Namestnik, S.A., J.R. Thomas, and es S. Seuahtet: 2012. _Two recent plant discoveries in Missouri: Cladium mariscus subsp. Jamaicense (Cyperaceae) and Uti Phytoneuron 2012-92: 1-6. Published 16 October 2012. ISSN 2153 733X TWO RECENT PLANT DISCOVERIES IN MISSOURI: CLADIUM MARISCUS SUBSP. JAMAICENSE (CYPERACEAE) AND UTRICULARIA MINOR (LENTIBULARIACEAE) Scott A. NAMESTNIK Cardno JFNew 708 Roosevelt Road Walkerton, Indiana 46574 cott com JUSTIN R. THOMAS Institute of Botanical Training, LLC 111 County Road 3260 Salem, Missouri 65560 com BRADFORD S. SLAUGHTER Michigan Natural Features Inventory .O. Box 30444 Lansing, Michigan 48909 slaugh14@msu.edu ABSTRACT Here we report the first Missouri records for Cladium mariscus (L.) Pohl subsp. jamaicense (Crantz) Kiik. (Cyperaceae) and Utricularia minor L. (Lentibulariaceae). Both taxa are documented from The Nature Conservancy’ s Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve in Shannon County, within the Ozark Highlands ecoregion of southeastern Missouri. KEY WORDS: Cyperaceae, Lentibulariaceae, Cladium, Utricularia, Missouri, Shannon County Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve is a 520-acre (210 ha) Nature Conservancy preserve characterized by rugged igneous knobs of Precambrian rhyolitic ash flows overlain by deep beds of dissected Ordovician dolomite. Below the small exposed igneous glade at the summit of Shut-in Mountain, the site is primarily oak-hickory woodland, with a minor component of shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata). Total relief warthiy oe preserve is 100 meters. The geology and topography create several areas of permanent Iwater discharge along Wildcat Hollow, the small, northeast-trending, intermittently flowing drainage that passes through the site. These phreatic discharges range from numerous small seepage areas of a few square meters to three fens ranging up to 1.0 ac (0.4 ha). The vegetation of these fen areas is briefly described below; data on dominant vascular plants are from Ladd (2010). The central fen in this complex is categorized as Ozark Fen by Nelson (2010), and supports a rich assemblage of plants whose Ozark distribution is restricted to fen systems. Dominant plant species in this fen are Rudbeckia fulgida var. umbrosa, Parnassia grandiflora, Scleria verticillata, Vernonia missurica, and Oxypolis rigidior. A few hundred meters upstream (west) from this fen is an unusual fen area characterized by an expanse of seeping marly gravel over dolomite bedrock. While this site likely supported Ozark fen historically, past land use history of this area has resulted in the loss of virtually all organic substrate, creating an unusual minerotrophic wetland dominated by a sparse cohort of Rhynchospora capillacea, Physostegia virginiana, Silphium terebinthinaceum, Panicum virgatum, and Fuirena simplex. Namestnik, Thomas, and Slaughter: Recent discoveries in Missouri 2 The easternmost fen has strong biological affinities to dolomite glade, and consists of a ca. 0.5 ac (0.2 ha) gently sloping open seepage over surfacing flats of dolomite bedrock. Dominant plant species here are Scleria verticillata, Schizachyrium scoparium, Rudbeckia missouriensis, Rhynchospora capillacea, Linum floridanum, and Panicum virgatum. Shortly after The Nature Conservancy acquired the site in 1988, a regime of frequent dormant season fires was implemented in much of the preserve. The drainage containing the three fens has been burned 17 times since its acquisition by the Conservancy. This fire management has increased botanical diversity within the fen. Of particular note, the second-known and largest population of Pogonia ophioglossoides in Missouri emerged following application of prescribed fire. Several plant taxa of conservation concern or taxa previously unknown in the state have been documented at the site including Equisetum = nelsonii, Ludwigia microcarpa, Scleria verticillata, and Utricularia subulata. Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense Since 2007, representatives from The Nature Conservancy have observed a slowly increasing vegetative population of a large sedge along the upper margin of the easternmost fen; this was subsequently identified as Cladium mariscus (L.) Pohl subsp. jamaicense (Crantz) Kik. by the authors. As of 2011, this population had grown to a dense stand of several thousand stems dominating an area measuring approximately 18 x 7 meters. In 2010, only two fertile culms from the previous growing season were located; a few fertile stems were also documented in 2011. Associated plant species include: Andropogon gerardii, Apios americana, Eupatorium perfoliatum, Fuirena simplex, Helenium autumnale, Liatris p Lysimachia quadriflora, Oxypolis rigidior, Panicum virgatum, Pycnanthemum virginianum, Rhynchospora capillacea, Rudbeckia fulgida var. umbrosa, Salix caroliniana, Sorghastrum nutans, Symphyotrichum lateriflorum, and Vernonia missurica. Voucher specimens: MISSOURI. Shannon Co.: The Nature Conservancy’s Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve, along the south side of Shannon County