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
1.3.
Coccothrinax argentea
(Loddiges ex Schultes & Schultes) Sargent ex
Schumann (1901: 469)
.
Thrinax argentea
Loddiges ex
Schultes & Schultes (1830: 1300)
.
Acanthorriza argentea
(Loddiges ex Schultes & Schultes)
Cook (1941: 50)
.
Neotype
(designated here):—
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
. Haina,
26 July 1939
,
L. Bailey 269
(
neotype
BH!).
Plate 3
Thrinax longistyla
Beccari
in
Urban (1912: 170)
.
Lectotype
(designated here):—
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
.
Barahona
, 0 m,
June 1910
,
M. Fuertes 415
(
holotype
GH!, isotypes FI!, K!, the
holotype
at B was destroyed).
Stems
5.0(1.5–20.0) m long and 5.2(4.5–6.5) cm diameter, solitary or rarely clustered.
Leaves
more or less deciduous or only leaf bases persisting on stem; leaf sheath fibers 0.3(0.1–0.5) mm diameter, closely woven, forming persistent, triangular ligules at the apices; petioles 10.5(5.3–17.9) mm diameter just below the apex; palmans 14.8(4.3–32.0) cm long, relatively long, without prominent adaxial veins; leaf blades not wedge-shaped; segments 42(25–58) per leaf, the middle ones 53.1(32.0–75.0) cm long and 2.9(1.5–5.5) cm wide; segments not pendulous at the apices, giving the leaf a flat appearance; middle leaf segments relatively long and narrow, tapering from base to apex, scarcely folded, flexible and not leathery, a shoulder or constriction absent or poorly developed, the apices thin, deeply splitting and breaking off; middle leaf segment apices attenuate; leaf segments not waxy or sometimes with a deciduous, thin layer of wax adaxially, densely indumentose abaxially, with irregularly shaped, semi-persistent, interlocking, fimbriate hairs without an obvious center, with well-developed transverse veinlets.
Inflorescences
curving, arching, or pendulous amongst the leaves, with few partial inflorescences; rachis bracts somewhat flattened, loosely sheathing, usually tomentose with a dense tuft of erect hairs at the apex; partial inflorescences 4(2–5); proximalmost rachillae straight, 9.2(5.2–15.0) cm long and 1.3(0.9–1.9) mm diameter in fruit; rachillae glabrous at or near anthesis; stamens 8(6–10); fruit pedicels 0.8(0.3–2.5) mm long;
fruits
7.7(5.6–9.1) mm long and 7.9(5.5–9.5) mm diameter, purple, dark purple, red-purple, reddish-purple, purple-black, red-pink, red-black, grayish-brown, blackish, or black; fruit surfaces smooth or sometimes with projecting fibers; seed surfaces deeply lobed, the lobes running from base of seeds almost to apices.
PLATE 3
.
Coccothrinax argentea
, Dominican Republic, with leaf segments not pendulous at the apices, giving the leaf a flat appearance.
Distribution and habitat:—
Hispaniola (
Haiti
,
Dominican Republic
) (
Fig. 9
) in deciduous or semi-deciduous forest, xeromorphic forest, pine forest, broad leaf forest, dry forest, or secondary forest, and persisting in disturbed areas, on limestone or serpentine soils, at 259(0–1,000) m elevation.
FIGURE 9
. Distribution of
Coccothrinax argentea
and
C. barbadensis
.
Taxonomic notes:—
As a preliminary species
Coccothrinax argentea
was polymorphic for one variable (stem branching). However, splitting it into two species such that variables were consistent within each one led to improbable species that could not be justified morphologically or geographically. Therefore the polymorphic variable was treated as a trait and
C. argentea
is recognized as a phylogenetic species.
Bailey (1939b)
gave a discussion of the taxonomic history of
C. argentea
, and a detailed description based on a specimen (
Bailey 269
) that he had collected near
Santo Domingo
in
the Dominican
Republic. This specimen is designated here as the
neotype
. One other name has been applied to specimens from this area,
Thrinax longistyla
.
Read (1975)
considered this to be a
Coccothrinax
rather than a
Thrinax
, and it was included as a synonym of
C. argentea
by
POWO (2023)
and its type share all character states with other specimens.
Coccothrinax argentea
is widespread in Hispaniola and appears to be a complicated and confusingly variable species.
Subspecific variation
:—Specimens from several, different areas have relatively short palmans with prominent adaxial veins, approaching those of
C. gracilis
. For example,
two specimens
(
Liogier 14587, 16128
) from the north coast of
the Dominican
Republic, from limestone cliffs, have this kind of short palman. Other specimens from scattered localities, often on serpentine soils, also have short palmans, for example those from the Loma la Peguera, the site of a nickel mine with serpentine soils.
One specimen (
Montero 436
) has clustered stems. It is from near
Puerto Plata
in northern
Dominican Republic
, near an area with other unusual palms, including an unidentified
Pseudophoenix
(
Rodríguez-Peña
et al.
2014
)
.
In the south-central part of
the Dominican
Republic specimens have fruits with projecting fibers (illustrated in
Fernández & Gottschalk 2017
, page 102), somewhat different from fruit surfaces of other specimens. The
neotype
has fruits with projecting fibers.
The Botanical Garden
in
Santo Domingo
is situated within this south-central part of
the Dominican
Republic
and here, in an area presumed to be part of the original vegetation, plants have tall, slender stems that often curve or bend, and a small, compact crown of leaves.
Such
plants have not been seen in other parts of
Hispaniola
.
There are two unusual populations in the peninsula part of southwestern
Haiti
. One specimen (
Zanoni 26116
) from the central part of the peninsula has obvious transverse veinlets and long pedicels (like
C. barbadensis
). In the extreme southwestern part of the peninsula there are
five specimens
. Three have long pedicels but two (
Bartlett 17491, Henderson 1030
) have short pedicels like those of most specimens of
C. argentea
from Hispaniola. All specimens of this extreme southwestern population are from roadsides or disturbed, hilly areas, mostly between Cavaillon and St. Louis-du-Sud.
According to several specimen labels,
C. argentea
and
C. spissa
occur together in mixed populations in some areas in Hispaniola. These two species can sometimes be difficult to distinguish and it seems likely that there are hybrids between them. Apart from its smaller size,
C. argentea
can usually be distinguished by its shorter, thinner, regularly arranged rachillae, It also usually has a persistent, triangular ligule (
Fig. 2A
). Specimens of
C. argentea
differ significantly from those of
C. spissa
in 10 variables (stem diameter, petiole width, palman length, number of segments, segment length, segment width, rachilla length, rachillae width, fruit length, fruit diameter), with
C. argentea
having lower values for all variables (
t-
test,
P
<0.05).