Orobanche bartlingii Grisebach (1844: 57)

Piwowarczyk, Renata, Pedraja, Óscar Sánchez, Khutsishvili, Manana & Kharazishvili, Davit, 2023, Holoparasitic Orobanchaceae in Georgia (Caucasus): taxonomic revision, diversity, distribution, habitats and host range, Phytotaxa 604 (1), pp. 1-103 : 73-75

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.604.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5464813D-FFF3-FFFD-FF67-AFD7660AF8A8

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Plazi

scientific name

Orobanche bartlingii Grisebach (1844: 57)
status

 

15. Orobanche bartlingii Grisebach (1844: 57) View in CoL View at ENA

. Type:— GERMANY (holotype indicated in Carlón et al. 2009: 18). “Habitat in fruticetis Hassiae inferioris pr. Allendorf [Bad Sooden-Allendorf, Werra-Meissner-Kreis, Hesse] (auctore Bartl. [F.G. Bartling] parasit, in Libanotide)” (GOET001913-8666! [https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/1638445650]). Heterotypic synonyms:— O. libanotidis Ruprecht (1845: 70) ; O. alsatica subsp. libanotidis (Rupr.) Tzvelev (1973: 363) ; O. alsatica var. libanotidis (Rupr.) Beck (1890: 177) . Fig. 48 View FIGURE 48 .

General distribution: —Eurasian species, occurring from the Pyrenees in Spain through France, Germany, Central Europe, and more frequent in Eastern Europe, the Baltic states ( Estonia), Russia (European and Asiatic), to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and the Caucasus (North and South Caucasus), with the latest report from NE Turkey (Piwowarczyk & Sánchez Pedraja in Nobis et al. 2023).

Distribution: —Single localities in the western (Imereti, Samtskhe-Javakheti), central (Shida Kartli) and eastern (Kakheti) parts ( Fig. 49 View FIGURE 49 ).

Habitat: —Rocky, partially shaded slopes, edges of shrublands and forest, rarely steppe hills, as well as occasionally in a nut orchard with a private farm; usually (500) 850–1300 m.

Hosts: —Here, on a new host not mentioned so far, Seseli transcaucasicum (Schischk.) Pimenov & Sdobnina (syn. Libanotis transcaucasica Schischk. ), rarely Cachrys microcarpa M. Bieb. (syn. Bilacunaria microcarpa (M. Bieb.) Pimenov & V. N. Tikhom. ) ( Apiaceae ), the last is a new host genus for this species.

Phenology: —Flowering (end of May) June–July, fruiting July–August.

Conservation status: —Vulnerable (VU) – B1 ab(iii) + 2 ab(iii). EOO is less than 12,000 km 2, existing at no more than 10 localities (4 provinces), severely fragmented; AOO is less than 500 km 2, existing at 5 localities. The main threats are loss/degradation of habitats; however, individuals in subpopulations are usually numerous.

Taxonomic note:—One of its synonyms and probably the most used name for this species was O. libanotidis Ruprecht , a name that we now typify and that even today is the priority name for those authors who prefer to treat this taxon as a subspecies or variety of O. alsatica Kirschleger (1836: 109) .

Lectotype (here designated):—1. “ Orobanche Libanotidis Rupr. / Herb. Dr. a Ķhlewein / Fl. Petrop. [Petropoli / Pretograd / Saint Petersburg]”. – 2. “ Orobanche libanotidis Rupr. / ... bei Duderhof [place in the SW Saint Petersburg] / Jul.”. – 3. “Typus!”. – 4. “ Orobanche libanotidis Rupr. / 1954.XII.30 Teste: Tzvelev”. – 5. “ Orobanche alsatica Kirschl. / var. libanotidis (Rupr.) G. Beck / 1955.I.6 Teste: N. Tzvelev” (LE00050361, the sheet contains two specimens with their respective labels (these are different), we choose as lectotype the specimen of Ķhlewein on right side of the sheet; the left specimen (Duderhof) is part of original material, but for its different label we are not sure that it is part of the same gathering, so we prefer to treat it a syntype). Isolectotypes: LE00050363 - hb. Ķhlewein; P04384459 - hb. Ķhlewein [only the specimen to the right of the sheet], P04384460 - hb. Ķhlewein [only the specimen to the left of the sheet], LY0738328 - hb. G. Rouy in R. Bonaparte, K - hb. Ķhlewein; W - hb. Ķhlewein, etc. Syntypes: LE00050361 [“Duderhof”, only the specimen to the left of the sheet]; P04384459 - hb. Bunge [only the specimen to the left of the sheet], etc. ( Ledebour 1849: 319, Sanchez Pedraja et al. 2016 +, Piwowarczyk et al. 2019).

The species had already been collected in the surroundings of Saint Petersburg and determined as O. major ( O. major sensu Gorter (1761: 100, Sobolewski 1799: 151) et auct. div., until Ruprecht (1845: 70); described it, indicating that it is a different species of the C. scabiosa parasite ( O. major auct., non L. = O. elatior Sutton (1798: 178)) . We choose here the lectotype from the material of “Ruprecht, Ķhlewein pl. exs.” ( Ledebour 1849: 319; Reichenbach f. 1862: 97).

Specimens examined: — GEORGIA. Imereti prov.: SW of Ambrolauri, between Kharistvala and Tkibuli, below Nakerala pass, steep slopes near serpentine road, landslides and rocky grassland, edges of forest, south exposure, on Seseli , 42°23’01”N, 43°00’46”E, 42°23’11”N, 43°00’47”E, 1030–1125 m, 16 July 2015, 17 July 2018, R. Piwowarczyk ( KTC) ( Piwowarczyk in Nobis et al. 2017) GoogleMaps ; Kakheti prov: NW of Udabno, E of Jikurebi Lake , steppe hills, on Bilacunaria , 41°34’12”N, 45°19’53”E, 860 m, 26 May 2014, R. Piwowarczyk ( KTC) GoogleMaps ; Samtskhe-Javakheti prov.: S of Abastumani, rocky shaded grasslands, on the edge of forest, meadows, on slope with southwestern exposure, on Seseli , 41°43’51.3”N, 42°50’18”E, 1215–1240 m, 12 July 2015, R. Piwowarczyk ( KTC) ( Piwowarczyk in Nobis et al. 2017) GoogleMaps ; Shida Kartli prov.: Grakali S, near the road to Sasireti , a roadside by an asphalt road, edges of bushes, also behind a fence in a nut orchard with a private farm, on Seseli , 41°56’07.4”N, 44°17’32.6”E, 560 m, 8 June 2022, R. Piwowarczyk ( KTC) GoogleMaps .

KTC

Pedagogical University

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