Tragopogon anatolicus A.Duran, B.Doğan & Coşkunç., 2014

Dogan, Bekir, Duran, Ahmet, Gültepe, Mutlu, Öztürk, Meryem & Coşkunçelebi, Kamil, 2014, Tragopogon anatolicus (Asteraceae), a new species from east Turkey, Phytotaxa 167 (3), pp. 235-244 : 236-238

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.167.3.2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BBE768-FFCB-3A6F-FF3C-FCF2FA14F87B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tragopogon anatolicus A.Duran, B.Doğan & Coşkunç.
status

sp. nov.

Tragopogon anatolicus A.Duran, B.Doğan & Coşkunç. View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 –3)

Type:— TURKEY. C10 Hakkari: Cilo Mountain , between Kırıkdağ and Cehennem streams, 1970 m a.s.l., 07.08.2009, A.Duran 8688 & B.Doğan (holotype: KNYA; isotypes: ANK, KTUB) .

Description: —Glabrous perennial, 65–80 cm tall, stems short-branched in upper part. Cauline leaves lanceolate or broadly lanceolate, midvein clear, 4–15 × 0.8–2 cm, margin flat. Peduncles not thickened below capitula. Involucre sparsely floccose at base. Phyllaries ca. 8, 10–12 × 2–3 mm in flower and 17–23 × 3–3.5 mm in fruit, lanceolate, equal to or shorter than flowers. Florets 15–25 per capitulum. Ligules 10–13 mm long; limb yellow, 6–8 mm long; tube glabrous, yellowish, 3–5 mm long. Achenes 13–19 mm long, whitish-fawn, slightly curved, gradually tapering towards the beak, with 5 longitudinal rows of remote scales, beak slender, ± equal to or slightly longer than achene, clavate at apex. Pappus 10–15 mm long, pale yellowish-brown, annulus hairy. Flowers in July, and fruits in July–August.

Distribution, ecology and conservation status: —The new species appears to be endemic to south-east Anatolia and belongs to the Irano-Turanian floristic element. Specimens were collected in Cilo Mountain (Hakkari province) where the species appears to be rare and local ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Tragopogon anatolicus grows in calcareous stony places, with Centaurea aucheriana , Bupleurum falcatum subsp. polyphyllum , Chaerophyllum macrospermum , Prangos ferulacea , Prangos uloptera , Pimpinella tragium , Marrubium sp. , Tanacetum balsamita , Astragalus sp. , Galium sp. , Hedysarum sp. , Crepis sp. It is hitherto known from the type locality only, and its estimated area of occupancy is less than 5 km 2 with a population of less than 60 mature individuals. Because of habitat quality, population size and overgrazing, the new species should be assessed as ‘Endangered’ (EN) according to the IUCN Red List criteria ( IUCN 2001).

Additional specimens examined: — Tragopon buphthalmoides : A7 Gümüşhane: Karamusa , 1696 m, 08.07.2008, Coşkunçelebi & M.Gültepe 2 ( KTUB); A9 Ardahan:between Ardahan and Kars, 21.07.2009, Coşkunçelebi & M.Gültepe 77 ( KTUB); B6 Kayseri: between Sarız and Pınarbaşı , 1783 m, 22.07.2011, Coşkunçelebi & M.Gültepe 278 ( KTUB); B9 Van: between Erciş and Van, 1680 m, 09.06.2011, Coşkunçelebi & M.Gültepe 209 ( KTUB) .

Micromorphological properties: —SEM observations of the achenes, pollen grains and leaf lower surface of Tragopogon anatolicus and T. buphthalmoides are given in Figs. 4–6 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 . As seen in Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 , the periferal surface of both the annulus and beak are covered with micro-projections in T. buphthalmoides ( Fig. 4m,n View FIGURE 4 ) but they are nearly smooth in T. anatolicus ( Fig. 4e,f View FIGURE 4 ). On the other hand, the body of the achenes in both taxa consists of tetragonal or elliptic epidermal cells with smooth and convex periferal surface.

Pollen grains of T. anatolicus , studied from the holotype, are prolate-spheroidal, tricolporate ( Fig. 5a View FIGURE 5 ); it is oblatespheroidal, tricolporate in T. buphthalmoides ( Fig. 5b View FIGURE 5 ). This type of pollen grain is common in the genus Tragopogon ( Blackmore 1982) . Other palynological features determined in the present study are given in Table 1.

FIGURE 3. Type of Tragopogon anatolicus ( = holotype).

Under SEM, the leaf surface does not give sufficient evidence for separation of T. anatolicus ( Fig. 6a View FIGURE 6 ) and T. buphthalmoides ( Fig. 6b View FIGURE 6 ), but the peripheral surface of epidermal cells in T. anatolicus appears more smooth than that in T. buphthalmoides . Additionally, the shape and the boundaries of epidermal cells are more distinct in T. anatolicus .

ANK

Ankara Üniversitesi

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