Revision and new species of the African genus Mischogyne (Annonaceae)
Author
Gosline, George
Author
Marshall, Andrew R.
Author
Larridon, Isabel
text
Kew Bulletin
2019
2019-06-30
74
28
1
23
journal article
10.1007/S12225-019-9804-7
1ed5ac34-1b70-4189-a175-7526621e1705
0075-5974
3345047
3.
Mischogyne gabonensis (
Le Thomas) Gosline
comb. et stat. nov.
http://www.ipni.org/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:60478275-2
Mischogyne elliotiana
(Engl. & Diels) Le Thomas var.
gabonensis
Pellegr. ex Le Thomas,
Flore du
Gabon
16: 291 (1969).
Uoariastrum elliotianum
var.
gabonensis
Pellegr. (
Pellegrin 1949
)
, nom. nud.
Type
:
Gabon
, Mayumba,
region de Nyanga
,
26 Aug. 1914
,
Le Testu
1768 (hololectotype P, sheet here designated [P00315820]; isotypes
BM
! [
BM
000547338],
BR
× 2* [
BR
0000008801661,
BR
0000008802330],
LISC
* [
LISC
000379], P × 2* [P00315817, P00315818], W A G × 5 * [W A G0 1 7 5 0 9 8, W A G 0 1 7 5 0 9 9,
WAG
0247284,
WAG
0247285,
WAG
0247286]).
Tree
3 – 7 (– 25) m tall, up to
25 cm
in diam., branches and twigs glabrous.
Taeigs
light grey to brown, striate. Shoot buds with light brown hairs
0.05 – 0.1 mm
long.
Petioles
5 – 10 mm
long,
1.5 – 2 mm
in diam., sparse indumentum of hairs
0.1 mm
long or glabrous.
Leaf
lamina obovate,
8 – 16 cm
long,
4 – 7 cm
wide, length:width ratio 2 – 2.5, apex rounded, abruptly acuminate, acumen linear,
1 – 3 cm
long,
0.5 – 1 cm
wide at base, 0.2 – 0.4 at mid-length, base cuneate, coriaceous, glabrous on both sides, glossy green above and light green below when fresh, drying matte, olive to brown, lighter below; midrib glabrous above and below; secondary veins 6 – 9, ascendant at 30° – 50° from midrib to 20 – 40% of length of the leaf, anastomosing near margin.
Floaeers
with flower buds
0.7 – 1.3 cm
long,
0.3 – 0.5 cm
in diam. Pedicel
0.5 – 1.2 cm
long,
0.3 – 0.9 mm
in diam., pubescent, hairs
0.1 – 0.3 mm
long, appressed, light brown.
Sepals
united into a thin membranous capsule, ovoid to conical,
0.7 – 1.3 cm
long,
0.3 – 0.5 cm
wide, length:width ratio 2 – 2.5, base rounded, apex acute or caudate (
Fig. 2D
). Calyx opens by rupturing, usually, into two parts drying dark brown, tomentose outside and inside, often the tips are lost leaving truncate “sepals”, thin, fragile and caducous.
Petals
narrowly elliptic,
1.4 – 1.6 cm
long,
0.3 – 0.5 cm
wide, length:width ratio 3 – 3.5, base truncate, apex acute, outer surface densely pubescent, hairs
0.1 – 0.3 mm
long, appressed, light brown, inner surface tomentose becoming glabrous, white when fresh, inner surface dark brown in herbarium material.
Torus
truncated conical,
2.2 – 3 mm
. long, 1.5 tapering to
1 mm
diam., upper part densely pubescent. Stamens mounted spirally on lower 60% of torus but generally fallen in herbarium specimens; carpels at the top, divergent.
Stamens
50 – 60, 1 –
3 mm
long,
0.5 – 0.8 mm
wide; yellow when fresh, filament
0.1 – 0.2 mm
long, connective with an indumentum of hairs
0.1 mm
long between thecae terminating in an extension of
0.1 – 0.2 mm
.
Carpels
3 – 7, 3 –
5.5 mm
long,
1 – 1.5 mm
in diam., densely pubescent, hairs
0.05 – 0.2 mm
long, velvety, appressed, white; stigma sessile, bilobed,
1 – 1.1 mm
long,
0.6 – 0.9 mm
wide, glabrous, yellow drying black.
