Lacomucinaea lineata (Linneaus f.) Nickrent & M.A.García 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.224.2.4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/12332317-FFB3-9441-1898-18E6BEEBFB42 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Lacomucinaea lineata (Linneaus f.) Nickrent & M.A.García |
status |
comb. nov. |
Lacomucinaea lineata (Linneaus f.) Nickrent & M.A.García View in CoL , comb. nov. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ).
Basionym: Thesium lineatum Linnaeus. (1782: 162) View in CoL . Type:— SOUTH AFRICA. “Habitat in Cap. Bonae spei.”, C.P. Thunberg s.n.
(holotype UPS-THUNB 6035!). Thesium ephedroides A.W. Hill (1910: 183) View in CoL . Type:— NAMIBIA. Kabub Mts., 1630 m, October 1906, P.T. Range 65 (holotype B!). Thesium viscibaccatum Dinter (1926: 452) . Type:— NAMIBIA. Klinghardt Gebirge, 26 September 1922, M.K. Dinter 4006 (holotype
PRE!).
Additional specimens examined: SOUTH AFRICA: Barrydale , hellig van de Warmwaterberg. Klipperige bodem, 21 Aug. 1971, E. Coppejans EC1016 ( BR) ; Van Rhynsdorp DA, SW trending rocky slopes above Wiedouw River , 5 Feb. 1982, P. Goldblatt 6526 ( BR) ; Along R354 , ca. 30 km north of Matjiesfontein, 29 Oct. 1996, D. L. Nickrent et al. 4088.5 ( SIU) ; Prieska District . About 3 km north west of Prieska, 3 Apr. 2000, P. Balkwill & L. McDade 11765 ( MO) ; Namaqualand , Bulletrap ( N of Springbok), 3–4 km on road to Nigramoep, 2 Sept. 2006, L. Mucina 020906/12 ( MA, NBG) ; 5.34 air km E of Middelplaas , 25 Nov. 2007, M. A. García et al. DLN 5388 ( MA, SIU, NBG) ; Hills above rest area along R 341 , ca. 3.6 air km S of Klaarstroom at Peraboom Drif, 27 Nov. 2007, M. A. García et al. DLN 5397 ( MA, SIU, NBG) . NAMIBIA: Lüderitz District . Farm Süd-Witpütz, Lavranos & Pehlemann 21691 ( MO) .
Description
Shrub to 2 m tall, densely branched, compact or spreading; bark on basal stems furrowed and ridged, grey to brown; young branches sometimes succulent, glabrous, glaucous, with yellow-green longitudinal striations that branch dichotomously and also anastomose. These striations later, following periderm growth, form the ridges on the bark of older branches. Shorter branches becoming spinose with age, with dry, tapering, pungent apices. Leaves alternate, simple, ciliolate when young, sparcely distributed on younger growth, petiole ca. 1/5 to 1/6 length of leaf, blade succulent, initially somewhat fusiform, terete, tapering more at the distal end, apex acute, 2–5 × 1 mm, caducous, progressively senescing on developmentally older stems, petiole and leaf apex senescing first, eventually followed by the middle portion of the leaf; leaf abscising leaving a persistent brown petiolar stub or sometimes as a whithered whole leaf; lateral branches subtended by one main bract and two transverse ones above. Flowers solitary, peduncle 1.5 mm long, subtended by a bract, at apex with two transversely oriented (with respect to bract), triangular to sublanceolate bracteoles, initially green, becoming brown and squamate, apex acuminate, senescing, margin ciliolate. Flower pedicel 1 mm long, merging gradually into the receptacle. Calyx not differentiated (fused to ovary and hypanthial cup), ca. 0.6 mm high, bearing a slightly raised, elliptic gland at lobe junctions. Corolla actinomorphic, (4)5-merous, 2.5–3.0 mm wide, corolla tube not present, lobes valvate, triangular, 1–1.5 mm long, uncinate, outer surface glabrous, inner surface without apical trichomes (beard), white. Stamens 5, antipetalous, inserted at junction of disk and corolla, at anthesis reaching only midway to corolla lobes, anther and filament each 0.4–0.5 mm long, anther subbasifixed, dithecal, tetrasporangiate, introrse, connected to corolla by post-staminal trichomes. Pollen heteropolar, tricolpate (see Fig. 4a in Stearn 1972). Disk lining hypanthium, at rim with distinct rounded lobes alternating with corolla lobes. Style filiform, ca. 0.8 mm long, stigma small, 2-lobed, lobes globose, positioned at ca. the height of the anthers. Ovary inferior, unilocular, placentation free-central with 3 pendulous ovules, placenta contorted with a peg-shaped projection at its apex. Fruit a drupe, pedunculate with persistent, scarious subtending bracteoles, white at maturity, globose to ellipsoid, 5–8 mm long, surface smooth, no reticulum visible, crowned by persistent, scarious, brown corolla lobes. Seed enclosed in a stony endocarp.
Lacomucinaea has a number of morphological features that are generally considered xeric adaptations. The glaucous stems are photosynthetic and, particularly on shorter axes, may become shoot spines such as those seen in Ulex Linnaeus (1753: 741 ; Fabaceae ). Both its leaves and distal stems are succulent. The caducous nature of its leaves, not seen in any other species in Thesiaceae , are reminiscent of this syndrome in succulents such as Opuntia subulata Engelmann (1883: 627 ; Cactaceae ) and some members of Euphorbia Linnaeus (1753: 450 ; Euphorbiaceae ). The striations that inspired the specific name of this plant are formed by cortical fibers that form long , raised ridges on the stems. Anatomically, these are primary phloem fiber bundles (not collenchyma as stated in Hendrych 1972), similar to the bast fibers seen in stems of flax ( Linum usitatissimum Linnaeus (1753: 277 ; Linaceae )). For Lacomucinaea and Osyridicarpos , these bundles are located in the cortex near the epidermis with a cushion of collenchyma in between. This arrangement is different from that seen in many South African Thesium with decurrent leaves where the primary phloem fiber bundles are located deep in the cortex near the vascular cambium. (Supplementary File S2).
Lacomucinaea is widely distributed in southern Africa ranging from central South Africa to Namibia ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). It has not been reported for Botswana ( Setshogo, 2005) but might be expected in the savanna biome in the southwestern part of that country. Examination of its distribution across biomes and bioregions of South Africa ( Mucina & Rutherford, 2006) shows it is most abundant in the Succulent Karoo and Nama-Karoo biomes. This plant is nearly absent in the Fynbos biome, with the exception of the Hantam Plateau Dolerite Renosterveld, part of the Granite and Dolerite Renosterveld Bioregion ( Mucina & Rutherford 2006). It is also known from the Great Fish Noorsveld vegetation unit of the Albany Thicket biome near Grahamstown.
E |
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh |
BR |
Embrapa Agrobiology Diazothrophic Microbial Culture Collection |
P |
Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants |
L |
Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch |
SIU |
Southern Illinois University |
MO |
Missouri Botanical Garden |
N |
Nanjing University |
MA |
Real Jardín Botánico |
NBG |
South African National Biodiversity Institute |
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
A |
Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum |
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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 |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Lacomucinaea lineata (Linneaus f.) Nickrent & M.A.García
Nickrent, Daniel L. & García, Miguel A. 2015 |
Thesium viscibaccatum
Dinter 1926: 452 |
Thesium ephedroides A.W. Hill (1910: 183)
A. W. Hill 1910: 183 |
Thesium lineatum
Linnaeus. 1782: 162 |