Victoria R. H. Schomb., Athenaeum (London) 1837

Smith, Lucy T., Magdalena, Carlos, Przelomska, Natalia A. S., Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A., Melgar-Gómez, Darío G., Beck, Stephan, Negrão, Raquel, Mian, Sahr, Leitch, Ilia J., Dodsworth, Steven, Maurin, Olivier, Ribero-Guardia, Gaston, Salazar, César D., Gutierrez-Sibauty, Gloria, Antonelli, Alexandre & Monro, Alexandre K., 2022, Revised Species Delimitation in the Giant Water Lily Genus Victoria (Nymphaeaceae) Confirms a New Species and Has Implications for Its Conservation, Frontiers in Plant Science 13, pp. 1-31 : 19-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3389/fpls.2022.883151

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7586151

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B287DB-FFFA-FFCD-AD15-FCF7496DFF55

treatment provided by

Juliana

scientific name

Victoria R. H. Schomb., Athenaeum (London) 1837
status

 

Key to the Species

1. Mature leaves with upturned rim, rim moderate to high (8– 10% of blade length), sigmoid in cross- section; mature bud concave towards apex; carpellary appendages with a cuneate base, arising 45 ◦ from the point of attachment (see Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 ); prickles associated with the flowers tapering abruptly to a point, covering ovary and either absent, or covering the basal 1/3 of abaxial surface of the outer tepal, prickles 0 – 100 per tepal; seeds globose, raphe faintly visible. Paraná river basin, lower course of Paraguay river V. cruziana View in CoL ( Figure 6 View FIGURE 6 )

1. Mature leaves with no upturned rim, or where present the upturned rim low to moderate (4–7% of blade length), sigmoid or vertical in cross-section; mature bud convex towards apex; carpellary appendages with an auriculate or subauriculate base, arising 45 ◦ from point of attachment or not (see Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ); prickles associated with the flowers tapering smoothly or abruptly to a point, covering both the ovary and entire abaxial surface of the outer tepal, or only the ovary, 0–1000 prickles per tepal; seeds ellipsoid or globose, raphe faintly visible or prominent. Amazon river basin, Pantanal 2

2. Mature leaves with no or moderate upturned rim, which, where present, is vertical in cross-section. Prickles associated with the flowers tapering smoothly to a point and covering both ovary and entire abaxial surface of the outer tepals, 55–300 prickles per tepal; stigmatic chamber deeply concave, obdeltate in longitudinal profile, carpellary appendage auriculate and hanging free from, not arising 45 ◦ from point of attachment (see Figures 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 ); seeds ellipsoid, the raphe faintly visible. Amazon river basin excluding V. amazonica View in CoL ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 )

2. Mature leaves with a moderate upturned rim, which is sigmoid in cross-section. Prickles associated with the flowers tapering abruptly to a point, covering both the ovary and entire abaxial surface of the outer tepals, or only the ovary, 0–1000 prickles per tepal; stigmatic chamber shallowly concave and oblong in longitudinal profile, carpellary appendage subauriculate at point of attachment not arising 45 ◦ from point of attachment (see Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ) (not known for V. cruziana f. mattogrossensis View in CoL ); seed ovoid, the raphe prominent. Llanos de Moxos or Pantanal 3

3. Prickles associated with the flowers covering the ovary and either absent from or sparsely distributed over the abaxial surface of the outer tepals, 0–10 per tepal; apical portion of the carpellary appendage longer than the basal portion. Llanos de Moxos V. boliviana View in CoL ( Figure 5 View FIGURE 5 )

3. Prickles associated with the flowers covering the ovary and distributed densely and evenly over the abaxial surface of the outer tepals, 500–1000+ per tepal; apical portion of the carpellary appendage shorter than the basal portion. Pantanal V. cruziana f. mattogrossensis View in CoL taxon incertum taxon incertae

Victoria R. H. Schomb., Athenaeum (London) 1837 View in CoL (No. 515): 661 (September 9 1837).

Victoria Lindl., Monog. View in CoL 3 (October 16 1837).

Victoria J. E. Gray, View in CoL Mag. Zool. Bot. 2(10): 373 (December 1 1837).

Aquatic perennial herb, rhizome erect, tuberous, elongate to cylindrical, roots adventitious. Leaves floating, orbicular, peltate, perforated by stomatodes, adaxial surface of lamina glabrous, lacking prickles, green; abaxial surface of lamina with prominent radial and reticulate ribs, juvenile leaves sagittate; leaf margins flat or upturned; prickles covering petiole and ribs. Inflorescences uniflorate, bracteate. Flowers axillary, solitary, multiple buds per plant; pedicel with 4 primary air chambers, 8 minor chambers, covered in prickles; flowers opening one at a time, projecting above water surface shortly before anthesis, projecting above or resting on water surface at anthesis, each flower opening over two nights and partially closing in between, protogynous. Epigynous, ovary globose, covered in prickles externally, ovules parietal, attached by short funiculi, globose. Outer tepals 4, triangular, apex acute to rounded. Inner tepals 40–c.100, arranged in spiral series, creating a torus (attachment point of tepals forming a ring of tissue), tepals gradually reducing in size towards the center and changing shape from apically rounded to acute from outer to innermost; outer staminodia in 1 or 2 whorls, thick, rigid, apiculate; stamens> 100, borne in c. 3 series, subulate, introrse; anthers linear-elongate; inner staminodia,>50, sigmoid, subulate, partially adnate to carpellary appendages, detaching at second-night anthesis; carpellary appendages L-shaped, arising from extension of stigmatic surface, lower parts adnate to tissue extending from tepal base attachment, corresponding in position and number with stigmatic surface ridges and locules. Fruit ripening just below surface of water, 10–15 cm in diameter (excluding prickles) at maturity, fleshy, oblate, topped by a shallow cylinder-shaped mass of dark reddish to maroon ring of persistent hard tissue formed by the remnant bases of tepals; inner staminodia persistent and curved over concave stigmatic surface while ripening; outer layers of pericarp disintegrating to release seeds. Seeds smooth, surrounded by a mucilaginous aril.

Three, possibly four species, tropical and temperate South America.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Nymphaeales

Family

Nymphaeaceae

Loc

Victoria R. H. Schomb., Athenaeum (London) 1837

Smith, Lucy T., Magdalena, Carlos, Przelomska, Natalia A. S., Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A., Melgar-Gómez, Darío G., Beck, Stephan, Negrão, Raquel, Mian, Sahr, Leitch, Ilia J., Dodsworth, Steven, Maurin, Olivier, Ribero-Guardia, Gaston, Salazar, César D., Gutierrez-Sibauty, Gloria, Antonelli, Alexandre & Monro, Alexandre K. 2022
2022
Loc

Victoria R. H. Schomb., Athenaeum (London) 1837

R. H. Schomb 1837: 661
1837
Loc

Victoria

Lindl. 1837: 3
1837
Loc

Victoria J. E. Gray,

J. E. Gray 1837: 373
1837
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