treatments-xml/data/AC/30/58/AC30583CD71A5B2FA67137DD78139E05.xml
2024-06-21 12:47:31 +02:00

229 lines
24 KiB
XML
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

<document ID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909" ID-GBIF-Dataset="185fc6f3-e76d-42ef-911f-ad0e5cdd2315" ID-PMC="PMC7305247" ID-Pensoft-Pub="1314-2003-151-1" ID-Pensoft-UUID="73AED83DDB7D5E8395DB6FC61FA3502A" ID-PubMed="32587460" ModsDocID="1314-2003-151-1" checkinTime="1592065774662" checkinUser="pensoft" docAuthor="Wege, Juliet A." docDate="2020" docId="AC30583CD71A5B2FA67137DD78139E05" docLanguage="en" docName="PhytoKeys 151: 1-47" docOrigin="PhytoKeys 151" docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909" docTitle="Levenhookia murfetii Lowrie &amp; Conran, J. International Triggerplant Society 1 (2): 14 16, figs 16 19, 48 I. 2011" docType="treatment" docVersion="4" id="73AED83DDB7D5E8395DB6FC61FA3502A" lastPageNumber="1" masterDocId="73AED83DDB7D5E8395DB6FC61FA3502A" masterDocTitle="Styleworts under the microscope: a taxonomic account of Levenhookia (Stylidiaceae)" masterLastPageNumber="47" masterPageNumber="1" pageNumber="1" updateTime="1668139842397" updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:mods xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
<mods:titleInfo>
<mods:title>Styleworts under the microscope: a taxonomic account of Levenhookia (Stylidiaceae)</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:name type="personal">
<mods:role>
<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart>Wege, Juliet A.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliation>Western Australian Herbarium, Biodiversity and Conservation Science, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, 17 Dick Perry Ave Kensington, Western Australia 6151, Perth, Australia</mods:affiliation>
<mods:nameIdentifier type="orcid">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7312-3840</mods:nameIdentifier>
<mods:nameIdentifier type="email">juliet.wege@dbca.wa.gov.au</mods:nameIdentifier>
</mods:name>
<mods:typeOfResource>text</mods:typeOfResource>
<mods:relatedItem type="host">
<mods:titleInfo>
<mods:title>PhytoKeys</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:part>
<mods:date>2020</mods:date>
<mods:detail type="volume">
<mods:number>151</mods:number>
</mods:detail>
<mods:extent unit="page">
<mods:start>1</mods:start>
<mods:end>47</mods:end>
</mods:extent>
</mods:part>
</mods:relatedItem>
<mods:location>
<mods:url>http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909</mods:url>
</mods:location>
<mods:classification>journal article</mods:classification>
<mods:identifier type="DOI">http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier type="Pensoft-Pub">1314-2003-151-1</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier type="Pensoft-UUID">73AED83DDB7D5E8395DB6FC61FA3502A</mods:identifier>
</mods:mods>
<treatment ID-GBIF-Taxon="164596948" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:AC30583CD71A5B2FA67137DD78139E05" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/AC30583CD71A5B2FA67137DD78139E05" lastPageNumber="1" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
2.
