Diospyros lowryi G.E. Schatz, 2021

Schatz, George E., Lowry Ii, Porter P., Rakouth, Hasina N. & Randrianaivo, Richard, 2021, Taxonomic studies of Diospyros (Ebenaceae) from the Malagasy region. VI. New species of large trees from Madagascar, Candollea 76 (2), pp. 201-236 : 220-222

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.15553/c2021v762a3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F5091D-FFBC-5F11-FF94-FABC9B9C01F9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Diospyros lowryi G.E. Schatz
status

sp. nov.

Diospyros lowryi G.E. Schatz , sp. nov. ( Fig. 11).

Holotypus: MADAGASCAR. Reg. Analanjirofo [Prov. Toamasina]: Masoala Peninsula , 21.II.1989, fr., Schatz & Lowry 2617 (MO-3706473!; iso-: K, P [ P03975074 ]!, TAN [ TAN001945 About TAN ]!, WAG [ WAG.1180486] image!) .

Diospyros lowryi G.E. Schatz is distinguished from other members of the genus in Madagascar by its ovate to elliptic, glabrous lamina with an abruptly short acuminate apex and its paired axillary infrutescences, each with 3– 6 fruits, the ovoid to elliptic fruit densely covered with short, appressed, beige trichomes 0.2–0.4 mm long, rendering the fruit beige in vivo, light brown in sicco.

Tree 20–25 m tall, 25 cm DBH. Young stems terete, sparsely covered with minute, erect, white trichomes 0.1 mm long. Leaves distichous, lamina 2.7–6 × 1.2–3.3 cm, ovate to elliptic, chartaceous, glabrous on both surfaces, base rounded to cuneate to acuminate, margin flat to slightly revolute, apex abruptly short acuminate, acumen 3– 8 mm long, the very tip rounded, midvein very slightly impressed above, raised below, venation brochidodromous, with 5–7 secondary veins per side, indistinct above, slightly raised below, tertiary venation reticulate; petiole 3–5 mm long, 1 mm in diam., rather sparsely covered with short, appressed trichomes c. 0.3 mm long, glabrescent. Male flowers in axillary cymose inflorescences of 2–4 flowers, 2–4 mm long, each flower subtended by a bracteole, the axes and bracteole orange-brown, pedicel c. 1 mm long, <1 mm in diam., densely covered with short, appressed, light beige trichomes c. 0.3 mm long; calyx broadly urceolate, 1 × 1.5 mm, entire, rather densely covered with short, appressed, light beige trichomes c. 0.2–0.3 mm long; corolla obconical in bud; stamens c. 18, immature. Female flowers not seen. Fruits axillary, borne in paired cymose infructescences, each with 3– 6 fruits, the axes densely covered with short, appressed, light brown trichomes c. 0.2–0.3 mm long; pedicel in fruit c. 1 mm long, c. 1.5–2 mm in diam., densely covered with appressed, light brown trichomes c. 0.2 mm long; fruiting calyx broadly cupuliform, 2 × 5–6 mm, entire, sparsely covered with appressed, light brown trichomes c. 0.2 mm long, margin entire, flat, dark chocolate brown in sicco, pedicel scar 1.5 mm in diam.; fruits ovoid to ellipsoid, 12–15 × 6–8 mm, slightly asymmetrical, beige in vivo, light brown in sicco, densely covered with short, appressed, beige trichomes c. 0.2–0.4 mm long, apex acute, shortly apiculate, apiculum 0.5 mm long. Seeds 1–3, ovoid to ellipsoid, 10–12 × 4–5 mm, glabrous, black, shiny.

Etymology. – The specific epithet honors my colleague Porter P. Lowry II, who has led the Missouri Botanical Garden’s program in Madagascar since 1986. Although he is a specialist in Araliaceae , in 2009 he agreed to work together with me on a revision of Malagasy Ebenaceae , a collaboration that has surpassed our wildest expectations.

Vernacular names. – “Maintipototra” (Service Forestier 12978); “Maintimpototra à petites feuilles” (Service Forestier 15365).

Distribution and ecology. – Diospyros lowryi is restricted to the area around the Baie d’Antongil, where it has been collected at just two sites, near Ambanizana, situated just outside Masoala National Park, and at the Farankaraina Forestry Station, to the east of Maroantsetra ( MADAGASCAR CATALOGUE, 2021). It occurs in low-elevation humid forest.

Phenology. – Flowering material has been collected in

November, and fruits in February and March.

Conservation status. – Diospyros lowryi has an extremely restricted geographic range in the form of an Area of Occupancy of 8 km ². It is known from just outside the protected area of Masoala, where it is threatened by exploitation of trees for firewood and house construction material, which will result in continuing decline. With respect to the most serious

mm [A–D: Réserves Naturelles 9731, P; E: Lowry et al. 7482, from photo] [Drawing: Alain Jouy]

plausible threat of exploitation of trees for firewood and house construction material, D. lowryi exists at two locations, and it was recently assessed for its risk of extinction as “Endangered” [EN B2ab(iii,v)] ( IUCN, 2021).

Notes. – Diospyros lowryi belongs to a loosely defined group of species in Madagascar characterized by 3-merous flowers and a small calyx that is generally cupuliform and entire or shallowly lobed, which includes several species previously placed by PERRIER DE LA BÂTHIE (1952) in the genus Maba (see above under D. andohahelensis ), as well as perhaps 25 additional new species that remain to be described. Within this group, D. lowryi can be distinguished by its ovate to elliptic, glabrous lamina with an abruptly acuminate apex and its axillary, paired infructescences, each with 3–6 fruits, the ovoid to elliptic fruits densely covered with appressed, beige trichomes 0.2–0.4 mm long, rendering the fruit beige in vivo, light brown in sicco.

Additional specimen examined. – MADAGASCAR.Reg. Analanjirofo [Prov. Toamasina]: Farankaraina, 4.III.1955, fr., Service Forestier 12978 ( MO, P, TEF); ibid. loco, 25.XI.1955, ♂ fl., Service Forestier 15365 ( G, MO, P, TEF) .

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

TAN

Parc de Tsimbazaza

WAG

Wageningen University

MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

TEF

Centre National de la Recherche Appliquée au Developement Rural

G

Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Ericales

Family

Ebenaceae

Genus

Diospyros

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF