Pitcairnia floresii Gouda & Ric.Fernández, 2012

Gouda, Eric J. & Fernández, Ricardo, 2012, A remarkable new Pitcairnia (Bromeliaceae) species from Peru, Phytotaxa 49 (1), pp. 29-33 : 29-33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.49.1.4

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E0946C-324F-FFE7-FF32-FF8B3965FCE4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pitcairnia floresii Gouda & Ric.Fernández
status

sp. nov.

Pitcairnia floresii Gouda & Ric.Fernández View in CoL , sp.nov.

Type:— PERU. Dept. San Martín: Prov. Picota, Pucacaca , Concesión Ojos de Agua , 503 m, Virgin forest , steep hill slope (35 o) in stony places, 7 January 2011, R . Fernández , W . Rodríguez , A . Flores & F . Ramírez 3590 (holotype USM!, isotypes L!, USM!, WU!) .

This new species resembles Pitcairnia corallina Linden & André but the inflorescence is not trailing on the ground and smaller in all flowering parts, with yellow petals (not red). The inflorescence resembles that of P. sceptriformis (subgenus Pitcairnia ), but is secundly flowered (not erect) and shorter and erect pedunculate. The ovules are not caudate. The plant is stemless, not long caulescent as in P. sceptriformis .

Plant terrestrial, flowering ones 100–130 cm tall, acaulescent, forming groups, rosettes with 5–10 leaves, with inflorescence much shorter than the leaves. Leaves arching, fasciculate, dimorphic, persisting, petiolate. Transitory leaves reduced to a sheath-like structure, ca. 15 × 1.2 cm, lanceolate, stiffly papyraceous, entire, attenuate, densely lepidote, brown. Leaf-sheaths erect, amplexicaulous, conspicuous, ovate or triangular, 2.5– 3 × ca. 2.5 cm, rigid, margin entire, venation very distinct, adaxially glabrous, abaxially covered with a coalescent layer of brown trichomes. Petiole erect, ca. 50 cm long, 0.6–1 cm wide, canaliculate, stiffly coriaceous, venation very distinct, margins entire, abaxially white lepidote. Leaf-blades arching, linearlanceolate, not channelled, papyraceous, 80–100 × (1.5–) 3–5.5 cm, entire, central vein thickened and very distinct, venation very distinct (surface grooved), acute or attenuate, adaxially glabrous, abaxially densely lepidote and covered with a fine layer of trichomes, upper surface green, more white or cinereous green abaxially. Inflorescence cylindrical, simple, horizontal or nearly so, dense, (fertile part) 15–30 × 3.5–4 cm (excluding the petals), polystichous, with 50 or more flowers, flowers 0.3 cm apart. Peduncle not totally covered by its bracts, mostly abruptly curved at a right angle (often near the base), shorter than the petioles of the leaves, 25–32 cm long, 6 (when dry)– 10 mm in diameter (or more), brown lepidote especially near the nodes. Peduncle bracts (narrowly) ovate, erect, the lower ones not foliaceous, upper ones exceeding the internodes, imbricate but exposing part of the peduncle (in the lower part), 3–6(–12) × 1.2–1.8 cm, papyraceous, distinctly nerved, margins entire, attenuate or (sub-)caudate, abaxially with brown indument (fimbriate at the bract margins), reddish. Floral bracts ovate, divergent with the flowers, 17–22(–25) × 12–16 mm, the lower ones equalling or exceeding the sepals, but soon only reaching halfway the sepals, imbricate, papyraceous, ecarinate, faintly nerved, entire, apex acuminate, adaxially sparsely lepidote toward the apex, abaxially sparsely lepidote, red. Flowers divergent and often upward secund, ca. 4 cm long, cylindrical, short and stout pedicellate; pedicels up to 6 mm long, obconic; corolla actinomorphic. Sepals triangular to ovate, erect, 19–23 × 8–12 mm, slightly asymmetrical, fleshy in central part, the adaxial ones distinctly carinate (alate when dry), with hyaline margins, apiculate, adaxially slightly lepidote at the base only, abaxially slightly lepidote, floccose of finely divided trichomes, red, free. Petals erect and only the apex spreading or recurving, ca. 3.3 cm long, 8 mm wide, ligulate (with slightly rhombic blade), with one ligule at the base; ligules highly adnate to the petal claw, 0.6 mm long, erodate denticulate; apex rounded and obtuse, yellow. Stamens ca. 3 cm long, free; anthers linear-sagittate, basifixed. Pistil (including the inferior part) 3.5 cm long, exceeding the stamens; ovary one third superior, ca. 8 (in total) × 6 mm (triangular, bi-carinate), (inferior part) obconical, reddish, rugose; style including the stigma 27–32 mm long, stigma lobes twisted together forming an ellipsoid stigma, ovules ellipsoid and rounded at the chalaza. Seeds unkown.

Habitat:— Virgin forest, steep hill slope (35 o) on stony places at about 500 m elevation.

Distribution:— Peru, Dept. San Martin (known from the type collection and surrounding areas only).

Etymology:— The species is dedicated to Mr. Alberto Flores, a farmer from Pucacaca who brought this species to our attention.

Observations:— This new Pitcairnia belongs to the subgenus Pepinia (Brongniart in André 1870: 32) Baker (1881: 227) ( Smith & Downs 1974) because the ovules in the ovaries are not appendaged at anthesis. It resembles Pitcairnia corallina Linden & André (1873: 112) and has the same tendency to a prostrate inflorescence (strongly curved and short peduncle), but in this case the inflorescence stays well off the ground. The sepals are shorter (19–23 mm vs. 26 mm in P. corallina ); the petals are yellow and also shorter (3.3 cm vs. 7 cm long and red with a narrow white margin). The leaf-blades are narrower (3–5.5 cm vs. 10 cm wide) and the petiole is entire (vs. serrate in P. corallina ).

It also resembles Pitcairnia brittoniana ( Mez 1896: 451) Mez (1935: 270) and Pitcairnia sceptriformis Mez (1904: 628) in inflorescence (depicted in the nicely illustrated book Bromeliaceae of Ecuador by Manzanares (2005), but this new species is stemless (vs.long caulescent in other two species). It is totally spineless (vs. at least in some parts with spines on the leaf margins in the other species). The peduncle is short and mostly strongly curved (vs. erect and elongate).

The rhizomes of Pitcairnia floresii are eaten by peccaries ("sajinos") during the dry season of July- August–September.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

USM

Universiti Sains Malaysia

L

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

WU

Wayland University

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Poales

Family

Bromeliaceae

Genus

Pitcairnia

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