<taxonomicName LSID="AC30583C-D71A-5B2F-A671-37DD78139E05" authority="Lowrie &amp; Conran, J. International Triggerplant Society 1 (2): 14 - 16, figs 16 - 19, 48 I. 2011" authorityName="Lowrie &amp; Conran, J. International Triggerplant Society 1 (2): 14 16, figs 16 19, 48 I." authorityYear="2011" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Stylidiaceae" genus="Levenhookia" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Levenhookia murfetii" order="Asterales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="murfetii">Levenhookia murfetii Lowrie &amp; Conran, J. International Triggerplant Society 1(2): 14-16, figs 16-19, 48I. 2011</taxonomicName>
<figureCitation captionStart="Figure 2" captionStartId="F2" captionText="Figure 2. Labellum and column movement in Levenhookia. Black arrow = labellum hooded over column; white arrow = labellum ' triggered' to release column; yellow arrow = labellum repositioned following column release; blue arrow = column position immediately following release from labellum A L. stipitata (unvouchered, Augusta area, Western Australia) B L. aestiva (J. A. Wege 2090) C-E L. leptantha (J. A. Wege 2063), with labellum enclosing the column (C), triggered to release the column which moves to the opposite side of the flower (D) and subsequently repositioned (E) with the stigmatic lobes developed F L. aestiva (J. A. Wege 2090), labellum triggered with column momentum stopped by the sheath at the base of the corolla lobes G, H L. pauciflora (at J. A. Wege 1071 &amp; C. Wilkins): note the unusual, distally-angled column and brush-tipped labellum I L. murfetii (J. A. Wege 2060): note the dorsal position of the labellum; J, K L. dubia, with the labellum opening (but not otherwise moving) to release the column (K). Photos by R. W. Davis (A, B) and J. A. Wege (C-K)." figureDoi="10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909.figure2" httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/420774" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Figs 2I</figureCitation>
<figureCitation captionStart="Figure 3" captionStartId="F3" captionText="Figure 3. Comparative distributions and floral morphologies A, B Levenhookia pusilla, with a disjunct distribution in Western Australia and South Australia and a dense inflorescence of pint-sized flowers (unvouchered, Mt Clarence, Albany, Western Australia) C, D L. murfetii, a Western Australian endemic with discrete markings at the base of the corolla lobes (J. A. Wege 1829) E, F L. sonderi, a rarity from South Australia and Victoria with red-purple markings on the labellum that are especially prominent in pressed material (unvouchered, from near St Andrews, Victoria). Photos by J. A. Wege (B), K. R. Thiele (D) and C. Lindorff (F). Scale bar on maps 1000 km." figureDoi="10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909.figure3" httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/420775" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">, 3D</figureCitation>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="reference_group">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Stylidiaceae" genus="Levenhookia" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Levenhookia pusilla" order="Asterales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="pusilla">Levenhookia pusilla</taxonomicName>
auct. non R.Br.: R. Erickson, Triggerplants 207-209 (1958),
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">p.p.</emphasis>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Type.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<emphasis bold="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Australia. Western Australia</emphasis>
: Brand Highway near Marchagee Road turn-off, Coomallo, 11 Sep 2007,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">A. Lowrie 3553 &amp; J.G. Conran</emphasis>
(holotype: PERTH 08298262; isotype: MEL 2385577).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="description">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Description.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
Annual herb 1-9 cm high. Glandular hairs 0.1-0.4 mm long. Stem dark red, simple or branched to varying degrees with porrect lateral branches, glabrous basally, glandular-hairy distally. Leaves cauline, scattered, green adaxially, reddish or green abaxially; lamina oblanceolate to narrowly oblanceolate, reniform or ovate, 2.5-13 mm long including the petiole, 1-5 mm wide, obtuse or subacute, glabrous or scarcely papillate, the uppermost leaves sparsely glandular-hairy abaxially towards the base. Flowers in corymbs, 1-ca. 40 per plant; bracts narrowly lanceolate to lanceolate or linear, 2.5-10 mm long, sparsely glandular-hairy abaxially towards the base, sometimes scarcely papillate on the margins; pedicels 1-4 mm long, sparsely glandular-hairy. Hypanthium depressed globose, globose or ovoid, 0.7-1.2 mm long, 0.7-1.4 mm wide, with glandular hairs throughout and sparse eglandular hairs 0.15-0.5 mm long distally. Calyx lobes subequal (with the anterior pair scarcely longer than the rest), 0.9-1.7 mm long, acute to subacute, sparsely glandular-hairy in lower 1/2-2/3, usually scarcely papillate apically. Corolla pale to medium pink or white, with red-pink throat markings and a white or yellowish green throat, glabrous; lobes
<normalizedToken originalValue="±">+/-</normalizedToken>
