کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6379130 | 1625170 | 2013 | 9 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

- The new species Warneckea parvifolia is described and illustrated.
- It occurs in Tembe Elephant Park (South Africa) and adjacent Mozambique (Licuati).
- It is distinct from the Mozambican W. sousae on molecular and morphological evidence.
- It is endangered by its very limited distribution and by elephant utilisation.
- Its suggested vernacular name is “Maputaland false rose-apple.”
Warneckea populations from “sand-forest” or “sand-thicket” habitats in Tembe Elephant Park, South Africa, and Licuati Forest Reserve in adjacent southern Mozambique were previously thought to be a small-leaved form of W. sousae, which typically includes larger-leaved plants ranging from central Mozambique northward to Tanzania. We examine this hypothesis using molecular and morphological evidence. Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic analysis of combined nrDNA ETS and ITS sequence data failed to resolve W. sousae and the Maputaland populations as an exclusively monophyletic group. Instead, the Kenyan endemic W. mouririifolia was strongly supported as the sister species of W. sousae, and the Maputaland plants were resolved in a separate, strongly supported clade together with populations of an as-yet undetermined Warneckea species from northern Mozambique. A hypothesis of exclusive monophyly for the plants from Tembe and Licuati had moderate support in separate ETS and ITS1 analyses (bootstrap proportions of 88% and 81%, respectively). Statistically significant differences in leaf dimensions and internode length were found between the Maputaland plants and typical W. sousae. We conclude that the populations from Tembe and Licuati represent a distinct species, which we describe as W. parvifolia. The species differs from W. sousae in having shorter internodes (mostly 5-25Â mm not 10-60Â mm long), smaller leaves (mostly 14-32Â ÃÂ 8-19Â mm not 40-76Â ÃÂ 22-52Â mm), shorter petioles (mostly 1-1.5Â mm not 1.5-6Â mm long), smaller flowers (hypanthium 1Â ÃÂ 1.5-1.75Â mm not 1.5-2Â ÃÂ 2Â mm; calyx lobes 0.5Â mm not 0.75Â mm long; staminal filaments 3-4Â mm not 5Â mm long; style 4-5Â mm not 9Â mm long), and globose fruit (not obovoid). An IUCN conservation status of Endangered (EN) B1a, b(ii, iii) is indicated for W. parvifolia, due to its limited distribution and projected declines in its habitat quality and area of occupancy.
Journal: South African Journal of Botany - Volume 88, September 2013, Pages 317-325