Paepalanthus paganuccii Giul. & M.J.G. Andrade, 2022

Andrade, Maria José Gomes De, Trovó, Marcelo, Rocha, Lamarck & Giulietti, Ana Maria, 2022, Paepalanthus (Eriocaulaceae) without scapes and spathes, a survey with the description of a new species, Phytotaxa 560 (2), pp. 135-152 : 140-143

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.560.2.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7046826

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038687A1-FFF9-9543-9FE8-24CEFF3B7E9E

treatment provided by

Plazi (2022-09-01 10:37:43, last updated 2024-11-27 13:58:19)

scientific name

Paepalanthus paganuccii Giul. & M.J.G. Andrade
status

sp. nov.

1. Paepalanthus paganuccii Giul. & M.J.G. Andrade , sp. nov. ( Figures 2C–E View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 , 4A–K View FIGURE4 , 5A–I View FIGURE 5 ).

Type:— BRAZIL. Bahia: Município de Pilão Arcado, Barra do Iuiu , 10°07’09”S, 42°51’15”W, 436 m alt., 07 September 2005 (fl., fr.), L. P. Queiroz et al. 10917 (holotype: HUEFS [101058]!) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis:— Paepalanthus paganuccii resembles P. sessiliflorus , sharing with it the general habit consisting of an elongated stem, the lack of scapes and spathes, two series of involucral bracts, trimerous flowers, and floral bract pilose at apex. Paepalanthus paganuccii is mainly distinguished by its being robust with 4.5–7.0 cm long tall (vs. 0.6–1.6 (–3.0 cm long); leaves usually senescent at the lower parts of the stem with persistent leaf sheaths (vs. persistent leaves along the entire stem), erect to patent, 8–10 mm long, acuminate apex (vs. recurved, 3–5 mm long, acute to obtuse apex), differentiated into sheath and blade (vs. undifferentiated); apical leaves surpassing the flowers by two times or more the floral disc size (vs. apical leaves surpassing the flowers slightly or one time the floral disc); involucral bracts lanceolate (external series) to obovate-elliptic (inner series), apex acute (vs. involucral bracts narrowly-oblong, apex cuspidate; floral bracts spathulate (vs. oblong to linear); seed coat tuberculate-striate (vs. seed coat reticulate).

Description:— Annual caulescent herb, 4.5–7.0 cm tall., roots brown. Stem erect, branched at the distal parts, leaves spirally arranged along the stem, persistent from middle to the apex and usually deciduous from the middle to base with persistent sheaths. Leaves lanceolate, erect to patent, membranous to chartaceous, 8–10 × 0.2–0.3 mm, apex acuminate, sheath abruptly detached from the limb, ca. 0.8 mm wide, ciliate along the margin from the middle toward the limb base, trichomes long (ca. 1.2 mm long), filamentous, 3–4-celled, basal and collar cells bulging, distal cells with short tuberculate wall; the uppermost leaves subtending the capitulum, about two times longer than the floral disc. Scape and spathe absent. Each capitulum terminating an abbreviated leafy branch, sessile, hemispherical, ca. 2 mm diam., receptacle densely long-villous with erect white trichomes, ca. 1.3 mm long. Involucral bracts in 2 series, ca. 6 bracts in each series, bracts of the outer series ca. 1.6 × 0.5 mm, lanceolate, apex acute, glabrous, bracts of the inner series ca. 1.4 × 0.8 mm, obovate-elliptic, apex acute, glabrous. Floral bracts spathulate, ca. 1.6 × 0.4 mm, apex round, long-ciliate in the upper part, filamentous trichomes (ca. 0.4 mm long), uniseriate, 4–5-celled, apex acute, slightly shorter than staminate flowers and with the size of the pistillate flowers. Flowers trimerous. Staminate flowers ca. 2 mm long; pedicel ca. 0.6 mm long; sepals spathulate-obovate, concave, fused at base, ca. 0.7 mm long, apex round or emarginate, white-cilliate, with short trichomes; anthophore ca. 0.5 mm long, corolla campanulate, shortly lobed, involute after anthesis, glabrous, overtopping the calyx due to the anthophore; stamens 3, exserted, filaments filiform, adnate to corolla, 2-thecous, 4-sporangiate, anthers dorsifixed; carpellodes 3, reduced. Pistillate flowers, ca. 1.4 mm long, pedicel ca. 0.6 mm long; sepals linear-spathulate, concave, free, ca. 0.8 mm long, apex rounded, glabrous, becoming rigid and revolute during the fruit development; petals 3, free, flat, linear-spathulate, ca. 0.8 mm long, loosely ciliate at the rounded apex; gynoecium ca. 1.0 mm long, 3-locular ovary, ca. 0.4 mm long, styles united in column ca. 0.6 mm long, stigmatic branches united, short stigmas, caducous during fruiting, nectariferous branches lacking. Fruit a capsule, released from the capitulum with the erect petals still connected at the top by the ciliate margin, through the elevation of the fruit associated with the pression of the rigid and revolute sepals. Seed obovate, ca. 0.4 mm long, seed coat with primary sculpture with a tuberculate-striate pattern, with tubercule organized in rows. This pattern is probably associate to a presence of an almost intact periclinal wall when the seed is liberated.

