Reinstatement of Aloe longibracteata (Asphodelaceae subfam. Alooideae), a maculate aloe from northeastern South Africa
Author
Smith, Gideon F.
Department of Botany, Nelson Mandela University, P. O. Box 77000, Gqberha, 6031 South Africa.
Author
Klopper, Ronell R.
Foundational Biodiversity Science Division, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X 101, Pretoria, 0001 South Africa. & Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002 South Africa.
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-10-13
568
2
191
203
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.568.2.4
journal article
163999
10.11646/phytotaxa.568.2.4
69efe8cb-b722-4e43-b568-5e516d80b001
1179-3163
7192899
Aloe longibracteata
Pole Evans (1915: 25)
Also treated in:
Pole Evans (1928
: t. 299),
Groenewald (1941: 71
, 104, 167),
Reynolds (1950: 262)
,
Judd (1967: 27
, plate 7),
Jeppe (1969: 92)
,
Bornman & Hardy (1971: 125)
,
Jacobsen (1977: 86)
,
Jacobsen (1986: 174)
,
Van Wyk & Smith (1996: 204)
,
Smith (2003: 33)
,
Van Wyk & Smith (2003: 208)
,
Grace (2009: 119)
,
Carter
et al
. (2011: 165)
,
Grace
et al
. (2011: 90–91)
,
Van Wyk & Smith (2014: 248–249)
,
Klopper (2015: 345
, 597),
Newton (2020: 598)
.
Type
:
—
SOUTH AFRICA
,
Mpumalanga
,
Lydenburg
,
May 1914
,
I
.
B
.
Pole Evans
56
(
holotype
PRE
PRE0086205
-0 [Image available at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.pre0086205-0])
.
Epitype (here designated)
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
,
Mpumalanga province
,
Lydenburg
, collected
May 1914
, flowered at
Laboratory
,
Pretoria
,
8 June 1916
,
Pole Evans
56
(epitype
PRE
PRE0086134
-0 [Image available at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.specimen. pre0086134-0]; isoepitype
K
K000256636
[Image available at https://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.specimen.k000256636])
.
Notes on the holo- and epitype of the name
Aloe longibracteata
:—In the protologue of the name
A. longibracteata
,
Pole Evans (1915: 25)
states that: “This plant was collected by myself near Lydenburg in the Transvaal in May, 1914. It grows in open grass country at an altitude of
5,000
–6,000
ft.
, and flowers from June to July.” Herb.
PRE
holds a specimen of
A. longibracteata
,
Pole Evans
56
, that has information associated with it that corresponds to the collecting date and place stated in the protologue (
Pole Evans 1915: 25
). This information satisfies
Turland
et al
. (2018
: Art. 40.3 Note 2) because concrete reference to some detail relating to the actual
type
, such as collector’s name [
I
.
B
. Pole Evans] or date [
May 1914
], was provided—it was not mere citation of a locality.
FIGURE 8.
The fruit of
Aloe longibracteata
, illustrated here, is larger than those of
A. davyana
. The dimensions of the bottom-most capsule in the photograph are 32 × 18 mm. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.
However, there are two sheets of
Pole Evans 56
at Herb.
PRE
: one (
PRE0086205
-0), the
holotype
, is dated
May 1914
, while the other one (
PRE0086134
-0) indicates that the
plant
was collected in
May 1914
, but that it
flowered
two years later at the [Botany]
Laboratory in Pretoria
(see
Smith
et al
. 2021b
for a discussion on aloe research and cultivation there), on
8 June 1916
, when that specimen was made.
This
second specimen is therefore not an isotype (duplicate of the
holotype
).
On a determination slip by Hugh Glen and Dave Hardy, dated
1991-04-04
where they identified the material as “
Aloe greatheadii var. davyana
”, these
two specimens
are indicated as “
Holotype
of synonym, Sheet 1 of 2” (
PRE
0086134-0,
8 June 1916
) and “
Holotype
of synonym, Sheet 2 of 2” (
PRE
0086205-0,
May 1914
). However, the sheet numbers were not indicated as such when the specimens were originally prepared and accessioned in Herb.
PRE
, and these
two specimens
therefore cannot be regarded as sheets of the same collection, especially also since it does not constitute a single collecting event (
Turland
et al
. 2018
; Articles 8.2 and 8.3) because of the different dates on the sheets. Furthermore, labeling a specimen does not constitute effective publication and designation of a type cannot be achieved in this way (
Turland
et al
. 2018
: Art. 7.10).
Note that
Reynolds (1950: 263)
, without citing a collecting number for the “
I
.
B
. Pole Evans” gathering, referred to a specimen collected by Pole Evans that “Fl.
May 1914
at Union Buildings” and doubtfully regarded it as the type—he stated “(?Type)”. As we show above this plant only flowered in 191
6
and the specimen does not represent the
holotype
, nor original material. At any rate, if the name
A. longibracteata
did not have a
holotype
, an author must definitely accept the designation of a type for it to be effective (
Turland
et al
. 2018
: Art. 7.11).
The sheet at Herb.
PRE
(
PRE
0086205-0) dated
May 1914
is thus the
holotype
of the name
Aloe longibracteata
. The other sheet at Herb.
PRE
(
PRE
0086134-0) dated
8 June 1916
was evidently prepared from material that was collected along with the plant pressed and preserved as the type. It flowered in Pretoria two years later, and therefore after publication of the name
A. longibracteata
in 1915. It can therefore not be regarded as original material.
A
sheet of
Pole Evans 56
at Herb.
K
, dated
1916/06/08
, has a label that is identical to that of the specimen with the same date at Herb.
PRE
. It was accessioned at Herb.
K
on
2 March 1920
and contains a hand-written note in pencil: ‘Not
TYPE
number—probably from type plant’. We regard this assumption as correct and this specimen is a duplicate of the one at Herb.
PRE
(
PRE
0086134-0) with the same date.
Since the
holotype
(
PRE0086205
-0) of
A. longibracteata
only consists of a partial infructescence and an envelope with seeds, the Herb.
PRE
specimen dated
8 June 1916
(
PRE0086134
-0; consisting of a leaf, cross section through the leaf, and an inflorescence) is here designated as epitype, with the duplicate at Herb.
K
(consisting of a leaf, inflorescence, and an envelope with leaf fragments, flowers, fruit, and seed) being an isoepitype.
Description
:—Plants small, low-growing, solitary, rarely 1- to 2-branched from the base, rosette erect to slightly leaning, up to (10–)
15 cm
tall.
Stem
± absent, short, simple and thickened lower down if present, clothed in very hard, persistent, twisted, dried leaves.
Leaves
very densely rosulate, at first erect, then horizontally spreading,
10–15 cm
long, (7–)
9–10 cm
wide at base, dull light to dark green, deltoid-lanceolate, abaxially pale green, longitudinally darker green or light purplish-lined, lines very narrow, adaxially sparsely white-spotted especially towards base or immaculate, white spots ± oblong to oval, sometimes arranged in interrupted, obscure, wavy transverse bands, texture smooth; margins shiny-orange-brown to shiny-dark brown, armed with prominent, short, very pungent, deltoid, shinybrown, dark-tipped teeth, ± 5–7(–9) mm long, 3–5(–9) mm apart, variously curved towards leaf base or more rarely straight.
Inflorescence
usually 1–2 produced successively per season, unbranched raceme or 2- to 3(–4)-branched panicle, 0.5–0.7(–0.8) m tall, erect, often apically cat tail-like curved, branched at or below middle, branches erect at narrow angle from peduncle; peduncle rather stout, lacking sterile bracts below racemes, panicle branches subtended by prominent fertile bracts irregularly deltoid to lanceolate-triangular, ±
25–50 mm
long, usually dark to light brown, drying rapidly, longitudinally dark brown lined.
Racemes
narrowly cylindrical, distinctly tapering upwards,
20–30 cm
long, ±
4–6 cm
wide where flowers are at anthesis, usually rather densely flowered; buds erect to erectly spreading, flowers pendulous at anthesis.
Floral bracts
prominent, narrowly lanceolate, variously twisted, ±
45–50 mm
long, longer than pedicels, much narrower than fertile bracts, drying rapidly, light brown to creamy white.
Pedicels
(10–)15– 20(–25) mm long, yellowish green when young, becoming reddish with age.
Flowers
:
perianth
: buds uniformly shiny strawberry-pink to peach-red, prominently green-striated in apical half; open flowers ± uniformly shiny strawberrypink to peach-red in basal ½, mouth slightly paler and yellowish white inside,
40–50 mm
long, ±
7–8 mm
across ovary, narrowed above ovary to yield small bulbous base, distinctly enlarged towards mouth, middle ± gradually enlarging towards mouth, ± straight to down-curved to horizontally spreading; tips of segments spreading, outer segments free for ⅓–½ of their length;
stamens
with filiform-flattened filaments, uniformly light yellow, hardly exserted;
ovary
(6–)7(–8) mm long,
2–3 mm
in diam., light green;
style
slightly exserted, uniformly light yellow;
stigma
tiny, very slightly capitate, yellowish.
Fruit
a loculicidal capsule, 30(–35) × 15(–20) mm, light green turning purplish light brown with age, dry remains of perianth variously persistent.
Seed
2 ×
3 mm
, black, ± D-shaped, angled, with prominent white to transparent wing.
Chromosome number
: 2
n
= 14 (
Groenewald 1941: 167
,
Riley & Majumdar 1979: 46
).
Distribution
:—
Aloe longibracteata
has a fairly restricted distribution in northeastern
South Africa
, mainly west of the escarpment, where it occurs from Mashishing (formerly Lydenburg) to Dullstroom in
Mpumalanga Province
, to Polokwane (formerly Pietersburg) and Tzaneen in
Limpopo Province
,
South Africa
(
Fig. 9
). It is especially common around Mashishing.
FIGURE 9.
Known natural geographical distribution range of
Aloe longibracteata
.
Flowering time
:—Mostly (June–)July–August, but some forms can flower as late as November.
