Tanaecium tetramerum (A.H.Gentry) Zuntini & L.G.Lohmann, TAXON 65(5): 1059. 2016.

Frazao, Annelise & Lohmann, Lucia G., 2019, An updated synopsis of Tanaecium (Bignonieae, Bignoniaceae), PhytoKeys 132, pp. 31-52 : 44-46

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.132.37538

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D436D096-ABEA-5638-AC82-63657514453C

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Tanaecium tetramerum (A.H.Gentry) Zuntini & L.G.Lohmann, TAXON 65(5): 1059. 2016.
status

 

19. Tanaecium tetramerum (A.H.Gentry) Zuntini & L.G.Lohmann, TAXON 65(5): 1059. 2016. View in CoL Fig. 1I View Figure 1

Sphingiphila tetramera A.H.Gentry, Syst. Bot. 15: 277-279, fig. 1. 1990. Type: Paraguay. Alto Paraguay: Chovoreca, moist sandy soil along pond in open cerrado vegetation, 19°20'S 59°05'W, 12 Aug 1983, W. Hahn 1600 (holotype, MO [ MO– 077156]!; isotypes, G [G00094221] image!, MBM– 117809 not seen, MO [ MO– 077155]!, NY [00328929]!, PY– 3783!, US [00432848]!).

Habitat and distribution.

Tanaecium tetramerum is known from Central South America, where it occurs in Bolivia (Cochabamba, Santa Cruz), and Paraguay (Alto Paraguay, Chaco). This species occurs in xerophytic vegetation along the Chaco, in transition areas between the Chaco and Bolivian Chiquitano, Interandian, and Andean valleys. Tanaecium tetramerum generally grows on sandy soils or rocky outcrops.

Phenology.

Flowering: January to February, August and November; fruiting: January to February, April, and July.

Notes.

Tanaecium tetramerum is characterized by a series of unique morphological features that allow this species to be easily separated from other species of Tanaecium such as the thorn-tipped branchlets, terminal leaflets never replaced by tendrils, corollas actinomorphic, hypocrateriform, and 4-lobed ( Gentry 1990; Pace et al. 2016) (Tab. 1 View Table 1 ).