Distribution, Habitat, and Conservation:— The type of Paepalanthus paganuccii was collected in the Caatinga of western Bahia, forming a dense population over seasonally humid sandy soils in a temporary lagoon in the São Francisco riverbanks (400 m high). Other disjunct populations were found in sandy areas of the Cerrado in Maranhão, and Tocantins ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ), but further detailed botanical expeditions and careful analysis of herbarium specimens may reveal a more continuous distribution.

Paepalanthus paganuccii has EOO = 118,138.378 km 2, and A00 = 16.000 km 2. Its populations are threatened by disturbance and change of the water regime near the São Francisco River as well as increasing disturbance and clearing of vast tracts of the Cerrado of Maranhão and Tocantins for agrobusiness. Apart from the population found within the Parque Nacional da Chapada das Mesas (Silva 903), the other populations are currently under threat. According IUCN (2019) criteria B1(bii,iv) and B2 (b,iii,iv), we consider the species should be treated as Endangered (EN).

Etymology:— The epithet honours Prof. Dr. Luciano Paganucci de Queiroz from the Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Bahia, Brazil, for collecting the holotype and specially for his relevant contributions to the botanical studies of the Brazilian Semiarid region.

Comments:— Paepalanthus paganuccii differs from the majority of the Eriocaulaceae by lacking one of the family’s main diagnostic characters, the presence of scapes and spathes. In this species the sessile capitulum terminates a short leafy branch, resembling the two species of P. subg. Thelxinoë. The flowers in the new species are however trimerous instead of dimerous, being therefore morphologically more related to P. sessiliflorus , its sister species ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Paepalanthus paganuccii is provisionally placed in P. ser. Leptocephali , which also comprises P. sessiliflorus and P. polytrichoides , both also annual herbs, with the seeds with a similar dispersal mechanism ( Figures 2–5 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE4 View FIGURE 5 ).

Among the Paepalanthus species with trimerous flowers, P. paganuccii is morphologically most related to P. sessiliflorus , and the differences between both species are detailed in the diagnosis and in Table 2 View TABLE 2 and illustrated in Figures 4–5 View FIGURE4 View FIGURE 5 . The specimens which have been included as paratypes were not examined in the phylogeny, nor were their seeds examined under SEM. However, they display other morphological characters, which is in accord with those found in P. paganuccii , even though some specimens may have leaves that are persistent along the stem, when juvenile (see Harley 56669 from Tocantins). Another aspect, which distinguishes between the two species in their distribution. While P. paganuccii is limited to a few populations within the Caatinga and Cerrado, P. sessiliflorus occurs in the Atlantic dunes and campo rupestre of the Chapada Diamantina in Bahia, with a heterotypic variety in northern South America ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 ).

Additional material examined:— BRAZIL. Bahia: Gentio do Ouro, estrada de Gentio do Ouro para XiqueXique (BA-160/BR-330), ca. 20 km de Xique-Xique, 11°07’04”S, 42°44’14”W, 03 May 2014, C. M GoogleMaps . Siniscalchi et al. 471 ( HUEFS, SPF) . Maranhão: Carolina, Rodovia MA-010, Serra do Portal da Chapada , solo arenoso na base dos paredões de arenito, em áreas sombreadas, 296 m, 07°11’12”S, 47°25’22”W, 19 May 2012, C GoogleMaps . Silva et al. 903 ( HUEFS) . Tocantins: Miracema do Tocantins, Rodovia TO-010, para a cidade de Lagedo e Palmas , ca. 9 km da cidade, paredão úmido na beira da estrada, 263 m, 09°37’48”S, 48°25’04”W, 01 February 2012, R. M GoogleMaps . Harley et al. 56669 ( HUEFS) .

IUCN (2019) Guidelines for Using the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, version 14. Prepared by the Standards and Petitions Committee. Available from: http: http: // www. iucnredlist. org / documents / RedListGuidelines. pdf. (Accessed 4 November 2021).