Additional specimens investigated
:—
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Mpumalanga
:
Middelburg district
,
Farm Hartbeeshoek
west of
Belfast
,
10 June 1995
,
P
.
M
.
Burgoyne
3735 & 3754
(
PRE
).
Between Lydenburg
and
Dullstroom
,
26 June 2007
,
O
.
M
.
Grace
,
E
.
van
Wyk
,
L
.
Nkuna
,
F
.
W
.
Mabatha
66
(
K
, 2 sheets).
Lydenburg
,
21 August 1914
,
I
.
B
.
Pole Evans
19
(
PRE
); ibidem,
22 July 1919
, ibidem,
I
.
B
.
Pole Evans
220
(
PRE
, 2 sheets);
15 August 1921
,
I
.
B
.
Pole Evans
239
(
PRE
, 2 sheets).
Lydenburg
, south of town,
7 August 2021
,
G
.
F
.
Smith
1157
(
PRU
); ibidem,
3 September 2021
,
G
.
F
.
Smith
1163
(
PRU
).
Lydenburg
,
Sukukuni
,
Farm Avontuur
,
30 June 1936
,
W
.
G
.
Barnard
532
(
PRE
).
Lydenburg
,
Buffelsvlei
,
20 July 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1466
(
PRE
).
Northwest of Lydenburg
,
20 July 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1460
(
PRE
, 2 sheets).
North of Lydenburg
, near
Potloodspruit
,
19 June 1937
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
2470 (
K
;
PRE
); ibidem,
2 August 1938
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
2885
(
K
;
PRE
).
Martins Hoop
, from
Lydenburg
on road to
Magnet Heights
,
12 July 1936
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1961
(
K
;
PRE
).
West of Hangslaagte
, top of
Dwarsriviersberg
,
12 July 1936
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1959
(
K
, 2 sheets;
PRE
, 2 sheets).
Lydenburg
,
Sekukuniland
,
Schoonoord
, west of
Lulu Mountains
,
12 July 1936
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1956
(
K
, 2 sheets;
PRE
).
Sekhukhuniland
,
Lulu Mountains
,
Farm Groot Vygenboom
,
3 September 1936
,
A
.
O
.
D. Mogg
16982
(
PRE
).
Graskop
,
The Bonnet area
,
19 June 1990
,
W
.
S
.
Matthews
920
(
PRE
).
West of Pilgrims Rest
,
12 November 1952
,
W
.
Marais
16
(
K
;
PRE
)
.
SOUTH AFRICA
.
Limpopo
:
Ohrigstad Dam Nature Reserve
,
6 August 1968
,
D. Edwards
4051
(
K
;
PRE
); ibidem,
28 August 1973
,
N
Jacobsen
2951
(
PRE
).
East of Ohrigstad
,
Brown’s Hill
,
17 November 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1648
(
PRE
).
Ohrigstad
to
Penge
,
22 August 1973
,
J
.
P
.
Nel
339
(
K
;
NBG
;
PRE
).
Lekgalameetse Nature Reserve
,
2 June 1986
,
M
.
Stalmans
1312
(
PRE
).
Strydom Tunnel
towards
Ohrigstad
,
23 June 1971
,
E
.
Buitendag
846
(
NBG
;
PRE
).
Tzaneen
,
Flowering
in garden
Division of Botany
,
9 August 1915
,
T
.
Behrens
123
(
PRE
, 2 sheets).
Tzaneen
,
8 August 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1518
(
K
;
PRE
, 2 sheets); ibidem,
August 1936
,
F
.
Z
.
van der Merwe
PRE
38131
(
K
;
PRE
).
East of Tzaneen
,
8 August 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1517
(
K
;
PRE
).
Southwest of Pietersburg
,
May 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1343
(
PRE
); ibidem,
July 1939
,
I
.
C
.
Verdoorn
&
A
.
O
.
D.
Mogg
PRE
38133
(
PRE
); ibidem,
27 July 1939
,
I
.
C
.
Verdoorn
&
A
.
O
.
D.
Mogg
PRE
38134
(
PRE
); ibidem,
13 October 1947
,
L
.
E
.
Codd
&
B
.
de Winter
3069
(
PRE
).
Southwest of Pietersburg
on road to
Potgietersrus
,
30 October 1938
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
3075
(
K
;
PRE
, 3 sheets).
South of Pietersburg
,
6 August 1966
,
D.
C
.
H
.
Plowes
2593
(
PRE
).
Percy Fyfe Nature Reserve
,
24 October 1969
,
B
.
J
.
Huntley
1490
(
PRE
).
Chuniespoort Hotel
,
May 1935
,
A
.
A
.
Obermeyer
&
I
.
C
.
Verdoorn
8
A
(
PRE
, 2 sheets).
Lebowa
,
Arabie
,
3 July 1981
,
W
.
Ellery
234
(
PRE
).
Potgietersrus
,
2 August 1927
,
F
.
Z
.
van der Merwe
PRE7409
(
PRE
).
North of Nylstroom
,
4 August 1935
,
G
.
W
.
Reynolds
1496
(
PRE
)
.