Acanthopsis villosa H.M.Steyn, 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.219.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2A3E87AA-B20F-FFA4-B4CB-FBD1FBD65551 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Acanthopsis villosa H.M.Steyn |
status |
sp. nov. |
4. Acanthopsis villosa H.M.Steyn View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 3D View FIGURE 3 , 7 View FIGURE 7 )
Acanthopsis villosa is easily distinguished from A. disperma in being a small, perennial subshrub (vs. an acaulescent herb) and from A. hoffmannseggiana in having inflorescences 9–12 mm in diameter (vs. (12–)15–18(–20) mm in diameter) and a densely villose indumentum on the leaves (vs. leaves with strigose to spreading indumentum, never densely villose).
Type: — SOUTH AFRICA. Northern Cape: Namaqualand District . Boesmanplaat, along a turn-off to the west of the road between Gamoep and Platbakkies, 908 m, (3018 AB), 16 August 2013, Koekemoer 4398 (holotype PRE0863486 About PRE -0!; isotype NBG!) .
Acanthus carduifolius Th. ss spica villosa E.Mey. , ms. [name written on specimen] sensu Drège 2433 ( P)
Perennial, compact subshrub, up to 70(–100) mm tall with reduced branching and very short internodes (<5 mm long). Leaves oblanceolate, 40–60(–70) × (5–) 7–10 mm; margin strongly undulate, dentate spinose to coarsely dentate spinose, spines fine to strong, 2–4 mm long, yellow; densely villose with long spreading hairs and short, spreading glandular hairs; base attenuate; subsessile or with petiole 2–5(–10) mm long. Inflorescences often attenuate to cuneate with a number of small, ovate to obovate sterile bracts at the base; 25–50(–70) mm long and 9–12 mm in diameter; basal portion of bracts overlapping, rarely exposing parts of the inflorescence axis. Bracts hemispherical to wedge-shaped, 20–22 mm long, base 7–9 mm long; middle and upper bracts ending in 5 primary spines; central primary spine usually compound, with (1)2 or often 3 pairs of marginal secondary spines; 2 lateral primary spines usually with 1 long secondary spine (marginal or basal) directed towards central primary spine and 1(–3) much shorter additional marginal secondary spine(s); secondary spines usually shorter, occasionally equal to primary spines; spines spreading in flower and slightly recurved in fruit; bract base densely villose with long, spreading to atrorse hairs as well as short, deflexed hairs and short glandular hairs; spines glabrescent to villose with short spreading hairs as well as isolated short glandular hairs. Bracteoles linear, 8–9 mm long; densely silky hairy. Calyx with dorsal sepal ovate, cuspidate, 13–14 mm long, densely silky hairy; ventral sepal ovate, 10–11 mm long; densely silky hairy; lateral sepals 8 mm long, densely silky hairy. Flowers purple with cream to white throat, 24–26 × 10–12 mm, tube 7–10 mm long; central lobe usually broader than long, constricted at base, emarginate. Stamens with orangy-brown anthers, 2 mm long; filaments 5–6 mm long, glandular with spreading hairs towards the base. Style with patch of glandular hairs at the base. Capsules ovate in face view, flattened, glabrous, shiny, 7 × 3 mm; 2-seeded. Seeds not seen.
Etymology: —The epithet refers to the densely villose (long, soft weak hairs) indumentum of the leaves and bracts.
Distribution, ecology and phenology: —Only known from a few localities on the plains or inselbergs in Bushmanland, east of the Kamiesberg range, Northern Cape, South Africa ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). This distribution falls in the Namaqualand Hardeveld and Bushmanland Bioregions ( Mucina & Rutherford 2006) in the transitional zone between winter- and summer-rainfall regions (falling predominantly in autumn) in very dry areas with the mean annual precipitation ranging between less than 100–160 mm. It is found in the Succulent Karoo ( Rutherford & Westfall 1994, Low &Rebelo 1996, Mucina & Rutherford 2006)and Nama-Karoo Biomes ( Rutherford & Westfall 1994, Low & Rebelo 1996). According to Mucina & Rutherford (2006) and Desmet (2013) the localities within the Bushmanland Bioregion falls within outliers of Succulent Karoo vegetation (Succulent Karoo Biome) within the prevailing Bushmanland Arid Grassland (Nama-Karoo Biome). Specimens were collected at elevations of 900–1070 m, in well-drained sandy soils derived from granite and quartzite. Flowering time: mainly August to October.
Notes: —Although Drège’s specimen (Drège 2433, in P) was included in the concept of Acanthodium carduifolium (L.f.) Nees in Candolle (1847:278), most herbarium specimens (which are now included in A. villosa ),were misidentified as A. disperma (probably because of the dense inflorescences with bracts ending in a compound central primary spine, but without long, viscid glandular hairs), in contrast to A. hoffmannseggiana which has long, viscid glandular hairs on the bracts.
Conservation status: — Acanthopsis villosa has a restricted distribution (Extent of Occurrence 7458 km ²), but is not threatened, and is therefore assessed as Least Concern ( IUCN 2001) (L. von Staden, pers. comm. 2015).
Additional specimens examined: — SOUTH AFRICA. Northern Cape: Little Bushmanland, Aggeneys, Natken farm. North-facing slope of western portion of Naip se Berg 1 km NW of Natken farm house, 1050 m, 29°21’34”S 18°17’04”E, (2918 AD), 6 October 1999, Desmet 2028 ( NBG!) GoogleMaps ; 20 km east of Springbok on road to Pofadder , (2918 CA), April 1970, Hugo 208 ( NBG!) ; Namaqualand District. West of Ratelkraal , (2918 CA), 7 September 1950, Maguire 330 ( NBG!) ; Namaqualand Dist. 25 miles east of Springbok at the farm Areb , (2918 CA), 6 August 1967, Rourke 804 ( NBG!) ; Bushmanland, Vaalputs, NECSA Site , (3018 AB), 2 August 2011, Van Rooyen 2790 ( PRE!, PRU!) ; Little Namaqualand, Alewyn’s Fontein , 950 m, (3018 BD), 22 December 1908, Pearson 3346 ( BOL!) ; Calvinia Div.; Braakfontein farm 33 mi. W [ N?] of Loeriesfontein , (3019 CB), 28 October 1963, Schlieben & Van Breda 9849 ( PRE!). Without precise locality: [Illegible] Kaus [Gebirge bei Goedemanskraal, Rustbank und Kookfontein, fide Drège (1843)], 3500 ft (III B), Drège 2433 ( P!), Marloth ex Meyer 6395 ( PRE!) .
NBG |
South African National Biodiversity Institute |
P |
Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants |
AD |
State Herbarium of South Australia |
CA |
Chicago Academy of Sciences |
PRE |
South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) |
PRU |
University of Pretoria |
BOL |
University of Cape Town |
N |
Nanjing University |
CB |
The CB Rhizobium Collection |
B |
Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Zentraleinrichtung der Freien Universitaet |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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