Hibiscus marioniae Dorr, 2022
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.214.91586 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9A2A71E0-1637-59F3-B289-1EA5185BF015 |
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scientific name |
Hibiscus marioniae Dorr |
status |
sp. nov. |
Hibiscus marioniae Dorr sp. nov.
Fig. 1 View Figure 1
Diagnosis.
Hibiscus marioniae Dorr differs from H. amazonicus Fryxell in having elliptic (versus ovate) leaf blades with cuneate (versus cordate to truncate and often asymmetrical) bases, a crenulate (versus coarsely toothed) margin, and long acuminate (versus acute) apices; more numerous (12 versus 8) and narrower (ca. 1.0 versus (2.0-)3.0-6.0 mm broad) involucellar bracts that are very slightly spathulate (versus distinctly spathulate, broadly lanceolate or imperfectly stipitate-peltate); and glabrous (versus minutely scaberulous) seeds.
Type.
Guyana. [Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo]: Upper Essequibo Region, Rewa River, Spider Mountains , 03°08'N, 058°32'W, 400-500 m alt., 20 Sep 1999 (fl, fr), M.J. Jansen-Jacobs, B.J.H. ter Welle, P.P. Haripersaud, O. Muller & M. van der Zee 6011 (holotype: U barcode 0067247!; isotypes: NY!, TEX barcode 00568796 as image!) GoogleMaps .
Description.
Suffrutescent herbs, to 50 cm tall; stems woody at base, unarmed, sparingly to moderately pubescent, with appressed 4-8-armed stellate hairs ca. 1 mm in diameter. Leaves simple, elliptic, 8.5-13.0 × 2.5-4.0 cm, base cuneate, palmately 3-nerved at base, midrib and 2° nerves slightly raised above, prominent below, margin crenulate, apex long acuminate, leaf blades sparingly pubescent above and below with yellowish, bifurcate and stellate hairs, stellate hairs 4-8-armed, arms ca. 1.0 mm long, erect, bifurcate hairs more frequent below than above; petioles 1.5-2.5 cm long, with a ventral line of short whitish stellate-hairs and more conspicuous and abundant yellowish stellate hairs, the latter hairs not in a line and denser distally; stipules almost linear, ca. 1.0-2.0 mm long, caducous. Flowers solitary or paired in leaf axils toward apices of stems; pedicels 3.5-7.0 cm long, not articulated, pubescent with ± appressed stellate hairs and more conspicuous, 4-8-armed stellate hairs with arms to 2.0 mm long. Bracts of involucel 12, distinct, 10.0-15.0 × ca. 0.75-1.0 mm, not or scarcely exceeding united portion of calyx at anthesis, very slightly spathulate apically, plane, with simple, bifurcate, and stellate hairs, hairs or arms of stellate hairs to 2.0 mm long. Calyx 5-lobed, united ca. half way, lobes 1.0-1.2 × 0.5-0.6 cm at anthesis, broadly triangular, apices acute, papery, light green with 3 darker but not thickened veins, nectaries absent, outer surface with yellowish simple and mostly 4-armed stellate hairs, arms to 2.0 mm long, inner surface with a few scattered simple hairs, accrescent in fruit, turning blackish (on herbarium specimens, at least), lobes expanding to 2.0-2.5 × 1.2 cm. Petals ca. 2.5 cm long (only one flower seen and not dissected), white (fide Jansen-Jacobs et al. 6011), corolla shape unknown. Staminal column shorter than the petals; anthers purple (fide Jansen-Jacobs et al. 6011). Styles and stigmas not seen. Capsules enclosed in accrescent calyces, 5-locular, chartaceous, capsule walls undulate and molded around individual seeds, walls covered with minute whitish hairs and more conspicuous yellowish simple hairs to 2.0 mm long. Seeds ca. 2.0 × 2.0 mm, globose-reniform, brownish (the hilum blackish), glabrous.
Etymology.
The species epithet honors Marion J. Jansen-Jacobs who has contributed greatly to our understanding of the flora of the Guianas as collector, herbarium curator, author, and executive director of the Flora of the Guianas project.
Distribution and ecology.
Known only from the type collection, which was made in central Guyana, northeast of the Kanuku Mountains; 400-500 m alt. According to information on the specimen label, the plant was found in an open spot in forest on rock in the "Spider Mountains." The name of these mountains does not appear in standard gazetteers ( Stephens and Traylor 1985; Anonymous 1993; Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission 2019) and it may have been a name created by the collectors of the type.
Discussion.
