A taxonomic revision of the genus Pauridia (Hypoxidaceae) in southern Africa
Author
Snijman, Deirdre A.
Compton Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X 7, Claremont 7735, South Africa / Department of Botany and Plant Biotechnology, University of Johannesburg, PO Box 524, Auckland Park, Johannesburg, 2006, South Africa;
d.snijman@sanbi.org.za
text
Phytotaxa
2014
2014-10-14
182
1
1
114
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.182.1.1
1179-3163
8307173
1.
Pauridia etesionamibensis
(U.Müll.-Doblies
etal
. 2011: 320)
Snijman & Kocyan (2013: 27)
.
Fig. 6
Bas.:—
Spiloxene etesionamibensis
U.Müll.-Doblies
, Mark.Ackermann, Weigend & D.Müll.-Doblies. Type (
holotype
):—
NAMIBIA
. Farm Spitskop (LUS 111) [QDS: 2716DC],
25 September 1977
,
Merxmüller & Giess 32268
(M! [image], isotype WIND!)
Plants
7–15 cm
tall. Corm more or less ovoid,
7–14 mm
diam., covered with several fibrous tunics; fibres finely herringbone-patterned, brown, free from disc-like remnants of old corms, truncate distally; roots growing from corm proximally. Cataphyll membranous, up to
22 mm
long. Leaves 3–6, sometimes sheathing for up to
25 mm
from base, spreading to pendant, linear to narrowly lorate, often curved, 35–310 ×
2–9 mm
, attenuate proximally, tapering evenly upwards, more or less carinate, pale green, usually flaccid, margin smooth. Inflorescences usually
2 in
flower at a time, 2(3)-flowered, shorter than leaves; scape up to 70 × ca.
1.5 mm
, somewhat compressed, green; bracts 2, clasping pedicels in lower half, lanceolate, 10–26 ×
3–5 mm
, keeled, pale green, thin-textured, margin translucent. Flowers pedicellate, stellate, white or pale pink, with an orange-yellow eye or dark pink central ring, backed with green and sometimes tinged with wine-red in outer whorl; pedicels spreading, 15–70 × ca.
1 mm
, green to pinkish; tepals 6, elliptical, 6–10(–17) mm long, outer 3.2–5.0 mm wide, minutely mucronate, inner 2.0–
3.5 mm
wide. Stamens 6, suberect, outer slightly shorter than inner, yellow; filaments inserted on raised ovary dome away from tepals, outer
1.5–3.5 mm
long, inner
2–3 mm
long, equalling or exceeding anthers; anthers oblong, latrorse, 1.7–3.6(4.2) ×
0.7 mm
, basal lobes up to
0.5 mm
long; pollen yellow. Ovary broadly obconical, 2–4 ×
2–3 mm
, 3-locular, dome convex, minutely papillate; style yellow, column 1.0–2.0 mmlong; stigma branches suberect, oblong-sagittate, 1.7–4.5 ×
0.3–0.5 mm
, slightly shorter than stamens, papillose, often with 3 channeled basal lobes up to
0.5 mm
long, sometimes spreading between filaments. Capsules broadly obconical, ca. 3–4 ×
3.5 mm
, dehiscence circumscissile, placental ridges remaining contiguous centrally. Seeds ovoid, 0.6–0.7 ×
0.5 mm
; testa shiny, black. Flowering period: (June–)August–September(–November), flowers remain open day and night.
Distribution and habitat
:—When first described by
Müller-Doblies
et al
. (2011)
,
Pauridia etesionamibensis
was regarded as endemic to the winter rainfall region of southern
Namibia
, on the mountains inland of Rosh Pinah. Subsequent to its initial discovery by Franz Sales Erni in 1938, additional collections have been made on the Oemsberg and Rosyntjieberg in the Richtersveld, extending the distribution into
South Africa
,
Northern Cape
(
Fig. 7A
). Populations of
P. etesionamibensis
are small and localized, most often on steep, rocky slopes or in crevices of sheer cliffs, where they occupy shaded, seasonally damp places in quartzitic or dolomitic soils, although small, isolated clumps of plants are occasionally also found at the base of large rock outcrops.
FIGURE 6.
Pauridia etesionamibensis
.
Oliver, Tõlken & Venter 295
(NBG!) collected in Richtersveld, Northern Cape, South Africa.
FIGURE 7
. Distribution maps for
A,
Pauridia etesionamibensis
from Namibia and Northern Cape, South Africa;
B,
P. pygmaea
from Western Cape, South Africa.
Diagnostic features
:—
Pauridia etesionamibensis
can be recognized by the delicate, often flaccid leaves and the two-flowered inflorescence with two lanceolate bracts which are similar in texture to the leaves. The white or pink flowers are distinguished by a contrasting orange-yellow eye or dark pink central ring and an ovary with a raised, minutely papillate apical dome that bears both stamen whorls a short distance from the tepals. The corm is covered by brown, unusually fine, herringbone-patterned fibrous tunics that separate from the old, disc-like corms which remain temporarily attached at the base.
