Hildegardia dauphinensis J. G. Zaborsky, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/a2009n1a8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3C96D-FFA3-EC67-42EA-FA68FC2073C6 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Hildegardia dauphinensis J. G. Zaborsky |
status |
sp. nov. |
Hildegardia dauphinensis J. G. Zaborsky , sp. nov.
( Figs 2 View FIG ; 3A, B View FIG )
Differt a H. perrieri (Hochr.) Arènes pilis stellatis 18-22- ramosis, calycibus et laminis insidentibus et marginibus laminarum non revolutis.
TYPUS. — Madagascar. Toliara Province, N of Ft Dauphin [Taolagnaro], on road to Ste Luce , 6 km E of main road, main block N of road, white sand littoral forest, block S-7 of QIT-FER, 24°47’S, 47°10’E, 15 m, 13.XI.1990, leaves and flowers, G. E. Schatz, N. Dumetz, D. Faber- Langendoen, A. Randrianasolo GoogleMaps & R. Rabevohitra 3001 (holo-, MO!; iso-, P!, TAN!).
DESCRIPTION
Deciduous tree 14 m tall. Leaf blades 13-15 × 15-16 cm, subrotund, palmately 7-veined at the base, the apex obtuse to acute, the base cordate, the margins entire and flat, not revolute, glabrous above, covered beneath with stellate hairs 0.8- 1.2 mm in diameter, each hair with 18-22 arms, hairs of domatia in axils of primary veins simple, 1 mm long. Inflorescence unknown, the flowers of the only known specimen collected from the ground. Pedicels not seen. Stipe 1.5-3 mm long; calyx 27-40 × 8-14 mm, campanulate to infundibuliform, slightly constricted at the middle, slightly flaring above, reportedly yellow-orange, thick, fleshy, the lobes 6-7.2 × 3-5 mm, narrowly triangular, acute, the entire outer surface of the calyx covered in simple and stellate hairs, simple hairs 0.4-0.6 mm long, stellate hairs 0.8-1.2 mm in diameter, the lowest 2 mm of the inside of the calyx tube filled with abundant simple hairs 2 mm long; androgynophore 28-30 mm long, covered by sparse stellate hairs 2-2.3 mm in diameter, the anthers 1-1.5 mm long, bilocular, arranged in a globose head of 5 groups, with 10 anthers per group, reportedly beige. Immature carpels 1 mm long. Fruit unknown.
REMARKS
Hildegardia dauphinensis most closely resembles H. perrieri (Hochr.) Arènes but lacks the revolute leaf margins characteristic of that species ( Arènes 1959). It also has a unique indument of multibranched stellate hairs that completely covers the leaf undersides ( Fig. 3A View FIG ). These multi-branched hairs are also interspersed among simple hairs on the calyces ( Fig. 3B View FIG ). These stellate hairs are unlike those seen in the other three Malagasy species. Each hair is stellate with 18-22 arms radiating from the center. This interesting hair structure immediately sets it apart from H. perrieri as well as the other Malagasy species. Its fruit was not collected and is unknown. The new species does not match any of the known African species treated in Dorr & Barnett (1990). These authors hypothesize that the Malagasy and African species form a natural group based on the presence of a tubular calyx, short calyx lobes, and flowering when leafless. Hildegardia dauphinensis matches these criteria as well. Wilkie et al. (2006) provided evidence that H. barteri (Mast.) Kosterm. , an African species, and H. populifolia Schott & Endl. , an Asian species, were not closely related. It is beyond the scope of this paper to clarify the circumscription of Hildegardia View in CoL ; it is possible that further research may indicate the need to exclude the African and Malagasy species from this genus.
The new species, H. dauphinensis , is assessed as Critically Endangered because its EOO (Extent of Occupancy) is less than 100 km 2, it is only known to occur at a single location outside a protected area, and there is both current and predicted decline from human pressure and planned future mining activities, thus the criteria CR B1ab(i,ii,iii) of the IUCN (2001) apply.
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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