Paepalanthus Species A

Hensold, Nancy, 2016, The Andean Paepalanthus pilosus complex (Eriocaulaceae): a revision with three new taxa, PhytoKeys 64, pp. 1-57 : 43-44

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.64.6864

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7FF10DA0-0CFA-521F-A4DE-64DAF2AA5AC7

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Paepalanthus Species A
status

 

Paepalanthus Species A Figs 6 View Figure 6 , 11F-G View Figure 11

Misapplied (?) name.

Paepalanthus macarenensis sensu Moldenke (1983) in part, and Rivera-Díaz (2010), probably non Moldenke (1952).

This robust taxon has a clumping habit structurally similar to Paepalanthus pilosus but lacks the dense pulviniform aspect. Its other similarities include acute to aristate leaves, scarious splitting peduncle sheath tips, pale gold lanceolate involucral bracts, and a nearly identical flower and fruit morphology. It differs by the following characters:

Leaves longer, narrowly linear-lanceolate, 3-4 cm long, the peduncles 10-20 cm long at anthesis, and the capitula 6-7.5 mm wide, much more floriferous (> 40 flowers) than Paepalanthus pilosus and sometimes globose at maturity, with alternating whorls of staminate and pistillate flowers. In addition, the capitula are “indeterminate,” with floral primordia found at the center of capitulum at the time of anthesis of the outer whorls. This contrasts with Paepalanthus pilosus , in which pistillate flowers are limited to the outer whorl, staminate to the inner, and no floral primordia are found at the start of anthesis.

The most robust individuals are found in the northern part of Serrania del Perija (ca. 10°15'- 10°20' N), but similar smaller plants are also found at the north end of the main Cordillera Oriental, about 300 km to the south. These have leaf, peduncle and sheath lengths approaching those of the Perijá plants, and in spite of their small capitula, the flowers are more numerous than in typical Paepalanthus pilosus (up to 40 per capitulum), and pistillate and staminate whorls alternate in the capitulum. It isn’t clear whether to treat these plants as small individuals of Paepalanthus sp. A, or intermediates with Paepalanthus pilosus . Smaller individuals are also found at Sa. de Perijá (Cuatrecasas 25027, 25143, US), but were only observed from scans.

The plants of Perijá had been distributed in part as Paepalanthus macarenensis , a species otherwise only known from ca. 800 m in the Sierra de la Macarena (Meta). I have seen an image of the Paepalanthus macarenensis type, and do not believe it is the same species or closely related, but pending closer examination treat the Perijá plants only provisionally here.

Specimens examined.

COLOMBIA. Cesar: [ Serranía de Perijá], Paramo de Sabana Rubia, 3250 m, 22 Jul 1987, H. Cuadros 3732 (MO), east of Manaure , Sabana Rubia, paramo, 3000-3100 m, 6-8 Nov 1959, J. Cuatrecasas & R. Romero-Castaneda 25025 (COL [COL000223802], US n.v.) , La Paz, Corr. San Jose de Oriente, Vda. Altos del Riecito - Altos de Perijá, Fca. Los Sauces, 10°14'48.75"N 72°57'44.5"W, 3096 m, 27 Feb 2006, J. O. Rangel 13692 (COL [COL000254069]) GoogleMaps

Smaller individuals.

COLOMBIA. Norte de Santander: de La Laguna a Nariz de Judío (Mutiscua), 19 Jun 1946, M. de Garganta 1209 (F); Santander: Paramo de Las Vegas, 3700-3800 m, 20-21 Dec 1926, E. P. Killip & A. C. Smith 15626 (F); Paramo de Santurban, between Tona and Mutiscua, 3800-4300 m, 18 Feb 1927, E. P. Killip & A. C. Smith 19557 (F).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Poales

Family

Eriocaulaceae