ebook img

Taxonomic notes on Mesoamerican Annona section Atta (Annonaceae), including Annona pruinosa sp. nov PDF

3 Pages·1992·1.8 MB·
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Taxonomic notes on Mesoamerican Annona section Atta (Annonaceae), including Annona pruinosa sp. nov

Taxonomic Notes on Mesoamerican Annona Section Atta (Annonaceae), Including Annona pruinosa sp. nov. George E. Sehatz Missouri Botanical Garden, P.O. Box 299, St. Louis, Missouri 63166-0299, U.S.A. Abstract. A new species of Annona sect. Atta acute, densely white-tomentose; petals 3 (the outer from the upper altitudinal limit of the Pacific dry petal whorl only, the inner whorl absent or at most forest of Nicaragua and Costa Rica is proposed based represented by tiny vestigial petals), fleshy, trique¬ upon a distinctive abaxial leaf epidermis. In addition, trous, narrowly oblong-elliptic, 1.8-2.4 cm long, the analysis of flowers discovered for Annona lon- 0.5-0.8 cm broad, the apex acute to obtuse, the gipes necessitates its transfer to section Atta. base concave inside, the outer surface white-seri¬ ceous toward the base, becoming sparsely puberu¬ During preparation of treatments of the Anno¬ lous toward the apex, the inner surface densely naceae for the Flora de Nicaragua and the Manual tomentose; stamens numerous, 1 mm long, the con¬ to the Plants of Costa Rica, a new species of nective expanded truncate discoid, minutely papil¬ Annona L. sect. Atta C. Martius has been identified lose, yellow, contrasting with the white thecae; car¬ based on material from Nicaragua and Costa Rica. pels 25-36. Fruit syncarpous, subglobose to broadly In addition, recent flowering collections of Annona ovoid, to 4.5 cm long, to 4.5 cm diam., the apex longipes Saff. from Veracruz, Mexico, reveal its rounded, the surface initially areolate, but then incorrect placement by Safford (1913) in section smooth with no evidence of the individual carpels Pilannona Saff., and indicate its proper placement at maturity, green, or light and dark green mottled, in section Atta. initially puberulous, at length glabrescent; seeds flat¬ tened ellipsoid-obovoid, to 1.6 cm long, 0.9 cm Annona (section Atta C. Martius) pruinosa Sehatz, broad, 0.6 cm thick, the seed coat very thin, smooth- sp. nov. TYPE: Nicaragua. Carazo: Finca de reticulate, light brown. Minco Cabrales, 700 m al sur del reloj, 18 June 1982 (fl, fr), L. Reyes V. 64 (holotype, Paratypes. COSTA RlCA. GUANACASTE: Parque Rincon de la Vieja, Hacienda Santa Maria, sendero a las pailas, MO; isotype, HNMN). Figure 1. 10°48'N, 85°10'W, 700-800 m, 13 Aug. 1987 (fr), G. Herrera 693 (CR, MO); El Mirador, Rio Negro, A speciebus aliis Annonae sectionis Attae laminis subtus 10°47'40"N, 85°18'35"W, 1 Oct. 1990 (fr), G. Rivera pruinosis differt. 679 (C.R, MO). PUNTARENAS: San Luis, Monteverde, Rio Tree to 10 m tall; young branches very sparsely Guacimal, 10° 16;N, 84°49'W, 700 m, 24 June 1988 (fr), Bello rt al. 24 (CR, MO, U), Canton de Puntarenas, white-tomentose, at length glabrescent. Petiole 0.8- Monteverde, cliff edge on Pacific slope, Rajo Tigre trail, 1.3 cm long, slender, deeply canaliculate, very 10°18'N, 84°48'W, 900 m, 20 Oct. 1990 (fr), Haber sparsely tomentose, drying black; lamina charta- & Zuchowski 10110 (CR, MO), 27 Dec. 1991 (fr), Sehatz ceous, elliptic to obovate-elliptic, 6.4-15 cm long, et al. 3230 (MO). Nicaragua, chontai.es: ca. 2.8 km above (N of) Cuapa, ca. 12°17'N, 85°23'W, 400-500 3.2- 8.3 cm broad, the base cuneate to obtuse, the m, 4 Sep. 1977 (fr), Stevens 3634 (HNMN, MO, WIS); apex acute to rounded, the upper surface glabrous, 2 3 km NE of Cuapa, 12°17'N, 85°22'W, 400 m, 24 the lower surface granular pruinose and initially Sep. 1983 (fr), Nee & Sebastian 28486 (HNMN, MO, sparsely white-puberulous, at length glabrescent, the WIS). BOACO: Las Pitas, carretera a Camoapa (No. 19), venation eucamptodromous with 9-14 secondary 1 2°28'N, 85°35'W, ca. 400 m, 29 Aug. 1981 (fr), Mo¬ reno 10651 (HNMN, MO). veins per side, the primary vein slightly impressed adaxially, prominently elevated and sparsely golden Distribution and habitat. Annona pruinosa is puberulous, as are the slender secondary veins, known from southern Nicaragua and the Pacific abaxially. Flowers solitary, terminal but appearing slope of the Tilaran range in northwestern Costa leaf-opposed or supra-axillary by displacement dur¬ Rica, in moist forest between 400 and 800 m, i.e., ing growth of the renewal shoot; pedicel slender, the upper altitudinal limit of the Pacific dry forest. 