Pauridiapygmaea Snijman & Kocyan (2013: 29)

Snijman, Deirdre A., 2014, A taxonomic revision of the genus Pauridia (Hypoxidaceae) in southern Africa, Phytotaxa 182 (1), pp. 1-114 : 24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.182.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156559

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CC87B7-FF90-FFA8-FF2D-FEFEA4C26CF0

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pauridiapygmaea Snijman & Kocyan (2013: 29)
status

 

2. Pauridiapygmaea Snijman & Kocyan (2013: 29) View in CoL View at ENA . Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8

Bas.:— Helonias minuta Linnaeus (1771: 225) Fabricia minuta (L.) Thunberg (1779: 25) View in CoL Hypoxis minuta (L.) Linnaeus (1782: 197) View in CoL Ianthe minuta (L.) Williams (1901: 292) View in CoL Spiloxene minuta (L.) Fourcade (1932: 76) View in CoL . Type (neotype designated by Snijman & Kocyan 2013: 29):— SOUTH AFRICA. [Cape], (LINN! No. 427.12 [image]) ( McNeill etal. 2012: Art. 7.4)

Plants dwarf, 1.0– 6.5 cm tall. Corm somewhat broadly conical, covered with heavy, fibrous tunics, base flat, 8–15 mm diam., often surrounded by a narrow rim; fibres thick, pale to dark brown, firmly attached to basal rim, converging distally into short acute tips; roots spreading from just above basal rim. Cataphylls membranous, 7–26 mm long. Leaves 2–3, shortly sheathing above base, erect to spreading, linear to narrowly lanceolate, 10–55 × 1.0– 2.5 mm, canaliculate to 3-angled in cross section, shiny green, firm, margin entire. Inflorescences 2 or more in flower at a time, 2(3)-flowered, shorter to longer than leaves; scape 3–13 × ca. 1 mm, laterally compressed, whitish green; bracts 2(3), clasping pedicels at base, linear, 5–11× ca. 1 mm, pale green. Flowers pedicellate, stellate, white, backed with green, sometimes red-tipped in outer whorl, often sweetly scented; pedicels suberect to ca. spreading, remaining so in fruit, 4–30 × ca. 0.5 mm, green or rarely pale reddish green; tepals 6, narrowly elliptical, 3.5–5.5 mm long, outer 2.0– 2.5 mm wide, minutely mucronate, inner 1.5–2.5 mm wide. Stamens 6, slightly arched around stigma, equal, white; filaments inserted on a broad, raised ovary dome away from tepals, up to 1.5 mm long, shorter than anthers; anthers sagittate, latrorse, ca. 1.5–2.5 × ca. 0.7 mm, basal lobes spreading, ca. 0.3–1.0 mm long, connective broader than thecae when fresh, notched at apex, often with a yellow patch proximally; pollen white. Ovary shortly obconical, ca. 1.5–2× 2 mm, 3-locular; style 0.4–1.5 mm long; stigma branches suberect, broadly triangular, 0.6–3.0 × 0.4–1.2 mm, more or less equalling stamens, pale green or white, densely papillose, basal lobes spreading, up to 1 mm long. Capsules shallowly cup-shaped, ca. 1.5–2 × 2.0 mm, dehiscence circumscissile. Seeds spherical, ca. 0.46 × 0.40 mm; testa black to golden brown, bluntly echinate in ca. 11–14 widely spaced, longitudinal rows, outer periclinal cell wall surrounded by a flat, finely pitted rim. Flowering period: late-April–June.

Distribution and habitat:— Pauridia pygmaea is endemic to remnant patches of lowland renosterveld in the northwestern and southwestern Cape, extending from Pakhuis Pass, east of Clanwilliam and Porterville, southwards to the Cape Peninsula and the flats near Gordon’s Bay ( Fig. 7B View FIGURE 7 ). Although growing singly, the plants are often found en masse, especially after fire. Favoured habitats are seasonally damp, clay or gravel flats. Currently the species is treated in the South African Red List as Endangered ( Raimondo et al. 2009).

Diagnostic features:—In addition to its dwarf habit, Pauridia pygmaea is most easily recognized by the broadly conical corm, which has a hard, conspicuously broad, flat base that forms a narrow rim around the circumference. Apart from green on the tepals’ backs and often a yellow spot on the anthers, the flowers are mostly entirely white and often sweetly scented. Although not always evident in the dried state, the anthers are sagittate, each with a broad connective, often exceeding the thecae in width, which tapers upwards to a notched apex. Such broad anthers are often found in species of Hypoxis , but in Paurida they are unique to P. pygmaea .

