Daviesia pteroclada Crisp (1995: 1223)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A05187DC-FF5F-D2CF-FF3C-53228E245224 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Daviesia pteroclada Crisp (1995: 1223) |
status |
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93. Daviesia pteroclada Crisp (1995: 1223) View in CoL . Type [approximate locality data given because the species is rare]: Western Australia, Irwin, near Green Head , 30°’S, 115°30’E, C. Chapman s.n., 1 August 1978. Holotype: CBG 9408372 About CBG ; isotypes: K, L, MEL, NSW, PERTH
Broom-like leafless shrubs, to 1.8 m tall, glabrous, glaucescent. Root anatomy normal (unistelar) or with anomalous secondary thickening (cord type). Branchlets erect or ascending, modified to cladodes, narrowly winged, compressed or triquetrous, 1.5–3.5(–8) mm broad, striate between the sharp ridges, even when fresh. Phyllodes reduced to scales in the adult plant. Seedling phyllodes at first narrowly obovate and horizontally flattened (nodes 1–4), becoming vertically compressed and subulate (nodes 6–8), reduced to scales thereafter. Unit inflorescences 1 per axil, racemes with the lower flowers clustered due to condensation of the rachis, 2–4-flowered; peduncle up to 1 mm long; rachis 0.5–2 mm long and concealed by the imbricate basal barren bracts; subtending bracts spreading, spathulate, abruptly contracted to the petiole-like base, with margins incurved, faintly striate, fused at the base of the pedicel, ca. 5 mm long. Pedicels thickening towards the apex, 2.5–3.5 mm long. Calyx 2– 2.5 mm long including the ca. 0.5 mm receptacle; upper 2 lobes united in a truncate, emarginate lip, ca. 0.75 m long; lower 3 lobes triangular, acuminate, ca. 0.25 mm long. Corolla ; standard transversely broadly elliptic, emarginate, 6.5–8 × 7–8 mm including the ca. 1 mm claw, deeply channelled near the base, orange at margins and grading through to dark red (or dark grey) towards centre, with blackish veins, lacking a central yellow mark, fading with age to yellow and light grey; wings spathulate, abaxial margins divergent, apically incurved and scarcely overlapping the keel, auriculate, 4.5–5 × 2–2.5 including the ca. 1 mm claw, dark grey grading to red at tips and margins; keel half transversely broadly elliptic, acute, abaxially rugose, auriculate, saccate, 3.5–4 × 1.75–2 mm including the 1–1.5 mm claw, dark red. Stamens strongly dimorphic: inner whorl of 5 with longer, filiform
A MONOGRAPH OF DAVIESIA
Phytotaxa 300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press • 209 filaments and shorter, versatile, anthers with confluent thecae; outer whorl of 5 with shorter, compressed filaments and longer, basifixed, 2-celled anthers; filaments free. Pod obliquely shallowly obtriangular, acute, compressed, 10–12 × 7–8 mm, rather thin-walled; upper suture sigmoid; lower suture acute. Seed ellipsoid, 3.6–4.7 mm long, ca. 2.5 mm broad, ca. 1.5 mm thick, light to dark brown with black mottling; aril 1.5–2.5 mm long. ( Fig. 93 View FIGURE 93 ).
210 • Phytotaxa 300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press
CRISP ET AL.
Flowering period:— July and August (January). Fruiting period: August to October.
Distribution:— Western Australia, from near Eneabba south towards Mt Lesueur.
Habitat:— Grows in sandy clay to sandy loam in woodland-heath with Eucalyptus wandoo .
Conservation status:— National: Not listed. WA: Priority 3, possibly threatened or near-threatened but not yet adequately surveyed.
Selected specimens (12 examined):— Approximate locality data given because the species is rare. WESTERN AUSTRALIA. Irwin: E of Mt Peron , 30°10’S, 115°20’E, C. A GoogleMaps . Gardner 9429 per F. A . Grigson, 26 August 1949 ( PERTH); between Green Head and Eneabba , 30°S, 115°10’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 5430, 24 January 1979, flowering adult ( CBG, PERTH); ibid., Crisp 5431, 24 January 1979, seedling ( CBG, PERTH); ibid., D. Kitchener 65, 27 October 1973 ( PERTH); ibid., C GoogleMaps . Chapman (35)76, 3 August 1976 ( AD, CBG, K, MEL, MO, NSW, PERTH, UWA) .
Affinity:— The only other species in the genus with phyllodes reduced to scales and narrowly winged, triquetrous cladodes, is D. alata . However, this species is not closely related to D. pteroclada and differs in floral and fruiting morphology; for example the bracts and calyx-lobes are conspicuously fimbriate, and the peduncle is up to 3.5 mm long. Also, D. alata has a procumbent to prostrate habit.
Instead, D. pteroclada is closely related to D. hakeoides ( Fig. 1B View FIGURE 1 ) within a group of species with moderately enlarged, shell-shaped, usually striate bracts which are imbricate and cover the rachis ( Crisp 1982a; 1984). From all members of this group it is immediately distinguished by its leafless, triquetrous branchlets. Daviesia debilior , D. gracilis and D. triflora are at least partly leafless but their branchlets are terete.
E |
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh |
C |
University of Copenhagen |
A |
Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum |
F |
Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department |
PERTH |
Western Australian Herbarium |
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
CBG |
Australian National Botanic Gardens, specimens pre-1993 |
AD |
State Herbarium of South Australia |
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
MEL |
Museo Entomologico de Leon |
MO |
Missouri Botanical Garden |
NSW |
Royal Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium of New South Wales |
UWA |
University of Western Australia |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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