Daviesia microcarpa Crisp (1995: 1211)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A05187DC-FF99-D205-FF3C-510188315702 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Daviesia microcarpa Crisp (1995: 1211) |
status |
|
3. Daviesia microcarpa Crisp (1995: 1211) View in CoL . Type [approximate locality data given because the species is rare]: Western Australia, Coolgardie, near Norseman GoogleMaps , 32°10’S, 121°50’E, M. D. Crisp 5943, J. Taylor & R. Jackson, 19 September 1979. Holotype: CBG; isotypes: CBG, K, NSW, PERTH
A MONOGRAPH OF DAVIESIA
Phytotaxa 300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press • 23 24 • Phytotaxa 300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press
CRISP ET AL.
Sprawling shrubs with many long, weak, tangled stems, to 0.4 m tall and 1 m broad, mostly glabrous but vegetative parts with scattered minute resinous warts, grey-green. Root anatomy normal (unistelar). Branchlets ascending, angular-terete with raised ribs. Phyllodes crowded (2.5–3.5 per cm), divaricate, needle-like, terete and smooth when fresh, angular with ribs when dry, apically pungent, basally articulate, 8–20 mm long, 0.5–0.75 mm diam., midrib more prominent on adaxial surface. Unit inflorescences 1 or 2 per axil, 1(2)-flowered; peduncle 0.5–1.5 mm long; subtending bracts oblong, clasping the pedicel, ca. 0.75–1 mm long. Pedicels ca. 1 mm long. Calyx ca. 3 mm long including the ca. 1 mm stipitate receptacle to which it is abruptly contracted; lobes ± equal, triangular, straight, acute, apiculate, ca. 0.5 mm long. Corolla : standard ovate, emarginate, auriculate, ca. 4–5 × 5 mm including the ca. 1 mm claw, centrally channelled, orange with pinkish red on veins and towards centre; wings obovate, rounded and incurved at apex, scarcely overlapping, auriculate, with a lobe opposite the auricles on the abaxial margin, ca. 4– 4.5 × 1.5 mm including the ca. 1.5 mm claw, pinkish red with orange tips; keel half transversely ovate with a scarcely acute apex, auriculate, saccate, ca. 3.5–4 × 1.5 mm including the ca. 1.5 mm claw, pale orange-pink. Stamens strongly dimorphic: inner whorl of 5 with terete filaments and subversatile anthers with confluent thecae; outer whorl of 5 with broad compressed filaments and basifixed 2-celled anthers; filaments cohering. Pod obliquely very broadly to shallowly obtriangular, ± obtuse, 4–4.5 × 3–3.5 mm, with raised reticulate venation; upper suture sigmoid; lower suture acute. Seed broadly obovoid, very small, ca. 2 mm long, 1.5 mm broad, 0.8 mm thick, yellow-brown with black mottling; aril ca. 0.8 mm long. ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ).
Flowering period:— August and September. Fruiting period: October.
Distribution:— Western Australia, known only from two disjunct populations, near Norseman and Southern Cross.
Habitat:— Grows on sand under Eucalyptus L’Héritier de Brutelle (1789: 18) or Allocasuarina Johnson (1982: 73) in shrubland with Triodia .
Conservation status:— National: Endangered. WA: Critically Endangered, Declared Rare Flora.
Selected specimens (6 examined):— Approximate locality data are given because the species is rare. WESTERN AUSTRALIA. Coolgardie: Type population near Norseman, M . I .H. Brooker 6429, 21 August 1979 ( CANB, PERTH); ibid., D. J . E . Whibley 4593, 29 October 1974 ( AD, PERTH); near Southern Cross , 31°10’S, 119°20’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 9697 & L . G . Cook, 3 September 2004 ( CANB, PERTH) .
Affinity:— The molecular phylogeny ( Fig. 1A View FIGURE 1 ) indicates that D. microcarpa has no close relative. The small sizes of the flowers and pods distinguish this species from nearly all its congeners: the pods are the smallest in the genus and only D. ulicifolia and D. arthropoda sometimes have similarly small flowers. Daviesia arthropoda and D. ulicifolia are easily distinguished by their horizontally flattened, well-spaced phyllodes, spinescent branchlet tips and larger pods (7.5–8 mm long). Daviesia microcarpa is most similar to D. ulicifolia subsp. stenophylla in coastal northern New South Wales and Queensland. As well as similar floral size and fruiting morphology, these taxa have 1-flowered inflorescences in common. However, the phyllodes of D. ulicifolia subsp. stenophylla are trigonous in cross-section, the habit is open and divaricate, the branchlets are spinescent, the standard lacks auricles and has a claw nearly as long as the lamina, and the pod is acute. Daviesia genistifolia is also very similar but can be distinguished by its well-spaced phyllodes, 2–6-flowered racemes and zygomorphic calyx with the upper two lobes united into a lip. It does not occur west of the Flinders Ranges in South Australia.
III. Actinomorphic Calyx Clade
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
I |
"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University |
CANB |
Australian National Botanic Gardens |
PERTH |
Western Australian Herbarium |
J |
University of the Witwatersrand |
E |
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh |
AD |
State Herbarium of South Australia |
L |
Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch |
G |
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |