Isoetes nana J.B.S. Pereira, 2017

Pereira, Jovani B. S., Stuetzel, Thomas & Schulz, Christian, 2017, Isoetes nana, a new species from the coastal mountains of southeastern Brazil, PhytoKeys 89, pp. 91-105 : 93-97

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.89.20171

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E49E64E4-CD09-5472-8B01-2BCAE9F6FC47

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Isoetes nana J.B.S. Pereira
status

sp. nov.

Isoetes nana J.B.S. Pereira sp. nov. Figs 1A-G View Figure 1 ; 7A-C View Figure 7

Diagnosis.

Isoetes nana can be distinguished from its closely resembling species by a set of characters that include 5-15 small leaves per individual, erect, reaching up to 3.5cm long, megaspore rugulate (rarely laevigate or obscurely cristate) and microspore sparsely echinate.

Type.

BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Serra de Itatiaia , March 1894, Ule 98 (holotype: G!; isotype: HBG!) .

Description.

Plants terrestrial or aquatic. Corm globose to subglobose, 0.3-0.8cm wide, 2-lobed. Roots conspicuous, dichotomously branched. Leaves 0.6-1.2mm wide at mid length, 1.5-3.5 cm long, 5-15, linear to triangular, straight, erect, apex acute; alae 0.9-1.6 cm long, stretching 1/2-3/4 of total leaf length. Subula semi-terete, olive-green in dry material. Labium present, caducous. Ligule not seen. Velum covering ca. 1/2 of the sporangium surface. Scales absent. Sporangium 1.0-1.5 mm wide, 1.5-2.0 mm long, orbiculate to elliptic, hyaline throughout. Megaspore 480-520 µm diameter (average = 500 µm, N = 10), trilete, white, not lustrous, subspheroidal; laesures straight, narrowly triangular, higher than wide, with straight and parallel sides, apex acute, slightly lower close to the pole; macrosculpture of the proximal and distal surfaces rugulate (rarely laevigate or obscurely cristate), microsculpture of the proximal and distal surfaces with terminal ends of anastomosed bars joined forming bacillae or more rarely echinulae; equatorial ridges arched, with straight and parallel sides, rounded. Microspore 29-33µm long (average = 31 µm, N = 20), light brown, monolete; laesurae straight, without prominent invagination, macrosculpture on the proximal and distal surface sparsely echinate, echinulae low, microsculpture baculate and granulate.

Additional specimens examined.

BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Serra de Itatiaia , em pequenas bacias d’água dos rochedos, Mar. 1894, Ule s.n. (P01591972; https://science.mnhn.fr/institution/mnhn/collection/p/item/p01591972) .

Distribution and habitat.

Isoetes nana is known only from the type locality at Serra de Itatiaia, Rio de Janeiro (Figure 2 View Figure 2 ). According to the label on herbarium sheets, the population was found at elevations of about 2300 m and recorded as aquatic, growing in small ponds on rocky outcrops.

Comments.

The two collections (Ule 98, kept in G and HBG and Ule s.n. kept in P) made by Ule at Serra de Itatiaia (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) in March 1894 are probably a single collection. Fuchs-Eckert labelled the collection Ule 98 (G) as Isoetes nana and also cited this name in a published paper ( Fuchs-Eckert 1982: 255). Hickey (1985) also pointed out the unique characters of the megaspore of I. nana in his doctoral thesis ( Hickey 1985: 142). However, neither Fuchs-Eckert nor Hickey have diagnosed and validly published this new taxon. Isoetes nana is known only from these two collections. Although we tried three times to re-collect Isoetes nana , without success (all our attempts were with bad weather, including heavy rain), no additional collections have been made until now. The lack of recent collections of this species may probably be due to two main reasons: first, because of its rarity; second, because it has been overlooked (as many Isoetes species) by botanists during fieldwork.

In the same Serra do Itatiaia, three other Isoetes taxa occur: I. ulei U. Weber, I. martii A. Braun and I. x goebelii U. Weber (pro sp.) ( I. martii × Isoetes sp.) (Figs 3 View Figure 3 - 5 View Figure 5 ). Isoetes nana can be easily distinguished from these species and the hybrid by its few leaves (5-15 per individual vs. more than 15 per individual, rarely 10 leaves in I. martii ) that are short (1.5-3.5 cm vs.> 6 cm) and by its megaspore rugulate, rarely laevigate or obscurely cristate (vs. reticulate or distinctly cristate) and microspore sparsely echinate (vs. laevigate or densely echinate) (Table 1 View Table 1 - 2 View Table 2 ).

In the coastal mountains in southern Brazil, three other species with non-reticulate megaspore occur that are similar to this new species (Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; Table 1 View Table 1 - 2 View Table 2 ): I. weberi U. Weber (Figures 6A-C View Figure 6 , 7D-F View Figure 7 and 8A-C View Figure 8 ), I. quiririensis J.B.S. Pereira & Labiak (Figures 6D-F View Figure 6 , 7G-I View Figure 7 and 8D-F View Figure 8 ) and I. maxima Hickey, Macluf & Link-Pérez (Figures 6G-I View Figure 6 , 7J-L View Figure 7 and 8G-I View Figure 8 ). Isoetes nana can be distinguished by the characters shown in the following taxonomic key and in Tables 1 View Table 1 and 2 View Table 2 . Furthermore, although the microsculpture of the megaspore seems to be a reliable source of taxonomic characters and it has been widely used to separate species in Selaginella ( Schulz et al. 2013; Bauer et al. 2016), the megaspore microsculpture in Isoetes is rarely studied and used in the taxonomy (but see Macluf et al. 2003; Troia et al. 2012; Schafran et al. 2016). We observed that the microsculpture of the proximal-distal surfaces of the megaspores of I. nana consists of anastomosed bars, whose terminal ends are joined forming bacillae or more rarely echinulae (Figure 7C View Figure 7 ). Amongst the analysed species, only I. maxima shows a similar microsculpture pattern (Figure 7L View Figure 7 ), while all remaining species present terminal ends of anastomosed bars joined forming echinulae (or more rarely bacillae in I. quiririensis ) (Figures 4C, F, I View Figure 4 and 7F, I View Figure 7 ). These data show that megaspore microsculpture may provide useful characters not only to identify I. nana , but also for the taxonomy of Brazilian Isoetes .

Since there is a correlation between spore sizes and ploidy level (Kott and Britton 1980; Troia 2001; Pereira et al. 2015) and I. nana presents mega- and microspore sizes that are similar to those of the diploids I. quiririensis and I. maxima (Table 2 View Table 2 ), we hypothesise that I. nana is also diploid.

Conservation status.

Since I. nana is currently known from a single (not recently confirmed) locality, it may deserve special attention concerning its conservation status. However, based on our current knowledge on this species and according to IUCN Red List criteria ( IUCN 2012), it is assessed here as data deficient (DD).