Decalepidanthus moltkioides (Royle) Dickoré & Hilger 2015

Dickoré, W. Bernhard & Hilger, Hartmut H., 2015, Decalepidanthus (Boraginaceae) includes and antedates Pseudomertensia; a synopsis of the genus, Phytotaxa 226 (2), pp. 131-143 : 136-137

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.226.2.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FF87FE-5963-4E5D-FF35-FA98FC7FF960

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Decalepidanthus moltkioides (Royle) Dickoré & Hilger
status

comb. nov.

3. Decalepidanthus moltkioides (Royle) Dickoré & Hilger View in CoL , comb. nov.

Basionym:— Anchusa moltkioides Royle (1835 View in CoL : t. 73, fig. 1, see notes). ≡ Myosotis moltkioides (Royle) Royle (1836: 305 View in CoL , see notes) ≡ Lithospermum moltkioides (Royle) Decne. View in CoL in Jacquemont (1844: 122). ≡ Mertensia moltkioides (Royle) Clarke (1883: 170) View in CoL . ≡ Pseudomertensia moltkioides (Royle) Kazmi (1970: 380) View in CoL . Type:— INDIA. Jammu & Kashmir: Peer Punjal, J.F.Royle s.n. (holo LIV photo!, iso? PH photo!).

= Lithospermum ovalifolium Decne. View in CoL in Jacquemont (1844: 119, t. 124). ≡ Pseudomertensia ovalifolium (Decne.) Bennet (1983: 591) View in CoL . ≡ Eritrichium nemorosum A.DC. View in CoL in Candolle (1846: 123) [non Eritrichium ovalifolium (Wall.) Candolle (1846: 123) View in CoL ; see note]. ≡ Mertensia ovalifolia (Decne.) Brand View in CoL in Engler (1931: 199) [non Mertensia ovalifolia (DC.) Brand View in CoL in Engler (1931: 199) ≡ Trigonotis ovalifolia (Wall.) Benth. ex Clarke (1883: 172) View in CoL ] ≡ Mertensia nemorosa (A.DC.) Johnston (1956: 305) View in CoL Pseudomertensia nemorosa (A.DC.) R.R.Stewart & Kazmi View in CoL in Kazmi (1970: 378). Type:— INDIA. Jammu & Kashmir: Frequens in humidis nemorum ad Ouri, 1467 m, 4. May 1831, V.Jacquemont 297 (holo P photo!, iso [‘Cachemyr’] P photo!, GH photo! [fragment of holo?]).

=? Mertensia moltkioides var. thomsonii Clarke (1883: 170) View in CoL . Type?:— INDIA. Jammu & Kashmir: ‘ Mertensia View in CoL sp. n. 3, Herb. Ind. Or. H. f. & T., Kashmir, near Islamabad’, 11000 ft., Thomson (K?; see below).

Icon.: — Royle (1835): t. 73, fig. 1a–h ( Anchusa moltkioides ); Nasir (1989b): fig. 33 D–E ( Pseudomertensia moltkioides var. leichtlinii ); fig. 33 I–L ( P. nemorosa ).

Distribution: —N Pakistan (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: Swat, Hazara), NW India (Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh): Outer Kashmir Himalaya.—Map 2.

Habitat: —Elevation (1520–)1950–3190(–3650) m, submontane–montane, apparently rare in northern Pakistan, perhaps more common in northwest India, in moist ravines and snow slides, scrub and forest ( Betula jacquemontii Spach , Corylus jacquemontii Decne. , Parrotiopsis jacquemontiana (Decne.) Rehder , Picea smithiana , Pinus wallichiana ).

Notes: —In transferring Lithospermum ovalifolium Decne. to Eritrichium, A.DC. in Candolle (1846: 123) coined the new name Eritrichium nemorosum . The epithet ovalifolium was not available because Candolle had already used it, above on the same page, for another combination based on Myosotis ovalifolia Wall. in Roxburgh (1824: 9). Unfortunately, Brand (1931: 199) transferred both identical epithets to Mertensia on the same page, first that based on Lithospermum ovalifolium Decne. , and only six lines later the one based on Myosotis ovalifolia Wall. On the basis of contemporary usage, Johnston (1956) discarded Brand’s combination of Lithospermum ovalifolium for his new combination of Mertensia nemorosa . However, Decaisne’s epithet would have been available for a combination in Pseudomertensia . Stewart & Kazmi (1970) did not take that into account and this was corrected by Bennet (1983).

