Specklinia lugduno-batavae (Pleurothallidinae: Orchidaceae), a new species in the S. digitalis group

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Blumea 59, 2015: 180 184 www.ingentaconnect.com/content/nhn/blumea RESEARCH ARTICLE http://dx.doi.org/10.3767/000651915x687859 Specklinia lugduno-batavae (Pleurothallidinae: Orchidaceae), a new species in the S. digitalis group A.P. Karremans 1,2, D. Bogarín 1,3, B. Gravendeel 2,4 Key words Costa Rica Nicaragua Specklinia digitalis Specklinia lugduno-batavae Specklinia pisinna Specklinia succulenta Abstract Specklinia lugduno-batavae from the Caribbean lowlands of Nicaragua and Costa Rica is formally described and illustrated. The new species belongs to the Specklinia digitalis group and can be recognised by the creeping habit, purple spotted abaxial surface of the leaf and the almost immaculate whitish cream flowers, which are produced in succession on a very short, flexuous inflorescence. The name honours Leiden University and the Hortus botanicus Leiden. The novelty is compared with its closest relatives, Specklinia digitalis, S. pisinna and S. succulenta. Published on 9 March 2015 Introduction Traditionally included in Pleurothallis R.Br. (Luer 1986), the genus Specklinia Lindl. was re-established by Pridgeon & Chase (2001), and has ever since then, with some exceptions (Luer 2006), received general acceptance by the orchid community (Pridgeon 2005, Pupulin et al. 2012, Bogarín et al. 2013, Karremans et al. 2013). Species in the genus are recognised by the tiny habit with ramicauls shorter than the leaf, obtuse petals, a ligulate lip, prominent column wings and naked pollinia that lack caudicles (Karremans 2014). About 100 species are recognised in the genus (Karremans, in prep.). It is distributed from Mexico, through Central America, southwards into Bolivia and Brazil, and the Antilles. Specklinia grobyi (Bateman ex Lindl.) F.Barros is perhaps the best known, most widely distributed and most variable species within the genus. Many of its morphological or geographical variants have been named, however the difficulty of clearly delimiting those entities has led authors to prefer a broad circumscription of S. grobyi. It is thus best referred to as the S. grobyi species complex (Luer 2006). Within the grobyi complex there are nonetheless several morphologically discrete, well-recognisable and accepted species. Specklinia digitalis (Luer) Pridgeon & M.W.Chase and S. pisinna (Luer) Solano & Soto Arenas from northern Central America are good examples. Both are easily distinguished from their close relatives by the tiny habit (plants under 3 cm tall), with suborbicular leaves, spotted with purple abaxially, the relatively elongate, racemose, multi-flowered inflorescence with a single flower open at a time, the conspicuous thickening of the apex of the dorsal sepal, and the ligulate, unlobed, mostly inornate lip, which is shallowly depressed in the middle. A third species with these general morphological features was described recently from the French Guyana as Specklinia succulenta Bellone & 1 Lankester Botanical Garden, University of Costa Rica, P.O. Box 302-7050 Cartago, Costa Rica; corresponding author e-mail: adam.karremans@ucr.ac.cr. 2 Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, The Netherlands. 3 Herbario UCH, Universidad Autónoma de Chiriquí 0427, David, Chiriquí, Panama. 4 Faculty of Science, Leiden University, The Netherlands. Archila. Here we formally describe a fourth species within the S. digitalis group, within the grobyi complex, from Nicaragua and Costa Rica. TAXONOMY Specklinia lugduno-batavae Karremans, Bogarín & Gravend., sp. nov. Fig. 1, 2a Etymology. The name honours the Academia Lugduno Batava, nowadays Leiden University, and its Hortus Academicus Lugduno-Batavus, the current Hortus botanicus Leiden (Fig. 5). The species is similar to Specklinia pisinna but can be distinguished by the prostrate habit (vs erect habit), shorter leaves (up to 8 vs 1 long), the flexuous inflorescence with up to 6 flowers (vs straight and containing up to 3 flowers), the creamy-white flowers (vs heavily suffused and striped with purple) and the shorter lip (up to 1.6 vs 2.3 mm). Specklinia digitalis is also similar but the new species can be distinguished by the shorter leaves (4 8 vs 12 15 mm), the shorter inflorescence (up to 1.5 vs up to 15 cm), the shorter sepals (3 4 vs 5 mm long), the ligulate to narrowly elliptic petals (vs obovate) and the shorter lip (1.5 1.6 vs 2 mm long). Typus: F. Pupulin, B. Arias, D. Bogarín & C. Ossenbach 7709 (holo JBL-spirit; D5055), Costa Rica, Heredia, Sarapiquí, Horquetas, unpaved road to Rara Avis, c. km 6, N10 20'40.2" W83 59'30.3", 200 m, 9 April 2009. Epiphytic, caespitose, prostrate to sub-erect herb to 1 cm tall, excluding the inflorescence. Roots fibrous, flexuous, glabrous. Stem abbreviated, terete-cylindric, to 1 2 mm long, monophyllous, completely concealed by papyraceous, sheaths. Leaves coriaceous, suborbicular to broadly elliptic, 4 8 by 3 6 mm, densely spotted with purple abaxially. Inflorescence borne laterally from the apex of the stem, without an annulus, an erect, flexuous, distichous, successively flowered raceme, with 1 2 flowers open at once, producing up to 6 flowers per inflorescence, up to 15 20 mm long; peduncle cylindric, to 15 mm long. Floral bracts infundibuliform, broadly ovate, acute, long. Pedicel cylindric, glabrous, persistent, 2 mm long including the subclavate ovary. Flowers whitish cream, immaculate to slightly brownish stained along the sepal veins. Sepals fleshy, glabrous; dorsal sepal elliptic, 3-veined, acute, 4.0 by 2.1 2.3 mm; lateral sepals completely fused into an elliptic synsepal, 4-veined, 4.0 4.5 by 3 mm. Petals ligulate to narrowly elliptic, obtuse, 2.1 2.2 by 0.9 1.0 mm, 1-veined. Lip ligulate, longitudinally slightly arched-convex in natural position, thinly articulate 2015 Naturalis Biodiversity Center You are free to share - to copy, distribute and transmit the work, under the following conditions: Attribution: You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Non-commercial: You may not use this work for commercial purposes. No derivative works: You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work. For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work, which can be found at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/legalcode. Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holder. Nothing in this license impairs or restricts the author s moral rights.

