ANNALS VOLUME 55 OF THE aie. MIS CONTENTS Revision of Bouvardia (Rubiaceae) by Will H. Blackwell 1-30 Notes on Hedyotis (Rubiaceae) in North America by Walter H. Lewis 31-33 New and noteworthy woody Rubiaceae of Panama by John D. Dwyer and Sister M. Victoria Hayden 34-47 Notes on Asclepiadaceae of Panama by Louis O. Williams 48-50 Bombacaceae neotropicae novae ll. New species of Eriotheca, Hampea and Quararibea by André Robyns 51-59 New species of Lisianthus (Gentianaceae) from Panama by André Robyns and Thomas S. Elias 60-63 Karyotypes in relation to classification and phylogeny in Claytonia by Walter H. Lewis and Yutaka Suda 64-67 NOTES 68-79 A new species of Stelis (Orchidaceae) from Panama 68-69. A new species of African Lagenaria (Cucurbitaceae) 69-72. Notes on the genus Inga Il 72-73. A new annual Eriogonum from Utah 74-75. A second series of Cochlospermum (Cochlospermaceae) from Panama 75-77. Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Robyns, a new species of Flacourtiaceae from Panama 77-78. Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns, comb. nov. (Flacourtiaceae) 78-79. A new Ormosia (Leguminosae) from Peru 79. ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 of the NUMBER | MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN A journal containing scientific contributions from the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Department of Botany of Washington Uni- versity in affiliation with the Missouri Botanical Garden, Outside contributions in systematic botany and allied fields will also be con- sidered. These papers are subject to a charge of $25 per printed page. HDITORIAL COMMITTEE Wat Lewis, Editor Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington a gru Patricia E. Purman, Assistant to the Edito Missouri [ee Garden Derex Burcu, Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington University Jonn D. Dwyer, Missouri Botanical Garden & St. Louis University AwpnÉ Rosyns, Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington University Information THE ANNALS OF THE Missourt BoranicaL GARDEN appears three times during i calendar year. Three numbers totaling about 400 pages constitute a volume Beginning with Volume 53, 1966: ubscription Price $15.00 per volume ingle Numbers 5.50 each Contents of previous issues of the ANNALS or THE Missouni BOTANICAL GarpeN are listed in the Agricultural Index, published by the H. W. Wilson Company. Beginning June 1, 1962 the Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, de 3] East 10th St., New York 3, N. Y., became sole agent for the ANNALS OF TH OURI Boranı ANICAL GARDEN. a Agency handles all subscriptions, all dain ms begin- ning with volume 50 (1963) and a Eg for back issues. Out-of-print number will be reprinted as may be required. Under the arrangement with " Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, the Agency handles also all purchases of any portion of the Annars subseries known as the “Flora of Panama.” ll matters regarding exchange continue to be handled by the Missouri Botanical Garden, 2315 Tower Grove Ave, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, as in ast. Printed by the Eden Publishing House, St. Louis, Missouri, 63103. ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 of the NUMBER MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN REVISION a A (RUBIACEAE )* v Witt H. BLACK WELL, JR.? Department d Botany, The E of Texas at Austin ABSTRACT The study of specimens, including many types, from 24 major North American and European herbaria has led to the recognition and description of 31 species of Bouvardia, including the novelty B. standleyana. The three subgenera proposed by Schlechtendal re retained as the foundation of taxonomic order in the genus, although their retention is admittedly partially fostered by convenience. Keys to the subgenera and species are presented and synonymy, typification and information on distribution and habitat are given for each species in so far as possible. INTRODUCTION Bouvardia, a rubiaceous genus of primarily small shrubs, is a notable but poorly understood component of the Mexican (with extensions into the south- western United States) and northern Central American flora. The habitat differs but is often a rocky outcrop of steep hillsides or barrancas at elevations above 500 meters, the ambient conditions varying from xeric to very mesic. No economic significance is attributed to the genus. However, the attractive flowers of a number of species have led to their adoption as ornamentals, and arti- ficial hybrids between some of them have been obtained. The nomenclature of these horticultural subjects is considered outside the scope of this study. The taxonomy of Bouvardia has received little attention since Standley’s treat- ment in the North American Flora (1921b), in which 30 species were recognized, a number being newly described. Since Standley’s revision, descriptions of 19 additional species have appeared, scattered throughout the literature. The im- mediate needs in the genus were to evaluate the status of the species described since *Based on a dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Assisted by a grant-in-aid, The Society of the Sigma Xi and by National Science Foundation Grant No. GB-4128 (Principal Investigator, W. Frank Blair). Dr. Marshall C. Johnston is gratefully acknowledged for supervision of this research. * Currently Postdoctoral Fellow, Missouri Botanical Garden and Department of Botany, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. Assisted by National Science Foundation Grant No. GB-5674 (Principal Investigator, Walter H. Lewis). ANN. Missourt Bor. Garp. 55(1): 1-30, 1968. The previous issue of the ANNALS OF THE MissouRI BOTANICAL GARDEN, Vol. 54, No. 3, pp. 201-421, was published on March 11, 1968. [Vor. 55 2 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Standley’s revision and re-evaluate those recognized by Standley. The recent aquisi- tion of material by herbaria throughout the world has emphasized the pertinence of such a study. The grouping of species within the genus has also been a matter of concern. Standley did not formally recognize the three subgenera introduced by Schlech- tendal (1854), although his organization of species in the key corresponds closely to them. I have found Schlechtendal’s subgenera to be at least a useful contrivance and consider their retention worthwhile for the sake of convenience alone. How- ever, as nature is not systematically perfect, it is to be understood that some in- termediacy exists between them, and that their delimitation is perhaps more prag- matic than phylogenetic. The position of Bouvardia within the Rubiaceae has undergone drastic, and probably justified, alteration. Bouvardia, Heterophyllaea, Hindsia, Manettia, Danais, Coursiana and Hymenopogon were traditionally treated as members of the Cinchoneae (Hooker, 1873; Schumann, 1891). However, Bremekamp (1952) considered winged seeds (the only character uniting the tribe Cinchoneae) to be of little morphological significance and transfered these genera to the subfamily Rubioideae and tribe Hedyotideae (having transfered the tribe Hedyotideae from the subfamily Cinchonoideae) based on the presence of raphides, the absence of large pits in the basal wall of the testa cells, and the peltate placentas. Breme- kamp reaffirms this transfer in a later paper (1966) in which he outlines his revisionary subdivision of the Rubiaceae. Of the above genera, Bouvardia appears most closely related to Heterophyllaea and Hindsia from which it is distinguished by characters of the fruit and by flowers with four rather than five stamens and to Manettia from which it differs in its shrubby (not scandent) habit, terminal inflorescences and loculicidal capsules. It is doubtful that the position of placental attachment may be employed as a character delimiting Bouvardia and Mannetia, as attempted by Standley (1921a, see key). In specimens of both genera examined, the placenta is attached to the base of the septum. Bouvardia is distinguished from Hedyotis (sensu Lewis, 1961) by characters of the placenta, seed, endosperm and stipules. SYSTEMATIC TREATMENT? BovvanpiA Salisbury, Parad. Lond. pl. 88, 1807. Aeginetia Cav., Anal. Ci. Nat. 3: 129, 1801; Ic. 6: 51, 1801, not Aeginetia L. (Sp. Pl. 632, 1753). Shrubs, suffrutices or perennial herbs; raphides present. Leaves opposite or 3 to 4(-6)-nate, petiolate or infrequently sessile; stipules interpetiolar, consisting of a basal sheath and a usually trullate, green (not hyaline or scarious) mucro or free-portion; blades simple, entire, usually membranous. Inflorescences terminal, cymose (occasionally reduced to solitary flowers). Flowers actinomorphic, often showy; calyx-lobes 4, most often lanceolate, typically erect or ascending, persisting 3 A list of exsiccatae may be obtained by writing the author. Address as of September 1, 1968: Department of Botany, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056. 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 3 in fruit; corolla tubular or salverform, the tube usually well exceeding the lobes, the lobes 4 (very rarely 5 on the same plant), valvate; stamens 4, epipetalous, the anthers linear, dehiscing by longitudinal slits, usually included and subsessile in pin flowers (but typically positioned well above the middle of the corolla-tube), included or exserted (the filaments becoming free from the corolla-tube at the throat and extending beyond) in thrum flowers; ovary + subglobose, inferior to l4 superior, the style single, slender (to ca 1 mm broad), compressed, elongate, exserted in pin flowers, included in thrum flowers, terminating in 2 rather short, linear, often minutely papillose style-branches, Capsules subglobose or slightly oblate, often somewhat compressed loculicidally, 2-celled (the septum complete), dehiscing loculicidally then septicidally, with a single ascending, fleshy, peltate placenta in each cell affixed to the based of the septum; seeds co, brown, vertically imbricate on the placenta, uniformly and + evenly winged, the wing neither dissected nor fringed, the nucleus disciform, flattened or slightly pulvinate in cross- section, the testa cells thin-walled, lacking large pits in the basal wall, the en- dosperm fleshly. Type: Bouvardia triphylla Salisbury [=B. ternifolia (Cav.) Schlecht.]. KEY TO THE SUBGENERA a. Leaves opposite b. Inflorescence es 3 to many-flowered, each partial inflorescence (flower or e of 3 or more flowe sometimes of only Di corolla tubular to salver- 1-7(- 8.5 mm long, flare 10-€ nthers dn aie flowers variously d cences are eee flowers, then the € branchlets are often D t and multiflora sue ore (p. 3) tial os o BH o 35 [t] ^ a leo] o Lm e m ^ = o "n Lol] E [mal > (o 5 [=] o P. M wa 0 (b “B 2 ir: ta (b < (D ^ go aa th Q = [t] n] c "d D H nflorescence composed o only a solitary o corolla salverform, white, d in the tube (1.5-)3.5-8.5 cm long, the lobes (4-)7-28 mm long, flared at 90°; h A N anthers included in thrum flowers or only e tips protruding IL. Bouvardioides (p. 16) aa. Leaves 3 to 4(-6)-nate at most nodes II. Bouvardia (p. 22) I. SUBG. BovvanpiasrRUM Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 58, 1854. Shrubs, suffrutices or rarely perennial herbs, the seasonal branches opposite, elongate or very short, pubescent or glabrous. Leaves opposite, typically petiolate; blades glabrous to conspicuously pubescent, the secondaries pinnate, less frequently subpalmate or plinerved, arcuate, rarely obscure, the reticulation obscure to prom- inent. Inflorescences few to many-flowered; partial inflorescences often composed of 3 or more flowers (occasionally l-flowered). Flowers pedicellate or rarely ses- sile; calyx-lobes free to the floral cup or joined basally by a calyx-tube; corolla tubular to salverform, red, orange, yellow, violet, lavender, white, yellowish-white or greenish-white, externally glabrous or puberulent or more elongate-pubescent, the tube internally with a villous ring toward the base or more often generally 4 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN pilose or villous in the lower half, rarely entirely glabrous within; anthers included in pin flowers (rarely exserted), in thrum flowers included or often exserted; style glabrate or rarely pubescent, the branches 0.5-2.5(-4) mm long. Lectotype: Bouvardia triflora H.B.K. [=B. multiflora (Cav.) Schultes & Schultes f.]. a. ponen typically pinnately nerved, E frequently subpalmately nerved the majority of the secondaries arising + together near the base of the mid- i iddl n rd the base. c. Stipular processes lanceolate, eglandular; inflorescences 7 to 12-flowered; corolla externally minutely pube rulent with € mes to 0.05 mm long es to 2: m conzattii ce. dup processes often filifo mand terminally glandular; inflorescences o 60-flowered; corolla eternally ime "the lobes Bo monem bb. Meier often pubescent in E: lower half but the a dinde not into an isolated villous rin d Calyx-lobes joined basally by a ie tube 0.5-2.5 mm lon e. Flowers short- cocoate not subtended by ae ete the blades cuneate to rounded at the base; corolla white to green- ish- or yellowish-white, the lobes spreading to 90°; anthers exserted by 2-5 mm in thrum flowers 3. B. loeseneriana ff. Seasonal branches distally pc to densely, PEDE e trichomes variously 0.05-1 mm long); petioles 0.5-2(-7 long; leaf-blades ania or date basally; corolla red- ene or apricot, the lobes yellow, spreading to 45°; anthers included in th flowers or y the tips protruding .............