Piper rubrifolium W. Trujillo-C. & M.A.Jaram

Trujillo, William, Jaramillo, M. Alejandra, Toro, Diego & Balslev, Henrik, 2023, Over- and under-described: new species, new synonyms, and a new name in the megadiverse genus Piper (Piperaceae) on the east Andean slopes, Phytotaxa 601 (3), pp. 263-284 : 276-279

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.601.3.4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8144724

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B0087AC-FFAD-4261-FF28-FA10FE75DA7F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Piper rubrifolium W. Trujillo-C. & M.A.Jaram
status

 

Piper rubrifolium W. Trujillo-C. & M.A.Jaram View in CoL View at ENA . sp. nov., Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 , 9 View FIGURE 9 , 10 View FIGURE 10 .

Type:— COLOMBIA: Caquetá, Florencia, trail to Tarqui, La Ruidosa ravine, 1°52’8”N, 75°39’40”W, 2027 m, 16 July 2014 [fr], W GoogleMaps . Trujillo et al. 3139 (holotype COAH!].

Diagnosis:— Piper rubrifolium is closely related P.sabaletasanum Trel. &Yunck.(1950: 104) , P.spoliatum (1950: 118) and P. cajambrense . It differs from P. cajambrense and P. spoliatum in having smooth internodes and petioles (vs. internodes and petioles with epidermal warty outgrowths in the latter). It can also be easily differentiated from P. sabaletasanum by its smooth leaves vs. bullate leaves in the latter. Piper rubrifolium has young leaves that are red on the underside, another trait that characterizes this species.

Shrub to 4 m tall. Internodes smooth, green to red, glabrous to puberulent, idioblasts not evident in any part of the plant. Prophylls lacking. Petioles uniform in shape and size along all axes, 4–6 cm long, vaginate along their entire length, smooth, glabrous to puberulent, green to burgundy colored. Leaf blades chartaceous, brown when dry and red when fresh on the underside in young leaves, 12.5–16 × 29–37 cm, variable in shape along axes; on monopodial axes, blade ovate, medially symmetric, base lobate, with lobes 1–1.5 cm long, symmetric, and not overlapping the petiole, sinus open, equilateral, basal insertion symmetric; on sympodial axes, blade elliptic, medially symmetric, base auriculate, lobes asymmetric, the shorter lobe 0.7–3 cm long, the other lobe 2–2.2 cm longer, the longer one partially overlapping the petiole, sinus closed, inequilateral, insertion symmetric; leaf blade smooth, glabrous to puberulent on the abaxial surface, eciliate; pinnately nerved from the lower half to 3/4 of the midvein; secondary veins 4–5 pairs, festooned brochidodromous, with spacing decreasing and angle increasing towards the base; tertiary veins randomly reticulate to percurrent; apex acuminate. Inflorescences and infructescences simple spikes, terminal, erect; peduncles 3–4 cm long, glabrous, green; flowering rachis 9–14 cm and fruiting rachis 25–28 cm long, fruits densely grouped along the rachis. Floral bracts cucullate, triangular when seen from above, 0.6–0.8 × 0.3–0.5 mm, glabrous on the adaxial surface and margin, not forming bands around the spike. Flowers with four stamens, filaments 0.8–1.2 mm long, anthers 0.10–0.16 × 0.08–0.12 mm, longitudinal dehiscent, with two thecae, with connective not protruding, glabrate; stigmas 3, 0.03–0.07 mm long, sessile. Fruits one-seeded berries, globose, 2–4 × 1.8–4 mm, glabrous, partially immersed in the rachis, with stigmas persistent, 0.03–0.07 mm long, sessile, green when alive and black when dry. Seeds ovoid, dark brown.

Distribution:— Piper rubrifolium is endemic to the eastern cordillera of the Andes along the slopes towards the Amazon basin at 1500–2000 m elevation, in the Tropical montane rain forest (TMrf).

Habitat and ecology:—It is a shade-loving species growing in the understory of rainforests.

Phenology:—Flowering and fruiting specimen were collected in July.

Etymology:—The name Piper rubrifolium is derived from the Latin rubrum meaning red and folia meaning leaves, referring to burgundy color underneath on young leaves.

Conservation status:— This species is known from three specimens representing two populations. Its habitat is threatened by deforestation and expansion of the agricultural frontier. The extent of occurrence ( EOO) is 398 km 2 and its area of occupancy ( AOO) is 12 km 2, which, together with the continuing decline in quality of the habitat, suggests that it is Endangered [EN B1 a+ B2 a] .

Phylogenetic relationships:— Piper rubrifolium belongs to the Macrostachys clade ( Jaramillo et al. 2008). In our phylogeny this species forms a monophyletic group with taxa known to occur in the Chocó region, i.e., P. spoliatum , P. sabaletasanum , and P. cajambrense ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Comments:— Piper rubrifolium is red on the abaxial surface of immature leaves and mature petioles, the petioles and internodes are smooth without epidermal warty outgrowths, and the leaf base has short lobes which are the most important characteristics that separate Piper rubrifolium from similar species.

Key to Piper rubrifolium and related species in the Macrostachys clade

1. Leaves bullate........................................................................................................................................................... P. sabaletasanum View in CoL

– Leaves smooth....................................................................................................................................................................................2

2. Petioles with epidermal warty outgrowths .........................................................................................................................................3

– Petioles smooth (without epidermal warty outgrowths)................................................................................................ P. rubrifolium View in CoL

3. Leaves oblanceolate, narrowed to the base ...................................................................................................................... P. spoliatum View in CoL

– Leaves broad–elliptic, wide at the base....................................................................................................................... P. cajambrense View in CoL

Additional specimens examined:— COLOMBIA: Caquetá, Florencia , trail to Campo Hermoso Alto , 3rd tunnel, 1°44’56”N, 75°44’36”W, 2037 m, 19 March 2020 [sterile], W. Trujillo & L. Sandoval 4029 ( UMNG-H!) GoogleMaps . Putumayo, Mocoa, road Sibundoy-Mocoa at El Mirador , 1°04’11”N, 76°44’41”W, 2000 m, 9 July 1998 [fl], H. Mendoza & F. Quevedo 6035 ( HUAZ!) GoogleMaps .

HUAZ

HUAZ

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

COAH

Instituto Amazónico de Investigaciones Científicas SINCHI

HUAZ

Universidad de la Amazonia

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Piperales

Family

Piperaceae

Genus

Piper

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