Cephalotaxus mannii Hook.

Bisht, Sunita, Khuraijam, Jibankumar Singh & Singh, Rita, 2021, Revisiting the taxonomy of the names Cephalotaxus mannii and C. griffithii (Taxaceae), Phytotaxa 501 (1), pp. 189-194 : 190-192

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.501.1.10

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5483039

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C87CF-FFEF-FFA7-E0A9-9600A2FCFADC

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Cephalotaxus mannii Hook.
status

 

Cephalotaxus mannii Hook. View in CoL f. (1886: t. 1523)

Lectotype (Step I. Lang et al. (2013). Step II. designated here):— INDIA. Meghalaya: Khasi Hills, Lankhla Woods, July 1885, G. Mann s.n. ( K000288019 , digital image!; isolectotype CAL447046 View Materials !) ( Fig.1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Residual syntypes:— INDIA. Meghalaya: Khasi Hills, Lankhla Woods, 01 November 1885, G. Mann s.n. ( DD!), ( CAL 447050 View Materials !), ( K000288007 , K000287675 , K001325156 , digital images!), ( A00003307 , digital image!), ( GH00003308 , digital image!), ( E00112582 , digital image!), (US00012030, digital image!), ( P00731282 , digital image!) , ( PH 00004039, digital image!).

Distribution:— India (Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur), China (Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan, Tibet), Northern Myanmar, Laos (Khammouan, Vientiane), Thailand, Vietnam.

Notes:— The species is distinguished from C. griffithii by several distinctive morphological characters. Leaves in C. mannii are borne 70º–90º to the branchlets where as it is 30º–45º in case of C. griffithii . Leaves of C. mannii are 1.5– 6 cm long, 2–4 mm wide and in C. grifithii leaves are 4–9 cm long and 4–7 mm wide. One of the main distinguishing character between the two species is the leaf base. Leaf base of C. griffithii is broadly rounded whereas C. mannii leaf have narrow base. Seeds of C. griffithii are 3.5–4.5 cm long and in C. mannii seeds are 1.8–2.8 cm long.

Second-step lectotypification:— In the protologue of C. mannii , the provenance was quoted as: “Khasia Mts., in Lankhla woods, about 5,000 ft., Gustav Mann ”. During the study, we have traced out multiple sheets of (thirteen specimens) this homogenous collection (by Gustav Mann) housed at different herbaria. Farjon (2010, 2017) and Lang et al. (2013) considered the specimen at Kew bearing “ 1 November 1885, G. Mann s.n.” as a holotype. Since there was not one specimen or illustration indicated or used by Hooker, there can be no holotype according to Art. 9.1 ( Turland et al. 2018). Nor can their use of “ holotype ” be corrected to “ lectotype ” under Art. 9.10, as they did not meet requirements of Art. 7.11 (Art. 9 Note 6), hence, their reference is therefore considered as effective first step lectotypification. So, the specimen selected here to be treated as second step lectotype.

Notes on conservation status:— Cephalotaxus mannii is listed as Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List ( Liao & Yang 2013). In the eastern Himalayan region of India, populations of C. mannii and C. griffithii are threatened by shifting cultivation and forest fire. In Mizoram state, the timber of C. griffithii is used for house building and making furniture ( Bhardwaj & Gakhar 2008). However, in most of the other states in Northeastern India, populations of C. griffithii ( Fig. 2A View FIGURE 2 ) remained unexplored due to remoteness of location and limited accessibility of the habitat of this species ( Moirangthem et al. 2014).

I

"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University

G

Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève

DD

Forest Research Institute, Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education

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