--..... 5. B. cordifolia ee. ait sessile, each with its base surrounded by the stipule- ve a bract-pair, the se phis glabrous B. capitata dd. Calcot free to the flor: eaf-blades slightly aie the nd partially or umi ds scure; corolla red-orange, the lobes yellow ........................ chrysantha gg. Leaf-blade embranous, th nies readily evident e whole length; corolla variously col lla externally puberulent or pu ube scent, i. Inflorescences obviously termi n on usually well-developed, leafy branches; corolla nally sparsely or densely pubescent with trichomes 0. * 3: mm lo j. Seasonal branches distally glabrous « or sparsely pilose; lower leaf-blade surface and distal portion of coro m jj. Distal portion of seasonal branches, lower leaf-blade- surface and distal] portion of corolla-tube densely villous; secondaries pinnate 9. B. xylosteoides ii. Inflorescences pseudoaxillary on greatly reduced, slender leafless branchlets; corolla externally minutely pap pillose- puberulent E == 0.05 mm long) iuueni 12. B. gracilipes hh. Corolla externally glabro k. Seasonal branchlets distally glabrous or papillose-puberu- flowers; corolla at least sparsely pilose in the lower half. l. Floriferous branchlets often suppressed (the vegetative portion as short as 2 mm); leaf-blades sparsely to 1968] BLACKWELL-——BOUVARDIA 5 moderately papillose-puberulent above and below; floral cup minutely hirtellous with trichomes 0.05-0.3 mm long; calyx-lobes typically lanceolate, usually somewhat anthers often exserted in thrum flowers ................ A multiflora . Floriferous branchlets often well- developed; leaf- blades glabrate but often ciliate marginally; floral cup glab- rous or obscurely puberulent with trichomes to long; e li r linear-lanceolate, often zm — — RE in thrum flowers or only the tips protruding . laevis D [am i enn branchlets distally rather sparsely pilose to densely cent with trichom 2-1 m br reticulation prominent below; inflorescences usually more than 15-flowered; corolla ately glabrous wi i l. B. standleyana aa. Leaf-blades (3-)5-plinerved. Inflorescences with fewer than 25 flowers; pedicels 6-13 mm long; calyx- lobes deltoid-acuminate, ca 1 mm long; corolla-tube with an internal villous ring towar i ase 3. B. rekoi mm. Inflorescences more than 25-flowered; pedicels 0.5-6 mm long; calyx-lobes lanceolate to linear or pne nd 2-9 mm ong; corolla-tube often villous in obes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate, 1-2 mm broad; corolla tubular, red, the tube 10-17 mm long; style glabrate 14. B. oaxacana nn. Reticulation of leaf-blades visible above, prominent below; calyx-lobes linear-subulate, 0.3-1 mm broad; corolla tubular to salverform, violet or id ond the tube 4.5-8.5 mm long; lower half of EC style ofte pubesc B. enero 1. BOUVARDIA MULTIFLORA (Cav.) Schultes & Schultes f., Mant. Syst. Veg. 3: 118, 1827. Aeginetia multiflora Cav., Anal. Ci. Nat. 3: 131, t. 28, fig. 2, 1801; Ic. 6: 52, t. 572, fig. 2, 1801. Bouvardia versicolor Ker, Bot. Reg. 3: pl. 245, 1817. (Based on a greenhouse-grown plant, illustration is taken as the type) B. triflora H.B.K, Nov. Gen. Sp. PL 8:386, 1820. (Type Humboldt & Bonpland s.n. P, seen; fragment P) B. cavanillesii DC., Prodr. 4: 366, 1830. (Based on Aeginetia multiflora) Anotis longiflora Bentham, Pl. Hartw. 23, 1839. (Type Hartweg 206 GH, K; photo MICH) Bouvardia triflora var. hirsuta Martens & Galeotti, Bull. Acad. Bruxelles 11(1): 236, 1844. (Type Galeotti 2658 B B. yao Kunze, Linnaea 20: 24, 1847. (Based on garden plants grown from Mexican eed, the description i is taken as the type B. ment Walpers, Ann. Bot. Syst. Lipsiae 5: 127, 1849, as synonym of B. versicolor. Bt onia tri .B.K.) A. ] :3 60. Bouvardia gracilis A. Gray, loc. cit. 22: 306, 1887. (Type probably Pringle 1255 G, GH) B. versicolor var. graciliflora A. Gray in S. Watson, loc. cit. 416. (Syntypes Palmer 154, T. B. heterophylla Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 107, 1921. (Holotype Heyde & Lux 3137 US 398167; isotype GH B. macrantha Standley, loc. cit. (Holotype Purpus 3981 US 841341; isotypes BM, F, GH, MO, UC) [Vor. 55 6 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN B. latifolia Standley, loc. cit. 111. (Holotype Langlassé 246 US 385804; isotypes F fragment, B. salvadorensis Steyermark, Ceiba 4: 302, 1955. (Holotype Tucker 1368 F 1492726; iso- types MICH, UC, US) Shrubs to 2 m; seasonal branchlets very short (2 mm) or to 10 cm or more in length, papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.2 mm long. Leaves with pe- tioles to 5 mm long; blades most often ovate-lanceolate (varying from broadly ovate to narrowly lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate), 0.7-6.7 cm long, 0.2-3.2 cm broad, membranous, sparsely or moderately hirtellous with papillose trichomes to 0.3 mm long, the secondaries 4-8, usually pinnate, the reticulation often obscure. Inflorescences terminal but often seemingly axillary by virtue of the very short branchlets, 3 to 7(-11)-flowered, often nodding; partial inflorescences 1 to 3-flow- ered; Flowers with pedicels 0.5-6(-16) mm long which are papillose-puberulent; floral cup hirtellous with papillose trichomes to 0.3 mm long; calyx-lobes typically lanceolate (varying from deltoid-acuminate to subulate), 1-8 mm long, usually somewhat hirtellous; corolla tubular to virtually salverform, white to greenish- or yellowish-white, less frequently yellow or red, glabrous, the tube 6-36(-44) mm long, internally sparsely pilosulous toward the base, the lobes 1-7(-8.5) mm long, spreading 10-90; anthers 1.5-2.5 mm long, in thrum flowers either exserted by 1-5 mm or included (tips sometimes protruding), included by 1-6 mm in pin flowers; style glabrous, the branches 1-4 mm long. Capsules 3-7 mm long, 3.5-9 mm broad; seeds 2-3.5 mm broad. Holotype: MA, not seen. Cavanilles gives no information about the locality or collector in the original description. Chihuahua to Nicaragua; no specimens known from Vera Cruz, Chiapas or the Yucatan Peninsula; moist slopes or ravines to dry, rocky hills or buffs; with pine-oak or thorn-scrub-cactus association; 1000-3000 m; flowering May through September. Bouvardia versicolor, B. heterophylla, B. latifolia, B. macrantha and B. salva- dorensis are reduced to synonymy for the first time. I consider B. multiflora to be a polymorphic species, the — im encompassing the variability of speci- mens referred to all the above segregat The types of B. heterophylla (Cus mgl and of B. salvadorensis and certain collections from Temascaltepec, Mexico and Zitacuaro, Michoacan (Hinton 7899, 7911, 7925, 7933, 11996, all US) possess elongate pedicels (often 5-16 mm), short calyx-lobes (2 mm or less) and seasonal branches often more elongate than those of the average specimen of B. multiflora. Type specimens of B. latifolia and other Guerreran specimens such as Crisman & Willis 193 (MICH, TAES) and Cooper & Rowell 2511 (MICH) possess elongate (to 44 mm), subsalverform (lobes spread- ing at ca 60°), white corollas which closely approach the type of corolla found in the subg. Bouvardioides. The type of B. macrantha (Tlacuilotepec, Puebla) and collections from the vicinity of San Luis Tultitlanapa, Puebla (Purpus 3324, 3328, 3330, 3331, 3332, all MO) are characterized by rather elongate (to 36 mm), tubu- lar corollas in which the anthers are included (or only the tips protruding) in thrum flowers. All these specimens are assignable to B. multiflora based on their total morphology and when all specimens of B. multiflora are considered, com- 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 7 plete intergradation is seen to exist. Attempting to formalize components of this reticulum of variation by the application of different Latin names would lead to confusion. 2. Bouvarpia LAEvis Martens & Galeotti, Bull. Acad. Bruxelles 11(1): 236, 1844. B. flava Decaisne, Fl. Serres 1: 215, pl. 38, 1845. (Based on a greenhouse-grown plant, the five ea is the type B. mollis Linden ex aoe Linnaea 26: = ae (Type LZf) B. nubigena Standley & Steyermark, Publ, d Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser, 22: 382, 1940. (Holotype C 31901 F 1043221; Dholos F, TEX) Shrubs to 1.5 m; seasonal branches usually well-developed, glabrous or dis- tally sparsely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.2 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-7.5 mm long; blades ovate-lanceolate, subattenuate or subacuminate at the apex, 1.5-10.5 cm long, 0.7-5 cm broad, membranous, glabrate but often ciliate marginally with trichomes 0.05-0.8 mm long, less frequently sparsely puberu- lent above and below (often primarily along the veins), the secondaries 4-10, pinnate, the reticulation apparent or obscure. Inflorescences 3 to 11-flowered; par- tial inflorescences 1 to 5-flowered. Flowers with pedicels (1-)3-27 mm long which are glabrous to moderately papillose-puberulent; floral cup glabrous or sparsely puberulent with trichomes to 0.1 mm long; calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate or linear, glabrate or sparsely ciliate, 4-12 mm long; corolla tubular, red or occasionally yellow, glabrous externally, the tube 16-39 mm long, pilosulous in the lower half, the lobes 2.5-5.5 mm long, flared up to 40°; anthers 2-4 mm long, included or only the tips protruding; style glabrate, the branches 1-2.5 mm long. Capsules 4-9 mm long, 5-10 mm broad; seeds 2-3 mm Type: Mexico. Vera Cruz: ravines around Zacuapan, 3000 ft, April 1840, Galeotti 2600 (BR, F fragment ex G-Deless, P not seen; photo of P specimen at F, TEX, US). Southwestern Tamaulipas to northwestern Oaxaca, Michoacan and southern Jalisco; centered in Hidalgo and western Vera Cruz; also found in Guatemala and extreme southern Chiapas; slopes of barrancas or rocky outcrops of mountain- sides; oak-pine woodlands in mesic to semi-arid conditions; 1000-3300 m; flowering April to August. Bouvardia laevis and B. multiflora are closely related species and intermediates are sometimes encountered. Keying out a “problematical” specimen often requires consideration of a number of characters in combination (see key, p. 5), some of which are not statable in quantitative or absolute terms, and none of which will alone serve to identify the plant with certainty. Although it would be easy to build a case for combining these two species, the majority of specimens are easily identifiable and the extremes quite divergent. At present it seems unwise to com- bine them, increasing still further the complexity of the variation coming under the name B. multiflora. 3. BOUVARDIA LOESENERIANA Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat, Hist., Bot. Ser. 11: 186, 19 36. B. hintoni Bullock, Kew Bull. 1937: 307, 1937. (Type Hinton 8107 BM, F, G, GH, K, MO, US) [Vor. 55 8 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Shrubs, seasonal branches short or well-developed, glabrate. Leaves with petioles 2.5-11.5 mm long; blades ovate to ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, basally cuneate to rounded, 2.5-9.8 cm long, 1.3-6.7 cm broad, sparsely pilosulous below and at the margins with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long, glabrate above, the sec- ondaries 4-12, pinnate, the reticulation apparent or obscure. Inflorescences (3-)7 to 20-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-5 mm leng; floral cup glabrous to pru- inose-puberulent (trichomes to 0.05 mm long) or hirtellous (trichomes to 0.5 mm long); calyx-lobes deltoid to broadly or narrowly lanceolate, 1-3(-4) mm long, marginally ciliate with trichomes to 0.2(-0.4) mm long, joined basally by a calyx- tube 0.5-2 mm long; corolla typically salverform, white to greenish- or yellowish- white, externally densely pruinose- or papillose-puberulent with white trichomes to 0.05 mm long or glabrous, the tube 24-32 mm long, internally sparsely or mod- erately pilosulous with trichomes 0.4-1 mm long, the lobes oblong-elliptic or ob- long-lanceolate, 3.5-7 mm long, spreading at ca 90°, often arcuate; anthers 2-2.5 mm Icng, exserted in thrum flowers by 2-5 mm; style glabrate, the branches 0.5-2 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Guerrero: Texquitzin nr Chilapa, 28 Oct 1829, Schultes 89 (Bt); isotype F (fragment). Guerrero and the southern portion of the State of Mexico to Nayarit; pre- cipitous mountainsides, wooded slopes and barrancas, steep ravines; typically in moist habitats but occasionally occurring in more arid barancas; 300-2400 m; flowering July through December. In typical specimens of B. loeseneriana the corolla-tubes are minutely but densely pruinose- or papillose-puberulent externally, the floral cups glabrous or obscurely puberulent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, the calyx-lobes deltoid or broadly lanceolate and not exceeding 3 mm, a calyx-tube to 2 mm long is present and the seasonal branches are well-developed (see types of B. loeseneriana and B. hintoni and such collections as Hinton 10521, US; 15003, US; 15979, US; McVaugh & Koelz 1046, MICH). However, in Colima, southwestern Jalisco and Nayarit, variable specimens are encountered with glabrous corolla-tubes, glabrous or pru- inose-puberulent (trichomes to 0.05 mm long) or conspicuously hirtellous (tri- chomes to 0.5 mm long) floral cups, often slender-lanceolate calyx-lobes to 4 mm long and short or elongate seasonal branchlets (see McVaugh 15260, 18060, 18964, 19832; Wilbur & Wilbur 2335, 2439, 2440, 2464, 2465; all MICH). Specimens with glabrous corollas, hirtellous floral cups, slender-lanceolate calyx-lobes and short branchlets are difficult to distinguish from B. multiflora and are doubtless closely allied to the latter. They differ from B. multiflora in the presence of a calyx-tube and usually in the more numerous flowers (more than 7) of the in- florescence. 