SAURAUIA TAYLORII (ACTINIDIACEAE), A DISTINCTIVE NEW SPECIES FROM THE KAIJENDE HIGHLANDS OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA

Similar documents
Three new species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from Sumatra, Indonesia

Palaquium, Palaquioides Dubard, Bull. Soc. Bot. Pr. 56, Mém. 16, 1909, 19. brachyblasts covered by numerous scars of bracts.

Two new species of Pentaphragma (Pentaphragmataceae) from Sarawak, Borneo

TWO NEW SPECIES OF LICUALA (ARECACEAE; CORYPHOIDEAE) FROM WESTERN NEW GUINEA

ENDIANDRA KASSAMENSIS (LAURACEAE), A NEW SPECIES FROM NEW GUINEA

New subspecies of Ardisia crenata (Primulaceae) from Thailand

A new species of Petrocodon (Gesneriaceae) from Thailand

Genetic Variation of Populations Scutellaria slametensis sp. nov. (Lamiaceae) on Mt. Slamet, Central Java, Indonesia

117. Barringtoniaceae 527

Begonia droopiae Ardi (Begoniaceae), a New Species of Begonia from West Sumatra

Begonia droopiae Ardi (Begoniaceae), a New Species of Begonia from West Sumatra

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Part 1: Naming the cultivar

Three New Species of Annonaceae from West Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo

Cotoneaster dammeri Schneid. (Rosaceae): A New Record to the Flora of Taiwan

(A. DC.) Pichon Apocynaceae. Saba senegalensis. LOCAL NAMES French (saba,liane saba); Mandinka (saba); Wolof (madd)

Key to the Genera of the Cichorieae Tribe of the Asteraceae Family of the New York New England Region. Introduction

Fig. 3: Leaves of Corchorus aestuans L.

POLEMONIACEAE PHLOX FAMILY

Teratophyllum hainanense (Lomariopsidaceae), a New Species from Hainan Island, China

1. ASPIDOPTERYS A. Jussieu ex Endlicher, Gen. Pl

GUIDE TO THE GENERA OF LIANAS AND CLIMBING PLANTS IN THE NEOTROPICS

CYPERACEAE SEDGE FAMILY

OXYLOBUS SUBGLABER KING & H. ROB. (ASTERACEAE: EUPATORIEAE) - ACCEPTANCE OF ITS SPECIFIC STATUS

Commiphora drakebrochmanii

A New Species of Wild Banana Musa arfakiana (Musaceae) from Papua (Formerly Irian Jaya) of Indonesia

32: Excerpt from: Anderson, W. R Malpighiaceae inthe botany of the Guayana Highland, Part XL Mem. New York Bot. Gard.

TWO NEW SPECIES OF POACEAE FROM INDIA

POACEAE [GRAMINEAE] GRASS FAMILY

Novitates Gabonenses 47. Another new Dichapetalum (Dichapetalaceae) from Gabon

OrchideenJournal. Publisher: V.D.O.F. Vereinigung Deutscher Orchideenfreunde e.v. Vol Paphiopedilum xdeleonii

AQUIFOLIACEAE. 1. ILEX Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

20. ALLOPHYLUS Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

A New Species in Potentilla Section Leptostylae (Rosaceae) from Yunnan, China

Magnolia hookeri var. longirostrata (Magnoliaceae), a new taxon from Yunnan, China

REDUCTION OF DIPLYCOSIA INDICA (2009) TO GAULTHERIA AKAENSIS (2006) (ERICACEAE)

GUIDE TO THE GENERA OF LIANAS AND CLIMBING PLANTS IN THE NEOTROPICS

24. CRYPTOCARYA R. Brown, Prodr , nom. cons.

Malvaceae mallow family

Del. Rutaceae. Teclea nobilis. LOCAL NAMES Amharic (atesa); English (small fruited teclea); Luganda (mubio)

