Diospyros bambuseti H. R. Fletcher, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew 1937: 387

Duangjai, Sutee, Sinbumroong, Aroon, Chalermwong, Porntawat, Suekaew, Padungsak & Suddee, Somran, 2022, Rediscovery of Diospyros bambuseti (Ebenaceae) in Thailand: Emended taxonomic description, lectotypification, and phylogenetic placement, Phytotaxa 542 (3), pp. 271-282 : 273-278

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.542.3.3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6421377

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FA760A-FFEC-FF8A-FF71-FB8D8924A6C9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diospyros bambuseti H. R. Fletcher, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew 1937: 387
status

 

Diospyros bambuseti H. R. Fletcher, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew 1937: 387 View in CoL ; Fl. Siam. En. 2: 364. 1938; Phengklai Fl. Thailand 2 (4): 290, Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 . 1981.

Type:— Thailand. Sa Kaeo, Aranya Prathet, 12 May, 1930, Kerr 19325 (lectotype designated here, BM barcode BM000884668; isolectotypes BK, E barcode E00318463, K barcode K000792557 and K001089520). Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 .

Small to medium-sized trees, up to 20 m high (already flowering when ca. 2.5 m high), with a trunk diameter up to 60 cm; trunk crooked with slight enlargements or buttresses at base; outer bark greyish-brown, smooth or scaly; inner bark thick, yellowish-brown; sapwood white; young branchlets green with dense brown hairs; older branchlets greyish-brown to brown, smooth to scaly; canopy dense and round. Leaves alternate; petiole 0.2–0.5 cm long, with dense brown hairs; lamina lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate to elliptic-oblong, 3.5–11 × 1.5–4.2 cm, base rounded or obtuse (rarely cuneate), apex acute or obtuse, margin entire or revolute, green on both surfaces, the lower surface slightly paler, upper surface glabrous, except the pubescent midrib, lower surface glabrescent; midrib impressed above, raised below, yellowishbrown; secondary veins 6–14 on each side, arched and anastomosing well away from the margin, conspicuous on both surfaces; tertiary veins conspicuous on both surfaces when fresh, secondary and tertiary veins hardly visible abaxially when dry, occasionally translucently dotted. Male flowers cymose, 3–4-merous, sessile. Calyx campanulate, 1–2 mm long, divided to middle, glabrescent outside, glabrous inside, slightly green. Corolla white; broadly urceolate or ovoid, 3–5 mm long, divided to middle; outside with a median line of hairs, glabrous inside. Stamens 16–20, glabrous. Rudimentary ovary glabrous. Female flowers solitary, 3–4-merous, sessile. Calyx broadly campanulate, 4–5 mm long, divided to middle, glabrescent outside, glabrous inside, slightly green. Corolla white; broadly campanulate or ovoid, 4–5 mm long, divided to middle; outside with a median line of hairs, glabrous inside. Staminodes 3–4, attached at the base of corolla-tube, glabrous. Ovary ovoid, 6–8-locular, villous; styles 3–4, ca 0.5–0.6 mm long, glabrous; stigmas bifid. Fruits green (yellowish green when mature), sessile, ellipsoid or elongated oboval in shape, 2.0–2.6 × 0.9–1.4 cm, base rounded, apex acute, nearly circular in cross section, smooth, sparsely pubescent, 6–8-locular, pericarp thin; seeds 1–2(3), 14–20 × 6–9 mm; fruiting calyx divided to the base, glabrous on both surfaces, lobes broadly ovate with broad blunt apices, 4.5–6 × 4 mm, reflexed, not plicate nor undulate; endosperm ruminate.

Vernacular name:— Maklua aran (Sa Kaeo); boon (Surat Thani).

Distribution:— Endemic to Thailand, known only from Aranya Prathet district, Sa Kaeo Province and Khian Sa district, Surat Thaini Province.

Habitat and Ecology:— Bamboo forest, riparian forest, ca. 50–100 m a.s.l. The D. bambuseti population in riparian forest of Khian Sa district, Surat Thani Province is dominated by Nauclea orientalis (L. 1753: 95) L. (1763: 243), Hydnocarpus castaneus Hook. f. & Thomson (1897: 197), Vatica diospyroides Symington (1938: 347) , Barringtonia acutangula subsp. spicata ( Blume 1827: 1097) Payens (1967: 231) , and Pongamia pinnata (L. 1753: 741) Pierre (1898: 385).

Conservation status:— DD, following IUCN Standard and Petitions Committee (2019). There are more than 500 individuals in the Khian Sa District, Surat Thaini. The population at Sa Kaeo Province remains unknown.

Phenology:— Flowering in May–June and fruiting in May–October. Fruits ripen in October.

Examined specimens:— THAILAND: Sa Kaeo [Aranya Prathet, 12 May, 1930, Kerr 19325 (lectotype BM!, isolectotypes BK!, E!, 2 shts. K!)] ; Surat Thani [Khian Sa district, 30 May, 2015, Sinbumroong et al. 300520151 (fl.) (BK!; BKF!), ibid., Sinbumroong et al. 300520152 (fl.) (BK!; BKF!), ibid., Sinbumroong et al. 300520153 (fr.) (BK!; BKF!), ibid., 22 October , 2018, Chalermwong 22102018 (fr.) (BK!; BKF!), ibid., 22 May, 2020, Sinbumroong 22052020 (fl.) (BK!; BKF!)] .

Notes:— In the original description, Fletcher (1937) stated that D. bambuseti was trimerous. However, both tri-and tetramerous flowers were found among our newly collected specimens of this species from Khian Sa, Surat Thani. Thus, the rediscovery of D. bambuseti demonstrates the necessity of further floristic studies in riparian forest along Tapi River , Surat Thani and the importance of protecting this forest area, as it harbours a population of an endemic Diospyros species .

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Ericales

Family

Ebenaceae

Genus

Diospyros

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