Strobilanthes fimbriata Nees (1832: 85)

Albertson, Winston D. & Wood, Hn. R. I., 2012, Forgotten types of Strobilanthes (Acanthaceae) in The Central National Herbarium, Kolkata, India, Phytotaxa 43, pp. 49-60 : 51-54

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.43.1.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4928577

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CD87DE-FF91-7C3F-C0E7-FA8BFB92FD4C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Strobilanthes fimbriata Nees (1832: 85)
status

 

Strobilanthes fimbriata Nees (1832: 85) View in CoL . Lectotype (designated here): INDIA. Meghalaya (“Silhet”), Da

Silva & Gomez in Wallich 2363 (K-W!).

Strobilanthes fimbriata var. majuscula W.W. Smith (1918: 192) View in CoL . Lectotype (designated here): MYANMAR. (Burma), Kachin, Toppin 4244 (E!).

Endopogon macrostegius Nees (1847: 104) View in CoL . Holotype: INDIA. Meghalaya, Khasi Hills, Griffith in Herb. Hooker (K!).

Strobilanthes macrostegia (Nees) C.B. Clarke (1884: 456) View in CoL

Strobilanthes neesii Kurz (1873: 93) View in CoL . synon. nov. Neotype (designated here): MYANMAR (Burma). “Martaban”, W. S. Kurz 835 ( CAL0000019803 View Materials !), Figure 2A View FIGURE 2 .

Strobilanthes neesii View in CoL was one of the species placed in the appendix at the end of the account of Strobilanthes View in CoL in the Flora of British India ( Clarke 1884). At CAL there is only a single collection of this species, Kurz 835, mounted on a Flora of British Burma label annotated “Jonkeyghat, Nakawa Chg” (Toukyeghat Nakawa Choung, approximately 21°7' N 95°52' E). George King has annotated the sheet “This is evidently the same as S. macrostegius , C.B.C.” There appear to be no other collections of this species elsewhere at K, BM or other likely herbaria.

The specimen agrees well with the description and comments in the prologue and might be part of the original material seen by Kurz and thus be appropriate for selection as a lectotype. However, there are major discrepancies between the location given in the protologue and that of the label. We have, therefore, thought it best to select it as a neotype.

Strobilanthes fimbriata is known from Bangladesh ( Chittagong Hills), Myanmar (Kachin and Pegu Yoma) and India, where it grows in Arunachal Pradesh (Abor Hills) and Meghalaya (Khasia Hills). Like S. elongata , it belongs to the group of species placed by Bremekamp (1944) in Semnostachya but to a subgroup, in which the leaves turn blackish-green when dried.

Strobilanthes karensium Kurz (1873: 94) View in CoL . Holotype: BURMA (Myanmar). Martaban , Toungoo Mountain, W.S. Kurz ( CAL0000019821 View Materials !). Figure 2B View FIGURE 2 .

Strobilanthes lilacina C.B. Clarke (1908: 67) View in CoL . Syntypes: THAILAND. Chiangmai , Hosseus 402a, 403a (n.v.?B†).

Once again there are problems with the labelling. There is a single collection at CAL but the sheet bears two contradictory labels, one with “Toungoo Mountain” written on it and the other a printed label with the number 830, apparently indicating the plant was collected in Pegu. As the Toungoo location clearly fits the Martaban locality given in the protologue as well as the epither karensium View in CoL we assume that that is the original collector’s label. The specimen fits the description in the protologue and, as there appear to be no other collections, we consider this to be the holotype .

Although Clarke (1884: 449) treated this species as a synonym of Strobilanthes falconeri , examination of the type at CAL shows this to be an error. It is, in fact, the oldest name for a plant later described by Clarke as S. lilacina based on a specimen collected by Hosseus in Thailand.

Apart from Kurz’s collection this species is only known from the Chiangmai district in Thailand and its existence raises the question of whether it was actually collected in what is now Thailand, rather than in what is now Myanmar. Taungoo lies at approximately 18°56ʹN 96°26ʹE, some 150 kilometres west of the border between Myanmar and Thailand GoogleMaps . At the very least it is reasonable to suppose that Kurz collected this plant in the mountains lying east of Taungoo city close to the Thai border, if not in present-day Thailand .

Strobilanthes lamioides T. Anderson (1867: 485) View in CoL . Lectotype (designated here): MYANMAR (Burma), Taijoo Mountain , [D. Brandis s.n.] ( CAL0000019816 View Materials !). Figure 3A View FIGURE 3 .

There are two syntypes of Strobilanthes lamioides View in CoL at CAL, both annotated by Anderson and the best is here selected as lectotype .

Strobilanthes lamioides is a somewhat mysterious species as it does not appear to have been collected again since the two original collections cited by Anderson. It appears to be closest to S. torrentium Benoist (= S. imlayae J.R.I. Wood ), which is known from Myanmar, eastern India and China but differs in its rounded, sparsely pilose bracts. Although Anderson described the bracts as “glandular-tomentose, ciliate”, this is not obvious from the specimens at CAL. Another uncertainty relates to the type locality, which we have been unable to identify with any current place name.

Strobilanthes brandisii T. Anderson (1867: 475) View in CoL . Lectotype: MYANMAR (Burma). Martaban, Toungoo (Taungnyo / Tenghyo) mountain, 4000', [D. Brandis s.n.] ( CAL0000019781 View Materials !), selected here. Figure 3B View FIGURE 3 .

There are two syntypes of Strobilanthes brandisii View in CoL at CAL, but none at Kew. Both are annotated by Anderson and represent good material. We have selected the sheet with the collector’s original label as the lectotype .

Strobilanthes brandisii is part of a complex of species, which includes S. lamioides , and S. falconeri T. Anderson , the type specimen of which is at K (Falconer 423). They were all published by Anderson in the same paper. Although their close relationship was not noted by Anderson, it was commented on by Clarke (1884: 449) and is immediately apparent from the type specimens. S. falconeri is the most distinct of the three species because of the ovate bracts and the presence of long silky hairs which cover the capitula and to a lesser extent the stem and leaves. Both S. brandisii and S. lamioides have spathulate bracts but the former is a canescent-pilose plant with copious white indumentum on the inflorescence, whereas in the latter the inflorescence is only thinly pubescent.

Strobilanthes brandisii is known from Myanmar, Laos and Thailand, where it is common. The type locality is presumably in the hills lying east of Taungoo (18°56ʹN 96°26ʹE) GoogleMaps .

CAL

Botanical Survey of India

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Lamiales

Family

Acanthaceae

Genus

Strobilanthes

Loc

Strobilanthes fimbriata Nees (1832: 85)

Albertson, Winston D. & Wood, Hn. R. I. 2012
2012
Loc

Strobilanthes fimbriata var. majuscula W.W. Smith (1918: 192)

Smith, W. W. 1918: )
1918
Loc

Strobilanthes macrostegia (Nees) C.B. Clarke (1884: 456)

Clarke, C. B. 1884: )
1884
Loc

Strobilanthes neesii

Kurz, S. 1873: )
1873
Loc

Strobilanthes karensium

Kurz, S. 1873: )
1873
Loc

Strobilanthes lamioides T. Anderson (1867: 485)

Anderson, T. 1867: )
1867
Loc

Strobilanthes brandisii T. Anderson (1867: 475)

Anderson, T. 1867: )
1867
Loc

Endopogon macrostegius

Nees Von Esenbeck, C. G. 1847: )
1847
Loc

Strobilanthes fimbriata

Nees Von Esenbeck, C. G. 1832: )
1832
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