Daviesia anceps Turczaninow (1853: 266)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.300.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A05187DC-FF9C-D209-FF3C-525188CB502C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Daviesia anceps Turczaninow (1853: 266) |
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1. Daviesia anceps Turczaninow (1853: 266) View in CoL , Bentham (1864: 89), Crisp (1995: 1169). Type: ‘ Drum. V. n. 86.’ Holotype: KW; isotypes: BM, K (3 sheets), G, MEL, P, W
Straggling, sometimes intricate shrubs, to 50 cm high, glabrous. Root anatomy with anomalous secondary thickening (cord type). Branchlets modified to cladodes, compressed but not winged (± biconvex), 1–2 mm broad, striate when dry with warty ridges that are transparent and appearing resinous. Phyllodes all reduced to small, exstipulate scales. Inflorescence: flowers solitary in axils of uppermost 1–3 scale-leaves (= bracts), thus comprising undifferentiated racemes terminating main or lateral shoots; peduncle nil; subtending bracts triangular, 1.5–2 mm long. Pedicels 2–3 mm long. Calyx 6–7 mm long including the 1–2 mm receptacle; lobes 2.5–4 mm long; upper 2 lobes united higher and closer than the lower 3, narrowly triangular; lower 3 lobes triangular. Corolla : standard very broadly elliptic, emarginate, 8–8.5 × 7–7.5 mm including the ca. 0.75 mm claw, with 2 calli at the base of the lamina, yellow with a triangular red border, and fine red veins radiating outward, around the yellow centre; wings narrowly elliptic with a rounded, upswept apex, adaxially auriculate, also with a small lobe about 1/3-way along the abaxial margin, ca. 7.5 × 2 mm including the 1–1.5 mm claw, with a channel from the auricle to part-way along the lamina, yellow; keel half transversely broadly elliptic (canoe-shaped), acute, auriculate, saccate, ca. 7.5 × 3 mm including the ca. 2–2.5 mm claw, yellow. Stamens uniform; filaments free, terete, tapering towards the apex; anthers 2-celled, versatile. Pod obliquely shallowly obtriangular with an acute to rounded apex, turgid, 7–9 × 4–5 mm; upper suture sigmoid; lower suture acute. Seed not seen. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ).
Flowering period:— November to January. Fruiting period: from January.
Distribution:— Western Australia, localised mainly around Ravensthorpe and along the adjacent south coast, especially in Fitzgerald River National Park and the Barrens.
Habitat:— Grows in sandy loam, clayey sand and gravelly or sandy laterite, in mallee or mallee-heath.
Selected specimens (20 examined):— WESTERN AUSTRALIA. Eyre: 3 km S of Ravensthorpe , 33°37’S, 120°03’E, R GoogleMaps . D. Royce 9439, 31 January 1971 ( PERTH); 106 km from Esperance along road to Ravensthorpe, Munglinup River crossing, 33°43’S, 120°52’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 4937, 8 January 1979 ( CBG, MEL, NSW, PERTH) ;
20 • Phytotaxa 300 (1) © 2017 Magnolia Press
CRISP ET AL.
Fitzgerald River National Park , 3 km W of Annie Peak, 33°51’S, 119°57’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 5033, 11 January 1979 ( AD, BRI, CBG, MEL, NSW, PERTH); Fitzgerald River National Park , 7 km WNW of Annie Peak, 33°50’S, 119°55’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 5016, 11 January 1979 ( CBG); 12 km ESE of Ravensthorpe, 1.5 km E of Mt Desmond , 33°37’S, 120°10’E, M GoogleMaps . D. Crisp 4952, 9 January 1979 ( AD, CBG, PERTH) .
Affinity:— See discussion under D. pachyloma .
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
PERTH |
Western Australian Herbarium |
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
CBG |
Australian National Botanic Gardens, specimens pre-1993 |
MEL |
Museo Entomologico de Leon |
NSW |
Royal Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium of New South Wales |
W |
Naturhistorisches Museum Wien |
AD |
State Herbarium of South Australia |
BRI |
Queensland Herbarium |
E |
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh |
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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