3–4 m
tall, with thick, initially stiffly erect branches. The shrub produces very long, massive renewal shoots from the base, which have particularly huge leaves (>
30 cm
long) and terminate in a compound inflorescence up to
40 cm
in diameter compared to ca.
5–15 cm
in other species.
The specimen
Weberbauer 3873
from San Pablo was tentatively referred to
H. submolle
by
Johnston (1928: 46)
. Leaf form, structure and pubescence of the material seen at G agree, however, with the rest of the material from the Depto.
Cajamarca
cited here, which are distinct from true
H. submolle
(
Pavón s.n.
, B- WILLD!). Unfortunately the specimen
Weberbauer 3873
has only young flowers, hence the glandular character of the fruit surface could not be verified.
The Contumazá and the Pamparomas populations are morphologically very similar in all aspects apart from flower colour: The Contumazá populations have cream-white flowers, the Pamparomas populations have pink to mauve flowers. In the absence of collections from the intervening area we nevertheless advocate treating them as a single species at the moment.