4. BOUVARDIA CAPITATA Bullock, Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 3296, 1935. Shrubs to 1.5 m; seasonal branchlets rather elongate, to 2 mm broad, woody or suffrutescent, glabrous or sparsely pilose distally with trichomes to 0.7 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-14 mm long; blades ovate to suborbicular or broadly ellip- tic, 2-10.3 cm long, 1.3-6.3 em broad, usually sparsely pilose with white trichomes 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 9 to 1 mm long (occasionally restricted to the margins), the secondaries 4-10, pinnate or the lower 46 arising subpalmately near the base of the midvein, the reticula- tion obscure. Inflorescences capitate, 6 to 36-flowered. Flowers sessile, each sub- tended by the stipule-sheath of a bract-pair; floral cup typically glabrous; calyx- lobes linear-lanceolate, 3-8 mm long, pilosulous toward the margins with trichomes 0.3-0.8 mm long, joined basally by a calyx-tube 1-2.5 mm long; corolla + salver- form, probably white, glabrous externally, the tube 15-23 mm long, pilosulous in the lower half; the lobes 3-7 mm long, oblong, spreading to 90°, often arcuate; anthers 1-2 mm long, exserted by 2-4 mm in thrum flowers; style glabrous. Cap- sules 4.5-8 mm long, 4.5-11 mm broad; seeds 2.5-4 mm broad. Type: Mexico. Mexico: Distr Temascaltepec, Palmar, in a barranca, 7 July 1934, Hinton 6319 (BM, F, K). Known only from the District of Temascaltepec in the State of Mexico; bar- rancas and open woodlands at 1000-1500 m; flowering in July and August. As pointed out by Bullock (loc. cit.) the congested inflorescence of B. capitata is distinctive, probably representing a reduction from a compound dichasium. The base of each sessile flower is surrounded by the often membranous and pluriaristate stipule-sheath of a bract-pair, the lamina being suppressed. The flowers are grouped in threes and then in multiples of three, each flower-group or partial inflorescence being in turn subtended by a stipule-sheath showing an increasing development of the bract lamina. Bouvardia capitata is closely related to B. loeseneriana, but in addition to the sessile flowers subtended by stipule-sheaths, specimens of B. capitata may often be distinguished by the glabrous corollas with the tube usually less than 23 mm long, linear-lanceolate calyx-lobes typically exceeding 3 mm in length and possess- ing a more elongate marginal pubescence, and the always glabrous floral cups. 5. BouvarDIA CORDIFOLIA DC., Prodr. 4: 366, 1830. ? Hedyotis lutea Sessé & Mocifio, Fl. Mex. 22, 1891. (Type Sessé & Mocifio s.n. MA, not seen). Shrubs, slender or suffrutices to 1 m; seasonal branches ascending, distally sparsely to densely papillose-puberulent or villosulous with white trichomes 0.05-1 mm long. Leaves with pubescent petioles 0.5-2(-7) mm long; blades broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, cordate or rounded at the base, 1.5-6.6 cm long, 0.7-5.2 cm broad, sparsely puberulent with papillose to villous trichomes 0.05-1 mm long, the secondaries 4-12, pinnate, the reticulation often conspicuous below. Inflores- cences 7 to 50-flowered, subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-2.5(-8) mm long which are sparsely to densely pubescent; floral cup glabrate to densely white- pubescent with trichomes 0.05-0.8 mm long; calyx-lobes lanceolate to subulate 1.5-7.5 mm long, joined basally by a calyx-tube 0.5-2 mm long; corolla tubular, red-orange or apricot (the lobes and extreme distal part of the tube yellow) mi- nutely white-papillose-puberulent externally with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, less frequently glabrous, the tube 12-30 mm long, pilose in the lower half but lacking a villous ring, the lobes ovate or deltoid to oblong or elliptic-lanceolate, flaring up to 45°, 1.2-5 mm long; anthers ca 2 mm long, brown, included by 1-6 mm [Vor. 55 10 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN or the tips protruding; style papillose-puberulent to glabrate, white, the branches 1-1.5 mm long. Capsules 3.5-6 mm long, 4-7 mm broad; seeds 1.5-3.5 mm broad. Type: Mexico: Sessé & Mocifio s.n. (MA, not seen); pl. 487 of the Calques des dessins . . . is a drawing of the type. Mexico, Michoacan, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Colima and Jalisco; steep moist slopes, shady arroyas or dry rocky cliffs or barrancas; often in oak or pine-oak woodlands; 200-2850 m; flowering June through November. The majority of specimens of B. cordifolia deposited in herbaria are from the vicinity of Morelia, Michoacan and Temascaltepec, Mexico and are characterized by the minute but often dense external puberulence of their corollas (see Black- well 26 & 27, TEX; Hinton 7950, F; Hitchcock & Stanford 7146, US; Kenoyer A263, F; Rzedowski 20775, ENCB). A few scattered collections of B. cordifolia have been made in Colima, southern Jalisco, Guerrero and Oaxaca, but these are all distinguished by glabrous corollas (see Iltis et al. 570, McVaugh 15010 & 15813, Ryan & Floyed 37, all MICH). As I have found no other character correlated with the difference in pubescence of the corolla which might serve to delimit these two “groups” of B. cordifolia, and since their apparent geographic separation may result from insufficient collecting rather than natural disjunction, I have not rec- ognized them by formal infraspecific categories. It is perhaps worth mentioning that an analogous situation involving pubescent and glabrous forms exists in B. loeseneriana and that the geographic area of interest and pattern of distribution are roughly similar. 6. BOUVARDIA CONZATTII Greenman, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 39: 92, 1903. Shrubs; seasonal branchlets often distally white-papillose-puberulent with trichomes 0.05-0.1 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-3 mm long; stipular processes lanceolate; blades ovate to lanceolate, 1.5-5 cm long, 0.4-2.8 cm broad, basally cuneate to broadly rounded, minutely papillose-hispidulous marginally and often sparsely so above and below (primarily along the main veins below) with tri- chomes 0.05-0.25 mm long, the secondaries 6-10, pinnate or occasionally the lower 4-6 arising subpalmately near the base of the midvein, the reticulation usually obscure. Inflorescences 7 to 12-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-5.5 mm long; floral cup glabrate; calyx-lobes linear or linear-lanceolate, 2.5-5.5 mm long, 0.3-0.8 mm broad, free to the floral cup; corolla tubular, red or yellowish-red, very min- utely papillose-puberulent externally with trichomes less than 0.05 mm long (some- times only sparsely so), the tube 8-17 mm long, 1.5-2 mm broad at the neck, internally with a villous ring toward the base, the lobes ovate to deltoid, 1-2 mm long, to 1.3 mm broad; anthers 2-3 mm long, included by 1-4.5 mm; style glabrate. Capsules 2.5-4.5 mm long, 3-5.5 mm broad; seeds 1.3-2 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico. Oaxaca: 1750 m, July-Aug 1901, Conzatti & Gonzáles 1067 (GH). (sphalm. Conzatti & Gonzáles 1076 by Greenman) Known only from Oaxaca; 1600-2000 m; known to be in flower May through August. 7. BoUVARDIA CHRYSANTHA Martius, Del. Hort. Monac. Sem. 1848: 4, 1848 (not seen); Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 3, 11: 247, 1849. 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARBDIA Il B. myrtifolia Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 121, 1854. (Type Schiede s.n. BÎ) B. macilenta Blake, Contr. Gray, Herb. 53: 65, 1918. (Holotype Conzatti & Reko 3288 GH) B. cataphyllaris Bullock, Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 3297, 1935. (Type Hinton 1131 BM, F, G, GH, K, CH, A Shrubs or suffrutices to 1 m; seasonal branchlets well-developed or very short, glabrous or distally papillose-puberulent (trichomes to 0.1 mm long) or pilosulous (trichomes to 1 mm). Leaves with petioles 0.5-3 mm long; blades ovate to elliptic or lanceolate, 1-7.8 cm long, 0.4-3 cm broad, often somewhat conduplicate, slightly crassulate, pale-satiny-green below, glabrous or sparsely puberulent with white trichomes 0.1-1 mm long (sometimes limited to the margins and midvein), rarely more densely pubescent, the secondaries usually totally or partially obscure, the reticulation not visible. Inflorescences 5 to 25-flowered, usually subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-4 mm long; floral cup green, glabrous or occasionally pubescent; calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate to slender-subulate, 2.5-11 mm long, free to the floral cup; corolla tubular, red-orange (the lobes and extreme distal part of the tube yellow), externally glabrous or rarely sparsely pilosulous with white trichomes to 1 mm long, the tube 15-34 mm long, 2-4 mm broad at the neck, sparsely pilosu- lous in the lower half (trichomes ca 0.5 mm long), the lobes ovate to oblong, 1.5-4 mm long, 1-3 mm broad, flared up to 40°; anthers white or yellow-white, 1.5-3 mm long, included by 1-6 mm or the tips protruding; style glabrate, white or yellow- white. Capsules 3.5-8.5 mm long, 4.5-10 mm broad; seeds 2.5-3.5 mm broad. Type: “Mexico”: nr Sanjaguillo, Karwinsky s.n., not seen. Oaxaca and extreme southern Peubla to Jalisco; dark loamy soil of volcanic slopes or rocky bluffs of barrancas; oak zone; 1300-2900 m; flowering mostly from June through October. Except for the small size of all structures, the type specimen of B. macilenta falls within the limits of variation under the name B. chrysantha. Certain specimens of B. chrysantha such as Hinton 10471 (MO, US) & 10541 (MO, US) and the type of B. cataphyllaris resemble B. multiflora in their short florif- erous branchlets, hirtellous floral cups and often partially evident secondary veins. It is thus probable that B. chrysantha intergrades to a limited extent with B. multi- flora. However, B. chrysantha is retained as a separate species since all but a few specimens are clearly distinct from B. multiflora. As already indicated, combining closely related species with B. multiflora would only lead to the creation of one hopelessly polymorphic species. 8. BOUVARDIA SUBCORDATA Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 105, 1921. Shrubs, the seasonal branches glabrous or pilose distally and at the nodes. Leaves with petioles 1-5 mm long; blades ovate to suborbicular, basally broadly rounded or cordate, 1.8-4.3 cm long, 1.2-3.4 cm broad, membranous, moderately or rather sparsely (but evenly) pilose with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long, the secondaries 6-8, the lower 4-6 often arising subpalmately near the base of the mid- vein, the reticulation obscure. Inflorescences 3 to T-flowered. Flowers with pedicels l-5 mm long which are puberulent with white trichomes ca 0.5 mm long; floral cup tomentose; calyx-lobes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate, 2-7.5 mm long, sparsely pilose, free to the floral cup; corolla tubular, red (?), externally rather sparsely [Vor. 55 12 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN white-pilose distally with trichomes 0.3-1 mm long, the tube 15-31 mm long, 2.5- 4.5 mm broad at the neck, pilose in the lower half, the lobes ovate to ovate- orbicular or rhombic, 2-4 mm long; anthers 2-2.5 mm long, included or the tips protruding; style glabrate. Holotype: Mexico. Sinaloa: betw Rosario & Colomas, 13 July 1897, Rose 1628 (US 300476) ; isotype F. Known only from the type collection. 9. BOUVARDIA XYLOsTEOIDES Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Beechey Voy. 428, 1840. B. villosa Standley, N. Amer. Fl 32: 107, 1921. (Holotype Conzatti 1486 US 764094; i ) Shrubs, the seasonal branchlets densely white-villous at least distally with trichomes to 1 mm long. Leaves with villous petioles 1-6 mm long; blades ovate to elliptic, basally cuneate to rounded, 1.3-3.3 cm long, 0.8-2 cm broad, villous with trichomes to 1 mm long (densely villous-tomentose below), the secondaries 4-8, pinnate, the reticulation obscure. Inflorescences 3 to 7-flowered. Flowers with vil- losulous pedicels 0.5-2 mm long; floral cup tomentose; calyx-lobes lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, 2-8 mm long, rather densely pubescent; corolla tubular, densely white-villous on the upper two-thirds with trichomes 0.4-1.3 mm long (sparsely pubescent toward the base), the tube 13-26 mm long, sparsely pilose within near the base, the lobes ovate, 1.5-3.5 mm long; anthers 2-4 mm long; style glabrous. Type: Mexico. Oaxaca: low mountains around Mitla (sphalm. Mitlam by Hooker & Arnott), Andrieux 333 (F fragment ex G-Deless., G, K). Bouvardia xylosteoides has been collected at 1800 m and is known to be in flower from May through July; all collections known (three, including the type col- lection) are from central Oaxaca. 10. BOUVARDIA DICTONEURA Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 109, 1921. B. matudai Lundell, i2. 