Castanopsis malipoensis and C. jinpingensis (Fagaceae), two new species from Yunnan, China

A TAXONOMIC REVISION OF ACTINIDIACEAE OF VIETNAM

Cornaceae dogwood family Cornus florida flowering dogwood

Carlyle A. Luer 1 and A. L. V. Toscano de Brito 2,3

OLEACEAE OLIVE FAMILY

Two new species of Neohouzeoua (Gramineae-Bambusoideae) from Thailand and Myanmar

14. POLYALTHIA Blume, Fl. Javae, Annonaceae,

A new species of Potentilla (Rosaceae): P. baekdusanensis M. Kim

Common Name: ALABAMA LEATHER FLOWER. Scientific Name: Clematis socialis Kral. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

7. OLEA Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 木犀榄属 mu xi lan shu

COMMELINACEAE SPIDERWORT FAMILY

Lankesteriana International Journal on Orchidology ISSN: Universidad de Costa Rica Costa Rica

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE NEOTROPICAL GENERA OF ANNONACEAE

Ericaceae (Heath or Blueberry Family) Key

THREE NEW MASDEVALLIA SPECIES (ORCHIDACEAE: PLEUROTHALLIDINAE) FROM PERU

Key to Vegetative Willows of Harney and Malheur Counties, Oregon. by Barbara Wilson of the Carex Working Group

BRACHYSTELMA SESHACHALAMENSE (APOCYNACEAE), A NEW SPECIES FROM ANDHRA PRADESH, INDIA

1. MAESA Forsskål, Fl. Aegypt. Arab

FOUR NEW SPECIES OF BEGONIA ( BEGONIACEAE) FROM SULAWESI

Plantaginaceae plantain family

Alismataceae water-plantain family

A NEW SPECIES AND A NEW RECORD OF POACEAE FAMILY FROM IRAN

26. CHELONOPSIS Miquel, Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugduno-Batavum 2:

Bojer Fabaceae - Papilionoideae. Crotalaria trichotoma. LOCAL NAMES English (West Indian rattlebox,curare pea)

Flora of China 8:

Non-Native Invasive Plants

Flora of China 6:

CLETHRACEAE. 1. CLETHRA Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

28. RUBUS Linnaeus, Sp. P1. 1:

A JOURNAL ON TAXONOMIC BOTANY, PLANT SOCIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY 12(1)

GLANDULARIA MALPAISANA (VERBENACEAE), A NEW SPECIES FROM SONORA, MEXICO

Brazilian nightshade Solanum seaforthianum

26. HYDRANGEA Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

A TAXONOMIC REVISION OF MALLOTUS SECTION POLYADENII (EUPHORBIACEAE)

OrchideenJournal. Publisher: V.D.O.F. Vereinigung Deutscher Orchideenfreunde e.v. Vol Thrixspermum bellamabantae Benjamin Mabanta

39. FRAGARIA Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

Common Name: RADFORD S SEDGE. Scientific Name: Carex radfordii L.L. Gaddy. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Journal of Plant Systematics

Crop Identification - Alfalfa Deep taproot and welldeveloped

(L.) Frodin Araliaceae. Schefflera heptaphylla. LOCAL NAMES English (ivy tree); Lao (Sino-Tibetan) (ko tan); Vietnamese (nam s[aa]m)

3. CAPPARIS Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1:

Daniel Santamaría-Aguilar 1

MNPhrag. Minnesota Non-native Phragmites Early Detection Project. Guide to Identifying Native and Non-native Phragmites australis

From the Ulu Merirai and Bukit Sarang Limestone Areas in Sarawak, Borneo

20. ACIDOSASA C. D. Chu & C. S. Chao ex P. C. Keng, J. Bamboo Res. 1(2):

PORTULACACEAE PURSLANE FAMILY

MYRSINACEAE. 1. MAESA Forsskål, Fl. Aegypt. Arab

A new Taiwan species Veronicastrum loshanense (Scrophulariaceae)

Nine new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from South and West Sulawesi, Indonesia. Citation Edinburgh Journal of Botany, 2011, v. 68 n. 2, p.

Carlyle A. Luer 2. Keywords: Colombia, Orchidaceae, Pleurothallidinae, Stelis

168. THRIXSPERMUM Loureiro, Fl. Cochinch. 2: 516,

Common Name: ELLIOTT S CROTON. Scientific Name: Croton elliottii Chapman. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Dypsis rosea. JOHN DRANSFIELD Herbarium, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 3AE, UK

15. CARYOPTERIS Bunge, Pl. Mongholico-Chin

Flora of China 4:

Pothos vietnamensis sp. nov. (Araceae Pothoideae Potheae) from Vietnam

CONNARACEAE. 1. CNESTIS Jussieu, Gen. Pl

14. TOXICODENDRON Miller, Gard. Dict. Abr., ed

Common Name: PORTER S REED GRASS. Scientific Name: Calamagrostis porteri A. Gray ssp. porteri. Other Commonly Used Names: Porter s reed bent

Transcription:

BLUMEA 53: 335 340 Published on 29 October 2008 http://dx.doi.org/10.3767/000651908x607981 SAURAUIA TAYLORII (ACTINIDIACEAE), A DISTINCTIVE NEW SPECIES FROM THE KAIJENDE HIGHLANDS OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA W. Takeuchi Arnold Arboretum and the Herbaria of Harvard University, c/o PNG National Forest Authority, P.O. Box 314, Lae, Morobe Province 411, Papua New Guinea SUMMARY Saurauia taylorii is described from subalpine environments in the Kaijende Highlands of Enga Province. The new species is easily distinguished by its unusually small and glabrous leaf-blades, and by its nodding flowers. Key words: Saurauia taylorii, Papua New Guinea, Wildlife Management Area. INTRODUCTION The Kaijende Highlands is a locality of considerable resource significance to Papua New Guinea (PNG). As the socioeconomic centre for Enga Province, the district ironically includes some of the largest remaining tracts of upper montane forest in Papuasia. Its open-pit mine at Porgera is the world s sixth largest producer of gold (Fig. 1), averaging Fig. 1. Kaijende Highlands. Foreground: forest habitat for Saurauia taylorii. Background (arrow): the Porgera open pit, one of the world s premier gold mines. 2008 Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

336 BLUMEA Vol. 53, No. 2, 2008 Fig. 2. Saurauia taylorii W.N.Takeuchi. In situ flowering aspect (Takeuchi, Towati & Ama 20310). Fig. 3. Closer view of the flowering branches. The corolla is disproportionately large in relation to the unusually small (1.5 3 cm long) leaf-blades (Takeuchi, Towati & Ama 20310).

