Sibbaldianthe subg. Sibbaldianthe

Mosyakin, Sergei L. & Shiyan, Natalia M., 2017, The genus Sibbaldianthe (Rosaceae): a nomenclatural overview and new combinations, Phytotaxa 296 (2), pp. 101-117 : 103-104

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.296.2.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/931B4212-FFF1-2D03-789D-D065B59AF8C5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sibbaldianthe subg. Sibbaldianthe
status

 

Sibbaldianthe subg. Sibbaldianthe

Type: Sibbaldianthe adpressa (Bunge) Juz. (type of the genus: Juzepczuk 1941: 229, 615).

1. Sibbaldianthe adpressa (Bunge) Juzepczuk (1941: 230, 615) ≡ Sibbaldia adpressa Bunge (1829: 428) Potentilla adpressa (Bunge) Cardot (1916: 408) .

Type:— RUSSIA [Altai Republic; in Russian— Республика Алтай]. According to the protologue: “in apricis montium et in campis siccis editis ad fl. Kan et Tschuja ( B.). Fl. Majo mense”. Original specimens in LE (see Juzepczuk 1941: 233) ; lectotype not designated.

Heterotypic synonyms:

Potentilla lindenbergii Lehmann (1851b: 339 View in CoL ; 1851c: 9).

Type (lectotype, designated by Soják 1996, as a “ holotype ”):— INDIA [?] “Ex India orientali, accepit Lindenberg” (label written by Lehmann, PR, sine num.: see Soják 1996: 111). According to the protologue: “Specimina completa, ex India Orientali allata, sine nomine accepi a Cl. J. B. W. Lindenberg; manca ex herbario Jacquemontiana, No. 1591 designata, benevole mecum communicavit celeberr. A. de Jussieu.”

Potentilla bifurca View in CoL L. var. pusilla Th. Wolf (1908: 64) .

Type:—[syntypes from CHINA] According to the protologue: “Eine in allen Teilen verarmte und stark reduzierte Zwergform, welche besonders die kalten Hochplateaus Tibets zwischen 3000 und 4000 m Höhe zu bewohnen scheint, wo sie Ladygin 1900 und 1901 mehrfach gesammelt hat“ [translation: „ A dwarf form, impoverished and greatly reduced in all parts, which seems to occupy the cold high plateaus of Tibet at altitudes between 3000 and 4000 m, where it was several times collected by Ladygin in 1900 and 1901”]. Herbarium specimens collected by Veniamin F. Ladygin during the Tibet expedition (1899–1901) led by P. K. Kozlov (see Andreev & Yusupova 2015) are mainly in LE ; lectotype not designated.

Potentilla bifurca View in CoL L. var. unijuga Th. Wolf (1908: 65) View in CoL .

Type:—[syntypes from MONGOLIA and CHINA]. According to the protologue: “Bis jetzt sah ich diese seltene Varietät in der Petersburger Herbarien nur einmal aus der nördlichen Mongolei (leg. Potanin), einmal von Zaidam in der mittl. Mongolei (leg. Przewalsky) und einmal aus Tangut im nordöstlichen Tibet (leg. Przewalsky)” [translation: “So far I have seen this rare variety in the Petersburg Herbarium only once from northern Mongolia (coll. Potanin), once from Zaidam in central Mongolia (coll. Przewalsky), and once from Tangutia in north-eastern Tibet (coll. Przewalsky)”]. Original specimens in LE ; lectotype not designated.

Sibbaldia minutissima Kitamura (1954: 132) View in CoL .

Type (holotype, KYO):— NEPAL. Sangda, 3800 m. S. Nakao s.n., 12 May 1953 (see Ikeda et al. 2004).

Original specimens of Sibbaldia adpressa should be present in LE but we were unable to locate them yet. The plants were collected by Bunge in at least two localities. There are three Kan rivers in Siberia ; the one mentioned in the protologue of S. appressa is a tributary of the Charysh River (in Russian—Чарыш). The Chuya River (Tschuja; in Russian—ЧуЯ) of the protologue is a tributary of the Katun’ (in Russian—Катунь) ; there are two more rivers with the same name in Siberia. Relevant information has been provided to colleagues from the LE herbarium ; they will check the available specimens and select a lectotype later.

The combination Potentilla adpressa (Bunge) Cardot (1916: 408) is legitimate because P. adpressa Opiz (1852: 79) is nomen nudum; Opiz provided no description and no reference, either direct or indirect, to any earlier valid name (see also Soják 2012).

Soják (1996: 111) cited the specimen of Potentilla lindenbergii Lehm. from the Lehmann herbarium in PR (see above) as the “ holotype ”. However, Lehmann mentioned in the protologue at least two original specimens, a “complete” one provided by J. B. W. Lindenberg and a “poor” or “incomplete” one from the Jacquemont herbarium provided by A. de Jussieu. Because of that the specimen erroneously listed by Soják as the “ holotype ” should be accepted as the lectotype (the error correctable under Art. 9.9 of ICN: McNeill et al. 2012).

The chromosome number 2n=28 was reported for this species (as Sibbaldia adpressa ) by Měsíček & Soják (1969).

Sibbaldianthe adpressa View in CoL is currently known from Mongolia, China (Gansu, Hebei, Heilongjiang, Nei Mongol, Qinghai, Xinjiang, and Xizang), northern Nepal, eastern Kazakhstan, and Russia (mainly southeastern Siberia) (Juzepczuk 1941; Grubov 1982; Gubanov 1996; Abdulina 1998; Li et al. 2003; Ovchinnikova 2005; Ikeda 2012; Urgamal et al. 2014 etc.).

B

Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Zentraleinrichtung der Freien Universitaet

LE

Servico de Microbiologia e Imunologia

PR

National Museum in Prague

J

University of the Witwatersrand

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

I

"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University

KYO

Kyoto University

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

ICN

Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de Historia Natural

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Rosales

Family

Rosaceae

Genus

Sibbaldianthe

Loc

Sibbaldianthe subg. Sibbaldianthe

Mosyakin, Sergei L. & Shiyan, Natalia M. 2017
2017
Loc

Sibbaldia minutissima

Kitamura, S. 1954: )
1954
Loc

Potentilla bifurca

Wolf, T. 1908: )
1908
Loc

Potentilla bifurca

Wolf, T. 1908: )
1908
Loc

Potentilla lindenbergii

Lehmann, J. G. Ch. 1851: 339
Lehmann, J. G. Ch. 1851: 9
1851
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