paired vertically to somewhat evenly arranged, spreading to scarcely recurved, rounded to scarcely emarginate or apiculate; anterior (upper) lobes elliptic to narrowly obovate, slightly inwardly curved,
<normalizedToken originalValue="±">+/-</normalizedToken>
equal to or a little shorter than the posterior lobes, 1-1.8 mm long, 0.6-1.2 mm wide; posterior lobes obovate, 1.2-2 mm long, 0.8-1.3 mm wide; tube white or yellowish, 0.5-0.7 mm long, shorter than the calyx lobes. Labellum dorsal, 0.7-0.8 mm long including a 0.1-0.2 mm long claw; hood dark red-pink, usually sparsely glandular-hairy abaxially, minutely papillate adaxially along the margins; appendage at the cleft apex bright pink, ca. 0.1-0.3 mm long, papillate; basal appendages white to yellowish, linear-subulate, 0.2-0.3 mm long. Column sheath creamy white to yellowish, glabrous, lopsided, with a narrowly triangular posterior lobe to 0.3 mm high and slightly smaller lateral lobes, pendulous appendages absent. Column whitish, free, 1-1.4 mm long, distally broadened and angled towards labellum, glabrous; stigmatic lobes to 0.5 mm long, developing while the column is hooded, erect to incurved. Capsule ovoid, 1.3-2.2 mm long excluding calyx lobes. Seeds 0.4-0.5 mm long, 0.3-0.4 mm wide.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="diagnostic features">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Diagnostic features.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Stylidiaceae" genus="Levenhookia" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Levenhookia murfetii" order="Asterales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Levenhookia murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
has a stem that is glabrous basally and glandular-hairy distally, bracts with glandular hairs restricted to the undersurface, and a pink or white corolla with small lobes (1-2 mm long) bearing a small red-pink marking towards the base.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="phenology">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Phenology.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Flowering from late August to early October; fruits have been collected in October.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="distribution">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Distribution.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Stylidiaceae" genus="Levenhookia" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Levenhookia murfetii" order="Asterales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Levenhookia murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
is endemic to south-western Australia (Fig.
<figureCitation captionStart="Figure 3" captionStartId="F3" captionText="Figure 3. Comparative distributions and floral morphologies A, B Levenhookia pusilla, with a disjunct distribution in Western Australia and South Australia and a dense inflorescence of pint-sized flowers (unvouchered, Mt Clarence, Albany, Western Australia) C, D L. murfetii, a Western Australian endemic with discrete markings at the base of the corolla lobes (J. A. Wege 1829) E, F L. sonderi, a rarity from South Australia and Victoria with red-purple markings on the labellum that are especially prominent in pressed material (unvouchered, from near St Andrews, Victoria). Photos by J. A. Wege (B), K. R. Thiele (D) and C. Lindorff (F). Scale bar on maps 1000 km." figureDoi="10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909.figure3" httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/420775" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">3C</figureCitation>
) where it occurs in the Geraldton Sandplains, Avon Wheatbelt and Mallee bioregions, from Eurardy Station to east of Grass Patch.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="habitat">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Habitat.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
This species usually grows in sand or sandy loam (rarely in clay loam), often with lateritic gravel (rarely with decomposed granite). It is commonly recorded in low heath, mallee shrubland, tall
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Casuarinaceae" genus="Allocasuarina" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Allocasuarina" order="Fagales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="genus">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Allocasuarina</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
or
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Tricholomataceae" genus="Melaleuca" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Melaleuca" order="Agaricales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="genus">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Melaleuca</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
shrubland, and
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Myrtaceae" genus="Eucalyptus" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Eucalyptus wandoo" order="Myrtales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="wandoo">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Eucalyptus wandoo</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
woodland. It is often abundant on firebreaks or near the base of open shrubs.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="conservation status">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Conservation status.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