W. Takeuchi: Saurauia taylorii from the Kaijende Highlands 337 over a million ounces of precious metal per year and generating 15% of PNG s export earnings (ABN-AMRO Morgans 2006). Pristine environments adjacent to the gold mine are currently being considered for conservation action as a Wildlife Management Area (WMA) jurisdiction (Richards 2007). The mountainous region between Mt Wilhelm and Kaijende encompasses one of the planet s five richest concentrations of vascular plants (Barthlott et al. 1996, 2005). In recognition of probable ecosystem values, Conservation International has instituted a long-term plan of biotic exploration focused on the Indonesian-PNG cordillera and adjoining colline zone, with a nascent Porgera-based WMA at its eastern endpoint. The Kaijende Highlands Expedition of 2005 was the lead operation in this projected binational agenda. The following account is the latest in a series of publications presenting floristic discoveries from that undertaking. DESCRIPTION Saurauia taylorii W.N.Takeuchi, spec. nov. Fig. 2, 3; Map 1 Saurauiae emarginatae similis, foliis glabris minoribus 14 29( 34) mm longis differt. Typus: Takeuchi, Towati & Ama 20310 (holo LAE; iso A, L), Papua New Guinea, Enga Province, Waile Creek, alt. 3200 m, 9 September 2005. Terrestrial shrubs 0.5 3 m tall, crowns compact, rounded. Branchlets corymbiform, crowded, unarmed, subapical axes 1.5 2 mm diam., compressed, striate, older axes cylindrical, without lenticels; scales striguliform, (1 )2 4 mm long, pallescent, ± dense, subpersistent; hair indument absent; surfaces dull black or dark brown, discolorously marked by the remnants of fallen scales; internodes 1 9( 15) mm. Leaves spiral, spreading, glabrous; petioles 1 2.5( 3) mm long, pulviniform, black, broadly channelled on the upper side; lamina elliptic, elliptic-ovate, or obovate, 14 29( 34) by 5 15( 19) mm, coriaceous; adaxially striate-rugulose, nitid, black or fuscous after drying; abaxially pustulate, dull brown; base cuneate to obtuse, symmetrical; margins coarsely serrate in the upper 1/2 2/3, entire below, serrations (3 )5 8 per side, each with an acroscopic spine, these marginal spines conoid-vasiform, 1 1.5 mm long, pale brown, smooth; apex acute, spinescent; venation brochidodrome, secondaries in 6 9 pairs, arcuate, at the lamina centre diverging 40 60 from midribs, supramedially reticulating, crossing nerves lax, subscalariform, veins adaxially obscure or planate, abaxially prominent, discolorous. Inflorescence axillary from foliate nodes, ascending; peduncles (15 )21 42 mm long, angulate (or terete), lineate, black, subdensely clothed with appressed scales similar to the branchlet indument; pedicels (if present) 1 11 mm long; bracts elliptic-ovate, (3.5 )6.5 9 by 1 3 mm, paired, closely subtending calyces or 1 5( 10) mm distant, in multiflorous inflorescences also present at the peduncle apex, induplicative or not, glabrous. Flowers solitary or monochasial, nodding, bisexual; sepals 5, narrowly ovate, 7 9 by 3 4 mm, connate in the basal 1 mm, concave, entire, with or without a hyaline border, adaxially glabrous, abaxially provided with appressed bristle-hairs along the centreline and near the base; petals 5, free or nearly so, obovate-spathulate, 14 17 by 7 9 mm, retuse, venose, bifacially glabrous, marked by linear cystoliths or not; stamens 70 76, 4- or 5-seriate, adnate to petals,

338 BLUMEA Vol. 53, No. 2, 2008 Map 1. Island of New Guinea. Localities from the Kaijende Expedition of 2005. a. Porgera; b. Waile Creek. glabrous; filaments compressed or flat, 1 mm long; anther-cells 2, linear-elliptic, 3.2 by 0.4 mm, ± basifixed, introrse, longitudinally dehiscent, obscurely calcarate at the base; connective ligulate, apically excurrent to a linear-deltate process c. 0.2 0.3 mm long; ovary superior, globular-umbonate, 2 mm diam., densely covered by pale villous hairs, locules 4 (or 5); styles 4 (or 5), 5 mm long, glabrous, black, fused in the lower 2 2.5 mm into a sulcate column, distally spreading, stigma punctiform. Fruit (immature) a dry berry, subglobose, 7 mm diam., crowned by the stigmatic remnant, indument persisting from the ovary, fruiting sepals not accrescent. Field notes Lamina fleshy or firm, adaxially dark green, abaxially pale green; peduncles ascending; flowers nodding, sepals red, petals white. Distribution Known only from the Kaijende Highlands of Enga Province, near the Porgera gold mine. Habitat & Ecology In mossy montane forests and in transitional border communities between subalpine forest and grassland. Occurring in mixed populations with Saurauia altiterra, S. giluwensis (Fig. 4), and S. trugul, primarily at 2900 3100 m altitude. Etymology The new species is named after fisheries biologist Garth Taylor, a former President of the environmental consulting group PT Hatfield Indonesia (Bogor, Indonesia), and the writer s colleague on previous multidisciplinary biosurveys in Sumatra and Irian Jaya. Notes 1. The most recent treatment for New Guinea (Diels 1922) is acutely outdated. Van Royen s (1982) review covers only nine species from elevations above 3000 m. Many of the c. 50 New Guinean species are range-restricted, particularly those from montane environments (Smith 1941).

