Ipomoea mucronifolia

Wood, John R. I., Munoz-Rodriguez, Pablo, Williams, Bethany R. M. & Scotland, Robert W., 2020, A foundation monograph of Ipomoea (Convolvulaceae) in the New World, PhytoKeys 143, pp. 1-823 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.143.32821

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D63EC572-7032-0C50-5437-98690471B6C7

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Ipomoea mucronifolia
status

 

67. Ipomoea mucronifolia View in CoL View at ENA J.R.I. Wood & Scotland, Kew Bull. 50 (31): 46. 2015. (Wood et al. 2015: 46)

Type.

BOLIVIA. Santa Cruz, Prov. Chiquitos, entre Limoncito y Roboré, J.R.I. Wood & P. Pozo 25064 (holotype USZ, isotypes K, LPB).

Description.

Trailing perennial; stem densely villous, glabrescent when old. Leaves petiolate, mostly 4-8 × 4-8 cm, shallowly cordate with the base broadly cuneate, auricles rounded, 3(-5)-lobed, the 4th and 5th lobes often poorly developed, lobes broadly ovate, elliptic or obovate, often overlapping, acute or obtuse and strongly mucronate wth mucro 2-3 mm long, densely grey appressed-pilose on both surfaces but abaxially paler; petioles 2.5-7 cm, softly pilose. Inflorescence of pedunculate, (2-)5-flowered, axillary cymes; peduncles 5.5-14 cm, pilose; bracteoles 3-7 × 1 mm, lanceolate, scarious, pilose, somewhat persistent; secondary peduncles 0.6-1.8 cm; pedicels 0.6-1.2 cm, pilose; sepals minutely gland-dotted on the exterior, unequal, outer 12-14 × 4 mm, broadly lanceolate, shortly acuminate, adpressed-pilose; inner 13-14 × 5 mm, oblong-obovate, rounded to acute, the central region pubescent, marginal part broad, glabrous, margin sparsely ciliate; corolla 5.5-6 cm long, pink, funnel-shaped, the limb c. 5 cm diam., distinctly lobed with ovate acute lobes, densely pilose in bud but somewhat glabrescent, the midpetaline bands thinly pilose on open corollas. Capsules and seeds not seen.

Illustration.

Figure 45 View Figure 45 .

Distribution.

A species of the northern Chaco growing in somewhat degraded bushland in Bolivia and the extreme north of Paraguay.

PARAGUAY. Alto Paraguay: Madrejón, F. Mereles 6696 (FCQ). Boquerón: Fortin Platanillos F. Mereles & R. Degen 6193 (CTES).

BOLIVIA. Santa Cruz: Cordillera, P.N. Kaa-Iya, A. Fuentes & G. Navarro 2319 (CTES, MO, NY, USZ).

Note.

Ipomoea mucronifolia is somewhat similar to Ipomoea pseudocalystegia in its palmately-lobed, softly hirsute, strongly mucronate leaves, combined with the lanceolate, acuminate sepals. It differs in the smaller, more deeply divided, less silvery leaves, the inflorescence of several-flowered cymes and the shorter deciduous bracteoles (up to 7 mm long, not> 20 mm).