This widespread species is locally abundant at a range of sites (
<bibRefCitation author="IUCN" journalOrPublisher="IUCN Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" refId="B17" refString="IUCN, 2012. IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: version 3.1. IUCN Species Survival Commission. IUCN Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK" title="IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: version 3.1. IUCN Species Survival Commission." year="2012">IUCN 2012</bibRefCitation>
: Least Concern).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="etymology">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Etymology.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
Honours Denzel E. Murfet, who is affiliated with the State Herbarium of South Australia and has made more than 650
<taxonomicName family="Stylidiaceae" lsidName="" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="family">Stylidiaceae</taxonomicName>
collections from across Australia (
<bibRefCitation author="AVH" journalOrPublisher="Ecology" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" publicationUrl="http://avh.chah.org.au" refId="B2" refString="AVH, 2019. The Australasian Virtual Herbarium, Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria, http://avh.chah.org.au" title="The Australasian Virtual Herbarium, Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria," url="http://avh.chah.org.au" year="2019">AVH 2019</bibRefCitation>
).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="vernacular name">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Vernacular name.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Kwongan Stylewort.</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="notes">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Notes.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<bibRefCitation author="Lowrie, A" journalOrPublisher="Journal of the International Triggerplant Society" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" pagination="4 - 29" publicationUrl="http://www.triggerplants.org/resources/ITPS+Journal+Vol+1+No+2.pdf" refId="B18" refString="Lowrie, A, Conran, J, 2011. An overview of the Australian Levenhookia (Stylidiaceae) complex, including a new species (L. murfetii) and observations on the triggering methods employed for pollination and outcrossing. Journal of the International Triggerplant Society 1 (2): 4 - 29, http://www.triggerplants.org/resources/ITPS+Journal+Vol+1+No+2.pdf" title="An overview of the Australian Levenhookia (Stylidiaceae) complex, including a new species (L. murfetii) and observations on the triggering methods employed for pollination and outcrossing." url="http://www.triggerplants.org/resources/ITPS+Journal+Vol+1+No+2.pdf" volume="1" year="2011">Lowrie and Conran (2011)</bibRefCitation>
described
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. murfetii" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
from a limited number of specimens collected from north and north-east of Perth. Examination of collections at PERTH indicate a much broader geographic range and reveal that some of the features they used to separate it from
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
are not taxonomically informative, most notably whether the stem is simple or branched, labellum morphology and inflorescence structure. The simplest way to distinguish pressed material of these two species is by examining the distal portion of the stem and the abaxial surface of the outermost floral bracts, which are always glandular-hairy in
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. murfetii" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
and glabrous in
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
.
<taxonomicName class="Magnoliopsida" family="Stylidiaceae" genus="Levenhookia" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Levenhookia murfetii" order="Asterales" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Levenhookia murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
mostly flowers earlier in the season (from late August to early October cf. late September to early December) and its flowers tend to have more openly-spread corolla lobes (compare Fig.
<figureCitation captionStart="Figure 3" captionStartId="F3" captionText="Figure 3. Comparative distributions and floral morphologies A, B Levenhookia pusilla, with a disjunct distribution in Western Australia and South Australia and a dense inflorescence of pint-sized flowers (unvouchered, Mt Clarence, Albany, Western Australia) C, D L. murfetii, a Western Australian endemic with discrete markings at the base of the corolla lobes (J. A. Wege 1829) E, F L. sonderi, a rarity from South Australia and Victoria with red-purple markings on the labellum that are especially prominent in pressed material (unvouchered, from near St Andrews, Victoria). Photos by J. A. Wege (B), K. R. Thiele (D) and C. Lindorff (F). Scale bar on maps 1000 km." figureDoi="10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909.figure3" httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/420775" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">3B, D</figureCitation>
) with discrete red-pink markings near the base (Fig.
