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Carex siguanabae Jim. Mejias, Acedo, Reznicek & Lois 2023, sp. nov

Authors :
Lois, Raúl
Acedo, Carmen
Reznicek, Anton A.
Jiménez-Mejías, Pedro
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2023.

Abstract

Carex siguanabae Jim.Mejías, Acedo, Reznicek & Lois, sp. nov. (Figs. 5–8) Diagnosis: —This new species is similar to Carex chordalis Liebm. (1850: 269) and to C. donnell-smithii L.H. Bailey (1889: 56). Carex siguanabae is easily distinguished from C. chordalis by its glume color (purplish-black in C. siguanabae vs hyaline to light brown in C. chordalis), and by its utricle enervation (nerves not evident in C. siguanabae vs clearly visible in C. chordalis). In addition, C. siguanabae can be distinguished from C. donnell-smithii (under Chater’s (1994) concept) by its glume length (3.9–7.0 mm in C. siguanabae vs 3.1–3.4 mm in C. donnell-smithii) and by the awned tip (1.0–2.0 mm in C. siguanabae vs 0.3–1.0(1.3) mm in C. donnell-smithii). Type: — EL SALVADOR: Department of Chalatenango: El Pital: Road between Río Chiquito and El Pital, cloud forest with Pinus spp., wet road banks, 14.38146 N 89.129035 W, 2630 m, 29 September 2019, P . Jiménez-Mejías & G. E. Rodríguez Palacios 7ES-PJM19 (Holotype: UPOS! (Figs. 5–7); isotype: MA!). Cespitose, rhizome covered with short yellowish to stramineous hairs. Stems 100–120 cm tall, 0.2–0.3 mm wide at the middle, smooth, trigonous, sides concave below the inflorescence, reddish to brown at the base. Leaves with well-developed blades, the largest ones ± 135 cm × 6.6–7.3 mm, equaling or exceeding the stems, linear, light reddishbrown at the base, W-folded, sheaths orangey-brownish. Inflorescence racemose, usually lax, 18–30 cm long, with 25–60 androgynous spikes, spreading; lowermost bract 15–20 cm × 4.9–7.9 mm, shorter than the inflorescence, soft, green to dark green, W-folded, sheathless or with a short sheath Habitat and distribution: —This species is distributed in the Central America Cordillera at the border between El Salvador and Honduras, although it may possibly inhabit Guatemala too. It occurs in montane forests, on river shores and open places (forest clearings or roadsides) between 1500 to 2500 m altitude. Phenology: —Flowers and fruits were collected between the end of February and May. Etymology: —The name Carex siguanabae refers to a local mythological creature well-known in Salvadoran folklore, “La Siguanaba”. It is represented as a long-haired woman with a terrifying face. The legend says that Siguanaba waits for men next to rivers and roads (both places where C. siguanabae grows), and then scares them to madness. Observations:— Carex siguanabae can be easily identified by the morphology of its glumes. It has one of the longest glumes in the section Fecundae, up to 7 mm long. It is also different from all the other species of the section by its extremely long and ciliated awns. Additional specimens examined (paratypes):— EL SALVADOR: Department of Santa Ana, National Park of Montecristo, La Cima de Miramundo, 14°24’N 89°21’W, 2420 m, 25 February, 2003 R.A. Carballo (MO-5898663!); Department of Chalatenango: Carretera de Río Chiquito a El Pital, 14.38146 N 89.129035 W, 2630 m, 29 September 2019, P. Jiménez-Mejías & G.E. Rodríguez-Palacios 3aES-PJM19 (UPOS!); Department of Santa Ana: San José Ingenio, National Park of Montecristo, close to Miramundo summit, 14°25’N 89°21’W, primary forest, 2300 m, 23 April 2001, W. Berendsohn 1691 (MO-5896064!); HONDURAS: Sumpul river, waterfall El Salto, 14°21’N 89°5’W, gallery forest, river bank, 1910 m, 27 May 2008, D. Rodríquez, J. Monterrosa & S. Ventura 1274 (MO-6105790!); Jocotán, El Salto, 14.353710 N 89.080637 W, 1780 m, 29 September 2019, P. Jiménez-Mejías & G.E. RodríguezPalacios 3bES-PJM19 (UPOS!).<br />Published as part of Lois, Raúl, Acedo, Carmen, Reznicek, Anton A. & Jiménez-Mejías, Pedro, 2023, Three newly described species of Carex sect. Fecundae (Cyperaceae) from Central America and typification of two related names, pp. 71-86 in Phytotaxa 579 (2) on pages 75-78, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.579.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/7543084<br />{"references":["Bailey, L. H. (1889) Studies of the Types of various Species of the Genus Carex. Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club 1: 56 - 57. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 97370","Chater, A. O. (1994) Carex L. In: Davidse, G., Sousa, M. & Chater, A. O. (Eds.) Flora Mesoamericana. Volumen 6. Alismataceae a Cyperaceae. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Instituto de Biologia, Missouri Botanical Garden, Natural History Museum, London, pp. 464 - 473."]}

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33bebddb39a426225c50aa47e71129b2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7543076