Barbacenia glaucescens Ferreira-Junior & Andr.Cabral, 2023

Cabral, Andressa, Ferreira-Júnior, Carlos Alberto & Menezes, Nanuza Luiza De, 2023, Two new remarkable species of Barbacenia (Velloziaceae) from the Brazilian Espinhaço Range in honor of Renato Mello-Silva, Phytotaxa 616 (3), pp. 279-287 : 280-284

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.616.3.7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10164919

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9D648785-EE72-D100-5892-FC500C36263B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Barbacenia glaucescens Ferreira-Junior & Andr.Cabral
status

sp. nov.

Barbacenia glaucescens Ferreira-Junior & Andr.Cabral sp. nov., ( Figs. 1A–G View FIGURE 1 ; 2A–C View FIGURE 2 ; 3C–D, I–J and N View FIGURE 3 ; 4 View FIGURE 4 ; table 1)

Type:— BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: Santana do Riacho, Serra do Cipó. Estrada Santana do Riacho—Lapinha ; 28 Jan. 1999; fl. & fr.; N.L. Menezes 1395 (holotype: SPF!; isotypes: BHZB!, RB!) .

Diagnosis: — Barbacenia glaucescens resembles B. gentianoides by the presence of spirotristichous leaves with overlapping length (5.4–13 cm and 3–8 cm, respectively), pedicel hidden by the leaves, tube of the hypanthium longer than the ovary and perianth red/orange (althougth it can vary between red, orange and yellow in B. gentianoides ). Moreover, B. glaucescens has glaucous and smooth leaves, the old ones twisted, and hypanthium covered with white trichomes (vs. bright green leaves with emergences on the midrib and margin, the old ones straight, and hypanthium covered with capitate-subulate emergences in B. gentianoides ).

Plant caespitose. Leaves spirotristichous, erect and becoming spirally twisted or rolled with age; adult blades 5.4–13 × 0.52–1.4 cm, linear-triangular to elliptical-triangular, glaucous, involute at the base and flat towards the apex, abscission line absent, apex long attenuate, margin with white-trichomes (sometimes only in the basal region), the old blades marcescent, reflexed and twisted. Flowers 1(-2); pedicel 5.5–6 mm long in the flowering, hidden by the leaves, cylindric, sparsely covered with white trichomes; hypanthium sparsely white-tomentose; section fused to ovary 13–16 × 3–4 mm, obovoid, light green to green; hypanthial tube 50–60 mm long, 7–10 mm wide at apex, lightred. Perianth predominantly red or red-orange, 23–41 × 3–5 mm, linear-lanceolate; sepals sparsely white-tomentose abaxially, adaxially smooth; petals smooth in both surfaces; corona lobes 14–18 × 2–3 mm, linear-lanceolate, red or red-orange, fused to the basal half, lobules 0.3–0.5 mm, asymmetric.Anthers 6–15 mm long, dorsifixed, attached to the corona apex, connective purple. Style 65–70 mm long, red, stigmatic regions 3, 1.6–1.8 mm long, confluent at apex. Capsule ca. 11 × 8 mm, widely ellipsoid. Seeds 0.7–1.3 mm long, rounded to slightly angulate, reddish brown.

Leaf and pedicel anatomy. Blade inconspicuously dorsiventral ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Shallow furrows between the fibro-vascular bundles, more evident on the abaxial surface ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Cuticle slightly thickened on both surfaces ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Stomata present on both surfaces, mostly on abaxial one, in the region between fibro-vascular bundles ( Fig. 3C– D; I–J View FIGURE 3 ). Epidermis uniseriate ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Palisade mesophyll 2–3 cell-layer thick, grading into spongy parenchyma near fibro-vascular bundles and into aquiferous parenchyma in region between bundles ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Fibro-vascular bundles surrounded by a distinct bundle sheath, 1–3 large vessels present in each fibro-vascular bundle ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Phloem strands 2, separated by parenchymatous or sclerified cells ( Fig. 3C–D View FIGURE 3 ). Fibers extending as girders next to epidermis on both sides, widely obtrapeziform in outline ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). Pedicel apparently circular in transverse section; fibro-vascular bundles 12; belt of sclerified cells not clearly seen ( Fig. 3N View FIGURE 3 ). Leaf: Menezes 1395 and 1404, Arndt & Aristóbolo s.n SPF83677; pedicel: Menezes 1395.

Additional specimens examined (paratypes): — BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: Santana do Riacho; Vale à esquerda da estrada em direç„o a Lapinha; 1000 m; 08 Sept. 1990; fl.; Arndt & Aristóbolo s.n. SPF 83677 ( SPF!, BHCB). Ibid.: Lapinha da Serra, próximo ao trevo de retorno para Lapinha da Serra; 19º06’09.11”S, 43º41’56.17”W; 1127 m; 16 Abr. 2013; fl.; C. A. Ferreira-Junior 1235 ( BHZB!). Ibid.: RPPN Brumas do Espinhaço e Ermo das Gerais; 19 Abr. 2012; fl.; C. A. Ferreira-Junior 413 ( BHZB!). Ibid.: Serra do Cipó, a 7 km da bifurcaç„o para a Lapinha; 13 Oct. 1999; fl.; N.L. Menezes 1404 ( SPF!).

Distribution and habitat:— Barbacenia glaucescens is restricted to the municipality of Santana do Riacho, southern Espinhaço Range, Minas Gerais state, Brazil ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ). This species occurs on rock outcrops of Serra do Cipó at elevations between 1000 and 1127 m. a.s.l.

Phenology: —Collected with flowers in January, April and between September and October and fruiting in January.

Preliminary conservation status:— There is not enough Barbacenia glaucescens information regarding spatial distribution to estimate its conservation status, therefore it is classified as Data Deficient (DD) according to IUCN (2012) criteria.

Etymology:— The epithet refers to the glaucous leaves, a character that differentiates the new species from the the bright green leaves of Barbacenia gentianoides .

Discussion:— Barbacenia glaucescens is similar to B. gentianoides ( Fig. 3A–B; G–H; M View FIGURE 3 ) by its phyllotaxys, leaf length, pedicel exposure, hypanthium vs. ovary relative length, and perianth colour. However, these species can be promptly distinguished by their leaf colour (glaucous in B. glaucescens vs. bright green in B. gentianoides ), presence/absence of emergences on leaf-blade (absent in B. glaucescens vs. present in B. gentianoides ), and posture of the marcescent leaves (twisted in B. glaucescens vs. straight in B. gentianoides ), and type of surface covering on hypanthium (tector trichomes in B. glaucescens vs. capitate-subulate emergences in B. gentianoides ) (see also Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). These species also have different stomata distribution on the leaves (amphistomatic in B. glaucescens vs. hypohistomatic in B. gentianoides ) and vary in the presence or absence of furrows (present in B. glaucescens vs. absent in B. gentianoides ) ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 , Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). Although B. glaucescens has been described as having glabrous leaves, an envelope was found attached to the sample Menezes 1404 containing pieces of leaves with a pubescent indument, which does not match the exsiccate itself.

SPF

Universidade de São Paulo

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

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