Didymoglossum barklyanum (Baker) J.P.Roux
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.375.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13728894 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B0A579-743F-964D-25DE-FC09FDE1671E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Didymoglossum barklyanum (Baker) J.P.Roux |
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13. Didymoglossum barklyanum (Baker) J.P.Roux View in CoL ( Roux 2009: 41), Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12
Trichomanes barklyanum Baker View in CoL ( Baker 1867: 338, t. 8, fig. F), as ‘ barklianum ’. Type:— MAURITIUS. ‘Tamari cascade’, without date, H. Barkly & A.M. Barkly s.n. (holotype K, K000228376!; isotype P, P00477822!). Note: in the introduction of his article including the description of T. barklyanum, Baker (1867) View in CoL clearly mentioned that all the specimens are housed in the Kew collections (K). This allows treating the specimen at K as the holotype.
Short description—Epiphytic or lithophytic; long-creeping filiform rhizomes, rootless and densely covered by dense black trichomes, bearing widely separated pending fronds; fronds sub-sessile or with short stipes, up to 1.5 cm long, narrowly ovate to oblong, entire with entire to mostly sinuate margins, with pinnate venation, lacking false veins, hairy with dark, not pedonculated, and usually paired trichomes on the margin; a single terminal sorus per fertile frond, cylindrical to narrowly campanulate with lips usually parallel and with brown margins; receptacle usually covered by the lips.
Global distribution—Endemic to the Mascarenes.
Current distribution in Mascarenes— La Réunion, Mauritius.
Ecology—Epiphytic on tree-trunks or lithophytic on shaded, wet rocks in lowland rainforests, with a few populations on shaded, wet rocks in wet ravines of the western side of La Réunion in remnants of semi-dry forests (50–700 m).
Specimens examined— MAURITIUS. Valley Cascade, March 1975, D. Lorence 1174 ( MAU) ; Vallée d’Osterlog , October 2010, S. Hennequin et al. 367 ( MAU, P02432431 ) .
— LA RÉUNION. Brûlé de Takamaka, October 2010, S. Hennequin et al. 308 (P02432361).
Note—This species was initially considered endemic to Mauritius ( Roux 2009), but has recently been confirmed on La Réunion ( Grangaud 2010). But because of its minute size and possible confusion in the field with similar Didymoglossum species, its potential presence outside Mascarenes, and especially in Madagascar, awaits confirmation. Its distinction is nevertheless easy, because it is the only Didymoglossum species in the western Indian Ocean that does not display false veins parallel to true veins.
MAU |
The Mauritius Herbarium |
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Didymoglossum barklyanum (Baker) J.P.Roux
Dubuisson, Jean-Yves, Pechon, Timothée Le, Bauret, Lucie, Rouhan, Germinal, Reeb, Catherine, Boucheron-Dubuisson, Elodie, Selosse, Marc-André, Chaussidon, Cécile, Dajoz, Isabelle, Pynee, Kersley, Grangaud, Edmond, Robert, Yannis, Tamon, Jean- Maurice & Hennequin, Sabine 2018 |
Trichomanes barklyanum Baker
, Baker 1867 |
T. barklyanum
, Baker 1867 |