A.P. Karremans et al.: Specklinia lugduno-batavae 181 b 3 mm a 1 cm f 0.5 mm e c d 3 mm Fig. 1 Specklinia lugduno-batavae Karremans, Bogarín & Gravend. a. Habit; b. flower; c. dissected perianth; d. column and lip, lateral view; e. column, ventral view; f. anther cap and pollinia (all Pupulin 7709, JBL-spirit). Drawn by D. Bogarín and inked by L. Oses. with the column foot by a hyaline claw, obtuse, longitudinally depress ed in the middle, 1.5 1.6 by 0.7 0.8 mm. Column slightly arched, terete-slender at the base, 1.6 1.8 mm long without the foot, provided with low, broad membranous wings at the apex; column foot inconspicuous. Anther cap deeply cucullate, ovate, 2-celled. Pollinia 2, obovate-complanate, minutely hooked at the base, lacking caudicles. The description is based on Pupulin 7709, Pupulin 7710 and Bogarín 6761. Distribution & Ecology The species is known only from the tropical wet forest of the Caribbean lowlands occurring in Nicaragua and Costa Rica at elevations between 200 350 m. Additional material examined. Costa Rica, Heredia, Sarapiquí; OET, La Selva, Surá trail, 350 m, R. Aguilar 8729 (LSCR), 16 Apr. 2004; CES trail, O. Vargas 1264 (LSCR), 13 June 2005; Unpaved road to Rara Avis, c. km 6, N10 20'40.2" W83 59'30.3", 200 m, F. Pupulin, B. Arias, D. Bogarín & C. Ossenbach 7707 (JBL-spirit; D3465), 9 Apr. 2009; F. Pupulin et al. 7708 (JBL-spirit; D3752), 9 Apr. 2009; F. Pupulin et al. 7710 (JBL-spirit; D3126), 9 Apr. 2009; D. Bogarín, B. Arias, C. Ossenbach & F. Pupulin 6761 (JBL-spirit; D2921; Fig. 2b), 9 Apr. 2009. Photographic images studied. Nicaragua, Refugio de Vida Silvestre Los Guatusos, photographed by Fabricio Díaz Santos (photographic voucher, 108 in Orquídeas del Río San Juan Díaz Santos (2010)); Guatusos Reserve, photographed by Dick Culbert (digital voucher, www.dixpix.ca/meso_america/ Flora/orchids/052_platystele.html).

182 Blumea Volume 59 / 3, 2015 Fig. 2 Specklinia lugduno-batavae Karremans, Bogarín & Gravend. a. Close-up on a flower; b. showing the habit (a. Pupulin 7709; b. Bogarín 6761, both JBL-spirit) Photos by: a. A.P. Karremans; b. D. Bogarín. Fig. 3 The close relatives of Specklinia lugduno-batavae Karremans, Bogarín & Gravend. a, b. Specklinia digitalis (Luer) Pridgeon & M.W.Chase; c, d. Specklinia pisinna (Luer) Solano & Soto Arenas; e, f. Specklinia succulenta Bellone & Archila (a, b. Karremans 5737, L-spirit; c, d. Karremans 4797, L-spirit; e, f. Bellone 680, LY). Photos by: a d. W. Driessen; e, f. G. Chiron (reproduced with their kind permission).