2:105, 1939. (Holotype Matuda 2667 MICH; isotypes F, MO, US; photos F, TEX B. venosissima Lundell, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 66:602, 1939. (Holotype Matuda 2748 B. pachecoana Standley & Steyermark, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 23: 22, 1943. (Holotype Standley 86226 F 1093896; isotypes A, US; photo US Shrubs, slender, to 2.5 m; seasonal branches often elongate, slender, suffrutes- cent, bisulcate, sometimes sparsely pilose along the margins of the sulcae with trichomes 0.1-0.8 mm long, otherwise glabrous. Leaves with petioles 0.5-10 mm long; stipular processes 1.5-10.5 mm long, often filiform, glandular at the tip; blades ovate to lanceolate, basally rounded or cordate, 2-10.6 cm long, 1-5.8 cm broad, usually glabrous but often ciliate marginally with trichomes 0.1-1 mm long, occasionally sparsely pilose above and below with trichomes to 1 mm, the secon- daries 4-12, pinnate or rarely subpalmate, the reticulation obscure to prominent. Inflorescences 7 to 60-flowered. Flowers with pedicels (1-)3-10 mm long; floral cup glabrous; calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate or linear-subulate, 1.5-6 mm long; corolla red or orange-red, externally glabrous, the tube 4-13.5(-20) mm long, 2-4.5 mm broad at the neck, a villous ring within toward the base, the lobes broadly ovate or rhombic to somewhat oblong, 1.5-6 mm long, 2-4 mm broad, flared up to 1968] BLACKWELL-——BOUVARDIA 13 60°; anthers 2-3 mm long, included by 1-7 mm or the tips protruding; style glabrate. Capsules 3-5 mm long, 3.5-6 mm broad; seeds 1-2 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico. Chiapas: Chicharras (sphalm. Chichorras by Standley), 3000-6000 ft, 6 Febr 1896, Nelson 3757 (US 256554) ; isotype GH. Southwestern Guatemala and southern Chiapas; volcanic slopes, often in pine forests; 1000-3800 m; apparently flowering the year round. A collection from Guerrero (Pilas-Pasion, Distr Montes de Oca), Hinton 10759 (UC, W), has 3-nate leaves (a characteristic of the subg. Bouvardia) but is other- wise indistinguishable from many specimens of B. dictyoneura. Field work is needed in the attempt to find additional specimens with ternate leaves and to assess the reality .of the apparent geographic separation from typical opposite- leaved forms. 11. Bouvarpia standleyana Blackwell, sp. nov. Frutex B. gracilipedi affinis, sed foliorum laminis supra saltem sparse pubes- centibus, inflorescentiis terminalibus in ramis foliosis elongatis dispositis, corollaque omnino glabro differt. Shrubs; seasonal branches 7-30 cm long, suffrutescent, distally sparsely pilose (often irregularly so) to densely arachnose-pubescent with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-7.5 mm long; blades ovate to trullate, 1.5-7.5 cm long, 0.8-4.3 cm broad, membranous, at least sparsely pubescent on both surfaces with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long (below primarily concentrated along the main veins, the trichomes often spreading or curling), occasionally densely arach- nose-puberulent below, the secondaries 6-12, pinnate, often brochidodrome, the reticulation apparent above, prominent below. Inflorescences (10-)15 to 50-flow- ered, terminal on leafy branches more than 7 cm long (including flowers) and more than 1 mm broad. Flowers with pedicels 3-14 mm long (at least a few pedi- cels 8 mm or more) and less than 0.5 mm broad; floral cup sparsely pilosulous to conspicuously hirsute with trichomes 0.2-0.7 mm long or glabrous; calyx-lobes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate to subulate, 1-3 mm long; corolla tubular, yellow or light orange, externally and internally glabrous, the tube 7-24 mm long, the lobes ovate or deltoid to oblong, 2-4 mm long, flared up to 45?; anthers 1-2 mm long, exserted by 1-3.5 mm in thrum flowers, included by 1-2 mm in pin flowers; ovary subglobose, ca 1 mm long, the style glabrous, with branches 1-2.5 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Michoacan: Distr Coalcoman, S of Naranjillo, 1360 m, 26 Nov 1938, Hinton 12677 (US 2020693) ; isotypes K, MICH, UC. Western Jalisco, Michoacan and Guerrero; mountain summits, steep mountain- sides or rocky slopes; often found in the oak zone but occasionally in sandy soil in association with more tropical vegetation; 800-1700 m; flowering September through ebruary. Bouvardia standleyana is distinguished from its nearest relative, B. gracilipes, by the glabrous corollas (externally and internally), the well-developed and leafy floriferous branches, the presence of pubescence on the upper blade surface (though often sparse) and the more elongate pubescence on the distal portion of the seasonal branches. [Vor. 55 14 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Two collections, Hinton 14901 (US) & 15408 (F), from Mina, Guerrero are interesting in their apparent intermediacy between B. standleyana and B. bouvar- dioides (subg. Bouvardia). Although the majority of floral and inflorescence char- acters, as well as the pilose to arachnose pubescence of the branchlets and leaves resemble B. standleyana, the leaf size, form, verticillation and the red corollas strongly suggest specimens of B. bouvardioides from the Western Sierra of Mexico. However, B. bouvardioides is not known from Guerrero and definitely solving the problem of the ancestry of such putative hybrids will require intensive field work followed by experimental studies. 12. Bouvarpia cGRACILIPES B. L. Robinson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 45: 404, 1910 Shrubs to 1.5 m; seasonal branches glabrous or distally white-papillose-puberu- lent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long. Leaves with petioles 0.5-3.5 mm long; blades ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 2-9 cm long, 1-4.4 cm broad, membranous, glabrous above, often puberulent or pilosulous below on the main veins (and marginally) with trichomes 0.05-0.5 mm long, otherwise glabrous, the secondaries 6-10, pinnate, often brochidodrome, the reticulation most conspicuous below, imparting a minutely varicose appearance to the blade above. Inflorescences 5 to 50-flowered, pseudo- axillary, the floriferous branchlets less than 7 cm long (including flowers), less than ] mm broad, leafless (only a stipule-sheath present at the nodes), with only 1 or 2 very short internodes below the peduncle. Flowers with pedicels 5-22 mm long (at least a few pedicels 8 mm or more) and less than 0.5 mm broad; floral cup minutely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long or glabrate; calyx- lobes deltoid to lanceolate, 0.5-2 mm long; corolla tubular, yellow or orange-yellow, externally minutely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, the tube 10-19 mm long, often somewhat pilosulous within just below the middle (but not with a dense, villous ring), the lobes broadly ovate to oblong, 2-4.5 mm long; anthers 1.5-3 mm long, exserted in thrum flowers by 1-2 mm; style glabrate, the branches 0.5-1 mm long. Capsules 3.5-5.5 mm long, 4-7 mm broad; seeds 1.5-2.5 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico. Nayarit: Tepic, 5 Jan to 6 Feb 1892, Palmer 1971 (GH); isotypes F, US. Nayarit and northwestern Jalisco; steep, heavily forested stream valleys in the oak zone; growing in cracks and among rocks in stream beds; known to be in flower in November and December. 13. BOUVARDIA REKOI Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 108, 1921. Shrubs; seasonal branches glabrous or distally minutely puberulent with tri- chomes to 0.05 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-3 mm long; blades ovate-lanceo- late, rounded at the base, 3-6.5 cm long, 0.9-2.7 cm broad, glabrous, 3 to 5-plinerved, the reticulation often prominent below. Inflorescences few-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 6-13 mm long and 0.2-0.3 mm broad; floral cup sparsely pruinose-puberu- lent or hispidulous with trichomes to 0.05 mm long; calyx-lobes deltoid-acuminate, ca | mm long; corolla tubular, externally glabrate, the tube 10-19 mm long, a 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 15 villous ring within near the base, the lobes oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-4 mm long; anthers 1.5-3 mm long, exserted in thrum flowers by 1-4 mm; style glabrate, the branches 1-1.5 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Oaxaca: Cafetal Montecristo (Cerro Espino), 1000 m, 7 Dec 1917, Reko 3650 (US 867149). Known only from the type collection. 14. BOUVARDIA OAXACANA Standley, Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 13: 7, 1923. Herbs, perennial or suffrutices; stems simple or sparsely branched, slender, distally puberulent with white trichomes 0.05-0.3 mm long. Leaves with petioles 0-2.5 mm long; blades broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, basally rounded, 3.4-6.7 cm long, 1.3-3.8 cm broad, glabrate or sparsely white-puberulent with trichomes 0.1-0.5 mm long (often primarily along the margin), 5-plinerved, the reticulation obscure above, visible but inconspicuous below. Inflorescences often more than 30- flowered, subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-4 mm long and 0.5 broad; floral cup usually densely hirtellous; calyx-lobes lanceolate to elliptic- or linear-lanceo- late, 2-9 mm long, 1-2 mm broad; corolla tubular, red, externally glabrous or sparsely hirtellous, the tube 10-17 mm long, villous toward the base within but lacking a villous ring, the lobes mostly oblong-lanceolate, 3-6 mm long; anthers 2-3 mm long, exserted by 2-6 mm in thrum flowers; style glabrate, the branches 1-2 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Oaxaca: Distr Juquila, betw Santa Cruz & El Aguacate, 900 m, 24 Dec 1921, Conzatti 4513 (US 1110842) ; isotype GH. Known only from the type collection. 15. BOUVARDIA QUINQUENERVATA Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 108, 1921. Shrubs; seasonal branches rather elongate, distally hirtellous with trichomes 0.05-0.3 mm long. Leaves with petioles 1-5 mm long; blades broadly ovate to ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, basally obtuse to rounded or cordate, 2.6-5.9 cm long, 1.3-3.7 cm broad, glabrate above, obscurely puberulent below on the main veins with trichomes to 0.1 mm long, 5-plinerved, the reticulation visible above, prom- inent below. Inflorescences usually more than 50-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 1.5-6 mm long, to 0.5 mm broad; floral cup rather densely hirtellous; calyx-lobes linear-subulate, 2-6 mm long, 0.3-1 mm broad; corolla tubular to virtually salver- form, violet or lavender, externally sparsely hirtellous (mainly toward the base) with trichomes 0.1-0.2 mm long, the tube 4.5-8.5 mm long, rather densely villous in the lower half (the pubescence not organized into a villous ring), the lobes oblong to oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-4 mm long; anthers 2-3.5 mm long, exserted in both pin and thrum flowers by 1-5.5 mm; style somewhat hirtellous or villosulous on the lower half. Capsules 3-4.5 mm long, 2.4-4 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico. Chiapas: San Bartolomé, 22 March 1904, Goldman 769 (US 470574). Southern Chiapas; pine forests on volcanic slopes; ca 1400 m; known to flower December through March. [Vor. 55 16 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Based cn the many-flowered inflorescences, the short lavender corollas and stamens exserted in both pin and thrum flowers, B. quinquenervata appears more closely related to specimens of B. bouvardioides from Chiapas and Guatemala than to any member of the subg. Bouvardiastrum. II. Susc. Bovvannioipzs Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 58, 1854. Shrubs or suffrutices; seasonal branches opposite, glabrous or pubescent. Leaves opposite, usually petiolate; blades glabrous or pubescent, the secondaries pinnate, obscure or rarely subpalmate, the reticulation obscure or inconspicuous Inflorescences 1- or several (to 15)-flowered (when several-flowered, each partial inflorescence composed of only 1 flower). Flowers pedicellate or sessile, = erect; calyx-lobes free to the floral cup or rarely connected basally by a calyx-tube; corolla salverform (lobes spreading at an angle of 90?), white, externally glabrous or pubescent, the tube internally sparsely pilose throughout or the pubescence limited to the upper half (never limited to the lower half), less often glabrate internally; anthers in both pin and thrum flowers included or only the tips protruding; style glabrate or more often minutely papillose-pubescent (at least on the distal half), the branches 1-7.5 mm long. Type: Bouvardia longiflora (Cav.) H.B.K. a. Flowers sessile or subsessile on a branch terminus (rarely with pedicels to 1 mm long), usually solitary (if inflorescences several-flowered then the leaf-blades a ne d villous beneath toward the base with trichomes to 1 mm long and the floral cup villous-tomentose or else the flowers with a calyx-tube ca 2 mm long extending beyond the floral cup). b Flowers solitary (if inflorescences 3 or more-flowered then the floral cup villous-tomentose with trichomes to 1.5 mm long and the leaf-blades con- spicuously villous below toward the base); calyx-lobes free to the flora cup. Stipular processes lanceolate or slender-subulate, 2.5-10 mm long; blades glabrate or infrequently