Noronhia olearia
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7599432 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7596182 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/824F8D54-FF64-3AD6-FE28-FEE6FAC9FA6E |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Noronhia olearia |
status |
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59. Noronhia olearia View in CoL Hong-Wa, nom. nov. ( Fig. 43A View Fig ).
≡ Olea ambrensis H. Perrier View in CoL in Mém. Inst. Sci. Madagascar, Sér. B, Biol. Vég. 2: 277. 1949
[non Noronhia ambrensis H. Perrier View in CoL in Mém. Inst. Sci. Madagascar, Sér. B, Biol. Vég. 2: 277. 1949].
Typus: MADAGASCAR. Prov. Antsiranana: Centre (Nord): Montagne d’Ambre , près de Diégo-Suarez, [12°33’S 49°08’E], 1000-1200 m, IX.1926, Perrier de la Bâthie 17706 (holo-: P [ P00162996 ]!) GoogleMaps .
Description
Trees to 10 m tall, trunk to 30 cm diameter; young twigs cylindrical, 0.5-2 mm diameter, glabrous; bark medium gray, smooth, sometimes lenticellate. Leaves opposite, persistent; bud scales persistent; blades dark green above, lighter below, lanceolate, 4-11 3 1.6-4.3 cm, coriaceous, glabrous, domatia absent, base acute to attenuate, margin flat to slightly undulate, apex acute to acuminate, the acumen 1-9 mm long, midrib slightly sunken above, raised below, secondary veins conspicuous, 7-12 per side, 4-19 mm apart, looping 1-5 mm from the margin; petiole yellow, 4-14 3 0.9-2 mm, usually not woody, sometimes only partially, glabrous. Flowers unseen, but infructescence thyrsoid. Fruiting pedicel 4-13 3 0.5-2 mm; young fruits green, reddish brown when mature, ovoid, 11-22.5 3 8-16 mm, surface smooth, sometimes verrucose, apex apiculate; dry pericarp 0.4-0.6 mm thick; endocarp woody; seed 11-16 3 6.5-12 mm.
Distribution, ecology and phenology
Noronhia olearia occurs in low- to mid-elevation transitional forests in the north, from Cap St. Sébastien to Montagne d’Ambre ( Fig. 36 View Fig ). It fruits from January to June.
Conservation status
The assessment included 10 collections representing eight localities and resulted in an EOO of 377 km 2, an AOO of 28 km 2, and four subpopulations representing three locations, of which two occur within a protected area (Montagne d’Ambre). One of the subpopulations occurs in an area that is now highly degraded as a result of land conversion for agriculture and pasture, and other forms of forest exploitation. The subpopulations within Montagne d’Ambre PN, especially those at the periphery, also suffer from illicit exploitation of wood and other forest products as well as encroachment for crop and khat cultivation. All these threats will lead to decline in habitat quality and number of individuals as well as habitat loss. Therefore, Noronhia olearia is assigned a preliminary status of “Endangered” [EN B1ab(i,i i,iii,iv,v)+2ab(i,ii,iii,iv,v)].
Notes
Noronhia olearia can be recognized by its yellow to reddish petioles and apiculate to rostrate fruits, which are often covered with a white pellicle. It differs from N. linocerioides by its lanceolate (vs. elliptic), coriaceous (vs. chartaceous) leaf blades, and smooth to verrucose (vs. smooth to punctate) fruits with an apiculate to rostrate (vs. rostellate) apex. This species was first described as Olea ambrensis , whose type (Perrier de la Bâthie 17706) morphologically resembles the following specimens: Andrianantoanina 130, 313 and 366, Hong-Wa 573 and 693, Leeuwenberg 14309 and Schatz 1501. Another collection, Richard 192 [P00701261, P04046974], identified by PERRIER DE LA BâTHIE as Noronhia ambrensis , also belongs to this group. Molecular studies placed material of Hong-Wa 573 and 693 deep within Noronhia (HONG- WA & BESNARD, 2013, 2014) rather than within Olea . Similarly, other specimens recognized as O. ambrensis by GREEN (2002) fell elsewhere within Noronhia , close to collections to which they resemble (e.g. Schatz 3605 in N. linocerioides ). Since the binomial Noronhia ambrensis is already occupied and no other validly published names are available for the entity described as Olea ambrensis , a new name is proposed here.
Additional specimens examined
MADAGASCAR. Prov. Antsiranana: Joffreville, Montagne d’Ambre PN, 12°31’S 49°09’E, 700-900 m, 3-11.V.1993, Andrianantoanina et al. 130 ( G, MO, P, TAN); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., 12°27’S 49°13’E, 250-500 m, 3-10.VIII.1993, Andrianantoanina & Rochsceohclher 269 ( K, MO, P); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., 12°35’S 49°09’E, 1475 m, 26.VIII-IX.1993, Andrianantoanina 313 ( K, MO, P, TAN); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., 12°27’S 49°13’E, 250-500 m, 29.IX-5.X.1993, Andrianantoanina 366 ( K, MO); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., 12°33’S 49°08’E, 1000 m, 22.I.2009, Hong-Wa 573 ( G, MO, P, TAN); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., 12°31’43”S 49°10’21”E, 993 m, 18.V.2010, Hong-Wa & Ortiz 693 ( G, MO, P, TAN); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., near Station des Roussettes , 12°31’S 49°10’E, 1000 m, 23.I.1994, Leeuwenberg 14309 ( MO, P, WAG); GoogleMaps Cap St. Sébastien , [12°26’S 48°44’E], 1837, Richard 192 ( P); GoogleMaps Ambohitra ( Joffreville ), Montagne d’Ambre PN, 12°33’S 49°08’E, 1000 m, 13.IX.1987, Schatz 1501 ( MO, P, TAN); GoogleMaps ibid. loc., [12°33’S 49°08’E], 19.V.1987, Service Forestier 31599 ( TEF). GoogleMaps
WAG |
WAG |
P |
Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants |
G |
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève |
MO |
Missouri Botanical Garden |
TAN |
Parc de Tsimbazaza |
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
WAG |
Wageningen University |
TEF |
Centre National de la Recherche Appliquée au Developement Rural |
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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Genus |
Noronhia olearia
Hong-Wa, Cynthia 2016 |
Olea ambrensis
H. Perrier 1949: 277 |
H. Perrier 1949: 277 |