Epidendrum amoanum Zambrano & Solano, 2021

Romero, Bosco Javier Zambrano, Hágsater, Eric & Solano, Rodolfo, 2021, Miscellaneous of new species in Epidendrum (Orchidaceae) from southwestern Ecuador, Phytotaxa 511 (2), pp. 111-114 : 111-114

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.511.2.2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7A6E8782-FFDF-FFEA-29C3-8D7AFE51F79E

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Epidendrum amoanum Zambrano & Solano
status

sp. nov.

Epidendrum amoanum Zambrano & Solano View in CoL , sp. nov. Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 .

Species haec Epidendrum amaruënse Hágsater, Collantes & Santiago (2006 : pl. 805), similis sed sepalo dorsali elliptico, petalis oblongis, erosis, labello sub-trilobato differt.

Type:— ECUADOR. Loja: Cantón Loja, vía El Cisne-Ambocas-Portovelo, 2000 m, 02 January 2018, Zambrano B. 2273 (holotype, QCNE; isotype, QCNE [in spirit]) .

Epiphytic, erect, sympodial herb, up to 40 cm tall. Roots 2–3 mm in diameter, scarce, from the base of the stems, fleshy, flexuous, white. Stems 12.0 × 0.2–0.25 cm, cane-like, terete, erect to slightly curved, new stems produced from a middle or sub-apical internode of the previous stem, covered by 5–7 tubular, imbricate, persistent, chartaceous, gray-brown non-foliar sheaths. Leaves 2.5–8.0 × 0.5–0.7 cm, 6–8 distributed along the apical half of the stem, subcoriaceous, distichous, sessile, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, carinate at the apex, channeled at the base; sheaths 0.4–1.6 × 0.2–0.25 cm, striated longitudinally, tubular, persistent, chartaceous. Inflorescence apical, racemose, arching, shorter than the apical leaf; peduncle 4.0–6.2 × 1.5–1.8 mm, terete, covered by a chartaceous bract 2.0–3.0 × 1.5–1.7 mm, conduplicate, persistent; rachis 10.0–12.5 × 1.4–1.8 mm, terete, slightly pustulate; floral bracts 1.5–4.5 mm long, narrowly triangular, acuminate, persistent, scarious. Flowers 7–8, opening in succession, small, resupinate, the sepals amber-yellow, the petals and lip amber-yellow suffused with brown, column light green, the anther greenish-cream suffused with brown; no fragrance perceived. Sepals fleshy, waxy, margin entire, 3-veined; dorsal sepal 3.4–3.8 × 2.5–2.7 mm, elliptic, rounded, shortly apiculate; lateral sepals 3.8–4.2 × 2.8–3.1 mm, obovate-elliptic, rounded, shortly apiculate, carinate dorsally. Petals 3.5–3.9 × 1.5–1.7 mm, fleshy, oblong, rounded, marginally erose near the apex, 3-veined. Lip 3.8–4.5 × 5.3–5.5 mm, fleshy, fused to the basal half of the column, concave, sub-3-lobed, obliquely reniform-sub-quadrate, deeply cordate at the base, margin erose, truncate at apex, 9-veined, with the lateral veins branched; ecallose, the central disc with 3 parallel, elongate ribs, about half as long as the lip, with 4 additional lateral ribs (two on each side), short and radiating; lateral lobes 3.0–3.3 × 1.4–1.5 mm, transversely elliptic; mid-lobe 0.5–0.8 × 2.3–2.5 mm, much smaller than the lateral lobes, transversely hemielliptic. Column 2.5–3.0 × 2.0– 2.2 mm, short, slightly curved, terete, thick, with a large apical wing on each side, widely rounded; clinandrium-hood short, margin slightly undulate; stigma ventral, concave, covered by a viscous substance; rostellum apical, cleft; nectary short, without penetrating the ovary, unornamented. Ovary 7.0–7.9 × 1.2–1.5 mm, straight, terete, thin, longitudinally sulcate. Anther 0.7 × 1.4 mm, dorsal, trapezoid-reniform, glandular-papillose; pollinarium 0.7 mm long, formed by 4 pollinia, cream-colored, sub-equal, obovate, laterally compressed, caudicles granulose. Capsule not seen.

Distribution and habitat: — Epidendrum amoanum is only known from the Loja province (road to El Cisne-

Portovelo) in southwestern Ecuador ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). The plant grows as an epiphyte on the branches of shrubs of Miconia Ruiz

& Pavón (1794: 60) and Euphorbia Linnaeus (1753: 450) species at 2000 m in elevation. Phenology: —In cultivation, E. amoanum flowered between January and August.

Etymology: —The name honors the researchers at the AMO herbarium (Mexico City), in recognition of their outstanding contributions to the knowledge of Neotropical orchids, especially their work on the genus Epidendrum .

Additional material examined: — ECUADOR. Loja: Cantón Loja, vía El Cisne-Ambocas-Portovelo, 2000 m, 02 January 2018, Zambrano B . s.n. (QCNE).

Comments: — Epidendrum amoanum belongs to the Diothonea group, and is recognized by the oblong-lanceolate leaves, amber-yellow flowers, elliptic dorsal sepal, oblong, erose petals, and a sub-3-lobed lip with seven minute keels and truncate apex. The most similar species is the Peruvian E. amaruënse , but it differs in the smaller plants (20 cm vs. 40 cm tall), linear-lanceolate leaves (vs. oblong-lanceolate), non-resupinate, yellow to ochre-green flowers (vs. resupinate, amber-yellow), the ovate dorsal sepal, 5 mm long (vs. elliptic, 3.4–3.8 mm long), the ovate petals (vs. oblong), and an entire lip with 5-keels and 2-lobed apex (vs. sub-3-lobed, with seven minute keels and truncate apex). Epidendrum jativae Dodson (1980 : pl. 85) differs in the non-resupinate flowers, green suffused with burgundy red to purplish brown (vs. resupinate, amber-yellow), elliptic-obovate dorsal sepal (vs. elliptic), petals 6 mm long (vs. 3.5–3.9 mm long), and an entire lip with 3 keels and 4-lobed apex (vs. sub-3-lobed, with 7 minute keels and truncate apex) ( Santiago & Hágsater 2006).

B

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

QCNE

Museo Ecuatoriano de Ciencias Naturales

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