Hibiscus as traditionally treated is a species-rich genus of ca. 200 ( Hochreutiner 1900) to over 400 species ( POWO 2022). It is included in the Hibisceae, a tribe defined by loculicidally dehiscent ( “capsular”) fruit, lack of gossypol glands, 5-toothed staminal column apex, styles usually apically branching, stigmas usually terminal, and style branches equal in number to the carpels ( Pfeil et al. 2002). Molecular data, however, suggest that the traditional concept of Hibiscus that is based on morphology created a “severely” paraphyletic genus ( Pfeil et al. 2002; Pfeil and Crisp 2005; Koopman and Baum 2008), which has other tribes ( Decaschistieae and Malvavisceae) and other genera of Hibisceae nested within it. Infrageneric classification of Hibiscus also has been problematic ( Pfeil and Crisp 2005) with unresolved conflicts between the sectional classifications based on morphology proposed by de Candolle (1824), Grisebach (1859), Gürke (1892), Hochreutiner (1900), Ulbrich (1921), van Borssum Waalkes (1966), and Fryxell (1988). This makes assigning H. marioniae to a section problematic.
Morphologically, Hibiscus marioniae is most similar to H. amazonicus . The two species share unarmed stems, an involucel comprised of distinct bracts, a papery or chartaceous 5-fid calyx that is ca. half-divided and accrescent in fruit, and a staminal column shorter than the petals. When Fryxell (1984) described H. amazonicus , he compared it to three other species found in South America ( H. dimidiatus Schrank, H. sororius L., and H. spathulatus Garcke) and stated they formed a natural grouping or alliance, but he refrained from naming this group. It appears that Fryxell made the connection to this group because as stated in his protologue, H. amazonicus keyed out (somewhat ambiguously) in Gürke (1892) and Kearney (1957) either to H. sororius or H. verbasciformis (≡ H. spathulatus ). Morphologically, especially in vestiture, these three species are very similar to each other, and they only can be distinguished easily by the shape of their involucellar bracts.
Earlier, Grisebach (1859) had made Hibiscus sororius , which also occurs in the West Indies and Mexico, the type and sole member of H. sect. Trionastrum Grisb. He categorized this section as having distinct involucellar bracts that are apically enlarged, a 5-fid ventricose calyx, and glabrous seeds. While H. amazonicus , H. marioniae , and H. spathulatus could be placed in this section, the cordate-ovate involucellar bracts of the closely allied H. dimidiatus and the puberulous or hirtellous seeds of H. spathulatus and H. dimidiatus , respectively, would require modification of Grisebach’s circumscription of his monotypic section.
Gürke (1892) overlooked Hibiscus sect. Trionastrum when he revised the Brazilian species of Hibiscus and he placed H. sororius , H. dimidiatus , and H. spathulatus in sect. Ketmia (Mill.) DC. (≡ sect. Hibiscus ), which he defined by involucellar bracts subulate-falciform, setaceous, linear, lanceolate, ovate, spathulate, or dilated apically but not bifurcate, and calyx not inflated with eglandular lobes. These characters, especially the negative or absent ones, seem to have been selected to set this section apart from sect. Furcaria DC. Nonetheless, little seems to separate sect. Trionastrum from sect. Hibiscus apart from the calyx being ventricose (i.e., swollen or distended) in the former and not inflated in the latter. Also, the seeds of sect. Hibiscus are either glabrous or pubescent but without the distinctive cotton-like hairs found in sect. Bombicella . Fryxell (1988) later recognized both sect. Hibiscus and sect. Trionastrum in his treatment of the Mexican species of Hibiscus and placed H. sororius in sect. Trionastrum but said nothing about the other South American allies of this species, presumably because they do not occur in Mexico.
Hochreutiner (1900) in his revision of Hibiscus had a very different assessment of the relationships of the three species that Fryxell (1984) later thought to be allied with H. amazonicus . Hochreutiner (1900), who also overlooked H. sect. Trionastrum , placed H. sororius in sect. Spatula Hochr., which he defined by its apically dilated involucellar bracts and glabrous seeds; H. dimidiatus in sect. Trichospermum Hochr. (= sect. Hibiscus ); and H. spathulatus (as H. verbasciformis ) in sect. Trionum DC. He clearly was unhappy with his sectional placement of H. spathulatus since he acknowledged that it was the only species that he included in sect. Trionum with lanceolate bracts and deeply lobed calyces.
No members of Hibiscus sect. Trionastrum (or sect. Spatula ) were included in the analysis of Pfeil and Crisp (2005: table 2). However, given that H. marioniae and its presumed relatives have distinct involucellar bracts and non-inflated calyces, these species will probably be found to belong to the “/Euhibiscus” clade, a rank free clade recognized by Pfeil and Crisp (2005) that contains sect. Hibiscus . Thus, irrespective of how the paraphyly in Hibiscus and the Hibisceae eventually is resolved taxonomically, H. marioniae likely will remain in or closely allied to Hibiscus s.str.
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