Adesmia cordobensis Burkart, Darwiniana

Monteiro, Thiago Cobra E, Iganci, João Ricardo Vieira, Miotto, Silvia Teresinha Sfoggia, Simpson, Beryl B., Vatanparast, Mohammad, Lewis, Gwilym P., Klitgård, Bente B., Pezzini, Flávia Fonseca, Vargas, Oscar M. & Fortuna-Perez, Ana Paula, 2024, Towards a Monophyletic Infrageneric Circumscription of Adesmia DC. (Dalbergieae, Leguminosae): a Taxonomic Revision in Adesmia series Adesmia, Phytotaxa 639 (1), pp. 1-69 : 17-21

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.639.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13366776

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FD8118-FFDA-3A15-E982-F8CBFCEFFE3E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Adesmia cordobensis Burkart, Darwiniana
status

 

3. Adesmia cordobensis Burkart, Darwiniana View in CoL 12: 84–88 (1960).

Type:— ARGENTINA. Cordoba: Punilla, Sierra Chica , Villa Carlos Paz , cerca del Lago San Roque , 21 December 1935, {fl./fr.}, Pastore , A. I. & Troncoso , N. S. s.n. (holotype: SI barcode 001516 [photo!], isotypes: NY barcode NY00759137 [photo!]; SI barcode 001517 [photo!]) .

= Adesmia comechingona C.A.Bianco & Weberling, Feddes Repertorium View in CoL 110: 515 (1999).

Type:— ARGENTINA. Cordoba: Río Cuarto , Sierra de los Comechingones, “Inter Achiras et La Punilla, 900 m s. m., Arbustal Serrano”, 15 November 1996, Bianco, C . A . & Weberling, F. H . E. 4679 (holotype RIOC) .

Prostrate to ascendant shrubs or subshrubs, adventitious roots from stem branch nodes absent. Stem pubescent, abundant white tector hairs intermixed with scarce short ochraceous glandular setules, which occur more densely on the inflorescence, bracts, pedicels, calyces, and fruits. Stipules 3–5× 1–1.5 mm, linear to narrowlY-triangular, pubescent. Leaves with (4–)5–6 pairs of leaflets; petiole 0.3–1 cm long, rachis 0.5–2.5 cm long, pubescent; leaflets 2–7× 0.7–3 mm, elliptic to obovate, apex acute to obtuse and mucronate, base acute to rounded, margin entire, pubescent on both surfaces. Raceme axillary or terminal, commonly with an axillary flower at the inflorescence base, 2–12 cm long, pubescent; bracts 2–3 mm long, lanceolate, pubescent; pedicel reflexed after anthesis, 1–10 mm long, pubescent. Flowers 6–8 mm long; calyx 4–5.5 mm long, externally pilose to pubescent, internally hirsute with white tector hairs on the lobes; lobes 1.5–2.5 mm long, narrowlY-triangular to triangular; standard petal reflexed, 6–8.5× 7–8 mm, orbicular to flabelliform, apex obtuse, externallY pubescent; claw 2–3× 1–2 mm, internallY pubescent on its median and basal portion; wing petals 6.5–7.5× 2–3 mm, oboVate, claw 2.5–3.5 mm long; keel petals 5–8× 3–4 mm, falcate, claw 3–4 mm long; stamens 5–7 mm long; anthers orbicular to elliptical; gynoecium 7–9 mm long; ovary 3.5–4.5 mm long, pubescent to hirsute, 4–5-ovulate. Lomentum 9–16 mm long, straight, light-brownish, pubescent and muricate, with sparse stiff setules at the centre of each article, fruit with 1–5 articles, these 2.5–3.5× 3–4 mm, discoid. Seeds brownish, 1.5–2× 1.5–2 mm, reniform, without an aril. ( Figures 7 View FIGURE 7 and 8 A View FIGURE 8 ).

Distribution and Habitat— Adesmia cordobensis has a distribution centered in the “Sierras Pampeanas’’ mountain range, in Cordoba and San Luis ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ), but is also found in Salta and Catamarca according to Ulibarri and Burkart (2000). The species inhabits the Comechingones biogeographical province and adjacent areas of the Chaco biogeographical province (districts “Chaqueño Serrano’’ and “Chaqueño Occidental”) and Pampean biogeographical province (district “Espinal”) of the Arana et al. (2021) biogeographical scheme for Argentina. Adesmia cordobensis occurs in shrubby and open grasslands between 900 and 1500 m of elevation ( Ulibarri and Burkart 2000).

Phenology— The species has been collected with flowers and fruits from October to December.

