Sonerila subumbellata J. Wai

Wai, Jarearnsak Sae & Hu, Jer-Ming, 2023, Twelve new species of Sonerila (Sonerileae, Melastomataceae) from Thailand, Phytotaxa 620 (2), pp. 107-142 : 132-134

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.620.2.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10011157

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5143A521-FFCE-FF9E-D59D-F938B68EF840

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sonerila subumbellata J. Wai
status

 

10. Sonerila subumbellata J. Wai & J.-M. Hu, sp. nov. ( Figures 20 View FIGURE 20 , 21 View FIGURE 21 ).

TYPE:— THAILAND. Yala Province, Betong District, Ban Piyamit 2, 5°52’36.15” N, 101° 1’10.35” E, 800–850 m, 28 April 2019 GoogleMaps , J. Wai 2713 (holotype PSU!; isotypes BKF!, TAI!).

Diagnosis: Sonerila subumbellata is morphologically most similar to S. capitata Stapf & King (in King 1900: 35) by the anisophyllous leaves and subumbellate inflorescences, but differs in the shape of leaves (obliquely ovate or elliptic vs. obovate), broad leaf bases (vs. narrow), larger petals (6.5–13 × 3.5–6 mm vs. ca. 3 × 1.5 mm), larger hypanthia (3.5–5 mm long vs. 2–2.5 mm) and short-muricate capsules (vs. bristly muricate).

Perennial herbs; stems creeping to ascending, stout, terete, simple or branched, 4–10 mm thick, appressed-sericeous; main erect stems 10–30 cm high; internodes 2.5–8 cm long. Leaves opposite, anisomorphic, adaxially light to dark green or occasionally purplish, glossy, abaxially pale green or occasionally reddish purple, chartaceous when dry. Larger leaves obliquely ovate or elliptic, 7.5–17.5 × 4.5–10 cm, 1.5–2.2 times as long as wide, adaxially sparsely appressed-sericeous, abaxially densely appressed-sericeous along veins, apex acute to acuminate, base broad, obliquely cordate, margin ciliate; venation pinnate; primary vein shallowly grooved above, prominent beneath; secondary veins arising from both sides of primary vein in an alternate or sub-opposite manner, 2–3 pairs; petioles 1–4 cm long, densely appressed-sericeous. Smaller leaves ovate, 0.5–2 × 0.5–1.5 cm, adaxially glabrous, abaxially appressed-sericeous along veins, apex acute or obtuse, base cordate, margin ciliate; venation basal acrodromous, usually with 3–5 main veins arising from the base; petioles sessile to subsessile, up to 2 mm long, appressed-sericeous. Inflorescences terminal or axillary, arranged in scorpioid cymes or subumbellate (derived from short-branched scorpioid cymes), 3–25- flowered, with scattered minute transparent glandular trichomes (seen under magnification) on peduncles, pedicels and hypanthia; peduncles erect or slightly curved, 1.5–6.5 cm long, green or reddish purple, sparsely appressed-sericeous; outer bracts sterile, leaf-like, persistent, oblong-lanceolate, lanceolate or oblanceolate, 6–8 × 2–2.5 mm long, margin ciliate, abaxially appressed-sericeous; inner (floral) bracts leaf-like, persistent, linear-oblong, narrowly lanceolate or subulate, 4–5 × 0.5–1 mm long, margin ciliate, abaxially sparsely appressed-sericeous or subglabrous. Flowers 3- merous; pedicels 2–4 mm long, greenish or reddish purple, glabrous. Hypanthium cup-shaped to campanulate, 3.5–5 × 3.5–4.5 mm, greenish or reddish, muricate; part of hypanthium free from ovary ca. 2 mm long. Calyx lobes 3, triangular, 2–2.5 × 2–3 mm, muricate. Petals short-clawed, elliptic or elliptic-rhomboid, 6.5–13 × 3.5–6 mm, apex acuminate, white or pinkish, glabrous on both surfaces. Stamens 3, equal, glabrous; filaments 2.5–5 mm long, white; anthers straight, oblong, deeply cordate at base, 2.5–4.5 mm long, yellow, apex opening with two pores. Ovary 1.5–2 mm long, 3-locular; ovary crown 0.7–1 mm high; ovules numerous; style 10–15 mm long, white or pinkish; stigma truncate, papillate. Capsule cup-shaped or turbinate, 4–5 × 4–5 mm, short-muricate. Seeds numerous, triangular ovoid, with an enlarged lateral raphe, 0.45–0.6 mm long, ca. 0.3 mm wide, 0.2–0.25 mm thick (measured through SEM), dark brown; testa cells with prominent tubercles on antiraphal side; tubercles cone-shaped or dome-shaped, usually with few minute verrucose papillae on the top.

