A revision of Coccothrinax, Hemithrinax, Leucothrinax, Thrinax, and Zombia (Arecaceae)
Author
Henderson, Andrew
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-09-19
614
1
1
115
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.614.1.1
journal article
270518
10.11646/phytotaxa.614.1.1
143c8e81-3541-4298-b233-d3ce4e79d26c
1179-3163
8389307
1.12.
Coccothrinax ekmanii
Burret (1929: 11)
.
Haitiella ekmanii
(Burret)
Bailey (1947a: 7)
Lectotype
(designated here):—
HAITI
.
Massif de la Selle
,
Gros Morne des Commissaries
, Anses-a-Pitre,
18 September 1926
,
E
. Ekman 6991
(
lectotype
S
n.v.
,
S
image!, isolectotypes
EHH
n.v.
,
EHH
image!,
K
!, US!, the
holotype
at
B
was destroyed).
Plate 11
.
Stems
6.5(3.0–12.0) m long and 3.9(3.0–5.0) cm diameter, solitary.
Leaves
more or less deciduous or only leaf bases persisting on stem; leaf sheath fibers 2.0(1.2–3.1) mm diameter, stout, woody, loosely woven, the inner and outer layer combining at the apices to
form erect
, spine-like fibers; petioles 7.1(5.2–9.2) mm diameter just below the apex; palmans 3.7(1.3–5.8) cm long, relatively short, with the adaxial veins prominent and terminating in a slight raised ridge and distinct pulvinus; leaf blades wedge-shaped; segments 25(21–28) per leaf, the middle ones 33.0(28.0–41.5) cm long and 2.0(1.2–2.8) cm wide; segments not pendulous at the apices, giving the leaf a flat appearance; middle leaf segments tapering from base to apex, often folded, stiff and leathery, with or without scarcely developed shoulders, the apices sharply pointed and briefly splitting; middle leaf segment apices attenuate; leaf segments not waxy or sometimes with a deciduous, thin layer of wax adaxially, without indumentum, scales, or wax abaxially, without or with poorly developed transverse veinlets.
Inflorescences
curving, arching, or pendulous amongst the leaves, with few partial inflorescences; rachis bracts narrow, closely sheathing, sparsely tomentose, usually without hairs at the apex; partial inflorescences 3(2–4); proximalmost rachillae straight, 4.6(3.1–6.0) cm long and 0.9(0.6–1.3) mm diameter in fruit; rachillae uneven at or near anthesis with lines of warty outgrowths, these often becoming more pronounced as fruits develop; stamens 7–8; fruit pedicels 0.1(0.1–0.3) mm long;
fruits
4.9(4.2–5.9) mm long and 5.3(4.4–6.3) mm diameter, brown or rusty brown; fruit surfaces densely muricate; seed surfaces lobed, the lobes running from base of seeds approximately to equator.
Distribution and habitat:—
Southeastern
Haiti
(
Sud-Est
) and southwestern
Dominican Republic
(
Barahona
,
Pedernales
) (
Fig. 11
) in dry, open areas on dog’s tooth limestone at 76(15–222) m elevation.
Taxonomic notes:—
As a preliminary species,
Coccothrinax ekmanii
has a unique combination of qualitative character states and is recognized as a phylogenetic species. It is a member of a group of nine Hispaniolan species (see notes under
C. boschiana
). It differs from all species in this group by its leaf sheaths with erect, spine-like fibers.
Tomlinson
et al.
(2011)
considered
C. ekmanii
to be notable anatomically because of its small vascular bundles attached to the abaxial leaf surface.
Subspecific variation
:—
Coccothrinax ekmanii
appears to show the same kind of variation in stems and leaves as seen in
C. boschiana
and
C. samanensis
. The label of a specimen (
Loomis 15
) from
Beata
Island in
Haiti
, an area completely exposed to prevailing winds, described the stems as being “twisted into grotesque shapes” and one stem reported to be
8.2 m
long and only
1.4 cm
diameter just below the leaves. The label described the leaves on younger, more sheltered plants as being orbicular but becoming wedge-shaped on older, more exposed plants. On the other hand, stems from more sheltered sites in
the Dominican
Republic, illustrated in
Fernández & Gottschalk (2017
, pages 122–123), show thicker, shorter, erect, straight stems covered with persistent leaf bases.