W. Takeuchi: Saurauia taylorii from the Kaijende Highlands 339 Fig. 4. Saurauia giluwensis (shown) often occurs with S. taylorii in mixed populations. The two species are the most common Saurauia in the Waile Creek area (Takeuchi, Towati & Ama 20259). 2. Although the novelty is apparently referable to section Pleianthae subsection Setosae, infrageneric separations are very problematic in this genus (Smith 1941) and are likely to be redefined by future revision. 3. Saurauia taylorii is laxly furnished with conoid spines on lamina margins but is otherwise bifacially smooth. Nearly all other Papuasian congeners (with the notable exception of S. eburnea and S. plurilocularis) are hairy or scaly over at least some part of the lamina surface. 4. Saurauia emarginata (and to a lesser extent S. roemeri) are the taxa closest to S. taylorii, differing primarily in leaf size, shape, and indument. The inflorescence in S. emarginata also differs by being strictly solitary, while S. taylorii is uniflorous or monochasial. The three species can be separated with the following key:

340 BLUMEA Vol. 53, No. 2, 2008 Lamina elliptic-obovate, 5 7 cm long, abaxial surfaces scaly; flowers solitary, erect. Morobe Province, PNG............................... S. emarginata Lamina elliptic, 10 12 cm long, abaxially strigose on veins; flowers dichasial, erect or not. South-Central Irian Jaya............................ S. roemeri Lamina elliptic, elliptic-ovate, or obovate, 1.4 2.9( 3.4) cm long, glabrous; flowers solitary or monochasial, nodding. Enga Province, PNG......... S. taylorii 5. The leaf-blades of S. taylorii are the smallest of any Saurauia in Eastern Malesia, easily distinguishing the new species from congeners. Additional specimen examined: Papua New Guinea. Enga Province: Takeuchi, Towati & Ama 20087 (A, LAE). ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Kaijende Highlands Expedition was funded primarily by Conservation International and the Porgera Joint Venture (operators of the Porgera gold mine). My activities in Papuasian botany are supported by the National Science Foundation (grant DEB 0315930), the Arnold Arboretum, and the Herbaria of Harvard University. Parataxonomists Ali Towati and Demas Ama were my principal associates in the field. REFERENCES ABN-AMRO Morgans. 2006. Lihir gold. Deja vu the transition continues. Report for investors. ABN-AMRO, Brisbane. Barthlott, W., W. Lauer & A. Placke. 1996. Global distribution of species diversity in vascular plants: towards a world map of phytodiversity. Erdkunde 50: 317 328. Barthlott, W., J. Mutke, D. Rafiqpoor, G. Kier & H. Kreft. 2005. Global centers of vascular plant diversity. Nova Acta Leop. n.s. 92 (342): 61 83. Diels, L. 1922. Die Dilleniaceen von Papuasien. Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 57: 436 459. Richards, S.J. (ed.). 2007. A rapid biological assessment of the Kaijende Highlands, Papua New Guinea. RAP Bulletin of Biological Assessment 45. Conservation International, Washington, DC. Smith, A.C. 1941. Studies of Papuasian plants, IV. J. Arnold Arbor. 22: 497 528. Van Royen, P. 1982. The alpine flora of New Guinea. Volume 3: Taxonomic part Winteraceae to Polygonaceae. Cramer, Vaduz.