Paratypes:— THAILAND. PENINSULAR: Songkhla Province, Ton Nga Chang Wildlife Sanctuary, 6°56’ N, 100°13’ E, 250 m, 17 August 1995, K. Karsen et al. 45731 ( AAU!, BKF!). GoogleMaps Yala, Province, Bannang Sata District, Khao Pok Yo , 6°20’ N, 101°17’ E, 1000 m, 10 October 1991, K. Karsen et al. 42282 ( AAU!, BKF!, P!, PSU!); GoogleMaps ibid., 950–1050, 16 June 1992, K. Karsen et al. 42918 ( AAU!, P!); GoogleMaps ibid., 6 April 1995, Herb Trip 1059 ( BCU!); Betong District, Ban Piyamit, 24 May 1993, Herb Trip 422 ( BCU!); GoogleMaps Ban Piyamit 2, 5°52’43.14” N, 101°1’18.92” E, 800–850 m, 3 June 2005, J. Wai 235 ( BKF!, PSU!, TAI!); GoogleMaps ibid., 850 m, 11 April 2010, J. Wai 1869 ( PSU!); GoogleMaps ibid., 5°52’41.4” N, 101° 1’18.3” E, 800–1000 m, 20 August 2014, J. Wai 2375 ( BKF!, PSU!, TAI!); GoogleMaps ibid., 5°54’26.04” N, 101° 2’8.77” E, 850–1000 m, 23 July 2015, J. Wai 2453 ( PSU!); GoogleMaps ibid., 5°54’23” N, 101° 2’11.3” E, 900 m, 19 August 2015, J. Wai 2468 ( PSU!, TAI!). GoogleMaps Narathiwat Province, Sukhirin District , 5°46’36.08” N, 101°42’53.18” E, 163 m, 2 January 2016, J. Wai 2506 ( PSU!); GoogleMaps Toh Moh, Khao Re Chaw , 550 m (1800 feet), 24 April 1931, M. C. Lakshnakara 727 ( BM!, BK!); GoogleMaps Waeng District, Bala forest , 18 February 1999, P. Puudjaa & S. Cholkulchana 541 ( BKF!); GoogleMaps ibid., 5°48’30” N, 101°48’36” E, 380 m, 9 March 2004, S. Chongko 256 ( CMUB!); GoogleMaps ibid., 50–100 m, 1 January 2016, J. Wai 2503 ( PSU!); GoogleMaps ibid., 350 m, 26 August 2017, J. Wai 2624 ( BK!, BKF!, PSU!, TAI!) GoogleMaps . MALAYSIA. PENINSULAR MALAYSIA: Kedah, Gunung Lang, near Baling, 25 March 1938, Kiah SFN 35052 ( K, L, SING). Perlis, Mata Ayer Forest Reserve , 30–31 August 1992, G. W. H. Davison s.n. ( KEP).

Distribution:— Peninsular Thailand (Songkhla, Yala and Narathiwat Provinces), Peninsular Malaysia (Kedah and Perlis).

Habitat:— Terrestrial plant. This species was found growing in deep shade, often found along the streams in lowland humid and submontane evergreen forests, at elevations of 50–1050 m.

Phenology:— Flowering and fruiting were observed from January to October.

DNA barcodes:— OP431260 (ITS), OP480544 (accD-psal), OP452981 (ndhF), OP480669 (rpl16), OP503776 (trnS-trnG), OP558266 (ndhC-trnV), OP495580 (ndhF-rpl32). All sequenced from J. Wai 2375

Etymology:— The specific epithet “subumbellata” refers to the almost umbrella-like appearance of the inflorescences.

Vernacular name:—สาวสนมดง (Sao Sanom Dong) ( Thailand).

Proposed IUCN conservation status:— Vulnerable (VU) under criteria B1ab (iii)+B2ab (iii). This species is narrowly distributed in Southern Thailand and Northern Peninsular Malaysia. The known extent of occurrence (EOO) is less than 20,000 km 2 and the known area of occupancy (AOO) is less than 2,000 km 2. Some populations are very close to the road, and they are threatened by agricultural expansion. It has been noticed that the populations have declined over time. Therefore, we qualify this species as VU according to IUCN Red List guidelines Version 15.1 ( IUCN Standards and Petitions Committee 2022).

J

University of the Witwatersrand

PSU

Portland State University, Vertebrate Biology Museum

BKF

National Park, Wildlife and Plant Conservation Department

TAI

National Taiwan University

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

AAU

Addis Ababa University, Department of Biology

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

BCU

Chulalongkorn University

M

Botanische Staatssammlung München

C

University of Copenhagen

BM

Bristol Museum

BK

Department of Agriculture

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

L

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

SING

Singapore Botanic Gardens

G

Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève

W

Naturhistorisches Museum Wien

H

University of Helsinki

KEP

Forest Research Institute Malaysia

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF