Clusia falcata Hammel, 2021

Luján, Manuel, Cacho, N. Ivalú, Pérez-Farrera, Miguel Ángel & Hammel, Barry, 2021, Clusia falcata (Clusiaceae), an endangered species with exceptionally narrow leaves endemic to Chiapas, Mexico, Kew Bulletin 76, pp. 645-650 : 646-649

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/S12225-021-09988-7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5825376

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8C4887A9-8C33-3404-96B7-B6D27E3CFBE5

treatment provided by

Jonas

scientific name

Clusia falcata Hammel
status

sp. nov.

Clusia falcata Hammel sp. nov.

Type: Mexico. Chiapas: Municipio Jitotol, along Río Hondo , 6.5 km N of Jitotol along road to Pichucalco , 1700 m, 27 Oct. 1971, D. E. Breedlove & R. F. Thorne 21392 (♂) (holotype: MO! barcode 2611409 ; isotypes: CAS! 330944 , MEXU! 254952 ) .

http://www.ipni.org/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77220442-1

Free-standing or hemiepiphyte shrub, 3 – 8 m; dioecious; branches cylindrical, epidermis non exfoliating; resin greenish-white. Leaves with the petiole 1.5 – 1.8 cm, unwinged, the base excavated and forming a pit in the adaxial portion of the junction between the petiole and the stem; lamina drying dark brown adaxially and light brown abaxially, (8 –) 10 – 15.5 × (1.4 –) 2 – 2.5 cm, narrowly lanceolate to oblong or elliptic, often falcate, base attenuate, apex acute to acuminate, margin slightly revolute; venation pinnate brochidodromous, the principal secondary veins 5 – 8 pairs, 5 – 10 mm apart, forming a 20° – 30° angle to primary vein, prominent abaxially and flat to slightly prominent adaxially; primary vein evident along the entire length of the lamina, the intramarginal vein 1 mm from margin; resin canals visible when dry in the adaxial (more faintly so on the abaxial) surface as thin, more or less continuous, nigrescent lines arising at a very narrow angle from, but eventually more or less parallel to the primary vein. Inflorescences slightly deflexed to pendant; dichasia often lacking the central flower, the staminate 4 – 5 × 4 – 8 cm, with 2 – 3 ramifications per node and a total of c. 16 flowers, the peduncle 1 – 3 cm, cylindrical to subquadrate; the pistillate 2 – 3 × c. 1 cm, with 2 or 3 ramifications per node (or ramifications lacking, but with 2 sets of bracts, c. 1 cm apart), with 1 – 5 flowers; bracts (subtending inflorescence branches) and bracteoles (subtending flowers) paired, 1.5 – 2 mm, more or less deltate, the apex acute, abaxially keeled. Flower buds 6 – 10 mm in diam. Flowers unisexual, lightly, but sweetly aromatic, non-resiniferous, the perianth differentiated into sepals and petals; sepals 4, light green, 5 – 6 × 3 – 4 mm and elliptic (staminate flowers), c. 6 × 6 mm and suborbicular (pistillate flowers); petals 4, erect, light green to dark pink, swollen at the base, succulent, 4 – 6 × 3 – 5 mm, oblong to pandurate (staminate flowers), c. 9 × 6 mm, ovate to suborbicular (pistillate flowers). Androecium (staminate flowers), uniform, (1.2 –) 1.5 – 3 mm, the androphore c. 2 × 2 mm, quadrangular with the sides concave due to bulged petal bases, convex; stamens 22 – 24, free, the filaments (0.2 –) 0.5 – 1 mm, anthers 1 – 2 mm, longitudinally dehiscent ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Gynoecium (pistillate flowers) with 4 pairs of stamen-like staminodia, alternate to the petals, c. 4 mm (including the androphore), each pair borne on an androphore, c. 2.7 mm; stigmas 4, smooth, discoid, sessile. Fruits pale yellow to green when submature, sepals persistent, 4 – 6 × 3 – 3.5 cm in diam., ellipsoid, 4-locular; seeds and arils not seen.

RECOGNITION. Clusia falcata can be readily separated from its congeners by its narrow lanceolate to oblong leaves (8 –) 10 – 15.5 × (1.4 –) 2 – 2.5 cm, with a ratio of leaf width to length of 0.17, which are likely the narrowest leaves observed in the genus thus far. Certain material of C. dukei Maguire — a species restricted to lowland wet forests on the Atlantic slopes of Costa Rica and Panama — likewise with very narrow and sometimes falcate leaves, has been indicated as worthy of taxonomic recognition (see Hammel 2010). That material has laminas 9.6 – 15 × 1.4 – 3 cm (leaf width to length ratio of 0.18), flowers with similarly 4- merous perianth and succulent petals. That form of C. dukei differs from C. falcata by its more numerous secondary veins at a wider angle to the primary vein (12 – 15 pairs, 2 – 3 (– 5) mm apart, at 30° – 40° angle vs 5 – 8 pairs, 5 – 10 mm apart, at 20° – 30° angle); and by its androecium with more stamens (32 vs 22 – 24 in C. falcata ). Clusia dukei overall differs by its clear (vs greenish-white) resin, and by its very different configuration of the resin canals, which are relatively short (interrupted) and widely branched lines that sometimes appear to form a mesh, vs the continuous and usually unbranched lines of C. falcata , more like those of C. flava Jacq. and C. guatemalensis Hemsl. These latter two species have flowers with a similar perianth, androecium and gynoecium, but usually with a higher number of stamens, staminodia, and stigmas than in C. falcata . Most notably, their leaves are never as long and narrow as those of C. falcata .

