Schiekia silvestris (Maas & Stoel) Hopper, E.J.Hickman, Rhian J.Sm. & M.Pell., 2020

Pellegrini, Marco O. O., Hickman, Ellen J., Guttierrez, Jorge E., Smith, Rhian J. & Hopper, Stephen D., 2020, Revisiting the taxonomy of the Neotropical Haemodoraceae (Commelinales), PhytoKeys 169, pp. 1-59 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.169.57996

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/16AA9316-320C-507D-9B79-3E67B5C7FFA8

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Schiekia silvestris (Maas & Stoel) Hopper, E.J.Hickman, Rhian J.Sm. & M.Pell.
status

stat. nov.

4.2. Schiekia silvestris (Maas & Stoel) Hopper, E.J.Hickman, Rhian J.Sm. & M.Pell. stat. nov. Figs 15 View Figure 15 , 16 View Figure 16 , 17 View Figure 17

Schiekia orinocensis subsp. silvestris Maas & Stoel in Maas PJM and Maas-van de Kamer H, Fl. Neotrop. Monogr. 61: 21. 1993. Holotype. BRAZIL. Amazonas: Rio Negro, road from Camanaus to Vaupés airport, fl., 30 Oct 1971, G.T. Prance et al. 15864 (INPA barcode INPA34082!; isotypes: F, K barcode K000574292!, MG n.v., MO n.v., NY barcode NY00247969!, S barcode S06-6076!, U barcode U0002448!, US barcode US00592174!).

Distribution and habitat.

Brazil (States of Amazonas, Pará, and Roraima), Colombia, French Guiana, Surinam, and Venezuela (Fig. 18 View Figure 18 ). Found growing in the seasonally-flooded forest understorey, near rivers.

Phenology.

It was found in flower and fruit from January to November, but peaking during the dry season.

Conservation status.

Schiekia silvestris possesses a wide EOO (1,634,289 km2) but a relatively narrow AOO (ca. 392 km2). This narrow AOO might, once again, be related to the difficulty for collection in the Amazon Region. Nonetheless, the number of known collections is relatively large, which leads us to believe this species might be much more common than Maas and Maas-van de Kamer (1993) were led to believe. Thus, following IUCN’s (2001) recommendations, S. silvestris should be considered as Least Concern (LC).

Comments.

Schiekia silvestris is by far the easiest species to differentiate from the three accepted by us in the present study. It is the only species to exclusively inhabit understorey and other mesic habitats and has a growth form similar to that of Xiphidium caeruleum , with its long and trailing rhizomes and leaves evenly distributed along the stem. Aside from that, the leaves are considerably more delicate and broader, and herbarium specimens of S. silvestris are commonly misidentified as X. caeruleum in Brazilian herbaria. Furthermore, the inflorescences of S. silvestris generally possess a corymb-like appearance, added to the diminutive and strongly bilabiate, pendulous, apricot to orange-yellow flowers, with tepals recurved in the upper half and non-inflated medial filament. The capsules of S. silvestris also tend to be much broader than those of S. orinocensis and S. timida , ranging from green when immature to chocolate brown when mature. Finally, it is the only species of Schiekia to present seeds with short and coarse trichomes scattered across the reticulate testa (Fig. 17U-W View Figure 17 ). On the other hand, S. orinocensis and S. timida (Fig. 20T-V View Figure 20 ) present evenly reticulate testa.