H-522, ca. 1.4 mi NE of the jet of hwys H and NN, ca. 7.5 mi E of Eminence; large, mostly vegetative colony in partial shade along upper side of easternmost fen, in gently sloping gravelly/marly seepage with exposed dolomite bedrock; 37° 06’ 35.82”’N, 91° 13’ 39.35”W, 21 Apr 2010, Thomas 2349 (MO), 24 August 2011. Ladd 32234 (KANU, MO). This is the northwesternmost, though not westernmost, record of Cladium mariscus subsp. Jamaicense, and represents a significant range extension as well as the first record for Missouri. This species is dominant in marshes of the Florida Everglades (Tucker 2002), and it occurs primarily in coastal marshes from Virginia to Texas and also in Hawaii (Tucker 2002; BONAP 2012). Additional inland populations in the United States have been reported from Georgia, Arkansas, Texas, and New Mexico (NatureServe 2010; USDA, NRCS 2010; T. Witsell, personal communication, 15 November 2010; BONAP 2012). Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense is also known from Mexico, the West Indies, Central America, and northern South America (Tucker 2002). The Missouri population of C. mariscus subsp. jamaicense is more than 400 km north of the closest documented sites in southern Arkansas (Tucker 2002; T. Witsell personal communication, 15 November 2010; NatureServe 2010; USDA, NRCS 2010; BONAP 2012). Namestnik, Thomas, and Slaughter: Recent discoveries in Missouri 3 In North America, Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense typically occurs in brackish and freshwater marshes (Tucker 2002). However, the Missouri population occurs on the margin of a marly fen. The precedent to occur in minerotrophic fen wetlands is not unexpected; the Old World counterpart to our taxon, the questionably distinct var. mariscus, is a dominant species in calcareous fens in Europe (EUNIS Biodiversity Database 2012), where the common name for the plant is “Great Fen Sedge.” Only three species of Cladium occur in North America — C. californicum, C. mariscoides, and C. mariscus subsp. jamaicense. Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense and C. californicum differ from C. mariscoides in having taller and broader culms, broader leaves with serrate margins, and taller inflorescences with a greater degree of branching (Tucker 2002). Cladium mariscus subsp. —_ famaicense is questionably distinct from Cc. californicum, and reportedly differs in Figure 1. Cladium mariscus ssp. jamaicense at Shut-in having spikelets in smaller groups, Mountain Fens Preserve. Photograph by Justin Thomas. inflorescences with third and fourth order branches, and taller culms (Tucker 2002). For a key and a full description of these taxa, see Tucker (2002). The nativity and ecological status of the Missouri population of Cladium ROGIER SSP. Jamaicense is uncertain. There is strong reason to suspect that this por is a recent i as evidenced by its occurrence well outside the previously documented range, its recent discovery in a well-investigated site visited annually by botanists, its proximity to a road, and its steadily increasing population at a single teens in the area. On the other hand, the species is not cultivated, and it is not | to be rtunistic or weedy. The continued discovery of conservative native vascular plant taxa at Shut-in ‘Mountain Fens Preserve also raises the slight possibility that habitat management at this site has resulted in the resurgence of a relict population of C. mariscus ssp. jamaicense. eae Utricularia minor In April 2010 the authors also d ted extensive of Utricularia minor L. from shallowly inundated marly substrate in all three fen communities within Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve. A subsequent survey of the three fen openings revealed 385 flowering stems in both marl- dominated openings and in the pools of deep muck zones. Plants were common in areas of permanent inundation that lacked visible flow. Though no other species of vascular plants were detected in the immediate microhabitat of the U. minor plants, the tussocks and higher (saturated but lati Namestnik, Thomas, and Slaughter: Recent discoveries in Missouri 4 not inundated) ground contained such species as: Rhynchospora capillacea, Carex leptalea, Panicum virgatum, Carex sterilis, and Silphium terebinthinaceum. Voucher specimen: MISSOURI Shannon Co.: The Nature Conservancy’s Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve, along the S side of Shannon County H-522, ca. 1.4 mi NE of the jct of hwys Hand NN, ca. 7.5 mi E of Eminence; from marly openings in westernmost fen, 37° 06’ 24.33” N, 91° 14’ 05.47” W, 30 Apr 2010, Thomas 2343 (MO). Utricularia minor is a circumboreal species, concentrated in the conterminous United States in New England and the northern Great Lakes states, and occurring at scattered localities from the Dakotas and central Nebraska west to Washington, Oregon, and California (Neid 2006; BONAP 2012). This collection represents a significant range extension for this species. The nearest known locations for U. minor are two ponds in Saline and Clay counties, Illinois, where the species was