A foundation monograph of Ipomoea (Convolvulaceae) in the New World
Author
Wood, John R. I.
Author
Munoz-Rodriguez, Pablo
Author
Williams, Bethany R. M.
Author
Scotland, Robert W.
text
PhytoKeys
2020
143
1
823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.143.32821
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.143.32821
1314-2003-143-1
F6F11A6EE4FF5A1885CEA2B60AE965A5
228.
Ipomoea grandifolia
(Dammer)
O'Donell
, Arq. Mus. Paranaense 9
: 222. 1952. (
O'Donell
1952: 222)
Jacquemontia grandifolia
Dammer
, Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 23
(Beibl. 57): 41. 1897. (Dammer 1897: 41). Type. BRAZIL. Rio de Janiero,
A.F.M. Glaziou
11257 (holotype B†, isotypes C, K).
Ipomoea setifera
var.
orbicularis
Chodat & Hassl., Bull. Herb. Boiss.
, ser. 2, 5: 687. 1905. (Chodat and Hassler 1905: 687). Type. PARAGUAY. [
Concepcion
],
Rio
Apa,
E. Hassler
7961a (holotype G00175007).
Ipomoea coccinea
var.
luteola
Arechav. Anales Mus. Nac.
Montevideo 4: 191. 1911. (Arechavaleta y Balpardo 1911: 191). Type. URUGUAY. Not specified. (?MVM, n.v.).
Diagnosis.
This is distinguished from
Ipomoea australis
by the shorter corolla (1.5-2.5 cm long), which is uniformly pink. The sepals are usually narrowly (not broadly) ovate, but this character is not constant. It is essentially a large-flowered form of
I. triloba
and has the appearance of being an intermediate with
I. australis
.
Illustration.
Figure
110A
.
Distribution.
Ipomoea grandifolia
is apparently frequent in NE Argentina, Paraguay, eastern Bolivia and much of southern Brazil whereas
I.australis
is mostly found in the Andean foothills of Argentina and Bolivia but extends into Paraguay. There are few certain records of
I. grandifolia
from Bolivia, all from the eastern lowlands where it grows on disturbed grassy roadsides at low altitudes. The record from Peru appears correctly named but requires confirmation.
URUGUAY.
E.J. Gibert
240 (K).
ARGENTINA. Chaco
:
A.G. Schulz
10440 (CTES), 6349 (CTES).
Corrientes
:
J. Paula-Souza et al.
7131 (CTES);
M. Dematteis et al.
941 (CTES);
Caceres
,
Zamudio
298
(CTES).
Entre
Rios
:
A. Schinini
12993 (CTES);
A. Burkart & N.S.Troncoso
27875 (CTES).
Misiones
:
H. Keller
8726 (CTES), 8738(CTES);
M. Dematteis & A. Krapovickas
1920 (CTES).
PARAGUAY. Amambay
: Pedro Juan Caballero,
A. Krapovickas et al
. 45906 (CTES, K).
Caazapa
: Tavai,
I. Basualdo
002204 (FCQ); Abai, Com.
Ache
de Ypetimi,
P. da Motta
93 (FCQ).
Canindeyu
:
Nandurokai
,
B.
Jimenez
et al.
1857 (BM, PY).
Concepcion
:
K. Fiebrig
5301 (BM, K).
Cordillera
: Pirareta,
E. Lurvey
427 (PY); Eusebio Ayala,
E. Lurvey
429 (PY).
Guiara
: Villarrica,
E. Hassler
8710 (BM);
Villarica-Paraguari
,
J. de Egea et al
. 1323 (FCQ); Yurai near Col. Independencia,
J.R.I. Wood et al.
28156 (FCQ).
Misiones
:
E. Lurvey
386 (PY);
Itapua
: Triumfo,
E. Lurvey
76 (PY).
Pres. Hayes
:
A. Krapovickas & C.
Cristobal
43241 (CTES).
Misiones
: San Miguel,
F. Mereles & J. de Egea
10140 (FCQ); San Juan Bautista,
E. Lurvey
386 (PY).
San Pedro
: Est. Alegria,
F.
Gonzalez
854 (FCQ).
BRAZIL. Acre
: Rio Branco,
E. Ule
8285 (K).
Amazonas
: Manaos,
J.W.H. Traill
548 (K);
E. Ule
5409 (K).
Bahia
: Correntina,
R.M. Harley
21816 (K).
Mato Grosso
: north of Xavantina,
J.A. Ratter et al.
1404 (E, MO) - intermediate with
I. cordatotriloba
.
Minas Gerais
:
A.F.M. Glaziou
14128 (BM);
Trinta and Fromm
1802 (CTES).
Parana
:
A. Krapovickas & C.
Cristobal
40921 (CTES);
G. Hatschbach
47573 (HB, K); Jacarahy,
G. Jansson
s.n. [24/3/1914] (K).
Rio Grande do Sul
:
G.E. Barboza al.
896 (CTES);
E. Pereira
8628 (HB, K).
Rio de Janeiro
:
A.F.M. Glaziou
13012 (K).
Santa Catarina
:
A. Krapovickas & C.
Cristobal
43979 (CTES), 44000 (CTES, K).
BOLIVIA. Cochabamba
: Carrasco: al lado del
reten
de Ivirgazama,
J.R.I. Wood & B. Williams
27733 (K, LPB, USZ).
Chuquisaca
: Luis Calvo, La Pista,
E. Saravia
10851 (HSB).
Santa Cruz
: Chiquitos: Santiago,
J.R.I. Wood
28136 (LPB, OXF, USZ); Cordillera, Camiri,
J.R.I. Wood et al.
28486 (LPB, USZ); Florida, Bermejo,
J.R.I. Wood
28107 (LPB, OXF, USZ);
Ibanez
, salida a
Abapo
,
J.R.I. Wood et al.
28474 (K, LPB, USZ);
Nuflo
de
Chavez
, c. 1 km from centre of San Javier along road towards
Concepcion
,
J.R.I. Wood & D. Soto
27943 (OXF, K, LPB, USZ).
PERU. Cusco
: La
Convencion
, Huayapata,
G. Calatayud
3261 (MO, OXF).
Notes.
Ipomoea grandifolia
is relatively easy to distinguish in the field by the small entirely pink corollas which look distinct from the larger corollas of
I. australis
with their darker throat and pale limb.
Specimens from Formosa e.g.
Schinini et al.
32696 (CTES) are intermediate with
Ipomoea australis
. J.A. Ratter et al.
1404 (E, MO) from north of Xavantina, Mato Grosso is problematic; the corolla is too large for
I. grandifolia
and
I. cynachifolia
(to which molecular data suggests it belongs) but it is out of the geographical range of
I. australis
.
Ipomoea grandifolia
was a forgotten species misplaced in
Jacquemontia
until it was transferred into
Ipomoea
and rediagnosed by
O'Donell
(1952: 226-228). Comparing his summary of its characteristics in 1952 with that in his posthumous account of
Ipomoea
in Argentina (
O'Donell
1959b)
O'Donell
had clearly come to depend on flower size alone to distinguish
I. grandifolia
, rather than any of the secondary characters discussed in 1952. Examination of the surviving isotype of
Ipomoea grandifolia
at Kew shows a plant with a corolla 2-2.2 cm long and narrowly ovate outer sepals which taper to a mucronate apex. This is a near perfect match for
Wood & Williams
27733 from Ivirgazama in Cochabamba Department. Unfortunately the narrower sepals are no more convincing as a character than the corolla size as many specimens of
I. australis
have similar sepals, rather than the more usual ovate, more abruptly mucronate sepals often found in that species.
Ipomoea grandifolia
is also very close to the widespread
I. triloba
L, which is absent from South America according to Austin (1978b) and Austin and
Huaman
(1996), although widely distributed as a weed in the Old World. Austin (1978b: 120) claims
I. grandifolia
is a hybrid but only suggests
Ipomoea australis
as one parent. Perhaps it has arisen as a result of hybridisation with an introduced
I. triloba
resulting in offspring showing a range of corolla sizes, sepal shape and indumentum that bridges the two species, but there is no molecular evidence for this.