Minuartia altoandina Nicola & Pozner, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.111.1.4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5078807 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EFF778-FF86-FFB5-FF08-8366FE92FED0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Minuartia altoandina Nicola & Pozner |
status |
sp. nov. |
Minuartia altoandina Nicola & Pozner View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 )
Type:— ARGENTINA. Jujuy: Dpto. Dr. Manuel Belgrano, del Refugio Militar al Chañi Chico, 4,740 m, 24º 02’ 13’’ S, 65º 42’ 58’’ W, 27 January 2012, C. A GoogleMaps . Zanotti & M. A. Suescún 269 (holotype SI!) .
Minute, moss-like herbs with slender, trailing stems with elongated internodes, rooting at nodes, and producing erect branches with short, reduced internodes. Trailing stems 40–50 × 0.6–0.8 mm with internodes 2–7 mm long and erect branches 10–15 mm long, densely covered by leaves. Leaves of the trailing stems opposite, sessile, shortly connated at base, lanceolate, 1.5–1.8 × 1 mm, recurved, acute-acuminate, 1-nerved; leaves of the erect branches opposite, sessile, shortly connated at base, ovate-lanceolate, 3–3.5 × 1–1.2 mm, erect, apex acute to rounded, 1-nerved, margin minutely pilose (2-5-celled, uniseriate trichomes) at base to papillose at apex. Flowers solitary, terminal. Pedicel reduced. Hypanthium short, dish-like, 0.25 × 1.5 mm; sepals 5, quincuncial, green, very much like the leaves, shortly lanceolate, 1.5–2 × 1–1.2 mm, apex acute to obtuse, 1-nerved, margin smooth or pilose-papillose; petals 0; stamens 10, white, 5 opposite to the sepals with a tiny pair of glands (nectaries) at filament base, and 5 alternate stamens without glands, anthers globose, dorsifixed, 0.25 × 0.25 mm, filaments 1 mm long; gynoecium 3-carpellate, ovary 0.5 × 0.7 mm, 1-locular with 3 campylotropous ovules arising from a central, short axis, styles 3, free, 1 mm long, stigmatic surface tiny, papillose, running along the inner side of the styles. Fruit and seeds unknown.
Distribution and habitat: —High Andes of northwestern Argentina at 4,740 m elevation. Among the most frequent species of the surrounding vegetation are: Senecio algens Wedd. , Caiophora nivalis Lillo , Calceolaria glacialis Wedd. , Frankenia triandra J. Remy , Oxalis sp. , Valeriana altoandina Cabrera , Valeriana nivalis Wedd. , and Xenophyllum pseudodigitatum (Rockh.) V.A. Funk.
Etymology: —Named because of its geographical distribution, in the high Andes of northwestern Argentina.
C |
University of Copenhagen |
A |
Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum |
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
SI |
Museo Botánico (SI) |
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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