<figureCitation captionStart="Figure 2" captionStartId="F2" captionText="Figure 2. Labellum and column movement in Levenhookia. Black arrow = labellum hooded over column; white arrow = labellum ' triggered' to release column; yellow arrow = labellum repositioned following column release; blue arrow = column position immediately following release from labellum A L. stipitata (unvouchered, Augusta area, Western Australia) B L. aestiva (J. A. Wege 2090) C-E L. leptantha (J. A. Wege 2063), with labellum enclosing the column (C), triggered to release the column which moves to the opposite side of the flower (D) and subsequently repositioned (E) with the stigmatic lobes developed F L. aestiva (J. A. Wege 2090), labellum triggered with column momentum stopped by the sheath at the base of the corolla lobes G, H L. pauciflora (at J. A. Wege 1071 &amp; C. Wilkins): note the unusual, distally-angled column and brush-tipped labellum I L. murfetii (J. A. Wege 2060): note the dorsal position of the labellum; J, K L. dubia, with the labellum opening (but not otherwise moving) to release the column (K). Photos by R. W. Davis (A, B) and J. A. Wege (C-K)." figureDoi="10.3897/phytokeys.151.51909.figure2" httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/420774" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">2I</figureCitation>
) (markings absent in
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
). While individual plants of
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. murfetii" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="murfetii">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. murfetii</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
often produce fewer flowers than in
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, flower number cannot be used to reliably separate these two species. They are largely geographically separated, although an apparent mixed collection from the Bolgart area (
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">R. Erickson s.n.</emphasis>
, PERTH 02769182) suggests that they may occur in sympatry. They are known to grow in proximity to one another in the Tarin Rock and Toodyay areas and probably also near Warradarge (refer to the notes under
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="illustrations">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Illustrations.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
R. Erickson, Triggerplants 208, Pl. 58, Nos. 1-7. 1958, as
<taxonomicName lsidName="L. pusilla" pageId="0" pageNumber="1" rank="species" species="pusilla">
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">L. pusilla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="0" pageNumber="1" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Selected specimens examined.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="0" pageNumber="1">
<emphasis bold="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">Australia. Western Australia</emphasis>
: junction of Yerina Springs Rd and Ogilvie Rd, 15 km NNE of Gregory, 11 Sep 2004,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">R.K. Brummitt 21236</emphasis>
,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">A.S. George &amp; E.G.H Oliver</emphasis>
(PERTH); due E of N end of Corry Rd, W of Corrigin, 24 Sep 2007,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">M. Hislop &amp; M. Griffiths WW 209 - 27</emphasis>
(PERTH); 21 miles [33.8 km] N of Geraldton, Moresby Range, 25 Aug 1974,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">D. &amp; N. McFarland 1137</emphasis>
(PERTH); Mt Lesueur National Park, 9 Sep 2008,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">D.E. Murfet &amp; A. Lowrie DEM 6345</emphasis>
(AD, PERTH); SE corner of Reserve 24952, 23 Sep 1998,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">E.M. Sandiford 326</emphasis>
(PERTH); 750 m E along Hills Rd from the Lake Grace - Dumbleyung Rd, Tarin Rock Nature Reserve, 21 Sep 1997,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">J.A. Wege 360</emphasis>
,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">R. Butcher &amp; C. Wilkins</emphasis>
(PERTH); 6.9 km S of Coorow - Greenhead Rd on Midlands Rd, Marchagee Nature Reserve, 16 Sep 2011,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">J.A. Wege 1829 &amp; K.R. Thiele</emphasis>
(PERTH); Elphin Nature Reserve off Waddington - Wongan Hills Rd, 11 Sep 2018,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">J.A. Wege 2060</emphasis>
(CANB, MEL, PERTH); ca. 4.4 km E of First North Rd on Eneabba - Three Springs Rd, Wotto Nature Reserve, 13 Sep 2018,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">J.A. Wege 2066</emphasis>
(PERTH); 2.5 km W from Brand Hwy on Coorow - Greenhead Rd, 14 Sep 2018,
<emphasis italics="true" pageId="0" pageNumber="1">J.A. Wege 2067</emphasis>
(CANB, MEL, PERTH).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>