A.P. Karremans et al.: Specklinia lugduno-batavae 183 c e h f g 0.5 mm 1 cm a b d Fig. 4 Specklinia pisinna (Luer) Solano & Soto Arenas. a. Habit; b. leaf and inflorescence; c. flower; d. dissected perianth; e. column and lip, lateral view; f. lip; g. column, ventral view; h. anther cap and pollinia (all Karremans 4749, L-spirit). Drawn by E. Winkel.

184 Blumea Volume 59 / 3, 2015 Note The short plant up to 1 cm tall, the suborbicular leaf with purple spots on the abaxial surface, the flexuous, successive racemose inflorescence with a single flower open at a time, the conspicuous thickening of the apex of the dorsal sepal, and the ligulate, unlobed, mostly inornate lip, which is shallowly depressed longitudinally in the middle places Specklinia lugduno-batavae in the S. digitalis species group (Fig. 3). The few tiny flowers and short inflorescence are similar to that of S. pisinna (Fig. 4), a species known to occur in Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras. However, the new species can be distinguished by the prostrate habit (vs erect habit), with shorter leaves, up to 8 mm long (vs 1), the flexuous inflorescence containing up to 6 flowers (vs straight, containing up to 3 flowers), the creamy-white flowers (vs heavily suffused and striped with purple) and the shorter lip (up to 1.6 vs 2.3 mm). From the Mexican endemic S. digitalis, it can be distinguished by the smaller prostrate habit with shorter leaves, 4 8 mm long (vs 12 15 mm) and shorter inflorescence (up to 2 vs 15 cm long) the ligulate to narrowly elliptic petals (vs obovate). Specklinia succulenta from French Guyana is also similar, but the new species can be distinguished by the prostrate habit (vs erect), the short inflorescence (up to 2 vs 10 cm long), the whitish cream flowers (vs greenish yellow) and the immaculate lip (vs a lip with two purple stripes). Acknowledgements We are very thankful to Jaco Kruizinga and Rogier van Vugt of the Hortus botanicus in Leiden who cultivated and photographed the material of S. pisinna, of which Esmée Winkel prepared a superb illustration. Lizbeth Oses inked the drawing of the type specimen of Specklinia lugduno-batavae. Wiel Driessen provided plant material and photographs of S. digitalis and S. pisinna. Guy Chiron was kind enough to provide the illustration and photographs of S. succulenta. We owe the illustration of the Hortus botanicus Leiden to Carlos Ossenbach. We are very thankful for the comments of Franco Pupulin and Melania Fernández, which improved the manuscript. We are also in debt to the Vice-Presidency of Research of the University of Costa Rica for providing support through the projects Filogenia molecular de las especies de Orchidaceae endémicas de Costa Rica (814- B1-239) and Taxonomía, filogenia molecular, aislamiento reproductivo y diferenciación de nichos de Specklinia endotrachys (814-B3-075). REFERENCES Boerhaave H. 1710. Index Plantarum Horti Lugduno Batavi. Cornelius Boutenstein, Leiden. Bogarín D, Karremans AP, Rincón R, et al. 2013. A new Specklinia (Orchidaceae: Pleurothallidinae) from Costa Rica and Panama. Phytotaxa 115, 2: 31 41. Karremans AP. 2014. Lankesteriana, a new genus in the Pleurothallidinae (Orchidaceae). Lankesteriana 13, 3: 319 332. Karremans AP, Pupulin F, Gravendeel B. 2013. Taxonomy, molecular phylogenetics, reproductive isolation, and niche differentiation of the Specklinia endotrachys species complex (Orchidaceae: Pleurothallidinae). Lankesteriana 13, 1 2: 132 133. Luer CA. 1986. Icones Pleurothallidinarum III. Systematics of the genus Pleurothallis (Orchidaceae). Monographs in Systematic Botany, Missouri Botanical Garden 20. Luer CA. 2006. Icones Pleurothallidinarum XXVIII. Reconsideration of Masdevallia, and the systematics of Specklinia and vegetatively similar genera (Orchidaceae). Monographs in Systematic Botany, Missouri Botanical Garden 105. Pridgeon AM. 2005. Subtribe Pleurothallidinae. In: Prigeon AM, Cribb PJ, Chase MW, et al. (eds), Genera Orchidacearum. Vol. 4 Epidendroideae, part 1: 319 422. Oxford University Press, New York. Pridgeon AM, Chase MW. 2001. A phylogenetic reclassification of Pleurothallidinae (Orchidaceae). Lindleyana 16, 4: 235 271. Pupulin F, Karremans AP, Gravendeel B. 2012. A reconsideration of the empusellous species of Specklinia (Orchidaceae: Pleurothallidinae) in Costa Rica. Phytotaxa 63: 1 20. Fig. 5 Hortus Academicus Lugduno-Batavus as depicted in Boerhaave (1710).