Distrianthes exxonmobilensis W.N.Takeuchi, 2015

Takeuchi, Wayne, 2015, Distrianthes exxonmobilensis (Loranthaceae), a new species in a formerly monotypic genus from Papua New Guinea, Phytotaxa 207 (2), pp. 200-204 : 200-203

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.207.2.7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E77914-FFC9-3002-FF37-3336FB499F36

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Distrianthes exxonmobilensis W.N.Takeuchi
status

sp. nov.

Distrianthes exxonmobilensis W.N.Takeuchi View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 )

Ab D. molliflorae (K.Schum.) Danser floribus 1 vel 3 (nec 6) differt.

Type: — PAPUA NEW GUINEA. Western Province: Juha South , mossy montane forest on limestone, 5°53.951’S, 142°26.037’E, 975 m, 18 February 2008, Takeuchi, Gambia & Jisaka 23094 (holotype A!; isotypes CANB!, LAE!) GoogleMaps .

Stem-parasitic shrubs, glabrous. Branchlets compressed on new growth, cylindrical when older, 4–8 mm diameter at the top, nodose, straight, ascending; periderm crustaceous, pale brown (or fuliginous), lenticellate, not fissured; abscission scars crateriform, circular to rotund, 3.5–5 × 4–6 mm; internodes 4–11 cm long. Leaves opposite, exstipulate, lax, spreading; petioles 2–5 × 2–4 mm, articulate, planoconvex, transversely or reticulately wrinkled, usually concolorous with the attaching stem; leaf-blades lanceolate-ovate to elliptic, 6.2–12(–17.5) × 3.4–6.6 cm, often curved to one side, firm, thick, opaque, bifacially rugulose, adaxially sooty, abaxially orange brown to ferruginous; lamina base rounded (rarely cuneate), equal (or suboblique); margin undulate; apex attenuate, acute, or obtuse; venation brochidodromous and camptodromous, midrib slightly raised on both sides; secondaries 3–6, obscure, discolorous, filiform, near the lamina center with divergence angles of 25–60°, (10–)18–30(–42) mm apart, arcuate, closing by supramedially looping nerves or not, reticulum invisible. Inflorescence ramiflorous from branches 3–9 mm in diameter, rarely internodal; involucral bracts 2, lanceolate-ovate, 14–20 × 4–9 mm, opposed, acute, sessile, free (apparently never connate), involute, enveloping peduncles and flower bases, persisting, dark brown, papery. Flowers 6-merous, solitary or 3 together; peduncle columnar (a knobby callosity when older), 3–4 × 2.5–4(–6) mm, surfaces pale brown, flaky; pedicels absent—the flowers seated directly on peduncle summits; bracteoles 1, subtending calyces, deltate, 1–2 × 0.5– 1 mm, basally sheathing, caducous; calyx 2–3 × 2.2–2.5 mm, tube (ovary) obconical, distally flared, limb shallowly cupuliform, 0.8–1.2 mm long, margin hyaline, laciniate or lacerate; corolla sympetalous, in bud somewhat fusiform but with a conspicuously prolonged apex to 10 × 2 mm, inflated in the middle, longitudinally marked by 6 suture lines, membranous, reddish-brown, tube 32–45 × 0.8–2 × 4–6(–9) mm, straight (or curved), lobes valvate, attenuate, 12–16 × 1.5–2.5 mm, reflexed at anthesis; stamens epipetalous, inserted 7–8 mm from petal apices, erect, filaments strap-shaped, 3.5–4 × 0.4–0.5 mm, anthers linear, 4.5–5 mm long, introrse, apiculate; style sulcate, 55–60 × 0.2–0.3 mm, stigma capitate. Fruits unknown.

Etymology: —The new species is named after the Exxon Mobil tenements where many biological discoveries were made during the PNG LNG Pipeline surveys of 2008.

Field characters: —Stem-parasitic shrub; runners adhesively rooted to mossy tree trunks, vertically ascending, straight, branching at the top; leafy stems lax, spreading; blades inflexible, adaxially yellow green, abaxially whitishgreen; corolla red.

Distribution: —Known only from the type locality in the Strickland basin of Western Province, Papua New Guinea ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ).

Habitat and ecology: —Mossy forest on limestone karst, sightings from 665–975 m (collection from 975 m).

Phenology: —Populations profusely flowering in February. Many fallen flowers on forest floors but no fruits seen.

Distrianthes Danser (1929: 312) View in CoL is a genus previously recorded only from northern New Guinea, over an area between the Doorman River ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ) in Indonesian Papua and Garaina ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ) in Morobe Province ( Barlow 1981, 1997). As presently understood, Distrianthes View in CoL is defined by the presence of 6-merous and sympetalous flowers in triads enclosed by involucral bracts (ibid.).

Three species have been historically published in Distrianthes View in CoL : D. lamii (K. Krause 1924: 104) Danser (1929: 312) View in CoL , D. molliflora (K. Krause 1922: 488) Danser (1929: 312) View in CoL , and D. spathata (K. Krause 1922: 489) Danser (1929: 312) View in CoL . Indument density, inflorescence dimensions, and connation of the involucral bracts are variable and intergrading among the described taxa. Owing to this character continuity, only D. molliflora View in CoL is accepted by modern authorities ( Barlow 1981, 1997, Kuijt & Hansen 2015). While D. exxonmobilensis View in CoL represents an extreme endpoint in the existing structural variation (e.g., glabrous flowers and free bracts), reduction of the inflorescence to a single flower or triad is a new generic quality whose significance is underscored by the geographic disjunction of its occurrence. Notwithstanding its novel features, D. exxonmobilensis View in CoL is best accommodated within Distrianthes View in CoL . Generic profiles based on single species will understandably prove too narrow if the genus is actually composed of more than one taxon.

The unusual involucre of D. exxonmobilensis can be compared to Papuanthes Danser (1931: 360) , a genus with reproductive structures similar to Distrianthes . However with pluriflorous heads (to 15 flowers together), and with bracts inserted at peduncle apices (vs. basal in Distrianthes ), any relationship to Papuanthes is more distant. Comparative morphology suggests Distrianthes is descended from Amyema stock ( Barlow 1997), but the presumed phylogeny is uncorroborated. Although DNA sequencing would be insightful, silica-dried samples have thus far been unavailable. The rarity of these plants ( D. molliflora was last seen ca. 30 years ago) has constrained application of modern techniques to their study.

With the species presented here, the generic range for Distrianthes is extended across the Central Divide and into the southern side of New Guinea. The geographic separation between Distrianthes and Papuanthes is decisively removed. Except for one locality in northern PNG, Papuanthes is historically known only from the southern provinces. All previous localities for Distrianthes were from areas north of the Dividing Ranges, on terranes comprising a distinct accretional phase from the tectonic paleohistory for D. exxonmobilensis (see Pigram & Davies 1987).

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

CANB

Australian National Botanic Gardens

LAE

Papua New Guinea Forest Research Institute

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Santalales

Family

Loranthaceae

Genus

Distrianthes

Loc

Distrianthes exxonmobilensis W.N.Takeuchi

Takeuchi, Wayne 2015
2015
Loc

Distrianthes

Danser, B. H. 1929: )
1929
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