1.3- 2.4 cm long, to 3.1 cm long, 0.2 cm diam. The affinities of Annona pruinosa within section and becoming rigid in fruit, white-tomentose, bearing Atta lie probably with several Caribbean species (A. a minute bract 0.8 0.9 cm from the base; sepals urbaniana R. E. Fries, from Haiti; A. praetermissa triangular, 0.2-0.3 cm long, 0.3 cm broad, the apex Fawcett & Rendle, from Jamaica; and A. cubensis Novon 2; 249-251. 1992. 250 Novon Figure 1. Annona pruinosa Schatz, flowering and fruiting branch (from L. Reyes V. 64). Inset: magnification of abaxial leaf surface, x200. K. E. F ries, from Cuba), all of which possess glaucous Additional specimens examined. MEXICO. VERACRUZ: leaf undersides. In Costa Rica, collections of A. Laguna Encantada, 2 Nov. 1971 (st), Beaman 5242 (XAL); 5 km SW of Santiago Tuxtla and Hwy. 180 at pruinosa have been referred to A. lutescens Saff., bridge over the Rio Tepango (Rio Grande), 18°27'N, described from southern Mexico and Guatemala, 95°19'W, 160 m, 14 Dec. 1985 (fl). Nee 32131 (NY, which, however, possesses a fruit twice as large as WIS, XAL), 5 Apr. 1983 (fl, fr), Nee & Taylor 26490 A. pruinosa and lacks the pruinose leaf underside. (F, WIS, XAL), 30 May 1986 (fl, fr), Schatz & Alverson Annona lutescens is probably better placed in syn¬ 1161 (MEXU, U, WIS, XAL). onymy as merely a broad-leaved variant of A. re¬ Although flowers were lacking, Safford (1913) ticulata L. nonetheless confidently assigned Annona longipes to his newly circumscribed section Pilannona, pre¬ Annona (section Atta C. Martius) longipes Safi’., sumably based on the indument, which, as he ac¬ Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 16(10): 269, pi. 89. knowledged, is erect in contrast to appressed (se¬ 1913. TYPE: M exico. Veracruz: Canton de los riceous) in Annona sericea Dunal and its allies. Tuxtlas, near the outlet of Lake Catemaco, 28 Nevertheless, he remarked that A. longipes lacked Apr. 1894 (lr), Nelson 430 (holotype, US; a muricate fruit surface, an essential characteristic isotype, NY). of other members of section Pilannona. Fries (1931: Volume 2, Number 3 Schatz 251 1992 Annona section Atta Santiago Tuxtla. In contrast to the broadly ovate outer petals of species in section Pilannona, A. longipes possesses outer petals typical of species in section Atta, i.e., distinctly keeled on the inner sur¬ face or triquetrous (Safford, 1914) (Fig. 2). Within section Atta, A. longipes is most closely related to several species with similar indument, including A. lorigiflora S. Watson from western Mexico, and the cultivated A. cherimola Miller, probably native to Ecuador. As such, A. longipes holds promise for possible hybridization with A. cherimola in the de¬ velopment of a second lowland “custard apple” cul- tivar; the “Atemoya,” a hybrid between A. cheri¬ mola and A. squamosa L., has already proven successful in southern Florida. Plants originating from seed of Schatz & Alverson 1161 are now in cultivation in the Climatron at the Missouri Botanical Garden. Known only from the above-cited collec¬ tions, A. longipes is apparently rare in the wild. Its range appears to fall within the rain shadow of the coastal Los Tuxtlas volcanic peaks, and therefore, climatically within a somewdiat drier phase of “Selva Alta Perennifolia,” which has now largely been con¬ verted to pasture and agriculture. Acknowledgments. I thank M. Nee for directing me to Annona longipes, W. Haber lor showing me Figure 2. Annona longipes, flowering and fruiting Annona pruinosa, and J. Myers for assistance with branches (Schatz & Alverson 1161). the illustration. 245-246) followed Safford in retaining A. longipes Literature Cited in section Pilannona, stating that "Da indessen die Fries, R. E. 1931. Revision der Arten einiger Anona- Bliiten nicht bekannt sind, kann die Stellung der Art ceen-Gattungen. II. Acta Horti Berg. 10(2): 129- nicht mit voller Sieherheit angegeben werden” [in¬ 341, pi. 1-27. sofar as the flowers are unknown, the position of Safford, W. E. 1913. Annona sericea and its allies. the species cannot be determined with complete Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 16(10): 263-276, pi. 85- 99. certainty]- -. 1914. Classification of the genus Annona with Flowers remained unknown until 1983, when Nee descriptions of new and imperfectly known species. & Taylor (26490) re-collected A. longipes near Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 18: 1 XII, 1-68, pi. 1-41.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.