Apios chendezhaoana (Fabaceae), an overlooked species and a new combination from China: evidence from morphological and molecular analyses
Author
Zhang, Fan
Dendrology Department, School of Forestry, Central South University of Forestry & Technology, 498 # Shaoshan South Rd, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China
Author
Feng, Si
Dendrology Department, School of Forestry, Central South University of Forestry & Technology, 498 # Shaoshan South Rd, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China
Author
Zhou, Jianjun
Dendrology Department, School of Forestry, Central South University of Forestry & Technology, 498 # Shaoshan South Rd, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China & Hunan Prospecting and Designing & Research General Institute for Agriculture, Forestry and Industry, 232 # Chengnan Central Rd, Changsha 410007, Hunan, China
Author
Zhang, Rong
Germplasm Bank of Wild Species, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 132 # Lanhei Rd, Heilongtan, Kunming 650201, Yunnan, China
Author
Liu, Linhan
School of Life Sciences, Hunan Normal University, 36 # Lushan Rd, Changsha 410081, Hunan, China
Author
Yang, Chengzi
College of Pharmacy, Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 1 # Qiuyang Rd, Shangjie, Minhou, Fuzhou 350122, Fujian, China
Author
Yu, Xunlin
Dendrology Department, School of Forestry, Central South University of Forestry & Technology, 498 # Shaoshan South Rd, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China
csfuyuxl@163.com
Author
Pan, Bo
Center for Integrative Conservation, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Menglun, Mengla 666303, Yunnan, China
csfuyuxl@163.com
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-09-25
371
1
1
16
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.371.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.371.1.1
1179-3163
13728810
Apios delavayi
Franchet (1890: 180–181)
.
Type:—
CHINA
.
Yunnan
,
14 September 1886
,
M. Delavay 2323, Barcode P00237786
(
holotype
P
!).
Perennial herbs. Tuber single, fusiform,
2–5 cm
in diameter,
5–20 cm
long. Leaves pinnately compound,
8–32 cm
, (3–) 5–9 (–11) leaflets. Leaflets highly variable, ovate to lanceolate, apex acuminate to acute. Racemes shorter or much longer than leaves. 2–30 flowers, lax. Calyx 2-lipped. Corolla light yellow, yellowish white, greenish yellow, yellowish purple, or dark purple; standard orbicular, pocket shaped, covering the tip of keel; wings shortest, reflexed; keel narrow, curved to semicircular, longer than standard. Legume linear or falcate, attenuate at base,
7–15 cm
.
Apios delavayi
Franchet (1890)
,
Apios macrantha
Oliver (1890
, October: pl. 1946),
Apios gracillima
Dunn (1903: 488–489)
, and
Apios delavayi
var.
pteridietorum
Handel-Mazzetti (1933)
, are all from SW
China
, and distinguished by flower color, inflorescence length, leaflet width, and flower number of each inflorescence (
Sa & Gilbert 2010
). However, only the name
A. delavayi
is frequently adopted during identification, and the other three names have seldom been used.
Ren
et al.
(2007)
considered that
A. gracillima
should be recognized as a distinct species, according to evidence from the leaf epidermis. However, using only microscopic evidence during taxonomic delimitations and treatments is not recommended. After examination of hundreds of specimens from CDBI, KUN, PE, and SM, we found they all have very similar flower shapes, with various colors from pale yellow, light green, greenish white to yellowish violet, light purple, and even dark purple. Leaflet numbers vary from 3 to 11; leaflet shape from linear to narrow lanceolate, lanceolate, and ovate; inflorescence longer or shorter than leaves, and flowers 6–30 or 2–4 per inflorescence. They all have the following consistent characters: lax inflorescence, broad standard, long curved circular keel, falcate pod, fusiform tuber, and a high elevation distribution between
1300–3800 m
. We therefore include all the four taxa into one species,
Apios delavayi
, as synonyms or varieties.
Because both
A. delavayi
and
A. macrantha
were published in 1890, while
A. macrantha
is not widely used, here we propose to conserve
A. delavayi
against
A. macrantha
. Interestingly, populations east of the Mekong-Salween Divide always have pale yellow to greenish white flowers, while populations west of the divide have light purple to dark purple flowers.
Types
of
Apios delavayi
and
A. macrantha
were both collected from the east part, and present greenish white or pale yellow flowers, while the
type
of
A. delavayi
var.
pteridietorum
was collected from west of the divide, and bears purple flowers. The Mekong-Salween Divide is an important floristic boundary between the eastern Himalaya and Hengduan Mountains (
Luo
et al.
2017
), so we adopt both
A. delavayi
var.
delavayi
and
A. delavayi
var.
pteridietorum
as accepted names to represent the distinct distribution of flower colors.