Crotalaria nallamalayana Rasingam & J. Swamy, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.345.2.7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13709281 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FF050407-1C31-FFEA-C6EE-F983FE5F69ED |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Crotalaria nallamalayana Rasingam & J. Swamy |
status |
sp. nov. |
Crotalaria nallamalayana Rasingam & J. Swamy View in CoL , sp. nov. Figs 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 .
Type: — India, Telangana, Mahabubnagar district, Amrabad Tiger Reserve, Mallayalodhi, on the way to waterfall, 22 nd September 2013, L. Rasingam & M. Sankara Rao 3715 (Holotype BSID, Isotypes CAL).
Diagnosis: — Crotalaria nallamalayana is similar to C. orixensis and C. senegalensis by its diffuse habit and oblong pods with many seeds, but differs from the former by having linear stipules to 7 mm long (lanceolate-falcate, up to 3 mm long in C. orixensis ), terminal inflorescences with blue flowers (leaf opposed with yellow flowers in C. orixensis ) and pubescent, sessile pods (glabrous, stipitate pods in C. orixensis ); and from the latter species by having obovate leaves (linear, lanceolate or elliptic in C. senegalensis ), ovate bracts (linear to linear-lanceolate in C. senegalensis ) and blue flowers (yellow in C. senegalensis ).
Diffuse perennial herb; stems slender, terete, brownish to pink, 20–30 cm long, 3–4 mm in diam., densely hairy; internodes 1.5–3.0 cm long. Leaves digitately trifoliolate; stipules ca. 7 × 1 mm long, not foliaceous, persistent, linear, aristate at apex, densely hairy on upper surface, glabrous on lower surface, 10–15-nerved; petiole 0.8–1.2 cm long, hairy, pulvinate, ca. 2 mm long. Terminal leaflets 2.0–3.5 × 1.2–2.1 cm, obovate, rounded-sub-cordate at base, margin entire, obtuse-retuse with apiculate tip at apex, thinly appressed hairy above, densely hairy below, midrib flat or slightly sunken above, nerves slightly raised above, 6–8 per side, 2–4 mm apart, venation reticulate; petiolule 3–6 mm long, hairy; stipels persistent, 1–2 mm long, linear, hairy. Lateral leaflets oblong-obovate, 1.3–2.5 × 0.6–1.0 cm long, cuneate at base, margin entire, rounded-obtuse with apiculate apex, thinly appressed hairy above, densely hairy below, lateral nerves 5–6 per side; petiolule ca. 1 mm long, hairy. Inflorescences terminal racemes 3.5–7.0 cm long; peduncle 0.8–1.4 cm long, densely brownish hairy mixed with short uncinate hairs. Bracts ca. 6.0 x 1.2 mm long, persistent, ovate with long cuspidate apex, densely hairy above, glabrous below, ca. 30 nerves on surface. Pedicels 4–5 mm long, filiform, appressed hairy mixed with short uncinate hairs. Flowers 4–6 × 3–4 mm long. Calyx 4.0– 4.5 mm long; tube ca. 1.5 mm long; lobes unequal, 2.5–3.0 x 1.2 mm, lanceolate, acuminate at apex, hairy above, glabrous below. Corolla blue with white streaks in the centre, slightly exserted. Standard with claw 0.8–1.0 mm long, glabrous; blade broadly obovate, 5.0 × 3.5 mm long, margin entire, rounded at apex, glabrous on surface. Wings with claw 0.4–0.6 mm long, glabrous; blade 3.5 × 1.3 mm long, oblong, rounded at apex, glabrous on surface. Keel petals with claw 0.9–1.2 mm long, glabrous; blade 4.0 × 1.5 mm long, boat shaped, rounded at apex, glabrous. Stamens unequal; tube ca. 4 mm long, oblique, free part of filaments 0.4–0.8 mm long; anthers dimorphic, 5 small dorsifixed anthers on long filaments and 5 large basifixed anthers on short filaments, glabrous. Gynoecium sessile, ca. 6 mm long; ovary ca. 4 mm long, linearoblong, densely hairy; style ca. 2 mm long, geniculate; stigma capitate. Pod sessile, oblong-ellipsoid, 10–12 × 0.4–0.5 mm long with ca. 3 mm geniculate beak, thinly hairy on surface, 7–8 seeded; seeds reniform.
Flowering & Fruiting: —August–November.
Habitat: —The species is usually found in open rocky grasslands of dry deciduous forests in association with Buchnera americana L.(1753:630), Ceropegia bulbosa Roxb.(1795:11) , Aristolochia indica L.(1753:960), Euphorbia cristata B.Heyne ex Roth (1821: 226) , Tylophora fasciculata Buch. -Ham. ex Wight (1834: 50) and Waltheria indica L. (1753: 673).
Distribution: — India, Telangana, Mahabubnagar district, Amrabad Tiger Reserve, Mallayalodhi ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ).
Etymology: —The species is named after the type locality Nallamala forest, which is a part of the Eastern Ghats of Telangana state.
Notes: — Crotalaria nallamalayana and C. orixensis belong to the section Calycinae Wight & Arn. (181: 1834), subsection Calycinae , as both species have spirally twisted keel beaks and almost 2-lipped calyces, deeply cleft and roughly as long as the corolla. On the other hand Crotalaria senegalensis belongs to the section Crotalaria subsection Longirostrae (Benth.) Polhill (312: 1968), which is very close to the section Calycinae but differs in the shape of the calyx and corolla length.
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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