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FIGURE 1. Majority-rule consensus tree from the Bayesian Inference analysis with combined nuclear and plastid data sets. Circles indicate the result of the Ancestral Character reconstruction by parsimony for the escape, indicate the frequency of the states in the last 1,000 post-burn-in trees from IB analysis of nuclear and plastid combined data set: white = scape present; black = scape absent; red = node absent. Above branches are values of posterior probabilities (PP), below are the bootstrap (BS) percentages from maximum parsimony (left) and maximum likelihood analyses (right); * indicates PP=1.00 and/or BS=100%; - indicates BS <50%. Figures show species with scape (P. regalis, by R.M. Harley) and without scape (P. paganuccii and P. sessiliflorus, by R.M. Harley; P. leucocephalus, by C.N. Fraga; P. scleranthus, by M. Trovó).

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FIGURE 2. Life-forms and inflorescences in Paepalanthus species without scape. A–B. Paepalanthus leucocephalus growing in the Chapada Diamantina, BA. C–E. P. paganuccii. C. Population growing in Tocantins (Harley 56669) on sandy soil. D. Rupiculous individual growing on sandstone. E. Detail of the capitulum. F. P. scleranthus, growing in Diamantina, MG, showing the black capitula. G. P. sessiliflorus growing in campo rupestre in Pico das Almas, BA. Scale bar: 5 mm. (photo credits: A–B. C.N. Fraga, C–E, G. R.M. Harley, F. M. Trovó).

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FIGURE 3. Geographical distribution of Paepalanthus species without scape. Red-orange symbols = Paepalanthus ser. Leptocephali; Blue-green symbols = P. subg. Thelxinoë.

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FIGURE4.MorphologyofplantandflowersinPaepalanthuswithoutscape.A–K:Paepalanthuspaganuccii.A.habit.B.leaf.C.capitulum. D. involucral bract of the outer series. E. involucral bract of the inner series. F. open staminate flower showing calyx, anthophore, corolla, androecium and floral bract. G. closed staminate flower showing pedicel, calyx and corolla trichomes. H. open pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla, gynoecium and floral bract. I. sepal. J. petal. K. developing fruit with two petals. L–M: Paepalanthus sessiliflorus var. sessiliflorus. L. open staminate flower showing calyx, anthophore, corolla, androecium and floral bract. M. open pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla, gynoecium and floral bract. N–P: Paepalanthus leucocephalus. N. open staminate flower showing calyx, anthophore, corolla, androecium and floral bract. O. closed pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla and floral bract apex. P. open pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla and gynoecium. Q–S: Paepalanthus scleranthus. Q. open staminate flower showing calyx, anthophore, corolla, androecium and floral bract. R. closed pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla and floral bract apex. S. open pistillate flower showing calyx, corolla and gynoecium [A–K. Queiroz 10917, holotype of P. paganuccii (HUEFS), L–M. Andrade 623 (HUEFS), N–P. Andrade 549 (HUEFS), Q–S. Alves 4015 (RB), drawings by AMG inked in by Carla Lima].

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FIGURE 5. SEM micrographs. A–I: Paepalanthus paganuccii. A. capitulum rounded by the terminal leaves. B. leaf with filamentous trichomes. C. leaf margin showing tricellular filamentous trichomes with a ring on the apex of the basal cell. D. staminate old flower showing bract with trichomes, calyx and involute corolla. E. pistillate flower showing three ciliate petals and gynoecium with stigmatic branch, lacking nectariferous branches. F. detail of petal apex showing 1-3-celled filamentous trichomes, basal cell with ring. G. detail of the floral bract apex showing 4-5-celled filamentous trichomes. H–I. mature seed, seed coat with a tuberculate-striate pattern, with the long tubercule organized in rows. I. detail of the seed coat showing the elongate tubercules. J–N: Paepalanthus sessiliflorus. J. a complete individual plant. K. staminate old flower showing long ciliate floral bract and calyx. L. pistillate flower showing three ciliate petals and gynoecium with stigmatic branch, lacking nectariferous branches. M–N. mature seed, seed coat with a reticulate pattern. N. detail of the seed coat showing cells 4-5-walled, the longitudinal anticlinal walls more proeminente than the transverse walls (A–I. Queiroz 10917, J. Queiroz 880, K. Harley 53657, L–N. Andrade 623).

L

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

P

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

HUEFS

Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana

C

University of Copenhagen

M

Botanische Staatssammlung München

SPF

Universidade de São Paulo

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile