Begonia silletensis (A. DC.) C. B. Clarke, 1879

Camfield, Rebecca & Hughes, Mark, 2018, A revision and one new species of Begonia L. (Begoniaceae, Cucurbitales) in Northeast India, European Journal of Taxonomy 396, pp. 1-116 : 91-93

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.396

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3794273

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0397A96F-2F37-FF8B-03ED-FD94E1602CBA

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Begonia silletensis
status

 

Begonia silletensis View in CoL (A.DC.) C.B.Clarke [sect. Sphenanthera ]

Fig. 58 View Fig

The Flora of British India 2: 636 ( Clarke 1879). – Casparya silletensis View in CoL A.DC., Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis 15 (1): 277 (de Candolle 1864). – Type: India, Meghalaya, Sillet Hills, Wallich Cat. No. 9107 (lecto-: K-W, barcode K000634631, here designated; isolecto-: BM000017324, G-DC, K-W, barcode K000634630).

Citations in other publications

As B. silletensis: Clarke (1881: 115) View in CoL , Chauhan (1996: 176), Tebbitt & Guan (2002: 134), Uddin (2007: 595), Hughes (2008: 116), Khatun (2008: 13), Dash (2010: 40), Dash & Mao (2011: 2095), Morris (2012b: 146); as Casparya silletensis: Baruah & Choudbury (2014: 41) .

Other material

INDIA: Arunachal-Pradesh: Amjee, Sastry 40556 ( ARUN n.v.); Bapu Mountain, Rotung, 24 Nov. 1911, Burkill 37376 ( CAL n.v.); ibid., Nov. 1911 – Mar. 1912, Burkill 36700 ( K); Buyang, Dash 32695 ( ARUN n.v.); Kameng District, 24 Mar. 1957, Panigrahi 6029 ( CAL n.v.); Mishmi Hills, Kamlang Valley, Glo, 22 Mar. 1949, Ward 18439 ( BM); Sangram to Koloring, Dash 31223 ( ARUN n.v.). Assam: Cachar, Oct. 1873, Keenan s.n. ( K); Cachar, Katakhal Forest, Mar. 1888, Mann s.n. ( K); Charduar Forest, Apr. 1887, Mann s.n. ( K); ibid., Apr. 1887, Mann s.n. ( K); Namchung, 18 Apr. 1885, Clarke 37937A ( K). Manipur: Watt 6875 ( E).

Description

Rhizomatous, stemless, monoecious herb, 40–60 cm high. Rhizome: 8–10 mm wide, glabrous. Stipules: lanceolate, 10–20 × 4 mm, puberulent hairs on reverse, persistent. Leaves: petiole 10 – 60 cm long, short red tomentose or pubescent; lamina ovate to broadly ovate, basifixed, base cordate with lobes not overlapping, 10–33 × 8.5–21 cm, asymmetric, upper surface green, very sparsely puberulous all over or on veins mostly near petiole attachment or glabrous, underside green, red puberulous all over, denser on veins, venation palmate, midrib 7–23 cm long; margin entire or with small teeth at ends of main veins, with sparse short hairs; apex short acuminate or acute. Inflorescence: cymose, terminal, few; peduncle with puberulous hairs, branching once; male primary 12 –25 cm long, secondary 1–2 mm long, 6–8 flowers; female primary 5–15 cm long, secondary 0.5(–4) cm long, 1–4 flowers; bracts ovate, 11–35 × 2–35 mm, margin entire, deciduous. Male flower: pedicel 1–4 cm long, red puberulous; tepals 4; outer tepals obovate, 4–20 × 10–15 mm, white to pink, red puberulous on reverse denser near base, margin entire; inner tepals spathulate, 13–17 × 7–12 mm, white to pink, glabrous; androecium with 70–100 stamens, symmetric; filaments 1–3 mm long, unequal, slightly fused at base or free; anther oblong elliptic, 1–2 mm long, dehiscing through slits running nearly the entire length of the anther, not hooded, connective extended. Female flower: pedicel 2–5 cm long, red puberulous hairs; bracteoles absent; tepals 4, equal obovate-orbicular, ca 16 × 15 mm, white to pink, puberulous on reverse denser near base, inner tepals similar yet smaller; ovary 3–4-locular, placentae bifid; capsule globose, densely red tomentose, without wings; styles 3–4, convoluted with twisted ends, caduceus. Fruit: upright, globose; capsule spherical, 8–23 × 10–15 mm, sparsely red tomentose to glabrous.

