2010. A new species of £>a/ea(Fabaceae) from southernmost Texas. Phytoneuron 2010-50: A NEW SPECIES OF DALEA (FABACEAE) FROM SOUTHERNMOST TEXAS Billie L. Turner Plant Resources Center The University of Texas Austin, TX 78712 ABSTRACT A new taxon, Dalea ceciliana B.L. Turner, sp. nov., is described from southern Texas, where it is confined to deep sandy soils. It is closely related to the caleiphile D. aurea, but the two taxa do not co-occur nor do the two populational systems intergrade near regions of contact. A photograph of the holotype is presented, along with a map showing the distributions of the taxa concerned. KEY WORDS: Dalea, D. aurea. D. ceciliana, Texas. Mexico The present novelty is similar to and clearly closely related to the widespread Dalea aurea Nutt. ex Pursh, and it is likely that specimens of the new species were included in the latter by Barneby (1977) in his treatment of the complex, to judge from his statement that "The climatic tolerance of D. aurea is exceptional, for it extends in Texas southward out onto the sands of the Gulf Coast Prairie and in Colorado and New Mexico up to the Rocky Mountain piedmont." The new species described here differs from Dalea aurea in its relatively shorter leaflets (1-2 times longer than wide vs. 2-4 times), vestiture of longer hairs, floral bracts lanceolate (vs. ovate) and longer (6-8 mm vs. 3-6 mm) (Fig. 1), and its habitats in the deep sands of southern Texas. The two taxa do not co-occur nor do the two populational systems intergrade near regions of contact (Fig. 2). DALEA CECILIANA B.L. Turner, sp. nov. Daleae aureae Nutt. similis sed differt foliolis plerumque 1-2-plo longioribus quam latioribus (vs 2-4-plo) trichomatibus fulvis vel brunneis longioribus (1-2 mm vs. minus quam 1 mm), bracteis floralibus lanceolatis 6-8 mm longis (vs. late ovatis 3-6 mm longis), et habitatione solorum arenaceorum profundorum Texas australis (vs. locorum calcareorum plus borealium). TYPE: TEXAS. Kenedy Co.: ca. 2 mi N of Norias, sandy grassy soil, flow r ers yellow, 10 Jun 1963, D.S. Correll & D.C. Wasshausen 27632 (holotype: TEX, Fig. 1). Perennial, multi-slemiripd hesb«» 30-50 cm high. Stems pubescent with upswq)t tawny hairs 0.8-1.0 mm long. Leaves (at mid-stem) 5-foliate, (lie rachis ca 2 cm long, narrowly winged throughout, the latter glandular-punctate beneath; leaflets ovate to obovate, 1.0-1.5 times as long as wide, pubescent on both surfaces with tawny hairs 1-2 mm long: petioles mostly 5-10 mm long; stipules narrowly lanceolate, ca 2 mm long. Peduncles 1-3 cm long, the heads at maturity ca 2 cm wide, 2-7 cm long; bracts lanceolate, 6-8 mm iong, 2-3 mm wide, pubescent above, glabrous beneath. Calyces 8-9 mm long, the lobes 4-5 mm long, pubescent with tan or tawny (rarely white) hairs 1-2 mm long, the sinuses with 2-4 prominent glands. Flowers yellow or rarely "pale pink (Runyon 2679, TEX)," the banner 5-6 mm long, flabellate apically, the stipe ca 4 mm long. Staminal tube ca 6 mm long, the filaments ca 2 mm long. Pods ovate-conical, ca 4 mm high, 2 mm Representative specimens. TEXAS. Brooks Co.: 10 miN of Encino, 16 Apr 1954, Johnston 54490 (TEX). Hidalgo Co.: 8 mi N of San Mguel, 9 Apr 1944, Lundell & Lundell 12785 (TEX). Jim Hogg Co.: Agua Nueva, Farm Road 1017, 21 Apr 1962, Johnston 54132 (TEX). Kenedy Co.: Turner: New species of Dalea from southernmost Texas 2 15 mi S of Sarita, 12 Jul 1957, Correll & Johnston 1 7864 (TEX). Maverick Co. (?): (w/o locality), 1 Jul 1931, Thorp s.n. (TEX). Medina Co.: Deep sandy soil, Carrizo outcrop, 2 mi SW of Devine, 1 May 1954, Thorp & Turner 3420 (TEX). Starr Co.: ca 8,2 road miles NW of jet FM 755 at La Gloria, 4 Apr 2002, Corr 20589 (TEX). Willacy Co.: Yturria Station, 20 Apr 1933, Runyon 3026 (TEX). Zapata Co.: ca 5 mi NE of San Ignacio along county road to Aguilares, 19 May 1980, Turner 80- 70M (TEX). In the above citations, the collection from Maverick Co. is queried since Tharp, on the date concerned, also collected in Medina Co. from the sandy Carrizo formation, where Doleo ceciliono is known to occur. The taxon has not been collected in Maverick Co. to date, although the Carrizo sands occur in the easternmost portion of that county. Since the plant concerned lacked a specific collection site, I infer that the collector misnumbered the specimen, such errors a well-known habit of the man (pers. observ.). Doleo ceciliono is named for my long-time friend, Cecilia nee Dean (Fig. 3). She served as Secretary of the Botany Department at the University' of Texas, Austin, when it was in its "prime''' (and when it existed). She married my friend and colleague, Professor Theodore Delevoryas, exceptional paleobotanist and ex Chairman of that Department. Cecilia subsequently divorced the fellow and remarried her second husband Joe Aldez, with whom she currently resides in Austin, Cecilia is one of the most altruistic females of my acquaintance and fully deserving of the eponym. Indeed, I have always referred to her as "Saint Cecilia," so much I've admired her intrinsic ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS As always, I am grateful to Guy Nesom for the Latin diagnosis and for reviewing the paper. Dr. Tom Wendt, Curator at TEX, provided useful collection data and the scan of the holotype and Dr. Robert Harms, TEX Research Associate, helped with technical aspects. The dot map is based upon specimens at TEX and the county collections called to the fore by the PLANTS website (USDA, NRCS 2010). LITERATURE CITED Barneby, R.C. 1977. Doleo, in Daleae imagines. Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 27: 135-587. USDA NRCS. 2010. The PLANTS Database. United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Accessed October 2010. Turner: New species of Dalea from southernmost Texas 3 Figure 1. Holotype of Dalea ceciliana. :. Distribution oiDalea aurea and Dalea cecilia. Turner: New species of DaleaUom southernmost Texas Figure 3. The eponymee, in Monterrey Mexico, 1983. Photo by Ted Delevoryas.