Pholidostachys synanthera subsp. synanthera

Henderson, Andrew, 2012, A revision of Pholidostachys (Arecaceae), Phytotaxa 43, pp. 1-48 : 16-17

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.43.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4928371

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3F64C34F-FFF6-7209-FF6C-F6EAFDECF84B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pholidostachys synanthera subsp. synanthera
status

 

7.1 Pholidostachys synanthera subsp. synanthera View in CoL View at ENA

Stems 3.9(1.8–6.0) m long. Leaf rachises 92.2(55.0–124.0) cm long; pinnae12(7–18) per side of rachis.

Distribution and habitat. From 7°19’N – 13°31’S and 70°07’– 78°57’W in the Cordilleras

Central and Oriental in Colombia and eastern Andean slopes in Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru at 1064(400– 1750) m elevation in lowland or montane rainforest ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ).

Subspecific variation. Regression shows there are significant associations between elevation and one stem, four leaf, and one inflorescence variables. Squared multiple R for the regression of stem height on elevation is 0.30, sheath length 0.88, number of pinnae 0.42, basal pinna width 0.37, apical pinna length 0.69, and rachilla width 0.13. Values for these variables decrease with elevation, except for number of pinnae and rachillae width which increase.

The northernmost population of subsp. synanthera occurs in the Cordilleras Central and Oriental in Colombia and has 13–17 rachillae per inflorescence. The northernmost specimen (Soejarto 2743) is tentatively included here; it is unusual in having only 4 rachillae. One specimen (Callejas 4221) appears to be a mixed collection, with the fruits (excluded from this study) belonging to P. sanluisensis .

Along eastern Andean slopes in Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, subsp. synanthera occurs in scattered localities. There do not appear to be any differences between these populations although sample size in small in some of them. The gaps between them may anyway be collecting artifacts. In Amazonas and Cajamarca, Peru, there is extreme variation. Two specimens (Díaz 8093, Rodríguez 1013) are the smallest seen with narrow pinnae and slender inflorescences with the rachillae 19.0– 22.5 cm long and 4.0– 4.3 mm diameter. Another specimen (Campos 4243), from less than 40 km away, has the some of the largest rachillae seen in the subspecies, 34.0 cm long and 9.6 mm diameter. Other specimens from this region are more usual in size. This kind of variation is reminiscent of that seen in Geonoma poeppigiana from the same region ( Henderson 2011). It is also of interest that Pholidostachys amazonensis occurs in this same region, and only differs from subsp. synanthera in its spicate inflorescence.

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