Bulbophyllum chrysolabium L. Li & D.P. Ye, 2018

Li, Lin, Ye, De-Ping & Zeng, Song-Jun, 2018, Bulbophyllum chrysolabium (Orchidaceae, Epidendroideae, Malaxideae), a new species from Yunnan, China, PhytoKeys 111, pp. 61-68 : 62-65

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.111.28136

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E10D8D88-CF5B-259F-06BC-C11ADE28F890

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Bulbophyllum chrysolabium L. Li & D.P. Ye
status

sp. nov.

Bulbophyllum chrysolabium L. Li & D.P. Ye sp. nov. Figures 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2

Diagnosis.

Bulbophyllum chrysolabium is distinguished from all known congeners by having the following unique combination of features: obliquely broadly-based triangular petals with a long filiform apex; lip densely glandular papillose on both sides and conspicuously ciliolate along margins; lip auricles well developed, narrowly falcate, tapering to a long sharp point at the apex; stelidia subulate and twisted inwards, slightly exceeding operculum.

Taxonomic notes.

Bulbophyllum chrysolabium appears to be related to B. orientale Seidenf. ( Seidenfaden 1979: 138), especially in narrowly falcate lip auricles and twisted stelidia, but differs in distinctly longer floral bracts (almost twice as long as the pedicel and ovary); petals with long filiform apices, a rather smaller lip (ca. 2.8 mm long), significantly glandular-papillose and ciliolate at margins; stelidia slightly exceeding operculum and distinctly longer than column. With respect to filiform petals, B. chrysolabium is also superficially similar to B. morphologorum Kräenzl. (1908: 89), however, the latter have a fat, conical protuberance or callus on the front of the column near its base and scape much longer than rachis. In addition, it has subulate, not twisted stelidia, considerably longer than operculum; lip auricles not falcate, but rather obtuse at the apex. A detailed morphological comparison between B. chrysolabium and its allied species is presented in Table 1 View Table 1 .

Type.

CHINA. Yunnan Province. Menglian Dai, Lahu and Va Autonomous County (referred to as Menglian County), 1400-1600 m alt., 23 May 2014, L. Li 1209, (holotype, IBSC! isotype, IBK!).

Description.

Epiphytic herbs. Rhizome rigid, creeping, 2-3 mm thick. Pseudobulbs borne on rhizome at an interval of 3-5 cm, ovoid to narrowly ovoid, 2.2-3.5 cm high, base often covered with remnant fibrous sheaths. Leaf apical, single, coriaceous, oblong to linear-oblong, 12-14 cm × 1.8-2.2 cm, subsessile, apex retuse or minutely notched. Inflorescences developing from base of pseudobulb, with pendulous densely many-flowered raceme; scape 5 to 6 cm long, nearly completely enveloped by 4 or 5 sterile, broadly ovate sheaths; sheath 1.5-1.8 cm long, scaled, light brownish; rachis about 6.5 cm long, with many flowers spirally arranged into a compact spike-like cylindrical raceme, opening simultaneously; floral bracts light brownish, dry papyraceous, oblong-lanceolate, ca. 6.5 mm long, almost twice as long as the pedicel and ovary, apex apiculate; pedicel and ovary ca. 3.5 mm, longitudinally slightly grooved. Flowers resupinate, not much opening, with unpleasant fishy smell. Sepals 3-6-veined, greenish-yellow, without spots or stripes. Dorsal sepal oblong-ovate or narrowly ovate, 4.5-5.0 mm × 1.0-1.5 mm, 3-veined, abaxially sparsely papillate, apex shortly aristate or apiculate, often recurved. Lateral sepals obliquely oblong-ovate, 5.5-6 mm × 2.0-2.5 mm, 5-6-veined, abaxially sparsely papillate, base adnate to column foot, margins strongly involute, with the apex shortly caudate, loosely adhering along the lower edges, forming an ovoid sac. Petals pale greenish-yellow, obliquely and broadly-based triangular, apex long acuminate, tapering into a long filiform or threadlike tail, usually contorted to spirally twisted, 2.0-2.2 mm × 0.8-1.0 mm near the base, with a tail 2.8-3.0 mm long, margins somewhat irregularly denticulate or erose. Lip yellowish-orange or deep golden yellow, fleshy, oblong narrowly ovoid, 2.5-2.8 mm × 1.3-1.5 mm, mobile on a thin ligament, recurved near the base, conspicuously auriculate at the base; disc with a longitudinal central groove, apex rounded or obtuse; auricles narrowly falcate, arching forward and gradually tapering to a long sharp point at the apex; densely glandular pap illose on both sides and conspicuously ciliolate along margins, whitish. Column greenish-yellow, subcylindric, 2.0-2.2 mm tall; foot ca. 1.5 mm; stelidia well-developed and subulate, ca. 1.2 mm, often twisted inwards, equalling or slightly exceeding operculum, with a sharp point along the upper margin. Anther abaxially with a rounded crest, golden-yellow. Pollinia 4, the inner ones more than half as long as the outer ones.

Distribution and habitat.

So far known only from Menglian County in southwest Yunnan Province, China, growing as an epiphyte amongst mosses on the tree trunk near the edge of river in rather exposed circumstances in subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest.

Etymology.

The specific epithet comes from the Ancient Greek word chryso - “golden” and the Latin derived labium “labellum”, referring to the golden-yellow lip of the type.

Phenology.

Flowering observed in December.

Conservation status.

Bulbophyllum chrysolabium is known only from its type locality, where it is represented by a single population of about 30-50 individual plants or clumps. The extent of occurrence (EOO) of the species cannot be estimated and its area of occupancy (AOO) is estimated to be 4 km2, which falls within the thresholds for Critically Endangered under criterion B2. Additional individuals of this species may yet be found in adjacent areas as the investigation continues. The location is relatively inaccessible to casual hikers and the potential for habitat destruction is limited, but it is not in a national reserve or other kinds of protected areas. Fortunately, a few individuals were brought into cultivation at SCBG. Although there is limited data to determine its actual distribution range, biology and threats, the current available information (one location in a non-protected area and AOO less than 10 km2) led us to assign a preliminary status of Critically Endangered [CR B2ab(iii)] according to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria ( IUCN 2017).