Oreocharis parviflora Lei Cai & Z.K. Wu, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.329.2.7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13723076 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D0442B-DD3F-6821-93BF-F8B9DC3CFED8 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Oreocharis parviflora Lei Cai & Z.K. Wu |
status |
sp. nov. |
Oreocharis parviflora Lei Cai & Z.K. Wu View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 & 2 View FIGURE 2 )
Diagnosis:— Oreocharis parviflora resembles O. henryana in floral characteristics, but can easily be distinguished from the latter by having petiole densely covered by rust-brown villous hairs, leaf blade elliptic to oval, leaf surface rugose and with depressed and reticulate veinlets, adaxially densely with appressed pubescence, abaxially with white or rust-brown pubescence, along veins densely with rust-brown villous hairs, veins depressed adaxially and prominent abaxially, peduncle and pedicel sparsely with rust-brown villous hairs and glandular-puberulence, calyx with 5 lobed lobed to base and broadly lanceolate.
Type:— CHINA. Yunnan: Nujiang Prefecture, Lanping County, Lajing Town, Jiulong Village, Hongtujian, 26°30’ N, 99°14’ E, elev. ca. 1915 m, on moist rocks in a valley (cultivated in Lijiang Alpine Botanical Garden), in flowering, 29 September 2016, Z. K. Wu et al. C 2016055 (holotype: KUN!, isotype: KUN!).
Perennial herbs, rhizomatous, short. Leaves basal, with long petioles, petiole 0.5–4.5 cm long, densely rust-brown villous, leaf blade surface rugose, with depressed and reticulate veinlets, elliptic to oval, 2–6.5 × 1.2–3.5 cm, adaxially densely appressed pubescent, abaxially white or rusty-brown pubescent, densely rusty-brown villous along veins, lateral veins 4–6 on each side of midrib, subsidence adaxially and prominent abaxially, apex rounded, base cuneate, margin crenate to crenulate or triangular serrated. Cymes axillary 1–4, inflorescence 6–12-flowered; peduncle 5–10 cm long, ca. 2mm in diameter, glandular pubescent and sparsely rusty-brown villous; bracts 2, linear to subulate, often deciduous, ca. 3 × 0.5 mm, outside villous, margin entire; pedicel 0.4–2.8 cm long, ca. 3 mm in diameter, glandular pubescent and sparsely rust-brown villous. Calyx 5-parted to base, lobes equal, broadly lanceolate, ca. 4 × 1 mm, outside sparsely pubescent and rust-brown villous, inside glabrous. Corolla dark purple to purplish brown with yellowish, 5–7 mm long, outside glabrous, tube campanulate, 3–5 mm long, ca. 4 mm in diameter; limb 2-lipped; adaxial lip 2-lobed to middle, abaxial lip 3-lobed to base, all lobes semiorbicular, 1–1.5 × 1–1.5 mm. Stamens 4, ca. 4 mm long, adnate to corolla 1–1.5 mm from base; filaments flattened, glabrous; anthers broadly oblong, 2-loculed, dehiscing longitudinally, connective glabrous; staminode 1, ca. 1 mm long, adnate to corolla ca. 1 mm from base. Disc ca. 0.8 mm high, entire. Pistil glabrous, 5–6 mm long; ovary cylindrical, 4–5 mm long; style ca. 1.5 mm long; stigma 1, disc-shaped. Capsule linear, 1.5–2.8 cm long, ca. 2 mm in diameter.
Distribution and Ecology:— Oreocharis parviflora is currently known only from the type locality in a valley along Lancang River by one population with ca. 200 individuals. This species was observed to grow on moist rocks with mosses and other epiphytes, and occasionally shallow surface soil, in places with sufficient seasonal run-off water, under evergreen broad-leaved forests in Lajing Town, Lanping County, Nujiang Prefecture, northwestern Yunnan, China.
Phenology:— Flowering from September to October; fruiting from October to November.
Etymology: —The specific epithet ‘ parviflora ’ derives from the Latin prefix, parvi-, small, and the Latin suffix, -flora, of flower, referring to the relatively small flowers of the new species. This species are among those with the smallest flowers in the genus of Oreocharis . The Chinese name in Pinyin is “Xiǎo Huâ Mǎ Líng Jǜ Tái”.
Taxonomic affinities:— Oreocharis parviflora morphologically resembles O. henryana ( Fig 3 View FIGURE 3 ) in having calyx with five lobes lobed to base, corolla purple and throat not constricted, tube campanulate, anthers broadly oblong, 2- loculed, and dehiscent longitudinally, and stigma 1 and disc-shaped. However, O. parviflora can be easily differentiated from the latter by the indumentum characters and the shape of leaf blade, petiole, peduncle, and pedicel. The detailed characters of the two related species are provided in Table 1.
Z |
Universität Zürich |
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
C |
University of Copenhagen |
KUN |
Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
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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