DISTRIBUTION. Northern and Eastern highlands of Chiapas ( Map 1 View Map 1 ).

SPECIMENS EXAMINED. MEXICO. Chiapas: Municipio Jitotol, along Río Hondo , 6.5 km N of Jitotol along road to Pichucalco , 1700 m, 27 Oct. 1971, D. E. Breedlove & R. F. Thorne 21392 (♂) (holotype: MO! barcode 2611409 ; isotypes: CAS! 330944 , MEXU! 254952 ). Paratypes: Municipio Ocosingo, limestone area near Laguna Ocotal Grande , c. 25 – 30 km SE of Monte (Cerro) Líbano , which is 43 km E of Ocosingo, 950 m, 20 July – 7 Aug. 1954, R. L. Dressler 1689 (♀) ( MEXU) ; Municipio Jitotol, 4 miles N of Jitotol, on the road to Pueblo Nuevo Solistahuacán , 1676 m, Sept. 1971, R. F. Thorne & E. Lathrop 41730 (♂) ( CAS) ; Municipio Yajalón, Banco de Grava , 15 Sept. 1983, A. Méndez Ton 6664 (♂) ( MEXU) ; Municipio Jitotol, 7 km N of Jitotol on road to Pichucalco (highway 195), in woods along river, upstream from bridge, 14 Oct. 1986, B. Hammel, E. Martínez & M. Merello 15692 (♂) 15693 (♀) ( CR, MO) .

HABITAT. Clusia falcata grows on forested slopes with Pinus , Quercus and Liquidambar , and on karst areas in tropical rain forests at 950 – 1700 m.

CONSERVATION STATUS. We estimate an extent of occurrence (EOO) of 1,569.623 km 2 and an area of occupancy (AOO) of 12.0 km 2 for Clusia falcata . The species is known from only three localities, and continuous decline in habitat quality is inferred in at least two of them given their proximity to urban centres (the towns of Jitotol and Yajalón respectively). Only one location is within a protected area, the Reserva de Biosfera Montes Azules, which may ensure the long-term stability of that particular plant population. Given the reduced number of known localities and their likely future instability, we assess the conservation status for C. falcata as endangered (EN) based on the IUCN criteria B1ab(iii)+2ab(iii).

PHENOLOGY. Clusia falcata was collected with flowers in September and October, and with fruits in August.

ETYMOLOGY. The specific epithet of Clusia falcata derives from the latin word falcatus, which describes the narrow and curved shape of the leaves, a character not previously observed in the genus.

NOTES. With the aim of identifying the phylogenetic position of Clusia falcata , sequencing of nrITS was attempted using tissue from the type specimen, although amplification was unsuccessful, probably because the DNA was highly degraded, which is common in tissues sampled from herbarium specimens. Nevertheless, the presence of a non-resiniferous quadrangular androphore bearing multiple free stamens suggests that C. falcata is included in the " Clusia flava group" an informal infrageneric species assembly that includes C. dukei , C. flava , C. guatemalensis , C. lundellii Standl. , C. quadrangula Bartlett , C. torresii Standl. and likely other closely related species from Central America with similar androecial morphology ( Hammel 1986). According to molecular evidence, the flava group is a well-supported monophyletic group ( Gustafsson et al. 2007; Luján 2019) in which hemiepiphytic habit as well as CAM photosynthesis are commonly present ( Vargas-Soto et al. 2009), and includes most, although not all taxa originally proposed by Hammel (1986).

A general pattern observed in evergreen woody plants is that relatively small leaves are more common at high latitudes, high elevations, nutrient poor, and hot arid conditions ( Givnish 1987; Wright et al. 2017). Moreover, in some groups (e. g. subtropical bamboos), species with relatively narrower leaves tend to inhabit areas subject to water deficiency ( Lin et al. 2020). The exceptionally narrow leaves observed in Clusia falcata suggest that this species may tolerate conditions of limited water availability. Furthermore, one specimen of C. falcata (R. L. Dressler 1689 [MEXU]) was collected on a limestone area, which indicates that the species may tolerate soils with high alkalinity and low nutrient levels. Several environmental and genetic factors are involved in determining leaf size and shape, potentially leading to many equally viable leaf strategies for a given environment ( Wright et al. 2017). Further comparative research is needed to better understand the drivers of leaf size and shape variability in Clusia , and to test whether C. falcata is adapted to particularly harsh environmental conditions.

CAS

USA, California, San Francisco, California Academy of Sciences

MEXU

MEXU

MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

MEXU

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

CR

Museo Nacional de Costa Rica

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