Anthurium tacotalpense Díaz Jim. & Pérez-Farr., 2022

Pérez-Farrera, Miguel Ángel, Jiménez, Pedro Díaz, Croat, Thomas B., Hentrich, Heiko, Vega, José Padilla & Aguilar-Rodríguez, Pedro A., 2022, Anthurium tacotalpense (Araceae), a new species from Mexico, Phytotaxa 538 (1), pp. 74-78 : 75-77

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.538.1.6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6344871

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DB879F-0F78-531E-F3AC-CB53FED9BE9C

treatment provided by

Plazi (2022-03-06 19:12:35, last updated 2024-11-29 08:09:42)

scientific name

Anthurium tacotalpense Díaz Jim. & Pérez-Farr.
status

sp. nov.

Anthurium tacotalpense Díaz Jim. & Pérez-Farr. sp. nov. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 )

Anthurium tacotalpense is morphologically similar to A. cerrobaulense , but differs from that species in having adaxially flat petioles (vs. sharply sulcate), longer spadix (7–8 vs. 4.0– 4.4 cm) and immature green berries (vs. dull violet-purple), orange when mature (vs. red to red-orange).

Type:— MEXICO. Tabasco: Municipio Tacotalpa, ejido Poaná, Selva altaperennifolia, 17°32’09”N 092°44’12”W, 60 m, 03 November 2009, Pedro Díaz Jiménez, A GoogleMaps . Garduza & M . E . Sosa 1009 (holotype UJAT!, isotypes MO!, HEM!) .

Terrestrial on rocky, steep slopes or epipetric, to 0.65 m tall; stems 10–20 cm long, 1.5–3.0 cm diam.; leaf scars ca. 1.5 cm wide; roots 1.5–3.0 mm thick, directed downward; cataphylls subcoriaceous, (3) 5–7 cm long, acute at apex, light green, drying light brown, persisting intact at apex, splitting into linear fibers at the base. Leaves erect to spreading; petioles 26–56 cm long, 3–5 mm diam., D–shaped, flattened adaxially; geniculum 1.0– 2.3 cm long, 5.0– 6.5 mm diam., flattened adaxially; blades ovate-triangular, acute at apex, broadly lobed at base, 21–43 cm long, 14–33 cm wide, broadest at point of petiole attachment; anterior lobe 9.0– 18.5 cm long; margins entire or undulate, straight or convex from base to apex; posterior lobes 9–24 cm long, 6.5–14.5 cm wide, directed outward, straight or overlapping; sinus triangular to spathulate, sometimes parabolic or hippocrepiform; upper surface dark green and semiglossy; lower surface light green, semiglossy, drying brown, semiglossy on both surfaces; midrib narrowly raised above, acute below; basal veins 4–5 pairs, the 1st free to base, departing midrib ca. 60° angle, 2nd to 3 rd fused 0.5–1.0 cm, 3 rd to 4 th fused 2.0– 2.5 cm, raised in weak valleys above, raised and light green to whitish below; posterior ribs naked; primary lateral veins 5–7 pairs, departing midrib at 55°–75° angle, weakly raised or flat above, raised below; collective veins arising from 1 st pair of basal veins, flat and slightly visible above, weakly raised below, 7–12 mm from the margin. Inflorescence erect-spreading, about as long as the leaves; peduncle 34–67 cm long, 2–4 mm diam.; spathe reflexed, lanceolate, thin, light green, 6–10 cm long, 1.3–2.5 cm wide, acuminate at the apex, rounded at the base, inserted ca. 40–50° angle on peduncle; spadix tapered, green at anthesis, light brown-matte and semi-glossy in post-anthesis, 7–13 cm long, 5–7 mm diam. at the base, 3.0– 3.5 mm diam. at the apex; flowers square or rhombic, 1.5–1.8 mm long, 3–4 mm wide, the sides ± straight; 2–5 flowers visible in either spiral; tepals light green, papillate minutely, sparse droplets appearing at anthesis, the lateral tepals 0.3–1.5 mm wide, the inner margin ± straight; pistil weakly emergent, matte; stigma oblong, 0.1–0.3 mm long, presence of small-transparent droplets in the female phase; anthers yellow; thecae ellipsoid; pollen yellow. Infructescence pendent; spadix to 8–10 cm long, ca. 1.5 cm diam.; berries orange at maturity, broadly obovoid or subglobose, truncate or sunk at apex, 5–10 mm long, 5.0– 7.5 mm wide; seeds 1 or 2, flattened on one side if 2, round or oblong, white-yellowish, 5–7 mm long, 4–7 mm wide.

