Ancistrothyrsus scopae Feuillet, 2020

Feuillet, Christian, 2020, Ancistrothyrsus scopae (Passifloraceae), a new species from Amazonian Brazil and Guyana, with keys to the genus and species, Phytotaxa 438 (3), pp. 207-212 : 209

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.438.3.5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03932349-355F-FFBB-3BCC-FD135DC7F88A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ancistrothyrsus scopae Feuillet
status

sp. nov.

Ancistrothyrsus scopae Feuillet View in CoL , sp. nov.

Type. — GUYANA. Potaro-Siparuni Region: Mt. Ayanganna , east face, 5°20’04”N, 59°55’30”W, 712 m, 20 June 2001, fruit, H. D. Clarke, R. Williams, C. Perry, E. Tripp,& J. Kelly 9663 (holotype US-1692615! [scan 01886149]; isotypes MO!, OSC! [fruit only], P!) Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 (top left) GoogleMaps

Diagnosis.— Species nova in Ancistrothyrsum pertinet, autem ab aliis speciebus ex longioribus trichomatibus multi-verticillatis ramosis differt.

Description.—Woody climbers. Stems terete, hairy; young stems tomentose with hyaline trichomes ca. 0.3 mm long and hirsute and with branched trichomes looking like bottlebrushes, up to 5 mm long, main stem of the trichomes straw-colored when dry with an occasional black one, short branches in tiers, spreading, hyaline; older stems tomentose with a few bottlebrush trichomes. Stipules reduced to a rim with long hyaline tomentose/ciliate trichomes at margin, hidden among the hirsute trichomes on the young stems. Tendrils with the same indumentum as the leaves. Leaves alternate: petiole canaliculate, 1–1.7 cm long, indumentum similar to the stem; lamina oblanceolate, 6–23 × 3.5–12 cm, base acute to cuneate, apex obtuse, margin entire or with minute mucronate teeth, on short branches, leaves adaxially scarcely and shortly tomentose, peltate scales with small erect trichomes at the margin, and denser indumentum on the veins, loosely arachneous on large leaves of the main stem, abaxially densely tomentose, 7–10 main veins on each side of the midrib. Inflorescences axillary on short branches with leaves 3.5–9 cm long, compound-cymose, tomentose, terminal flower of the triads developing as a hook; peduncle 2–2.5 cm long; bracts 1–1.5 mm long, scale-like; bracteoles shorter than the bracts; pedicels 4–5 mm long; hooks swollen, indurate, semicircular ca. 1cm diam., sessile or nearly so. Flowers not seen; according to the labels, white with “stamens yellow”. Fruits yellow-orange, stipitate, ellipsoidal, 8–10 × 6–7 cm, dehiscent 4-valved, with two kinds of trichomes, stiff appressed and patelliform, pericarp rigid, 7–10 mm thick; Seeds 1.2 × 0.7 × 0.4 cm, 8–10 ovules per placenta, not all ovules developed into seeds.

Distribution. Guyana (Mt Ayanganna), Brazil (Amazonas, Manaus), 80–715 m, in terra firme forest. The label of the type collection says: dense forest on brown sandy clay and laterite, with Dicymbe , Pentaclethra , and Micrandra .

Phenology. Flowering (January) and fruiting (January, June, December).

Etymology. The Latin noun in apposition scopae is a nominative plural meaning brooms or brushes. It is a reference to the branched trichomes looking like bottlebrushes typical of that species.

Additional specimens studied: BRAZIL. Amazonas : Igarapé do Bindá , 25 May 1961, fr., W. A. Rodrigues & J. Chagas 2631 = INPA 9175 View Materials ( INPA!), 11 January 1962, fl., W. A. Rodrigues & J. Chagas 4074 = INPA 10639 View Materials ( INPA!, NY! [scan NY01291499 !]) ; Manaus , Estrada do Aleixo, 25 January 1932, fl. & fr., A. Ducke JBRJ-24384 (JBRJ- 2 [scans RB00271367 ! & RB00776286 !], K [scan K001185245 !], P-2! [scans P06719670 ! & P06719672 !], US!) ; estrada Manaus-Itacoariara , km 47, 28 December 1960, fr., W. A. Rodrigues & L. Coêlho 2024 = INPA 8398 View Materials ( INPA!) .

H

University of Helsinki

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

C

University of Copenhagen

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

J

University of the Witwatersrand

MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

OSC

Oregon State University

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

INPA

Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia

NY

William and Lynda Steere Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

L

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

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