collected in 1964 and 1965, respectively (Dolbeare and Ebinger 1974; Herkert and Ebinger, eds., 2002). These southern Illinois collections represent possible introductions or waifs (Herkert and Ebinger, eds., 2002); the species is otherwise concentrated in far northeastern Illinois and, to the west, occurs no closer to Missouri than north-central Iowa (BONAP 2012). The species is also disjunct in the southeastern United States in high-elevation fens and bogs in the Southern Blue Ridge Mountains in western North Carolina (Weakley 2011). Throughout its range, Utricularia minor typically inhabits low-nutrient, anaerobic wetland habitats. In New England and the Great Lakes states, U. minor inhabits a variety of wetlands, including shallow ponds, peaty lake margins, fens, sedge meadows, and marshes, often in shallow water or disturbed areas such as tire ruts and animal trails (Voss 1996; Chadde 2002; Magee and Ahles 2007). The species generally shows a preference for calcareous soils (Voss 1996; Chadde 2002). In the western United States, the species is scattered and local, and typically occurs in seeps, floating mats, shallow water, and saturated peat in calcareous fens and associated habitats at elevations typically greater than 2,100 m (7,000 ft) (Neid 2006). In Alaska, U. minor is known from quiet water and mud habitats (Hultén 1968). Although U. minor is considered to be globally secure, the species is rare across much of its North American range, and it is considered critically imperiled in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, New Jersey, Utah, and Prince Edward Island; imperiled in Colorado, Nebraska, New Nols North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, New Brunswick, and katel and vulnerable in California, Ohio, and Manitoba. In addition, U. minor is considered extirpated from Delaware and is known only from historical collections from North Carolina and Rhode Island (Neid 2006). Figure 2. Utricularia minor at Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve. Photograph by Justin Thomas. Namestnik, Thomas, and Slaughter: Recent discoveries in Missouri 45 The genus Utricularia L. is diverse worldwide, but only 20 species are documented from the United States and Canada, and only three species were previously documented from Missouri: U. gibba L.; U. macrorhiza J. Le Conte; and U. subulata L. (Steyermark 1963; Neid 2006; BONAP 2012). Utricularia minor can be differentiated from U. subulata, which also occurs at the site, by its numerous, dichotomous or irregularly divided leaves (vs. leaves absent or linear for U. subulata) and by its small, cream-colored flowers with the spur approximately half the length of the lower lip (vs. flowers yellow with the spur about equaling the lip in U. subulata) (Gleason and Cronquist 1991). Utricularia minor can be differentiated from U. gibba and U. macrorhiza by its lower corolla lip, which is approximately twice as long as the upper lip (vs. lower corolla lip equaling or slightly longer than the upper lip in U. gibba and U. macrorhiza) and its flat ultimate leaf segments (vs. ultimate leaf segments filiform in U. gibba and U. macrorhiza) (Gleason and Cronquist 1991). Based on its occurrence in a typical habitat (calcareous fen), the rarity and local distribution of calcareous fens in southern Missouri (Nelson 2010), and the documentation of numerous scattered populations in similar wetlands in several western states over the past half-century (Neid 2006), the population of Utricularia minor at Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve is likely a native occurrence. In addition, U. minor is a very small, inconspicuous, easily overlooked plant, and flowers early in spring when its calcareous fen habitat appears barren of vegetation without close inspection. Systematic inventories of calcareous fens, seeps, and pond shores in the surrounding region in April or early May may reveal additional populations of this locally rare bladderwort species in southern Missouri. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Our thanks to George Yatskievych and Garrett Crow for verification of identification of Utricularia minor, to Doug Ladd for providing background information about Shut-in Mountain Fens Preserve and the Cladium mariscus subsp. jamaicense population, and to Susan Farrington for her assistance with stem counts and collection of additional specimens. LITERATURE CITED BONAP. 2012. North American Plant Atlas (US county-level species maps). Biota of North America Program, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Last update: Oct 2011 Chadde, S.W. 2002. A Great Lakes Wetland Flora: A Complete Guide to the Aquatic and Wetland Plants of the Upper Midwest (ed. 2). PocketFlora Press, Laurium, Michigan. Dolbeare, B.L. and J. Ebinger. 1974. Distribution of the common vascular hydrophytes in Illinois. Transactions of the Illinois State Academy of Science 67: 402-417. EUNIS Biodiversity Database. 2012. Calcareous fens with Cladium mariscus and species of the Caricion davallianae (7210). 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