Fruits
nearly sessile with 1 – 3 ovoid monocarps 6 – 6.5 ×
2.8 – 3.2 cm
, green with white speckles. Seeds
6 in
yellow pulp, 2 ×
1.5 cm
with an indumentum of fine white hairs (
Fig. 5
).
RECOGNITION
. Similar to
Mischogyne elliotiana
in its flowers and fruits. Distinct in being a medium-sized tree to
25 m
tall rather than a small tree or shrub
3 – 10 m
tall; in having 3 – 7 carpels rather than 7 – 12; and in having sepals united in a capsular membranous calyx rather than three free reduplicate-valvate sepals; in the carpel indumentum velvety appressed with hairs
0.05 – 2 mm
long, rather than with longer bristly semi-erect hairs
0.8 – 1 mm
long.
DISTRIBUTION
.
Cameroon
, Bioko (
Equatorial Guinea
),
Gabon
(
Map 1
).
SPECIMENS EXAMINED.
CAMEROON
.
South Region
:
Nkoolong
,
Environs de Nko'olong
,
30 km
E Campo
,
B.
Satabié
978 (
YA
not seen)
.
Southwest Region
:
Njonji
,
Fako
, along path to the lake.,
200 m
, [4°6' 8°59'], fr,
26 Sept. 2001
,
D. Kenfack
1545 (
MO
*);
Bakingili
,
Mount Cameroon National Park
,
Bakingili
trail, above
Bakingili village
,
449 m
, fl,
2 April 2016
,
T. L. P. Couoreur
1033 (photos only)
.
EQUATORIAL GUINEA
.
Bioko
:
Moaba - Moka Trail
/
Pt
141 -
Pt
139, 300 m
, [3°16' 8°38'6"], fl,
15 March 2007
,
W. R. Q. Luke
11941 (K!)
.
GABON
.
Nyanga Province
: Mayumba, région du
Nyanga
.,
24 m
, [3°25' 10°40'], fl,
26 Aug. 1914
,
G. M. P. C.
Le Testu
1768 (
BM
*,
BR
*, L*,
LISC
*, P*)
.
HABITAT
. Lowland evergreen rain forest.
CONSERVATION STATUS
. This taxon is only known from four locations: (1) The Mt
Cameroon
sites are at the edge of the Mt
Cameroon
National Park but not within it and subject to community logging. (2) The specimen from the south of
Cameroon
is not in the Campo-Ma’ an National Park, but in an area designat- ed as a production forest. (3) Specimens from Bioko are from within the Reserva Científica de la Caldera de Luba. The forest in the reserve is described as pristine, but a new road is already increasing development pressure in the area (
Cronin
et al.
2015
). (4) The exact location of the Gabonese specimen from Mayumba is unknown and it is not clear that it still exists. A “sustainable” development, including forestry, is planned for the Mayumba area (http:// www.sfmafrica.co.za/projects/gabon). There are threats to plants in three of the four known locations. From the known specimens we compute an AOO of
24 km
2
and an EOO of
66192 km
2
. This justifies an
IUCN
category of Endangered B2ab(ii).
PHENOLOGY
. Flowering in January, November. Fruiting November.
ETYMOLOGY
. Meaning ̒from
Gabon
̓.
VERNACULAR
NAME
. None recorded.
USES
. None recorded.
NOTES
. Annick
Le Thomas (1969)
described this taxon as a variety in the
Flore
du
Gabon
based on Pellegrin’ s nomum nudum
Uoariastrum elliotianum
(Engl. & Diels) Sprague & Hutch. var.
gabonensis.
Her diagnosis distinguishes the variety by fewer carpels (4 – 5) with an attenuate apex and sepals and pedicels puberulent. Her full description appears to be based on
Mischogyne elliotiana
, and the distinctive capsular calyx is not described.
The specimens from Mt
Cameroon
occur in one of the wettest environments in Africa with over
4000 mm
ppa. Couvreur records the tree as up to
25 m
tall,
25 cm
diam. (
T. L. P. Couoreur
1033), which makes it quite distinct from the smaller and more branched
Mischogyne elliotiana
. The leaves also have a longer and often linear acumen. This evidence justifies raising this taxon to the species level.
David Kenfack photographed fruits of this species (
D. Kenfack
1545) showing hairy seeds (
Fig. 6D
). Hairy seeds are known from only a few genera (
Setten
et al.
1992
) and this bears further investigation.