Lasianthus sithammaratensis Napiroon, Balslev & Chayamarit, 2020

Napiroon, Tiwtawat, Chayamarit, Kongkanda, Dawson, Sally, Till, Walter & Balslev, Henrik, 2020, A synopsis of Lasianthus (Lasiantheae, Rubiaceae) in Thailand and two additional new species, Phytotaxa 439 (1), pp. 1-38 : 30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.439.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13873637

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB879E-B70B-D00C-FF72-FCA62891CB59

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lasianthus sithammaratensis Napiroon, Balslev & Chayamarit
status

sp. nov.

58. Lasianthus sithammaratensis Napiroon, Balslev & Chayamarit View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 ).

Diagnosis:— Lasianthus sithammaratensis is morphologically similar to L. appressus Hooker (1880:181) , but differs by having: leaves that are oblong or oblong-lanceolate (not lanceolate), 8‒10 × 1.5‒2 (not 6‒8 × 2‒3) cm; 10–12 (not 6–8) pairs of secondary veins; pubescent (not appressed-hirsute) on the branches, stipules, bracts and calyx; conspicuous (not inconspicuous) stipules that are 2.5‒3 (not 0.5‒1) mm long; petioles 10‒11 (not 4‒5) mm long; bracts absent (not present and linear-lanceolate to subulate); calyx cupular (not campanulate); corolla tube sparsely hirsute outside, pilose inside (not pubescent on both sides); drupes subglobose (young drupes on specimens), pubescent (not glabrous); 4‒5 (not 8) pyrenes.

Type:— THAILAND. Nakhon Si Thammarat: Khao Maen, Nam Tok Yong National Park, 8 ° 17’42”N, 99 ° 39’47”E, 9 February 2005, K. Williams 1319 (holotype: WU!).

Description:—Shrubs 30‒40 cm tall. Stem terete, 0.6–0.8 cm diam., subglabrous; branches and branchlets terete, 5–6 mm diam., puberulous. Stipules conspicuous, broadly-triangular and persistent when dry, 2.5‒3 mm long, apex acute, pubescent. Leaves coriaceous; petiole 10‒11 mm long, pubescent; blades oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 8–10 × 1.5–2 cm, base acute, apex acute, glabrous on both surfaces, pubescent on the midrib and veins beneath; secondary veins 10–12 pairs, slender, slightly depressed above, prominent beneath, ascending at angles of 45‒50° from midrib, tertiary veins concealed above, obvious beneath, parallel or subreticulate; bracts absent. Cymes sessile; calyx pubescent, cupular; calyx tube 4 mm long; calyx 4-lobed, lobes broadly-triangular, 0.8–1 mm long; corolla 7 mm long, corolla tube 5 mm long, outside sparsely hirsute and inside pilose, 5-lobed, lobes lanceolate 3 mm long, externally sparsely hirsute, internally pilose; anthers 5, innate, 0.8–1 mm long; style 3 mm long, 5 lobed, glabrous, stigma 0.8–1 mm long. Drupes subglobose (only young drupes present on specimens), puberulous, fresh fruit purple-green, crowned by calyx limb; pyrenes 4‒5, very hard.

Common name: —Pat Muang Si Thammarat.

Distribution: —Endemic to Peninsular Thailand in moist evergreen forest at Khao Maen, Nam Tok Yong National Park in the Nakhon Si Thammarat province.

Habitat: — Growing under shade among understory trees in scrub forest, on sandy-loam at 100‒120 m elevation.

Proposed IUCN conservation assessment: — Lasianthus sithammaratensis is here assessed as Endangered (B2ab(ii)), in accordance with IUCN criteria ( IUCN 2012). It is known only from one population in Nam Tok Yong National park, Nakhon Si Thammarat province.

Phenology: — Flowering and fruiting in February–March.

Etymology: —The specific epithet refers to the type locality which is in Nakhon Si Thammarat province, southern Thailand where it is commonly known as Nakhon or Si Thammarat.

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