Distribution and phenology

Arunachal-Pradesh, Assam and Manipur; also in China, Bangladesh and Myanmar; 450–1000 m. Flowering: April to September; fruiting: April to October.

Conservation status

Least Concern. Begonia silletensis has an AOO of 44 km 2 and an EOO of 87,700 km 2 suggesting the species could be Vulnerable. There is, however, suitable habitat available in Northeast India, particularly the mountains of Arunachal-Pradesh and down into the Arakan mountain range. The species has been recorded near the Namphada Reserve and the Pakke Tiger Reserve.

Remarks

There has been much confusion over the delimitation of this species and how it can be separated from its nearest relative, B. aborensis , by using hair characters. Begonia silletensis is described as being glabrous ( Tebbitt & Guan 2002; Dash & Mao 2011; Morris 2011c, 2012b), however, close examination of specimens cited in Tebbitt & Guan (2002) reveal some with short sparse pubescence, and one (Mann s.n.) with 5 mm long hairs we consider to belong to B. aborensis . After consulting all available specimens including two sheets of type material and the Kew specimen (K000634631) designated as the lectotype, it is clear that B. silletensis has soft short tomentose hairs along the veins on the lamina underside and petiole. The upper surface of the leaf looks glabrous at a glance, but with a hand lens or microscope small, sparsely spread hairs are often visible especially near the petiole attachment and along the veins. The same short tomentose pubescence is also found on the young ovaries but lost as the fruit ripens. The most reliable character for separating the two species is the longer peduncle in B. silletensis , and the longer, red indumentum on B. aborensis . In this account it has been decided to leave them as separate but very closely related species. Further studies on good flowering material and possibly a genetic analysis would be useful to give insight into whether they could be considered as a single, variable taxon. The plant photographed in Morris (2011c) identified as B. aborensis is referable to our concept of B. silletensis considering its very short indumentum and distinct peduncle.

Morris (2012b) shows photographs of a very large glabrous Begonia from Arunachal-Pradesh, referred to as B. silletensis . The plant has 5-locular fruit and flowers with 5–6 styles, and very large solitary female flowers over 10 cm diameter with up to 10 fringed tepals. This differs considerably from the type of B. silletensis and raises the possibility that the plant in the photograph is a new species.

There is variety of this species, B. silletensis var. mengyangensis Tebbitt & K.Y.Guan ( Tebbitt & Guan 2002) , found in Yunnan, China.All specimens viewed for this account are of the type variety B. silletensis var. silletensis .

ARUN

Botanical Survey of India, Arunachal Pradesh Regional Centre

CAL

Botanical Survey of India

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

BM

Bristol Museum

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Cucurbitales

Family

Begoniaceae

Genus

Begonia

Loc

Begonia silletensis

Camfield, Rebecca & Hughes, Mark 2018
2018
Loc

B. silletensis: Clarke (1881: 115)

Morris R. 2012: 146
Dash S. S. & Mao A. A. 2011: 2095
Dash S. S. 2010: 40
Hughes M. 2008: 116
Khatun B. M. R. 2008: 13
Uddin A. 2007: 595
Tebbitt M. C. & Guan K. Y. 2002: 134
Chauhan A. S. 1996: 176
Clarke C. B. 1881: )
1881
Loc

Casparya silletensis

2: 636 ( Clarke 1879 )
(1): 277 (de Candolle 1864 )
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