Distribution, habitat and conservation status: — Anthurium tacotalpense is endemic to the municipality of Tacotalpa, state of Tabasco, Mexico. It grows in the understory or edge of the forest, between 50 and 150 m, on karstic rocks in “bosque tropical perennifolio” (sensu Rzedowski 1978) or lower montane rain forest (sensu Breedlove 1981). The habitat has irregular topography with slopes of up to 70% and cliffs. The geology of this region comprises Eocene continental marine strata with Oligocene marine inclusions. Its limestone rock has eroded to form a karst topography ( López-Mendoza 1980; López-Hernández 1994), and the soil is a shallow tropical rendzina. According to the extent of occurrence and area of occupancy, the new species is considered critically endangered (CR; IUCN 2001).

Phenology: —Its flowering and fruiting has been recorded in February, July, June, August, September, October and November.

Eponymy: — This species is named for the municipality of Tacotalpa , Tabasco, where the type locality is located.

Additional specimens examined (paratypes): — MEXICO. Tabasco: Municipio Tacotalpa, Cerro al noroeste del Ej. Lázaro Cárdenas, a 1.5 km del Ejido., 17°33’04”N 092°45’34”W, 130 m, 08 July 1981, Clark P. Cowan, Sergio Zamudio R. & M.A. Magaña A GoogleMaps . 3402 ( CSAT!, MO!); Municipio Tacotalpa, Kolem Chen, 17°26’32”N 092°45’30”W, 79 m, 16 March 2008, Pedro Díaz Jiménez 438 ( MO!, UJAT!); GoogleMaps Kolem Chen, 17°26’31”N 092°45’31”W, 92 m, 03 June 2021, Pedro Díaz Jiménez 1577 ( UJAT!) GoogleMaps .

Notes: — Anthurium tacotalpense represents the thirty-second taxa of Anthurium sect. Andiphilum in Mexico (Croat et al. unpubl. data). It is recognized for its terrestrial and epipetric habit, D–shaped and adaxially flattened petioles, ovate-triangular blades, green spadix at anthesis and orange berries at maturity. It can be easily confused with A. cerrobaulense , an epiphytic or epipetric (rarely terrestrial) species from Chiapas and Oaxaca, Mexico. However, A. cerrobaulense has sharply sulcate adaxially petioles, shorter spadix and immature dull berries violet-purple. Furthermore, A. cerrobaulense grows in Quercus -Pinus forests, between 830–1,600 m ( Croat 1983).

All specimens of Anthurium tacotalpense collected in southern Tabasco had previously been identified as A. berriozabalense ( Díaz Jiménez et al. 2015) , a species described by Matuda (1951) from Las Vistas, north of Berriozabal, Chiapas, but the latter species is characterized by having blades with the entire margins, straight or concave from the base to the apex, the anterior lobe and posterior lobes narrower, and the posterior lobes directed outward ( Croat 1983), while in A. tacotalpense the blades have margins entire or undulate, either straight or convex from the base to apex, the anterior lobe and posterior lobes are almost twice as wide, and the posterior lobes directed outward, straight or overlapping.

Breedlove, D. (1981) Introduction to Flora of Chiapas. California Academy of Science Press. California E. U., 29 pp.

Croat, T. B. (1983) A revision of the genus Anthurium (Araceae) of Mexico and Central America. Part I: Mexico and Middle America. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 70: 211 - 420. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 2399049

Diaz Jimenez, P., Guadarrama-Olivera, M. A & Croat, T. B. (2015) Diversidad floristica de Araceae en el estado de Tabasco, Mexico. Botanical Sciences 93: 131 - 142. https: // doi. org / 10.17129 / botsci. 238

IUCN. (2001) IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: Version 3. 1. IUCN Species Survival, 31 pp.

Lopez-Hernandez, E. S. (1994) La vegetacion y la flora de la sierra de Tabasco. Universidad Juarez Autonoma de Tabasco, Mexico, Villahermosa, Tabasco, 88 pp.

Lopez-Mendoza, R. (1980) Tipos de vegetacion y su distribucion en el estado de Tabasco y norte de Chiapas. Cuadernos Universitarios. Serie Agronomia 1. Chapingo, Mexico, 121 pp.

Matuda, E. (1951) Nuevas Araceas de Mexico. Anales del Instituto de Biologia de la Universidad Nacional de Mexico 22: 369 - 383.

Rzedowski, J. (1978) La Vegetacion de Mexico. Edit Limusa, Mexico, D. F., 432 pp.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 2. Anthurium tacotalpense. A. Cultivated adult plant showing upper surface, lobes and margins of the blades; B. Inflorescence in the male phase with its yellow stamens; C. Portion of spadix in male phase showing the flowers, tepals and pistils with black stigmas (not receptive); D. Infructescence with mature (orange) and immature (green) fruits. Scale bars: A = 10 cm; B = 2 cm; C = 1 mm; D = 2 cm. Photos:A–D: Pedro Díaz Jiménez.

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

M

Botanische Staatssammlung München

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

UJAT

Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco

MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

HEM

Universidad de Ciencias y Artes de Chiapas

P

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

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

CSAT

Colegio de Postgraduados, Campus Tabasco

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Alismatales

Family

Araceae

Genus

Anthurium