Vincetoxicum xinpingense H. Peng & Y.H. Wang, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.361.1.4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/190087AA-B437-4C56-FF56-B45377B449C2 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Vincetoxicum xinpingense H. Peng & Y.H. Wang |
status |
sp. nov. |
Vincetoxicum xinpingense H. Peng & Y.H. Wang View in CoL , spec. nov. ( Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 )
Vincetoxicum xinpingense View in CoL is distinguished from V. sublanceolatum ( Miquel 1866: 128) Maximowicz (1876: 796) View in CoL mainly by its horizontal (vs. pendulous in V. sublanceolatum View in CoL ) pollinia, corolla with a diameter of 2.1–3 cm (vs. 0.7–1.5 cm in V. sublanceolatum View in CoL ), corona 2/3 of the length of anthers (vs. far shorter than anthers in V. sublanceolatum View in CoL ). Vincetoxicum xinpingense View in CoL can also be distinguished from Tylophora forrestii M.G. Gilbert & P.T. Li (1995: 13) View in CoL by its dark purple (vs. yellowish green in T. forrestii View in CoL ) corolla with a diameter of 2.1–3 cm (vs. c. 1.2 cm in T. forrestii View in CoL ), corona ovoid (vs. narrowly ovoid in T. forrestii View in CoL ), and apex of corona lobes obtuse (vs. acute in T. forrestii View in CoL ).
Type: — CHINA. Yunnan: Xinping County, Ailao Mountains , 23°58 ′ 24 ″ N, 101°31 ′ 30 ″ E, 2030 m, 23 May 2017, H. Peng, Z.H. Wang & L. Chen XP314 (holotype: KUN! [KUN1344773]; isotypes: K!, KUN! [KUN1344774], PE!, TI!) GoogleMaps .
Perennial twining herbs, with colourless latex. Stem slender, terete, branched, sparsely pubescent with short curved trichomes in one or two lines. Leaves opposite; lamina chartaceous, ovate-oblong or elliptic, 7.4–12.5 × 3.5–6.5 cm, margin and nerves on both surfaces pubescent, elsewhere glabrous, apex acute to acuminate, base truncate or retuse, margin entire; petiole 1.3–4.9 cm long, usually with two glands, upper surface grooved, both surfaces densely covered with curved trichomes. Inflorescence dichasial, axillary, 1–2 per axil, flowers (1–) 4–10 (–12); peduncle 2.2–6.6 cm long, puberulent, pedicel slender, 0.5–3.0 cm long, puberulent. Calyx rotate, lobes 5, lanceolate, apex acute, glabrous, with five basal glands. Corolla rotate, dark purple, 2.1–3 cm in diameter; deeply 5-lobed, lobes narrowly lanceolate, 0.8–1.4 × 0.1–0.4 cm, apex truncate, glabrous on both surfaces, margin recurved; corona 3/5 as long as gynostegium, dark purple, deeply 5-lobed, lobes adnate to surface of gynostegium, c. 0.8 × 0.6 mm, ovoid, fleshy; connective appendage membranaceous, ovate, c. 0.59 × 0.72 mm, pollinia 2 per pollinarium, horizontal; corpusculum oblong, c. 0.1 × 0.03 mm; pollinia ellipsoid, c. 0.23 × 0.16 mm; caudicle c. 0.08 mm long. Follicles fusiform, c. 8 × 2.3 cm, glabrous, solitary. Seeds flat, ovate, c. 7 × 5 mm, blackish brown, coma c. 4.3 cm long, white.
Phenology: —Flowering from May to July and fruiting from June to September.
Conservation Status: —Currently, V. xinpingense is only known from three adjacent locations in Ailao Mountains. However, these locations have all been developed into scenic area. In the present survey, very few mature plants (less than 100) were found. The extent of occurrence for V. xinpingense is less than 500 km 2. The plants are directly threatened by disruptive human activities like tourism. Following the IUCN (2017), V. xinpingense could be considered Endangered [EN B2ab(i, ii, v) + D] in a preliminary conservation statement.
Distribution & Habitat:— Vincetoxicum xinpingense is known from the Ailao Mountains in Xinping County, Yunnan Province, China. It is a perennial twining herb growing in the mid-montane humid evergreen broad-leaved forest at an elevation of about 2030 m. The dominant species of the community include Schima wallichii ( Candolle 1824: 528) Korthals (1842: 143) ( Theaceae ), Camellia cuspidata ( Kochs 1900: 586) H.J. Veitch (1912: 228) ( Theaceae ), Rhododendron leptothrium I. B. Balfour & Forrest (1919: 84) ( Ericaceae ), Styrax grandiflorus J.F. Gmelin (1792: 659) ( Styracaceae ), and Symplocos groffii Merrill (1917: 107) ( Symplocaceae ). The dominant shrubs of the region contain Ternstroemia gymnanthera ( Wight & Arnott 1834: 87) Beddome (1871: 91) ( Theaceae ), Osmanthus matsumuranus Hayata (1911: 192) ( Oleaceae ), Illicium verum J.D. Hooker (1888 : pl. 7005) ( Illiciaceae ), and Decaisnea insignis ( Griffith 1855: 187) J.D. Hooker & Thomson (1855: 350) ( Lardizabalaceae ). The main herbs consist of Elatostema tenuicaudatum W.T. Wang (1980: 31) ( Urticaceae ), Ophiorrhiza hispida J.D. Hooker (1880: 83) ( Rubiaceae ), Asplenium unilaterale var. udum Atkinson & C.B. Clarke (1880: 481) ( Aspleniaceae ), and Polystichum nudisorum Ching (1941: 71) ( Dryopteridaceae ).
Etymology: —The specific epithet ‘ xinpingense ’ refers to ‘Xinping County’, from where the species is found.
PE |
Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
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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Vincetoxicum xinpingense H. Peng & Y.H. Wang
Jiang, Li-Qiong, Li, Yuan-Yuan, Zhu, Xin-Xin, Wang, Yue-Hua & Peng, Hua 2018 |
Vincetoxicum xinpingense
H. Peng & Y. H. Wang 2018 |
Vincetoxicum xinpingense
H. Peng & Y. H. Wang 2018 |
Tylophora forrestii M.G. Gilbert & P.T. Li (1995: 13)
M. G. Gilbert & P. T. Li 1995: 13 |
T. forrestii
M. G. Gilbert & P. T. Li 1995 |
T. forrestii
M. G. Gilbert & P. T. Li 1995 |
T. forrestii
M. G. Gilbert & P. T. Li 1995 |
T. forrestii
M. G. Gilbert & P. T. Li 1995 |
V. sublanceolatum ( Miquel 1866: 128 )
Maximowicz 1876: 796 |
V. sublanceolatum
Maximowicz 1876 |
V. sublanceolatum
Maximowicz 1876 |
V. sublanceolatum
Maximowicz 1876 |