Discussion
:—In southern Africa the only other species in which the ovary has a broad, raised apical dome that carries the stamens is
Pauridia pygmaea
, an easily overlooked dwarf species from
Western Cape
. Provisionally this unique feature is taken to reflect a close relationship between
P
.
etesionamibensis
and
P. pygmaea
. Other genera in which closely related species exhibit distribution patterns with a huge disjunction between the Gariep and the southwestern
Cape
centres are
Cyrtanthus herrei
(F.M.Leight.)
R.A.Dyer (1959: 1281)
(
Amaryllidaceae
) which is sister to the southwestern
Cape
C. carneus
Lindley (1831: 1462)
,
Amaryllis paradisicola
Snijman
in
Snijman & Williamson (1998: 193)
which is sister to the
Western Cape
A. belladonna
Linnaeus (1753: 293)
,
Moraea gariepensis
Goldblatt (1986: 48)
(
Iridaceae
) which is sister to the Core Cape-centred
M. ramosissima
(L.f.)
Druce (1914: 636)
, and
Trachyandra adamsonii
(Compton)
Obermeyer (1958: 720)
(
Asphodelaceae
) and
Walleria gracilis
(Salisb.)
S.Carter (1962: 189)
(
Tecophilaeaceae
), both having disjunct populations in the Richtersveld and
Western Cape
(
Goldblatt
etal.
2002
,
Manning 1990
,
Manning
etal.
2001
,
Snijman & Meerow 2010
).
Merxmüller (1969)
, in his conspectus of plants of
Namibia
, regarded these Namibian plants as
Spiloxene scullyi
(now
P. scullyi
), based on their apparent similarity in habit and preferred habitat.
P. scullyi
, however, has naked corms and yellow flowers with a unilocular ovary. Remarkably, populations of both species are partly sympatric on the Rosyntjieberg, Richtersveld, where they can be found growing in the same rock crevices.
Additional specimens examined
:—
NAMIBIA
.
Rosh Pinah District
,
Numeis
(QDS: 2716
DC
),
2 September 2000
,
Bruyns
8833
(
NBG
!)
;
Farm Spitzkop
, LU 111, in deep kloof with waterfall (QDS: 2716
DC
),
18 September 1973
,
Giess
13055
(
WIND
!)
;
Farm Spitzkop
, LU 111 (QDS: 2716
DC
),
15 June 1976
,
Giess
&
Müller
14410
(
WIND
!)
;
Farm Spitzkop
, kloof ca.
3 km
Sof farm houses (QDS: 2716
DC
),
8 August 2000
,
Goldblatt
&
Manning
11337
(
NBG
!)
;
Farm Spitzkop
, LUS 111 (QDS: 2716
DC
),
25 September 1981
,
Müller
&
Horn
1596
(
WIND
!)
;
Rosh Pinah District
, NW of beacon,
Sonberg
(QDS: 2716
DD
),
3 September 2000
,
Bruyns
8853
(
NBG
!)
;
Namuskluft
, NW corner near
Rosh Pinah
(QDS: 2716
DD
),
August 1981
,
Lavranos
&
Pehlemann
19975
(
WIND
!)
;
Konsatienaberg
(QDS: 2716
DD
),
6 July 2007
,
Van Jaarsveld 21080
(
NBG
!)
.
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Northern Cape
:
Richtersveld
,
Rosyntjieberg
, neck
Nof Lelieshoek
(QDS: 2817
AC
),
1060 m
,
30 August 1977
,
Oliver
,
Tölken
&
Venter
295
(
BOL
!,
K
!, MO!,
NBG
!,
PRE
!)
;
Richtersveld
,
Rosyntjieberg
, kloof on N side above fountain (QDS: 2817
AC
),
800 m
,
30 August 1977
,
Oliver
,
Tölken
&
Venter
308
(
NBG
!)
;
N foot of
Rosyntjieberg
(QDS: 2817
AC
),
650 m
,
30 August 1977
,
Thompson
& le
Roux
218
(
NBG
!)
;
Richtersveld
,
N of Eksteenfontein
, towards summit of
Oemsberg
(QDS: 2817
AC
),
25 November 1991
,
G. & F. Williamson
4482
(NBG!);
Richtersveld National Park
,
N Oemsberg
(QDS: 2817
AC
)
,
September 1993
,
G. & F.
Williamson
5286
(
NBG
!)
;
Richtersveld National Park
,
Paradyskloof
(QDS: 2817
AC
)
,
September 1995
,
G. & F.
Williamson
5738
(
NBG
!)
.
Inexact
locality: Sof
Aus
and
Witputs
,
October 1938
,
F. Erni
sub
B.H. 31845
(
BOL
!)
.