Chenopodium amurense, Ignatov, 1986

Mosyakin, Sergei L. & De Lange, Peter J., 2018, New combinations for three taxa of the Oxybasis glauca aggregate (Chenopodiaceae) from Australasia, East Asia, and South America, Phytotaxa 350 (3), pp. 259-273 : 263-264

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.350.3.5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EE6587FA-7C2C-4D38-FF5F-18F9ED51FB92

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chenopodium amurense
status

 

Chenopodium amurense View in CoL from the Russian Far East

Ignatov (1986: 111) reported in the protologue that Chenopodium amurense differs from C. glaucum in having lobate (normally trilobate) leaves and narrow spathulate tepals of pentamerous flowers (trimerous flowers usually have wider tepals). Ecologically this taxon seems to be a predominantly non-weedy species confined to sandy alluvial habitats of the Amur River and adjacent areas.

Mosyakin (1993: 74) briefly commented that Chenopodium amurense may be related to C. ambiguum . That assumption was based mainly on some similarity in leaf shape characters of these two taxa. Feodorova (2017: 9) assumed that C. glaucum subsp. orientale Voroshilov (1984: 36) is the same taxon as C. amurense and noted that “both these taxa appear to be synonymous with C. ambiguum R. Br. ”. However, the original description of subsp. orientale does not match the characters reported for C. amurense . In particular, Voroshilov (l.c.) noted that his new taxon differs from subsp. glaucum only in having leaves green on both sides (occasionally only young leaves being slightly glaucous and mealy beneath). The leaves in subsp. orientale were described as elongate to linear-oblong in shape, obtuse at apex, and sinuate-dentate at margins (“Folia petiolata, oblonga vel lineari-oblonga, obtusa, margine sinuato-dentata ad subintegerrima, utrinque viridia, novella tantum vix glaucescentia”; Voroshilov 1984: 36), as in subsp. glauca , but not trilobate or deltoid as in C. amurense . Ignatov (1988: 24) also commented that C. glaucum subsp. orientale differs from subsp. glaucum only in the absence of mealy indumentum on the lower surface of leaves and is not identical with his C. amurense . Holotypes of both C. glaucum subsp. orientale and C. amurense are deposited in MHA ( Voroshilov 1984,

Ignatov 1986, Stepanova 2015). The first author of the present article (Sergei Mosyakin) studied the type specimens of both these entities during his visits to MHA in the 1990s and also concluded that C. glaucum subsp. orientale and C. amurense are different taxa from the morphological point of view, as well as C. amurense and C. ambiguum , which differ, in particular, in their perianth characters, leaf shape, and succulence. The chromosome count reported for C. amurense ( Probatova & Sokolovskaya 1990) indicate that that taxon is a diploid with 2n = 18, so its identity with tetraploid C. ambiguum (here recognized as Oxybasis ambigua ) is also very unlikely.

Chenopodium amurense View in CoL was recognized as a distinct species in several publications on the flora of the Russian Far East ( Ignatov 1988, Czerepanov 1995a, 1995b, Schlotgauer et al. 2001, Pavlova & Probatova 2006, Kryukova 2010, Lomonosova 2012, Kasatkina 2013, Tzyrenova & Kasatkina 2013, Mel’nikova & Kryukova 2015, etc.). Most probably it also occurs in adjacent regions of China (see Zhu et al. 2003), and possibly can be also expected in Korea and/or Japan.

Kasatkina (2013) and Tzyrenova & Kasatkina (2013) noted that Chenopodium amurense View in CoL occurs on banks of the Amur River and some other water bodies together with several other predominantly alluvial species considered endemic or subendemic for the region, such as Corispermum elongatum Bunge View in CoL (in Maximowicz 1859: 224), C. macrocarpum Bunge View in CoL (in Maximowicz 1859: 226), Gnaphalium mandshuricum Kirpicznikov & Kuprianova ex Kirpicznikov (1960: 298) View in CoL , Juncus amuricus ( Maximowicz 1859: 296) V.I. Kreczetowicz & Gontscharow (1935: 516) View in CoL , Rumex amurensis F. Schmidt View in CoL (in Maximowicz 1859: 228), Symphyllocarpus exilis Maximowicz (1859: 151 View in CoL ; see also Smoljaninova 1960), and some others. Some of these species and their communities and habitats are in need of conservation. Chenopodium amurense View in CoL was included in the Red List of the Jewish Autonomous Region of the Russian Far East, but was soon excluded from it (data from the site Strictly protected natural areas of Russia —ОсОбО ОхранЯемые прирОдные территОрии РОссии: http://oopt.aari.ru/; see also Mel’nikova & Kryukova 2015) and is not listed now in the Red Data Book of the Jewish Autonomous Region ( Schlotgauer 2006).

Considering the morphological and ecological distinctiveness of that predominantly alluvial taxon and its geographic isolation from the main part of the native range of Oxybasis glauca , we propose here the species-rank transfer of Chenopodium amurense to Oxybasis (see below).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Caryophyllales

Family

Amaranthaceae

Genus

Chenopodium

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Caryophyllales

Family

Amaranthaceae

Genus

Chenopodium

Loc

Chenopodium amurense

Mosyakin, Sergei L. & De Lange, Peter J. 2018
2018
Loc

Gnaphalium mandshuricum

Kirpicznikov 1960: 298
1960
Loc

Juncus amuricus ( Maximowicz 1859: 296 ) V.I. Kreczetowicz & Gontscharow (1935: 516)

V. I. Kreczetowicz & Gontscharow 1935: 516
1935
Loc

Symphyllocarpus exilis

Maximowicz 1859
1859
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF