Podocarpus bidwillii, Hooibr. ex Endlicher, 1847
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.220.2.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C6FD3D-8E76-FF9D-FF5F-FE70FBE0F989 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Podocarpus bidwillii |
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As described by Endlicher, Podocarpus bidwillii (as Bidwilli) translates to read: ‘Eupodocarp with leaves spreading everywhere, linear-lanceolate (1 inch: 1½ lines), on both sides narrowed, mucronate, without nerves, and with acute leaf-bud scales ’ [italics mine] ( Endlicher 1847: 213). Podocarpus bidwillii was listed, and presumably accepted, in early European and American catalogues, synopses and conifer manuals, eg., Lindley & Gordon (1851), Dietrich (1852), Carrière (1855), Gordon (1858), Henkel & Hochstetter (1865), and Hoopes (1868).
Italian botanist and conifer specialist Filippo Parlatore (1868: 514) cited P. bidwillii as a synonym of the New Zealand forest tree Podocarpus totara , and his treatment was followed by the New Zealand flora writer Cheeseman (1925: 111), and the American botanist Netta Gray (1956: 163). Later, Gray (1958: 443), in a revision of South Pacific species of Podocarpus , cited P. bidwillii as a synonym of P. spinulosus . This relationship was established much earlier by the French botanist and conifer specialist Élie-Abel Carrière (1867: 654) who made the following observations:
‘I have been able to assure myself after an examination of specimens and live individuals that Podocarpus spinulosa R.Br., and Bidwilli, Hoibr. , are identical...... I even add that P.laeta, Bidwilli , pungens, spinulosa , Alpina and Lawrencii, are most probably only forms of P.Totara .’
There is a specimen of a cultivated plant of P. spinulosus (as ‘spinulosa’) in the Natural History Museum Paris (P01633546!) from the ‘Herbier De L’ Abbé Lelièvé’ bearing its characteristic leaves with a mid-dorsal ridge, resting buds with acute leaf-bud scales, and labelled as such by Carrière (Carr. 453) on 3 July 56 [1856]. It is now generally accepted that Endlicher’s P. bidwillii is synonymous with P. spinulosus , a conifer of shrub-like proportions with acute leaf-bud scales with fine free tips, confined to heathland over poor soils and coastal sand deposits, and endemic to eastern Australia ( Hill 1998: 53).
Attempts to locate duplicate specimens of Endlicher’s P. bidwillii have so far been unsuccessful. However, in the Berlin Herbarium, there is a specimen of a cultivated plant acquired in 1913 from the ‘Herbarium Dendrologicum’ of the dendrologist Karl Koch, and labelled in his hand ‘ Podocarpus Bidwilli’.
Underneath, in an unknown hand, are the words ‘ist sicher falsch’ [is certainly wrong]. Below this on the same label, also in an unknown hand, is written ‘= Podocarpus laeta’. The digital image of this specimen (B10 0426223, Fig.1 View FIGURE 1 ), on close examination, supports its placement under P. laetus as described by Endlicher, in particular its terminal resting buds with obtuse leaf-bud scales, and leaves with a mid-dorsal groove or furrow.
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