Conservation status— Vulnerable (VU) B2ab(iii). Adesmia cordobensis has an EOO estimated at 3.821, 417 km ² and an AOO of 32 km ². The species is endemic to the Cordoba province and surrounding areas in Argentina and was already assessed as Vulnerable following criteria A3c by Groom (2012). The “Sierras Pampeanas” mountain range of the Comechingones biogeographical province was recently recognised as a hotspot of endangered endemic species in Argentina ( Salariato et al. 2021).

Etymology— The epithet cordobensis comes from Cordoba, an Argentinian province where the species is most frequent.

Notes— Adesmia cordobensis was not sampled in our phylogeny, but it has morphological features encountered in series Adesmia sensu Burkart (1967a) and in the previously recognised series Bicolores , and has similarities with the species A. retrofracta and A. grisea . Adesmia cordobensis is similar to Adesmia retrofracta by its discoid fruit articles, but can be distinguished by its flowers 6–8 mm long and its incanous-pubescent indumentum ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ) (vs. flowers 9–12 mm long and a glabrescent indumentum in A. retrofracta ). Adesmia grisea is morphologically similar to A. cordobensis by having an incanous pubescent indumentum, obovate leaflets, and a lomentaceous fruit, but differs by its shrubby habit, flowers 6–8 mm long and a lomentum with discoid articles (vs. herbaceous habit, flowers 10–13 mm long and lomentum with orbicular fruit articles in A. grisea ). A. cordobensis has orange flowers ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ) and A. grisea has yellow flowers.

In the protologue description of Adesmia comechingona, Bianco and Weberling (1999) explained that the species differs from A. cordobensis by the shrubby habit with a divaricate aspect, and by the sericeous lomentum with a “broad, but thin, and not thickened” upper suture. We agree with Ulibarri and Burkart (2000) that synonymized A. comechingona under A. cordobensis on the basis that the variation in the habit and fruit indumentum cited by Bianco and Weberling (1999) is within the variation range of A. cordobensis .

Ulibarri and Burkart (2000) described Adesmia cordobensis var. appendiculata , mentioning in its protologue the presence of sub-plumose, 1–2 mm long setules on the lomentum articles (vs. non-plumose setules of less than 1 mm long in the typical variety). After analyzing the holotype of Adesmia cordobensis var. appendiculata (SI165760 image!), we found that the variety is vegetativelly very similar to A. cordobensis var. cordobensis , only differing by the stiff setules on the fruits (vs. non-stiff glandular trichomes in the typical variety). We agree with Ulibarri and Burkart (2000) and maintain A. cordobensis var. appendiculata as a distinct variety, but due to lack of available material for character measurement we do not treat the taxon in this account.

Additional Specimens Examined — ARGENTINA. CORDOBA: Ciudad de Cordoba, 20 December 1904, Stuckert, T. 14729 (paratype CORD 00003149 About CORD [photo!]). Cosquin, La Falda , dry slope, 15 December 1946, Sparre, B. 1365 ( K 000627867 ). Ischilín, Los Coquitos , 15 October 1971, Pedersen, T. M. 9929 ( MBM 30689 View Materials ; K 000627868 ). Punilla, la falda , November 1897, Stuckert, T. 3952 ( CORD 00003154 About CORD [photo!]). Sierra Chica, huerta grande , 05 December 1902, Stuckert, T. 12213 ( CORD 00003151 About CORD [photo!]). Sierra de Achala , falda de Copina , December 1901, Stuckert, T. 10340 ( CORD 00003152 About CORD [photo!]). Río Cuarto, Sierra de los Comechingones , “Inter Achiras et La Punilla, 900 m s. m., Arbustal Serrano, 29 November 1998, Weberling, F. H. E. 10618 (paratype A. comenchingona M 0233771 [photo!]). Santa Maria , La Ochoa , 25 November 1902, Stuckert, T. 12106 (paratype CORD 00003150 About CORD [photo!]). Malagueño , 03 January 1898, Stuckert, T. 6019 ( CORD 00003153 About CORD [photo!]) .

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

I

"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University

N

Nanjing University

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

SI

Museo Botánico (SI)

NY

William and Lynda Steere Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden

C

University of Copenhagen

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

H

University of Helsinki

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

RIOC

Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Fabales

Family

Fabaceae

Genus

Adesmia

Loc

Adesmia cordobensis Burkart, Darwiniana

Monteiro, Thiago Cobra E, Iganci, João Ricardo Vieira, Miotto, Silvia Teresinha Sfoggia, Simpson, Beryl B., Vatanparast, Mohammad, Lewis, Gwilym P., Klitgård, Bente B., Pezzini, Flávia Fonseca, Vargas, Oscar M. & Fortuna-Perez, Ana Paula 2024
2024
Loc

Adesmia comechingona C.A.Bianco & Weberling, Feddes Repertorium

C. A. Bianco & Weberling 1999: 515
1999
Loc

Adesmia cordobensis

Burkart 1960: 84
1960
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