Because of the uniquely shaped corm and anthers, Nel (1914b) placed P. pygmaea (as Ianthe minuta ) in a somewhat isolated position within the genus. The species, however, appears to be closely allied to the recently described P. etesionamibensis with which it shares a characteristically raised, broad apical dome. As discussed under that species, the distribution pattern of P. etesionamibensis and P. pygmaea , confined to the Gariep centre and Western Cape respectively, is a disjunction often repeated by sister species in several other families— Amaryllidaceae , Asphodelaceae , Iridaceae and Tecophilaeaceae .

Nomenclature:— Pauridia pygmaea was previously known as Spiloxene minuta , but since the epithet minuta was already occupied in Pauridia, Snijman & Kocyan (2013) assigned the name pygmaea to this species.

Additional specimens examined:— SOUTH AFRICA. Western Cape: 2 miles [3.2 km] Nof Pakhuis (QDS: 3219 AA), 18 May 1935, Salter 5395 ( BOL!) ; Darling Flora Reserve (QDS: 3318 AD), 24 May 1956, Winkler 87 ( NBG) !; damp ground above Porterville Dam (QDS: 3318 BB), 12 May 1964, Kellerman 19 ( NBG!) ; Riverlands Reserve , Wof Malmesbury (QDS: 3318 BC), 23 May 2008, Koopman s.n. ( NBG 216616 About NBG !) ; Camp Ground , near Rondebosch (QDS: 3318 CD), June, H. Bolus 7297 ( BOL!) ; pone Rondebosch (QDS: 3318 CD), 1890, MacOwan 3096 (SAM!) ; Cape Town (3318CD), 8 June 1847, Prior s.n. ( PRE 30239!, ZT!) ; Camp Ground (QDS: 3318 CD), 2 June 1945, Salter 8933 ( NBG!) ; Camp Ground, prope Cape Town (QDS: 3318 CD), 22 May 1892, Schlechter 743 ( ZT!) ; Cape Town, Rondebosch Common (QDS: 3318 CD), 9 May 2007, Snijman 2107 ( NBG!) ; Camp Ground (QDS: 3318 CD), 17 May 1896, Wolley Dod 1079 ( BOL!) ; Paarl , gravelly flats (QDS: 3318 DB), 26 April 1946, Barker 4025 ( NBG!) ; Stellenbosch, vlakte tussen Duthiereservat en Bosbouwfakulteit (QDS: 3318 DD), 14 June 1963, Bos 49 ( NBG!) ; Stellenbosch flats (QDS: 3318 DD), June 1960, Cheadle 812 ( PRE!) ; Stellenbosch (QDS: 3318 DD), April 1917, Duthie 465 ( BOL!) ; Stellenbosch, Eerste River Terrace (QDS: 3318 DD), 10 May 1939, Garside 4938 ( BOL!) ; J.N. Briers Louw Reserve , Wof Paarl (QDS: 3318 DD), 2 June 2008, Snijman 2224 ( NBG!) ; Voëltjiesdorp (QDS: 3318 DD), 17 April 1964, Taylor 5746a ( NBG!, PRE!) ; Elandsberg Private Nature Reserve (QDS: 3319 AC), 4 June 2000, Parker 452 ( NBG!) ; Elandsberg Private Nature Reserve (QDS: 3319 AC), 2 July 2012, Parker s.n. ( NBG!) ; Wellington, Elandsberg Private Nature Reserve (QDS: 3319 AC), 13 May 1999, Parker sub Snijman 1691 ( NBG!) ; Die Bos, adjacent Luandle, Sof N2, 1 km Eof Strand (QDS: 3418 BB), 15 May 1998, Helme 1452 ( NBG!) . Inexact locality: Eikenboom am Bergrivier, June, Zeyher 1665 ( BOL!) .

AA

Ministry of Science, Academy of Sciences

BOL

University of Cape Town

AD

State Herbarium of South Australia

NBG

South African National Biodiversity Institute

BB

Buffalo Bill Museum

BC

Institut Botànic de Barcelona

PRE

South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI)

ZT

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich

DD

Forest Research Institute, Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education

AC

Amherst College, Beneski Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Asparagales

Family

Hypoxidaceae

Genus

Pauridia

Loc

Pauridiapygmaea Snijman & Kocyan (2013: 29)

Snijman, Deirdre A. 2014
2014
Loc

Spiloxene minuta (L.)

Fourcade 1932: 76
1932
Loc

Ianthe minuta (L.)

Williams 1901: 292
1901
Loc

Hypoxis minuta (L.)

Linnaeus 1782: 197
1782
Loc

Fabricia minuta (L.)

Thunberg 1779: 25
1779
Loc

Helonias minuta

Linnaeus 1771: 225
1771
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