puberulent with trichomes to 0.3 mm long (not concentrated below toward the base); floral cup glabrate or rarely ensely puberulent with trichomes to 0.3 mm long; corolla-tube glabrous externally or rarely sparsely puberulent with trichomes to 0.3 mm g^ A flowers always solita 16. B. longiflora c. Stipular processes often pluriaristate, 1-3.5 mm long; blades cónspicu- ously villous below toward the base with trichomes to 1 mm; floral cup densely, villous with trichomes 0.5-1.5 mm long; corolla-tube externally sparsely villous distally with trichomes 03-5 mm long (if oa then the inflorescences with 3-11 ihe B. langlassei : vio dama adt 3 to 5(-T)-flowered (floral cup pruinose- E n with trichomes to 0.05 mm long and the leaf- ud glabrate); calyx-lobes con- nected basally by a calyx-tube ca 2 mm long 19. B. rosei . Flowers typically at least on pedicellate; inflorescences often 3- or more- flowered (if flowers solitary, the leaf-blades pe Sun 9 mm broad and the plants often low, dense shrubs of xerophytic d. Petioles (0.5-)3-12 mm long; leaf-blades usually broader than 9 mm, the secondaries evident; inflorescences 3 to 15- e. eii glabrate; pedicels (0.5-)2.5-19 mm = ng; C calyx-lobes (0.5-)1.5-5 m br "us often rather broadly linear-elliptic; corolla-tube 1.5-4.5(-5.6) m lon 20. B. glabra ee. Plants bs or conspicuously pubescent; pedicels 0.5-2.5(-6) mm Jong; calyx-lobes 0.5-1(-2) mm broad, + linear; corolla-tube (3.5-)4.5- 21 e Q c > m w B. induta 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 17 dd. Petioles 0-3(-45) mm long; leaf-blades usually less i 9 mm broad, e secondaries usually obscure; bees es 1 to 9-flo f. Xerophytic, low, dense shrubs, the branchlets often eem g pseudo- spinescent; leaf-blades to Xs ns m long, often papillose- Seles with trichomes to 0.2 mm uade very sparsely ou flowers 2) mm ng 18. B. erecta . Typically not xerophytes, the branches not at all spinescent; leaf-blades 0.9-7 cm long, glabrate or rarely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.3 mm long; inflorescences often 3 to 9-flowered, the flowers occasion- ally solitary; imm lobes 2-32 mm long. Leaf-blades having a length/width ratio of 2.4/1 to 18/1; floral cup typically pruinose- or papillose-puberulent with trichomes to to 0.05(-0.3) mm long (sometimes sparsely so); cae 2-11 mm long; ovary gt subglobose, 1-2 mm long ................... B. dolichantha . Leaf-blades having a length/width ratio of 10/1 to 42/1; ud cup glabrous; calyx-lobes 12-32 mm long; ovary turbinate or sub- cylindrical, 2-3.5 mm long 23. B. karwinskyi 16. BouvaRDIA LONGIFLORA (Cav.) H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 386, 1820. Aeginetia longiflora Cav., Anal. Ci. Nat. 3: 130, t. 28, fig. 1, 1801; Ic. 6: 51, t. 572, fig. 1, 1801. solitary (inflorescences X * flowered); calyx-lobes 1.5-5(-6. lon ax -— oe ge i e Bud iflora var. et ee Martens & Galeotti, Bull. Acad. Bruxelles 11(1): 236, 1844. type c 659 Houstonia longiflora (Cav.) h Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 4: 314, 1860. Shrubs to 1.6 pn seasonal branches ascending, glabrous or distally white- papillose-hirtellous with trichomes to 0.2 mm long, often short and slender and herbaceous. Leaves with petioles to 10 mm long; stipular processes lanceolate or slender-subulate, 2.5-10 mm long; blades lanceolate or occasionally ovate- or elliptic- lanceolate, 1.5-5.7 cm long, 0.5-2.2 cm broad, glabrous or infrequently white- puberulent with trichomes 0.05-0.3 mm long, the secondaries 4-12, pinnate. Flowers solitary, sessile or subsessile (pedicels to 1 mm long); floral cup glabrate or rarely densely puberulent with white trichomes 0.1-0.3 mm long; calyx-lobes linear to linear-lanceolate or linear-oblanceolate, rarely more broadly oblanceolate or + elliptic, (2.5-)6-26 mm long; corolla glabrous externally or rarely sparsely puberu- lent with trichomes to 0.3 mm long, the tube 3.5-8.5 cm long, internally sparsely pilose throughout, the lobes 8-28 mm long; anthers 3-5 mm long; ovary 2-5 mm long, the style glabrate or pruinose-puberulent, the branches 2-6 mm long. Capsules 8-12.5 mm long, 7-12 mm broad; seeds 1.5-4 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico: betw Queretaro & Guanajuato, Oct (MA, not seen). The description is based on a specimen in the herbarium of L. Née without reference to the collector. Aguascalientes, Jalisco and San Luis Potosi to Puebla and Oaxaca; occasional on rhyolitic or basaltic hillsides or steep roadcuts at elevations of 2000-4000 m; sometimes associated with xerophytic plants in arid or semiarid habitats but more frequently occurring in mesic woodlands of oak and pine; flowering most commonly from May through August. Two collections of B. longiflora from Puebla, Purpus 1249 (GH, MO) from Tehuacan and Purpus 3327 (MO, UC) from the vicinity of San Luis Tultitlanapa, are distinguished by their puberulent leaves, densely puberulent floral cups and shorter calyx-lobes (2.5-6 mm long). At first I thought these formed a distinct [Vor. 55 18 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN subspecies. However, other collections of “typical” B. longiflora, Purpus 3323 (F) & 3326 (GH, MO), from the vicinity of San Luis Tultitlanapa were subsequently seen and cast doubt on the geographical separation of the puberulent forms. Addi- tional collecting is needed to elucidate their status. 17. BOUVARDIA LANGLASSEI Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 110, 1921. Shrubs to 1.5 m; seasonal branches distally villous with trichomes 0.2-1 mm long, often short and herbaceous. Leaves with villous petioles to 7 mm long; stipular processes 1-3.5 mm long, often pluriaristate; blades obovate or oblanceolate to ovate or ovate-lanceolate, 1.2-5.2 cm long, 0.5-2.8 cm broad, villous (particularly beneath toward the base) with white trichomes 0.3-1 mm long, the secondaries 4-10, pinnate or infrequently + plinerved. Flowers solitary or 3-11 on a seasonal branch, sessile or subsessile (pedicels to 1 mm); floral cup densely white-villous with trichomes 0.5-1.5 mm long; calyx-lobes linear or slender-lanceolate, 2.5-9 mm long; corolla distally sparsely villous externally with slender trichomes 0.3-1.5 mm long or glabrous (when glabrous, the inflorescence typically several-flowered), the e 3.5-6.6 cm long, internally glabrate or sparsely pilose throughout, the lobes 6-14 mm long; anthers 3-4 mm long; ovary 1-3 mm long, the style glabrate, the branches 1.5-3.5 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Guerrero: Testla (Yextla), 45 km W of Chilpancingo, 1500 m, 8 June 1899, Langlassé 1049 (US); isotypes F (fragment), G, GH, P; photo US. Guerrero and northwestern Michoacan; infrequent; mountain slopes in rocky soil, often under semiarid conditions; 1000-2000 m; known to be in flower in June. 18. Bouvarpia ERECTA (DC.) Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 110, 1921. Catesbaea erecta DC., Prodr. 4: 401, 1830. diei E Sessé & Mocifio, Fl. Mex. 22, 1891. (Type Sessé & Mociño s.n. MA, Bouvardia FS Schumann in Loesener, Bull. Herb. Boiss. 3: 621, 1895. (Type Seler B. flos-joannis var. latifolia Loesener, Repert. Sp. Nov. 18: 358, 1922. (Type Endlicher 1966 W, not seen) Shrubs to 1.2 m; seasonal branches glabrous or papillose-hispidulous with white trichomes to 0.2 mm long, + herbaceous, becoming woody and pseudospines- cent. Leaves often pseudofasiculate by virtue of crowding and the development of axillary buds which produce leaves but fail to elongate; petioles to 2.5 mm long; stipular processes slender-deltoid, 0.5-2 mm long; blades lanceolate or linear to elliptic-lanceolate or oblanceolate, 3.5-12(-18) mm long, 1-4.5 mm broad, char- taceous, glabrous or white-papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.2 mm long, the secondaries obscure. Flowers solitary (rarely 3 terminating a branchlet); pedicels (0-)1-8 mm long; floral cup glabrous or puberulent with trichomes to 0.2 mm long; calyx-lobes linear to lanceolate or slightly oblanceolate, 1.5-5(-6.5) mm long; corolla white but often lightly suffused with rose, inconspicuously puberulent externally with trichomes to 0.05 mm long or glabrate, the tube 2.5-5.5 cm long, sparsely pilose in the upper half (sometimes densely so at the throat), the lobes 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 19 5-12 mm long; anthers 2-4 mm long; ovary 1-2.5 mm long, the style often minutely papillose-puberulent, the branches 1.5-5 mm long. Capsules 4-9 mm long, 4-8.5 mm broad; seeds 2-3 mm broad. Type: Mexico: Sessé & Mocifio s.n. (MA, not seen); pl. 460 of the Calques des dessin ... is a drawing of the type. Puebla; limestone slopes with gray or whitish soil and frequent rock outcrops; often in association with thorn-scrub, cactus and hat palms under arid conditions; 1300-2500 m; flowering from June through early October. Bouvardia erecta is unique in the subg. Bouvardioides in its adaptation to xeric conditions. The habit is that of a dense, low shrub of scrubby appearance. The branchlets are often pseudospinescent and the leaves small and rather densely crowded. 19. Bouvarpia Roser Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 109, 1921. Shrubs, the branches minutely puberulent when young. Leaves with petioles ca 1 mm long; stipular processes narrowly lanceolate, 3-5 mm long; blades ovate to elliptic, 2-3.8 cm long, 0.7-2 cm broad, glabrate, the secondaries 4-8, subpalmate (two arising from the midvein slightly below the midpoint of the leaf and the remainder originating together near the base or occasionally all originating near the base). Inflorescences 3 to 5(-7)-flowered. Flowers typically sessile (occasionally with pedicels to ca 1 mm); floral cup pruinose-puberulent; calyx-lobes linear- lanceolate, 4-9 mm long, connected basally by a calyx-tube extending ca 2 mm above the floral cup; corolla glabrate externally, the tube 4-7 cm long, internally sparsely pilose throughout, the lobes 11-15 mm long; anthers 3-4 mm long; ovary ca 1.5 mm long; style moderately papillose-hispid distally, the branches 4-6 mm long. Capsules 6-8 mm long and broad; seeds 2-3 mm broad. Holotype: Mexico. Durango: Sierra Madre, 16 Aug 1897, Rose 3516 (US); isotype F; photo US. Sierra Madre of Durango and Sinaloa; infrequent; known to be in flower in August (probably also in September). 20. Bouvarpia GLABRA Polakowsky, Linnaea 41: 565, 1877. B. i var. gracilis Polakowsky, loc. cit. 566. (Type Polakowsky 172 Bt, BM, W; photos F, G, TEX B. glabra var. obtusa Loesener, Verh. Bot. Ver. Brandenburg 65: 106, 1923. (Type Seler 2920 Bt) Shrubs to 1.5 m; branches glabrous. Leaves with petioles (2-)3-12 mm long; stipular processes lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, 1.5-6 mm long; blades ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, 2.5-10.5 cm long, 0.9-4.3 cm broad, glabrous or glabrate, the secondaries 6-12, pinnate. Inflorescences 3 to 7-flowered. Flowers with pedicels (0.5-)2.5-19 mm long; calyx-lobes elliptic to oblanceolate or + linear, 3.5-17 mm long, (0.5-) 1.5-5 mm broad; corolla externally glabrous or rarely minutely puberu- lent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, the tube 1.5-4.5(-5.6) cm long, glabrate within, the lobes 5-16 mm long; anthers 2.5-4 mm long; ovary 1.5-3 mm long; style pruinose-puberulent, the branches 1.5-7.5 mm long. Capsules 4-10 mm long, 5-10 mm broad; seeds 2-4.5 mm broad. [Vor. 55 20 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Type: Costa Rica: San José, Aug 1875 Polakowsky 337 (Bt, F fragment; photos F, G, TEX, US); possibly from cultivated material. Guatemala, southern Chiapas and Costa Rica; wooded or shrubby slopes or barrancas of volcanic mountains in arid to very mesic (cloud forest) conditions; 1300-3500 m; flowering the year round. I have seen collections from Honduras perhaps assignable to B. glabra but intermediate between B. glabra and B. dolichantha. Examples of these possibly hybrid specimens are Hawkes et al. 2095 (C, G, K), Molina 6501 (F) and Rodriguez 3124 (F). Additional collecting is needed to ascertain more accurately the distribution of B. glabra, B. dolichantha and B. induta and to look for inter- mediate forms. These three taxa are a closely related complex in northern Central America and I view the specific status of B. dolichantha and B. induta as tentative at present. 