In this nomenclatural tangle it seems fortunate that the accepted name can be based on Anchusa moltkioides Royle , and we propose Lithospermum ovalifolium to comprise a taxonomic synonym thereof. However, Royle’s illustration ( Royle 1835) with analysis of floral parts, thus validly published by Royle and not Bentham ( McNeill et al. 2012, ICN Art.. 38.8–9) and subsequent combination as Myosotis moltkioides ( Royle 1836: 305, McNeill et al. 2012, ICN Art. 46.2: Royle contributing author) are both somewhat ambiguous. Type material of Anchusa moltkioides (in LIV), however, seems unequivocal as to represent a taxon different from Eritrichium primuloides Decne. in Jacquemont (1844: 123), which previously was considered a synonym of an accepted taxon based on Anchusa moltkioides or Myosotis moltkioides . In consequence, and by successively adding other probably discordant elements, this apparently resulted in a very polymorphic “ Pseudomertensia moltkioides ”, in which Kazmi (1970) distinguished four varieties. We have here also excluded var. tanneri (= D. echioides ) and var. leichtlinii (= D. elongata ), while admitting that between either species, transitional or problematic specimens might occur, and hybridisation cannot be ruled out. Decalepidanthus moltkioides and D. primuloides remain critical and occasionally difficult to delimit. They seem to be largely parapatric, while their distributions apparently differentiate along complex altitudinal gradients and might partly overlap. The former is generally a more robust plant of lower elevations in the outer western Himalayas including the Kashmir basin. Incomplete herbarium material, especially from areas of potential spatial or elevational contact, can make it also difficult to distinguish D. moltkioides and D. racemosus . These species share the potentially retrorse indumentum, and might also approach each other in habit.We did not find type material directly referable to Mertensia moltkioides var. thomsonii . Clarke (1883 probably) intended this variety to accommodate relatively more robust specimens, while he already had separated his Mertensia tibetica for the diminutive high altitude plants (see under D. primuloides ). Apparently, none of Thomson’ s specimens from Kashmir at Kew is from the relatively high elevation (11,000 ft.) given in the protologue. Out of four similar, possible type specimens, the probably closest match for this name is: [ INDIA. Jammu & Kashmir] Kashmir [Avantipur, south of Srinagar], 5000–7000 ft., 4 May 1848, T.Thomson (K!). Another specimen was denoted as “ Mertensia moltkioides var. evolutior ”, which seems to be an unpublished name: INDIA. [Jammu & Kashmir: Udhampur, Bhadarwah to Padri P., 32°55’N 75°47’E], 5000–7000 ft., 3 June 1848, T. Thomson (K!). All these specimens correspond to the “typical” D. moltkioides .

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Boraginales

Family

Boraginaceae

Genus

Decalepidanthus

Loc

Decalepidanthus moltkioides (Royle) Dickoré & Hilger

Dickoré, W. Bernhard & Hilger, Hartmut H. 2015
2015
Loc

Mertensia

Dickoré & Hilger 2015
2015
Loc

Pseudomertensia ovalifolium (Decne.)

Bennet 1983: 591
1983
Loc

Pseudomertensia moltkioides (Royle)

Kazmi 1970: 380
1970
Loc

Mertensia nemorosa (A.DC.)

Johnston 1956: 305
1956
Loc

Mertensia moltkioides (Royle)

Clarke 1883: 170
1883
Loc

Trigonotis ovalifolia (Wall.) Benth. ex

Clarke 1883: 172
1883
Loc

Mertensia moltkioides var. thomsonii

Clarke 1883: 170
1883
Loc

Eritrichium ovalifolium (Wall.)

Candolle 1846: 123
1846
Loc

Myosotis moltkioides

Royle 1836
1836
Loc

Anchusa moltkioides

Royle 1835
1835
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