21. Bouvarpia InDUTA (Robinson) Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 109, 1921. B. es es induta B. L. Robinson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 45: 404, 1910. B. pur Bor andegee, Univ. Calif. Pu ibl Bot. 10: 415, 1924. (Holotype Purpus 9251 303 1?; isotypes F, GH, haa to 1 m; branches distally rather densely white-hirsute with trichomes to 0.8 mm long or glabrous. Leaves with petioles (0.5-)3-9 mm long; stipular processes subulate, 1-3.5 mm long; blades lanceolate to ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, (1.5-)2-7.3 cm long, (0.5-)1-2.5 cm broad, conspicuously white-hirsute with trichomes to 1 mm long or glabrous, the secondaries 4-10, pinnate. Inflorescences 3 to 15-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-2.5(-6) mm long which are densely hirsute to glabrate; floral cup white-hirsute-tomentellous with trichomes to 1 mm long or minutely puberulent (trichomes to 0.05 mm long) or glabrate; calyx-lobes linear to linear-lanceolate or linear-elliptic or slightly oblanceolate, 2.5-16 mm long, 0.5-1(-2) mm broad; corolla externally villosulous or hirsute with trichomes 0.1-0.7 mm long or pruinose- or papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, rarely glabrate externally, the tube (3.5-)4.5-8.5 cm long, pilose in the distal half with trichomes to 1 mm long, the lobes 7-22 mm long; anthers 3-5 mm long; ovary 1-2.5 mm long, the style distally minutely puberulent and proximally glab- rous, with branches 1-5 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Chiapas: June-July 1864-70, Ghiesbreght s.n. (GH). The holotype is one of three collections of B. induta on one herbarium sheet, viz. the one in the middle. The specimens on the left and right are Ghiesbreght 108 and 692 respectively. Chiapas and adjacent Guatemala; rocky, dry limestone areas in pine forests; 1000-2200 m; flowering March through September. Some specimens of B. purpusii differ from B. induta in the glabrescence of all parts (see Purpus 9252 MO, UC, US). However, the holotype is a pubescent plant similar to the majority of specimens of B. induta. An isotype (F) is a mixed col- lection, the specimen on the left side of the herbarium sheet being glabrate and the one on the right conspicuously pubescent. The specimens on the right is probably a duplicate of the holotype. 1968] BLACKWELL-—BOUVARDIA 2I 22. BOUVARDIA DOLICHANTHA Loesener, Verh. Bot. Ver. Brandenburg 65: 106, 1923. B. steyermarkii Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist, Bot. Ser. 22: 383, 1940. (Holotype Steyermark 29671 F 1043386; photos F, TEX) Shrubs or low suffrutices; branches glabrous or sparsely papillose- or pruinose- puberulent distally with trichomes to 0.05(-0.3) mm long. Leaves opposite but occasionally crowded and pseudoverticillate; petioles 0.5-3(-4.5) mm long; stipular processes deltoid to lanceolate, 0.5-3 mm long; blades linear ‘or lanceolate to elliptic- or narrowly ovate-lanceolate, 0.9-7 cm long, 1.5-9 mm broad, glabrate or rarely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.3 mm long, the secondaries obscure or 4-6 and pinnate. Inflorescences (1-)3 to 9-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5- 5.5 mm long which are glabrous or minutely puberulent; floral cup typically pruinose- or papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.05(-0.3) mm long; calyx- lobes linear or lanceolate to narrowly elliptic or oblanceolate, 2-11 mm long, 0.5- 1.3(-2) mm broad; corolla externally glabrous or sparsely papillose-puberulent with trichomes to 0.05(-0.2) mm long, the tube 1.7-8 cm long, internally glabrate or papillose-puberulent to pilose (trichomes 0.1-1 mm long) in the upper half, the lobes 4-19 mm long; anthers 2-4 mm long; ovary usually subglobose, 1-2 mm long, the style minutely puberulent on the distal two-thirds, with branches 1-5 mm long. Capsules 3.5-8.5 mm long and broad; seeds 2-3.5 mm broad. Loesener cites Seler 2795 and 2883 without selecting one or the other as the type. I designate Seler 2883 (US 1205579) as lectotype (Guatemala: Dept of Huehuetenango, Distr of Nenton, nr Uaxackanal & toward Quen Santo, 1100 m, 9 July 1896); isolectotypes GH, F (fragment); photos F, G, US from Bf. Guatemala and Honduras; occasional on mountainsides along humid banks in mixed woodlands of oak and pine; 1000-3400 m; flowering May through October. 23. BOUVARDIA KARWINSKYI Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 8: 155, 1930 Shrubs to 1.5 m; seasonal branches glabrate or obscurely hirtellous with tri- chomes to 0.1 mm long. Leaves opposite but often crowded, sometimes pseudo- fasciculate by the production of leaves by axillary buds which fail to develop into branches; petioles 0-2 mm long; stipular processes lanceolate, 1.5-5.5 mm long; blades linear to linear-lanceolate or narrowly linear-elliptic, 1.6-5.3 cm long, 0.7-3 mm broad, glabrous, the secondaries obscure. Inflorescences 1 to 5-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-6 mm long which are glabrous; floral cup glabrous, calyx lobes linear, 12-32 mm long, 0.5-1.5 mm broad; corolla glabrous externally, the tube 3.5-6.2 cm long, sparsely pilose in the upper half, the lobes 7-13.5 mm long; anthers 3-3.5 mm long; ovary turbinate or subcylindrical, 2-3.5 mm long, the style papillose-puberulent (particularly distally) with trichomes to 0.05 mm long, with branches 1-2 mm long. Holotype: Mexico: betw Victoria & Río Blanco, 1842, Karwinsky 312 (LE); isotype F (fragment). I have been unable to learn the state(s) in which the type and other specimens of B. karwinskyi were collected; flowering July through October. [Vor. 55 29, ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN III. Susc. Bouvanpra Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 58, 1854. Shrubs, suffrutices or perennial herbs; seasonal branches opposite or verticil- late, pubescent to glabrous. Leaves 3 to 4(-6)-nate at some or all of the nodes, petiolate or sessile; blades conspicuously pubescent (mostly below) to glabrous, the secondaries pinnate, arcuate, less frequently obscure, the reticulation obscure to prominent. Inflorescences few to many-flowered; partial inflorescences 3- or more- flowered. Flowers pedicellate or virtually sessile; calyx-lobes free to the floral cup; corolla tubular to salverform (lobes spreading 10-90°), red, less frequently lavender, rose, violet-blue or pink, externally pubescent or glabrous, the tube internally pilose or villous in the lower half (rarely glabrate) or the pubescence organized into a villous ring near the base; anthers included (rarely exserted) in pin flowers; included or often exserted in thrum flowers; style usually glabrate, the branches 0.5-3 mm long. a. Spine externally eene leui obscurely pruinose-puberulent or glabrate but n the leaves obova 9 to 6-nate at some of the nodes b. oe es not more reg re p the blades typically neither obovate nor Hy qii ui corolla-tube puberulent externally with trichomes usually 0.1- ong, internally with a villous ring toward the base. Well-branched shrubs or low suffrutices (occasionally the stems simple and herbaceous but broader than 1.5 mm at the midpoint); leaves at least short-petiolate, the blades having a length/width ratio of 1.5/1 to 19/1 and most often not linear, the secondaries usually apparent 24. B. Ue cc. Herbaceous or bun pi perennials, the stems 1-1.5 mm broad a the midpoint, simple or sparsely branched distally; leaves often E or subsessile edi onally og ee the blades linear, with a length/width ed 5 12/ A 50/1, the secondaries obscure ........ 25. B. aula bb. Leaves 5- or 6-nate one more nodes, the blades often obovate an mucronulate; corolla-tube puberlent externally with trichomes to 0.05 mm d or rarely glabrate, lackin internal villous ring toward the base though d som ae villeculbas) 26. B. obovata aa. Corolla externally gla d. Seasonal branches distally villosulous or hirsute with trichomes 0.2-2 mm ong; leaves short-petiolate or subsessile (petioles 0.5-3 mm long), the blades often es pubescent (particularly below) with trichomes .2-1.1 mm long (the pubescence either coarse and yellowish or bone i ube A mm i Qa D e than 60 flowers and often ser n pin owers. orolla tubular, the tube typically with a villous ring internally ond the base, the lobes usually less sn 2.2 mm broad, spread- ing up to 21. B. leiantha ff. Corolla salverform, the tube villous internally toward the base but lacking a definite en ring, the lobes frequently 2.2 mm broad or more, spreading 28. B. viminalis ee, Coarse perennial herbs, prd with distinctly tetragonal stems 3-4 mm ic marily on the main veins, the secondaries (8-) 12-22; calyx-lobes subu- late (or approaching filiform), (3-)5.5-12 mm long; anthers included in pin and thrum flowers 29. B. scabra 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 93 dd. Seasonal branches distally glabrous or puberulent with trichomes to 0.1 or red (when red the inflorescences more than 60-flowered and no capitate), the tube 2-19 mm long. Leaves sessile, the blades linear, having a length/width ratio of 4/1 to ga 24, BOUVARDIA TERNIFOLIA (Cav.) Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 98, 1854. Ixora Mns Cav., Ic. 4: 3, t. 305, 1797. I. am na Jacquin, Hort. Schónbr. 3: 4, 1798. (Based on I. ternifoli a) Hou. sonia coccinea Andrews, Bot. Repos., pl. 106, wo an is taken as the type) p ees triphylla Salisbury, Parad. Lond., pl. 88, (Based on I. ternifolia B. linearis H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 383, 1819. jo Humboldt & Bonpland s.n. P, een; photos F, P, TEX, FUS). B. angustifolia H.B.K., loc. cit. 384. (Type Humboldt & Bonpland s.n. F, P not seen, US; photos F, P, TEX, US B. hirtella H.B.K., loc. cit. (Type Humboldt & Bonpland s.n. P, not seen; photos F, P, S B. jacquinii H.B.K., loc. cit. ce Pe (Based on I. americana) B. coccinea (Andrews) Link, Enum. Hort. Berol. 1: 139, 1821. B. quaternifolia DC., Prodr. a: "365, 1830. (Type Alaman s.n. G-DC, not seen; photo IDC Carphalea pubiflora Sessé & Mocifio ex DC., loc. cit. (As synonym of B. quaternifolia) Bouvardia jacquinii var. B exogyna DC., loc. cit. (Based on a plant grown in Salm-Dyck's garden; type G- ab m seen; photo IDC C) B. jacquinii var. y o DC., loc. cit. (Based on “Bouvardia triphylla var. B Salisb.,” the supposedly broader leafed form, the type of which is Salisbury’s p B. splendens Graham, Bot. Mag., pl. 3781, 1840. (Based on greenhouse- -grown plants; K) B. triphylla var. splendens (Graham) Lindley, Bot. Reg. 26: t. 37, 1840. B. tolucana Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Beechey Voy. 427, 1840. (Type Andrieux 332 K, W) B. quaterniflora Steudel, Nomen. Bot. ed. 2, part 1, 300, 1841, as synonym of Carphalea pubiflora; probably. a mistake for B. quaternifolia DC. B. scabrida Martens & Galeotti, Bull. Acad. Bruxelles 11 (1): 237, 1844. (Holotype Galeotti B. hypoleuca Bentham, P1. Hartw. 288, 1848. (Type Hartweg 1605 K; photo MICH) B. glaberrima Engelmann in Wislizenus, Tour N. Mex. 106, 1848. (Type Wislizenus 161 B. ovata A. Gra y, Pl. Wright. 5: 67, 1853. (Type Wright 1117 GH, MO, US) dans eee sane Willd. ex Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 60, 1854. (As synonym of Bouvardia angustifolia Varie rdia Ene iflora Schle cht., loc. cit. 97. (Type BT) . houtteana Schlecht. ex Planchon, Fl. Serres 10: 149, t. 55, 1855. (Illustration is taken ast pd ype B. hivtella var. quaternifolia (DC.) Rothrock in Wheeler, Rept. U.S. Geogr. Surv. 6: 137, B. triphylla var. angustifolia (H.B.K.) A. Gray, Syn. Fl. N. Amer. 1(2): 24, 1884. B. s var. angustifolia (H.B.K.) B. L. Robinson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci. 45: 910. B. Em Loesener, Repert. Sp. Nov. 18: 357, 1922. (Type Endlicher 176a Bt; photos F, G, TEX, US). B. orizabensis Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist, Bot. Ser. 8: 334, 1931. (Holotype tteri 604 P; isotypes F fragment, G) Shrubs or suffrutices or perennial herbs to 1.5 m, the branches sparsely to rather densely papillose-hispidulous when young with white trichomes 0.1-0.3 mm [Vor. 55 24 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN long. Leaves with petioles 0.5-12 mm long; blades extremely variable (linear, lanceolate, elliptic, ovate, obovate) though most often elliptic-lanceolate, 1-11 cm long, 0.1-3.1 cm broad, glabrate to densely papillose-hispidulous or villosulous with white trichomes variously 0.05-1 mm long, the secondaries 4-12 (often obscure in narrow, linear leaves), the reticulation apparent or obscure. Cymes 3 to 40- flowered, sometimes subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 1-15 mm long; floral cup sparsely to densely papillose-hispidulous; calyx-lobes lanceolate to linear, 2-10 mm long; corolla tubular, salmon-red or orange-red or scarlet, externally pubescent with papillose, white, red-tipped trichomes 0.1-0.4 mm long (rarely obscurely puberulent with trichomes 0.05 mm long or less or villosulous with trichomes to 0.8 mm long), the tube 9-35 mm long, typically with a villous ring internally toward the base, the lobes ovate to oblong, 1.5-3.5(-5) mm long, spreading up to 60°, internally white-pruinose-puberulent; anthers 2-4 mm long, white or red, included by 1-4 mm or the tips protruding; ovary 1-2.5 mm long, the style-branches red, 1-2.5 mm long. Capsules 4.5-9 mm long, 5-10.5 mm broad, glabrous or sparsely papillose-hispid; seeds 2-3.5 mm broad. The original description of Ixora ternifolia was based on a plant growing in the Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid, the seed having been sent from Mexico. The illustration is taken as the type. Southwestern Texas and New Mexico and southeastern Arizona to Oaxaca and southern Vera Cruz; the most common species of Bouvardia; frequent in desert and mesic, montane habitats; 800-3000 m; flowering mostly from late February through October. In examining type material of B. scabrida, Galeotti 2624, specimens at P and W (and photos A, F, MICH, TEX) were found to be B. viminalis. However, the specimen at BR is B. ternifolia and Galeotti 2624 is thus a mixed collection. As the original publication clearly describes the BR specimen, it is regarded as the type of B. scabrida. The “isotypes” and “phototypes” discussed are merely addi- tional specimens of B. viminalis. Standley (Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 8: 334, 1931) considered B. orizabensis to be a “well marked” species “related clearly to B. bouvardioides.” Examination of type material, however, showed B. orizabensis to be synonymous with B. ternifolia. Confusion may have arisen because of the obscurity of the pubescence, particularly of the corolla, on the F and P type specimens of B. orizabensis. It is worthy of mention, however, that the external pubescence of the G specimen is similar to that of typical specimens of B. ternifolia and may be from another plant. Even if Botteri 604 represents a mixed collection, all the speci- mens involved are still referable to B. ternifolia. 25. BOUVARDIA TENUIFOLIA Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 104, 1921. Herbs, often suffrutescent toward the base; stems simple or sparsely branched distally, 1-1.5 mm broad at the midpoint, glabrous or distally minutely puberulent to villosulous (white trichomes 0.05-0.7 mm long). Leaves with petioles 0-3 mm long; blades linear, 2-9.5 cm long, 0.7-4.5 mm broad, glabrous or pubescent with trichomes similar to those of the distal portion of the stem, the secondaries an 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 25 reticulation obscure. Cymes 3 to 25-flowered, often subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-6 mm long; calyx-lobes narrowly deltoid to subulate or linear, 1-3 mm long; corolla tubular, red, externally pubescent with papillose, white, red-tipped trichomes 0.1-0.4 mm long, the tube 7-26 mm long, a villous ring within near the base, the lobes ovate or elliptic, 1.5-5 mm long; anthers 2-4 mm long, included by 1-6 mm or the tips protruding; ovary 1-1.5 mm long, the style-branches 0.5-2 mm long. Holotype: Mexico. Jalisco: grassy hillsides nr Guadalajara, Oct 1899, Pringle 2292 (US); isotypes A, BM, BR, F, G, LE, M, MICH, MO, MSC, P, UC, W. Sinaloa and western Durango to northern Jalisco; found in various habitats: precipitous slopes with pine and oak, open slopes in palm-oak country, grassy hill- sides, gravelly banks of ravines, dry hills; 150-2700 m; flowering July through De- cember. Intergradation occurs between B. tenuifolia and B. ternifolia where their ranges overlap, viz. the Western Sierra Madre from extreme western Durango and eastern Sinaloa to Nayarit and northwestern Jalisco. The shaky separation of the two spe- cies by a combination of leaf and habit characters may prove untenable in the light of future collecting. 26. BouvARDIA OBOVATA H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 385, 1820. Hedyotis fruticosa Sessé & Mocifio ex DC., Prodr. 4: 365, 1830. (Type Sessé & Mocifio s.n. M,F Herbs or suffrutices to 1.3 m; stems glabrous or sparsely papillose-puberulent (most noticeably at the nodes and on the extreme distal portion) with white tri- chomes to 0.1 mm long. Leaves 3 to 6-nate (at least one or two nodes 5- or 6-nate); petioles 0-7 mm long; blades obovate to elliptic, 3.5-13 cm long, 0.9-3.8 cm broad, often mucronulate, glabrate, the secondaries 6-12, the reticulation ap- parent below, often subobscure above. Cymes 10 to 60-flowered. Flowers with ped- icels 0.5-12 mm long; calyx-lobes lanceolate, 2-4 mm long; corolla tubular, red, externally minutely papillose-puberulent with white, red-tipped trichomes to 0.05 mm long, the tube 10-32 mm long, internally glabrate or somewhat villosu- lous toward the base (not with a villous ring), the lobes ovate to elliptic or oblong, 2-5 mm long, flared up to 30°; anthers 2.5-3.5 mm long, included by 1-8 mm or the tips protruding; ovary 1-2 mm long, the style-branches 1-3 mm long. Capsules 5.5-9 mm long, 6-10 mm broad, glabrous; seeds 2-3.5 mm broad. Type: Mexico. Distrito Federal: betw Chapultepec & Tezcoco, “1200 hex.?”, June 1803-04, Bonpland s.n. (P). Occuring sporadically in Nayarit, Mexico State, the Federal District, Morelos and Oaxaca; wooded slopes and barrancas of volcanic mountains; rolling grassy hills in oak forests with a few pines; 1000-2150 m; flowering June through Sep- tem ber. 27. BOUVARDIA LEIANTHA Bentham, Pl. Hartw. 85, 1841. lide Orsted, Vid. Medd. Nat. For. Kjóbenh. 1852: 46, 1852. (Type probably “On d 11039 C) Shrubs to 1.5 m, the branches hirtellous or villosulous with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long when young. Leaves with petioles to 3 mm long; blades ovate to [Vor. 55 26 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, 1.5-7.5 cm long, 0.7-3.5 cm broad, sparsely to densely villosulous (particularly below) with white trichomes 0.3-1 mm long, the sec- ondaries 6-14, the reticulation often prominulous below. Cymes 6 to 45-flowered, often subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 1-6 mm long; calyx-lobes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate to linear or subulate, 2-5.5 mm long; corolla tubular, deep red, glabrous externally, the tube 10-19 mm long, often with an internal villous ring toward the base, the lobes ovate to elliptic or elliptic-lanceolate, 1.5-3.5 mm long, 0.8-2.2 mm broad, spreading up to 45°; anthers 1.5-2 mm long, exserted 1-3 mm in thrum flowers; ovary 1-1.5 mm long, the style-branches 1-2 mm long. Capsules 2.5-5.5 mm long, 3.5-6 mm broad, glabrous; seeds 1.5-2 mm broad. Type: Guatemala: in fields nr Tejar & Chimaltenango, July-Aug 1841, Hartweg 583 (GH, K, P, W, photo US from Bf). Chiapas to Nicaragua; rocky, open or bushy, moist or dry hillsides in oak-pine forests; sometimes growing in dense tropical forests at lower elevations; 400-4000 m; apparently flowering the year round. 28. BOUVARDIA VIMINALIs Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 120, 1854. Shrubs or suffrutices to 1 m; branches villosulous when young with slender white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long. Leaves spreading, often arcuate and + condupli- cate; petioles to 3 mm long; blades ovate-lanceolate, 1.5-5.7 cm long, 0.3-2.6 cm broad, villosulous (particularly below) with white trichomes 0.2-1 mm long, the secondaries 4-13, the reticulation prominulous to obscure. Cymes 7 to 35-flowered, often subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0-4 mm long; calyx-lobes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate or linear, 1.5-5.5 mm long, somewhat villosulous or hirtellous; corolla salverform, externally pinkish-red and glabrous, the tube 10-20 mm long, internally villosulous toward the base but lacking a villous ring, the lobes typically 4 but occasionally 5 on the same plant, ovate to elliptic or oblong, 2-6.5 mm long, 1-5 mm broad, internally scarlet, flared at ca 90°; anthers 1.5-2.5 mm long, yellowish- white, exserted 1-2 mm in thrum flowers; ovary 1-2.5 mm long, the style-branches 1-2.5 mm long, pink or white. Capsules 3-6.5 mm long and broad, sparsely hirtel- lous; seeds 1.5-2 mm broad. Type: Schiede s.n. (BT). I designate Pringle 4888 (MO) as neotype (Oaxaca: Monte Alban, 6000 ft, 4 Sept 1894); isoneotypes BM, BR, F, GH, M, MSC, P, UC, Oaxaca and southern Peubla; rocky, open hillsides in sandy soil; sometimes in association with Agave, Karwinskia, Croton and cactus; flowering June through Marc 29. Bouvarpia scABRA Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Beechey Voy. 427, 1840. Herbs to 1 m, often woody toward the base; stems often simple and tetragonal, 3-4 mm broad at the midpoint, hirsute with yellow trichomes 0.3-2 mm long for virtually the entire length. Leaves with petioles to 3 mm long; blades ovate or rhombic-ovate to elliptic-lanceolate, 2.5-9.8 cm long, 0.7-4.7 cm broad, chartaceous or subcoriaceous, yellowish-hirsute with trichomes 0.2-1.1 mm long (often concen- trated below along the main veins), the secondaries (8-)12-22, raised below, the 1968] BLACKWELL—BOUVARDIA 27 reticulation often prominent below. Cymes 15 to 60-flowered, often subcapitate. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-7 mm long; calyx-lobes subulate, suffused with red, his- pidulous, (3-)5.5-12 mm long, often spreading; corolla salverform, red, glabrous ex- ternally, the tube 10-27 mm long, rather densely villous internally toward the base but rarely with a villous ring, the lobes ovate, 2.5-8 mm long, spreading to 90°; anthers 1-2.5 mm long, included by 2-8 mm; ovary 1-2.5 mm long, the style- branches 1-2 mm long. Type: Mexico. Nayarit: betw San Blas & Tepic, Sinclair s.n. (K). Nayarit and Jalisco; rocky mountainsides, wooded ravines, slopes of barrancas; in oak zone or sometimes in tropical deciduous forests; 900-1700 m; flowering August through January. 30. Bouvarpta roska Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 116, 1854. B. violacea Rzedowski, Ciencia (Méx.) 19: 82, 1959. (Holotype Rzedowski 7680 MEXU, not seen; isotype ENC Herbs to 0.5 m; stems often simple, green, distally compressed, 1-1.5 mm broad at the midpoint, glabrate or pruinose- or papillose-puberulent with white trichomes to 0.1 mm long. Leaves ascending, sessile; blades linear, 2-10 mm long at the lower nodes, to 40 mm long at the upper nodes (except immediately sub- tending the inflorescence), 0.5-3 mm broad, chartaceous, glabrous or hirtellous with white trichomes to 0.3 mm long, the secondaries and reticulation obscure. Cymes 3 to 20-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 0.5-5 mm long; floral cup glabrous; calyx- lobes lanceolate or elliptic-lanceolate, 1-4 mm long; corolla salverform, rose or violet-blue or clear pink, glabrous externally, the tube 5-19 mm long, internally often villous toward the base but lacking a villous ring, the lobes ovate or elliptic- lanceolate or oblong, 2.5-6 mm long, spreading at 90°; anthers 1-2 mm long, ex- serted 1-2 mm in thrum flowers; ovary turbinate, 1-1.5 mm long, the style- branches 0.5-2 mm long. Type: Mexico. Hidalgo (?): nr San José del Oro, Schiede s.n. (BT). I desig- nate McVaugh 14819 (MICH) as neotype (Guanajuanto: 22 mi W of Xichu, rd from Xichu to San Luis de la Paz, 2300 m, 14 June 1957). San Luis Potosi, Guanajuato, Queretaro and Hidalgo; rhyolitic and andesitic hillsides in pine-oak forests; sometimes in dry habitats; 1800-2800 m; flowering April through June. 31. BOUVARDIA BOUVARDIOIDES (Seemann) Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 102, 1921. Hedyotis bouvardioides Seemann, Bot. Voy. Herald 296, 1856. Houstonia bouvardioides (Seemann) Bentham & Hooker, Gen. Pl. 2: 1873. Bouvardia pallida Standley, Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 14: 245, 1924. a Standley 2297 ; isotype GH) Shrubs to 5 m, often slender and clambering, the branches pruinose-puberulent or hirtellous when young with white trichomes to 0.1 mm long. Leaves with petioles (2)4-15 mm long; blades ovate- or elliptic-lanceolate, 2.5-11.5 cm long, 0.7-4.5 cm broad, thinly membranous, glabrate or sparsely appressed-hirtellous with white trichomes to 0.3 mm long (often confined to the main veins below), the secondaries 8-14, the reticulation prominulous below. Cymes typically more than [Vor. 55 28 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 60-flowered. Flowers with pedicels 1-7 mm long; calyx-lobes linear to lanceolate, 1.5-6 mm long; corolla tubular to somewhat salverform, red or lavender, glabrous externally, the tube 2-18 mm long, internally somewhat villous toward the base (but lacking a definite villous ring), the lobes rather narrowly oblong or elliptic- lanceolate, 2.5-6 mm long, 1-3 mm broad; anthers 1.5-2.5 mm long, exserted by 1-8 mm in pin and thrum flowers; ovary 1-1.5 mm long, the style branches 1-2 mm long. Capsules 2-3 mm long, 2.5-3.5 mm broad, hirtellous with white trichomes to 0.2 mm long; seeds 0.4-0.8 mm broad. Type: Mexico. Durango (?): Sierra Madre, Seemann s.n. (GH). A disjunct pattern of distribution is evident: one center of dispersal being in the Western Sierra Madre of Mexico at lower elevations from Durango and Sin- aloa to northwestern Jalisco, the other from southern Chiapas to El Salvador. This species occupies diverse habitats at elevations of 300-2000 m and flowers from Oc- tober to April. Standley (Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 14: 245, 1924) treated the Central American component of this species as a separate species, B. pallida, reserving the name bouvarioides for plants of the Western Sierra Madre of Mexico. Although the two groups are apparently widely disjunct geographically, the characters reputedly distinguishing them (corolla size and color) completely break down on careful scrutiny. EXCLUDED AND DOUBTFUL SPECIES l. Bouvardia alexanderae A. Carter, Madroño 13: 142, fig. 1 & 2, 1955 (Holotype Carter 2577 UC 985926, not seen; isotype F). Carter (loc. cit. 144) recognized that Bouvardia in the section “having iis white, salverform corollas with long number (n — 13) and anda location, I believe B. alexanderae to have cd ae and H. brevipes (Rose) Lewis. = Hedyotis alexanderae (A. Carter) W. H. Lewis. B. chlorantha Bertoloni ex Schultes & Schultes f., Mant. Syst. Veg. 3: 116, 1827, ap- parently based on a specimen in Bertoloni’s herbarium (not seen); the ‘description à I occinea (Andrews) Link (Enum. Hort. Berol. 1: 139, 1821). = = Nacibea | coccinea blet = Manettia coccinea (Aublet) Willd., fide Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 97, B. deamii Donn, Sm., Bot. Gaz 49: 445, 1910 (Holotype €: 6190 US; isotype M = = Rondeletia deamii (Donn. Sm.) Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 60, 1918. "Bouvardia?" discolor Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Beechey Voy. 428. "1840 (Type Andrieux — Rondeletia leucophylla H.B.K., fide Standley, N. Amer. Mis Y^ Piel 1918. B. ferruginea A. Richard, Mém. Soc. Hist. Nat. Paris 5: 212, 1834, no B. havanensis (H.B.K.) A. Richard, loc cit. = Manettia coccinea jae "Willd, fide Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 97, 1921. B. hirsuta cq A. Richard, loc. cit. = Rondeletia hirsuta Swartz, fide Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 75, 1918. , B. microphylla Schlecht., Linnaea 26: 112, 1854 (Type Schiede s.n. BT), the descrip- tio not sufficient for determination. . B. uU e Dehnhardt, Rivista Mese l, 167. Standley questionably placed B. quinqueflora in the syno B. chr ntha. However, I have been SRY to trace Dehnhardt’s oraina e or "ds specimen(s) on which it oS p ND gm A — e 1968] BLACKWELL-—BOUVARDIA 29 was based. A description of B. quinqueflora by More es 2: 507, 1843) is not sufficiently detailed to permit certainty of dispositi 11. B. racemosa (Ruiz & Pa pw E Richard, Mém. Soc. Hist. Nat. Paris 5: 212, 1834. = ? Berg i ies Rui avon. 12. B. scandens A. Richard, bd de nomen nudum 13. B. strigillosa Baxter, Loudon's Hort. Brit. Suppl. 3: 502, 1850, the description is too scanty for determination. 14. B. strigosa Bent , Pl. Hartw. 75, 1841 (Type Hartweg 503 K). — Rondeletia strigosa (Bentham) Hemsley, fide Standley, N. Amer. Fl, 32: 50, 1918. 15. B. uniflora (H.B.K.) A. Richard, Mém. Soc. Hist Rea Paris 5: 272, 1834. = Manettia coccinea (Aublet) beue fide paN : r, Fl. 32:97, 1921. 16. B. viperalis Schlecht., Linnae d 1854 (Iype Schiede s.n. Bt), the description o suffice for dc ds 17, Cestrum pnr er Willd. ex a & Schultes in L., Syst. Veg. 4: 808, 1819 (Type mboldt & Bonpland s.n., not seen), provi isionally. excluded from the ae ‘of ouvardia aa Standley incorrectly says that Willdenow’s n as published in synon 18. Hedyotis mexicana Standley, N nes Fl. 32: 104, 1921, as synonym of Bouvardia tern iis possibly an error for Hedyotis fruticosa Sessé & Mociño ex DC. (= Bou ia obovata H.B.K. Horona oiro leaca Raf., Ann. To Sci. Phys. 5: 226, 1820, based on H. coccinea var. alba Dum. which I have been unable to trace. hag (Index Rafinesquianus 226, 1949) states that Houstonia “ochroleuca” Raf. = Bouvardia des d Salisb. = B. coccinea (Andrews) Link. The basis of this eats is not kno je TERATURE CIT BREMEKAMP, C. B. 1952. The Aran species of Oldenlandia L. sensu Hiern et K. Schumann. Verh. Kon. Nederl. Akad. Wet., Afd. Natuurk., sect. 2, 48: 1-2 Remarks on the position, the delimitation and the subdivision of the biaceae. o Bot. Nee Hooxen ] D. 1873. Cane: p: 32- 44, In Bentam & Hooxer, Genera Plantarum. LEwIs, W H. 1961. Merger of the North American Houstonia and Oldenlandia under edyotis. Rhodora en 216-223. SCHLECHTENDAL, D. F. L. von. 1854. Die gattung Bouvardia . . . Linnaea 26: 43-126. SCHUMANN, K. 1891. C UM p. 41-55, In ENGLER & PRANTL, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 4(4). STANDLEY, P. C. 1921a. Cinchoneae. N. Amer. Fl. 32: 94. —— ——— ——. 192]b. Bouvardia. N. Amer. Fl. 32: 100-111. INDEX OF LATIN NAMES New taxa are in boldface type, all other taxa are in roman type; numbers in boldface type refer to descriptions, numbers in roman type refer to synonyms, numbers with dagger (+) refer to names incidentally mentioned. Aeginetia 2; hyssopifolia 23; longiflora Mee 201, 21; de 23; dam OS- 17; mult iflora 5 » 191; ferrugin nea 281; T: Aga ve 26t UR d 18, var. latifolia 18; glaber- Anot longiflora rima 23; glabra 19, var. gracilis 19, Bouvardia 1f, $^ 241, 28]; subg. Bou- var. obtusa 19; gracilipes 131, 14; vardia 13f, 4f, 22; subg. Bouvardia- gracilis 5; havanensis 281; hetero- strum 3, 161; subg. Bouvardioides 6f, phylla 5, 6t; hintoni 7; hirsuta 281; 16, 191, 285; lenge ad 281; angus- hirtella 23, r. quaternifolia 23; 14t, l6t, 24+, 27, 281; capitata 8, 20; jacquinii 23, var. B exogyna 23, 97; cataphyllaris 11; cavanillesii 5; var. y ovata 23; karwinskyi 21; laevis chlorantha 281; chrysantha 10, 111; 7; langlassei 18; latifolia 6; coccinea 23, 28t, a a 10; leiantha 25; linearis 23; loeseneriana cordifolia 9, 107; sa : : ; ; longiflora 16t, 17, deamii 281; anae 12. 137: do- 18}, var. induta 20, var. latifolia 17; 30 macilenta 11; macrantha 5, 6]; matu- RJ .CO ct | > + Cu. or — Eus N Mel Ec 27, 281; purpusii 20; quaternifolia 23; quinqueflora i: 28t, 291; quinquenervata 15, : racemosa 29f; rekoi 14; rosea Ex rosei 19; salvadorensis 6; scabra 26; scabrida 23, 241; scandens 291: schiedeana 5; splen ens 23; st tand- 141; steyermarkii 21; graciliflora 5; villosa 12; vimin alis 241, 26; ho olacea 2f; viperalis 29f; xylosteoi s 12 *Bouvar ardia?” discolor 28+ Catesbaea erecta Carphalea pubiflora 23 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Cestrum spermacocifolium 29+ Cinchoneae 2 Cinchonoideae 2+ Coursiana Danais 2t Hedyotideae 2t oo iG subg. Edrisia 281; alexan- derae 281; bouvardioides 27; brevipes 281; Eus 91; mexicana 291; saxatalis 281; spinescens 18 ?Hedyotis lutea 9 Heterophyllaea 2t indsia 2t an Houstonia bouvardioides 27; coccinea 23, var. alba HE longiflora 17; ochro- leuca 291; triflor Hymenopogon 2ł Ixora americana 23; ternifolia 23, 24t Karwinskia 26 Manettia 2t; coccinea 28t ?Mannetia racemosa Nacibea o 28t, 29t Rondeletia dea 287, hirsuta 28t, leucophylla 25 strigosa 29t Rubiaceae Ít, 2f Rubioideae OF NOTES ON HEDYOTIS (RUBIACEAE) IN NORTH AMERICA’ BY WALTER H. Lewis Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis ABSTRACT The following hu aere taxa are proposed: Hedyotis acerosa var. polypremoides ay) W. H. Lewis, H. alexanderae (A. Carter) W. H. Lewis, H. crassifolia f. albiflora (Gr Seay W. H. Lewis, and H. nigricans var. parviflora (Gray) W. H. Lewis. Range extensions are also given for H. australis Lewis & Moore and H. rosea Raf. l. — acerosa Gray var. polypremoides (Gray) W. H. Lewis, stat. nov. ustonia polypremoides Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 21: 379, 1886. va a Mice Pringle 356 GH) (ie MO), Santa Eulalia Mts, nr Chi huahua 885 in fruit; several plants are mount n the same sheet, some of which aa ed h . . ft ar. with plants varying as for Pringle 356; they were collected at the same locality, but in flower ay 1 polypremoides var. bigelovii Greenman, Proc. Amer. Acad. 32: 291, 1897. Type Bigelow 437 (GH = Hedyotis polypremoides (Gray) Shinners, Field & Lab. 17: 168, 1949. Occasional throughout the range of the typical variety, the var. polypremoides has stems suffruticose below, opposite leaves, and flowers mostly pedunculate. Stems of the var. acerosa are usually suffruticose throughout, leaves are commonly 3- or 4-verticillate, and flowers may be sessile or pedunculate. The new variety is jo and tetraploid where x = 11 (Lewis, Amer. Jour. Bot. 49: 855-865, 1962). CHIHUAHUA: Santa Eulalia m Pringle 1066 (MO). NEw mexico: Lincoln Co, Gray, Earle Ü Earle 429 (MO), nr Gray, Skehan 36 (GH, MO), W of Ruidosa, Harrison & Hicks s.n. (GH), White Mts, Wooton 179 (GH, ); Otero Co, 1.7 mi W Rolls, Lewis 5525 (MO, SMU), mi W of Mes alero, Lewis 5535 (SMU); San Miguel Co, Las Lagunitas, 15 mi S of Las Vegas, Brandege | 1795 (MO). Texas: Brewster Co, Chisos Mts, Mueller 8170 (GH); Culberson Co, Apache Mts, ca 28 mi NW of Kent, Correll 31667 (LL), E of El Capitan, at 4492 (CH, MO), nr Frijole, Shreve 10245 (GH), below ae hg. Correll & Johnston 19133 (LL), N McKittrick Canyon, Lewis 5538 (MO), i E of Nickel ce Muller 8254 (LL); Hudspeth Co, Black Mt, Cornudas Range, Corel & y bees 24310 (LL), Victoria Canyon, Muller 8220 (LL), id., Waterfall 4787 (GH, MO). 2. Hedyotis alexanderae (A. Carter) W. H. Lewis, comb. nov. = Bouvardia alexanderae A. Carter, Madrofio 13: 142, fig. 2, 1955. Holotype Carter 2577 (UC). Endemic to the Cape region of Baja California, Mexico and known only from ipod bluffs along the east s CALIFORNIA SUR: Arroyo de n (ca 22 mi SE of La Paz), Wiggins et al. 471 (MO), "growing on steep granite walls yes del Salto, E of La Paz, Carter 2577 (UC), on steep, re , walls of arroyo; Saltito (ca 30 km E of La Paz), Lewis 5349 (MO, SMU), occasional i cracks of granite slopes above i y its. long corolla tubes and large capsules H. alexanderae superficially resembles many but not all species of Bouvardia; yet because of a number of well marked characters shared with Hedyotis, the species clearly belongs to this genus. * Supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. 5042. ANN. Missourr Bor. Garp. 55(1): 31-33, 1968. [Vor.. 55 32 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN (1) Stipules: scarious in Hedyotis and H. alexanderae, greenish in Bouvardia; (2) Inflorescences: central flower of cyme shortly pedunculate in many species of Hedyotis and H. alexanderae, never shorter but peduncles always as long as or longer than that of adjacent flowers in Bouvardia; (3) Placentae: fused + medially to septum in Hedyotis and H. alexanderae, fused basally to septum in Bouvardia; (4) Seeds: wingless in Hedyotis and H. alexanderae, winged in Bouvardia; (5) Chromosome number of 2n = 26: known for six species of Hedyotis from Baja California and H. alexanderae, unknown for Bouvardia; (6) Pollen morphology: os uniquely flared into crescent shaped extensions on both sides of each colpus (cf. Lewis, Amer. Jour. Bot. 52: 259, fig. 2, 1965) in all species of Hedyotis from Baja California and H. alexanderae, unknown for Bouvardia; (7) Distribution: Hedyotis and H. alexanderae native to Baja California, Bouvardia unknown to the peninsula. Thus by gross morphology, cytology, pollen morphology and distribu- tion H. alexanderae differs from Bouvardia, yet is strikingly similar to Hedyotis, especially H. brevipes (Rose) W. H. Lewis, H. saxatilis W. H. Lewis and other species also endemic to Baja California. 3. Hedyotis crassifolia Raf. f. albiflora (Standley) W. H. Lewis, comb. nov. = Houstonia pusilla Schoepf f. ge oe Rhodora 34: 177, 1932. Holotype Benke | 5191 (F), New Iberia [Iberia Par], Lou edyotis Ed (L.) Hooker var. minor ^ (Michx.) Torrey & Gray f. benkei Fos- 954 berg, Guanes 19: The white e form is usually found in the same population as the more common blue flowered form; the f. albiflora is known from Louisiana, Missouri (Steyermark, Fl. Missouri 1400, 1963), and Texas (Brazoria Co, 5 mi N of Angleton, Lewis 6929, MO, SMU). 4. Hedyotis nigricans (Lam.) Fosberg var. parviflora (Gray) W. H. Lewis, comb. nov. = Houstonia stenophylla Torrey & Gray var. parviflora Gray, Pl. Wright. 1 [Smith- sonian Contr. Knowledge 3(5)]: 81, 1852. Type Wright 238 (GH), San Pedro River, = picola Greenman, i Amer. Acad. 32: 286, 1897. = = Hedyotis angulata Fosberg in Shinners, Field & Lab. 17: 166, 1949. = H. nigricans var. icu (Fosberg) W. H. Lewis, Amer. Jour. Bot. 49: 865, 1962. A variety close to the var. rigidiuscula (Gray) Shinners but differing by having capsules about as long as broad, globose, + l5 inferior and when mature with calyx-lobes equalling their length. Infrequent in rocky crevices and hillsides in western Texas. 5. Hedyotis australis Lewis & Moore. An extension of this rarely collected though rather common early white flower- ing species of Hedyotis is reported to include Mississippi and Oklahoma. It is also known from Arkansas, Georgia (Chambers, Rhodora 65: 271-273, 1963), Louisiana, and Texas and should be found in Alabama and Tennessee. MISSISSIPPI: Madison Co, Natchez Trace Pkwy, McDougall 1217 (US); Warren Co, 6.3 i SE of Vicksburg, Lewis 5118 (SMU). okraHowa: McCurtain Co, Tom, Lewis 6952 (DUKE, MO, NY, OKLA) 1968] LEWIS—HEDYOTIS 33 6. a rosea Raf. = ustonia patens Elliot var, pusilla Gray, i = 1(2): 25, 1886. Lectotype selected Hae s.n. (GH), d [Rapides Par], Louisi zH. maea Mueller vod i Torrey Bot. "Club 63: 33, 1936. Syntypes Pyg Mueller 3 (NY), 4 (NY), a Co, T = Hedyotis taylorae dp in Sitnnem Field & Lab. 17: 169, 1949. = H. minima (Beck) Torrey & Gra y E albiflora Lathrop, Rhodora 59; 95, 1957. Holotype Lathrop & McGregor 35 (KANU), Sec. 32, T25S, RISE, Woodson Co, Kansas. A very small spring (Febr-early April) annual with large light rose corollas paling white with age; infrequently collected in the south-central U.S. The species is known from Arkansas (Moore, Rhodora 58: 331, 1956), Louisiana, Oklahoma (Waterfall, Rhodora 55: 201, 1953), Texas, and now Mississippi [Simpson Co, 1.4 mi SE of Pinola, Lewis 5124 (SMU, US); Warren Co, 6.3 mi SE of Vicksburg, Lewis 5117 (SMU)], and, on the basis of the holotype of H. minima f. albiflora, Kansas. Material in herbaria is often determined as Hedyotis (or Houstonia) minima (Beck) Torrey & Gray which in fact is H. crassifolia Raf. NEW AND NOTEWORTHY WOODY RUBIACEAE OF PANAMA BY Jonn D. Dwyer AND Sister M. Victoria HAYDEN St. Louis University and Missouri Botanical Garden ABSTRACT Three genera, previously unreported for Panama, Bathysa, Duroia, and Exostema are discussed with B. panamensis and D. panamensis described as new. Four new species of Cephaelis, one new species of Faramea, and four new species and one subspecies of Psychotria are also described. Complete diagnoses of Ronabea latifolia Aublet and Uragoga emetica (L.f.) Baillon are included. Additional notes on Coussarea and Schradera are presented. 1, Bathysa panamensis Dwyer, sp. nov. Arbores parvae, ramulis laevibus minute lenticellatis, in sicco opaco-griseis. Folia subsessilia aut pedicellis ad 0.5 cm longis; lamina obovato-elliptica aut obovato-elliptico-subtrapeziformis, ad apicem lato-cuneata, ultime gradatim acumi- nata, acumine ad 1.5 cm longo, versus basim lato-cuneata, basi truncata aut plerumque brevi-auriculata, rigido-papyracea, laevis, supra glabra, infra in costa venisque albido-appresso-pilosis, concolor, in sicco brunnea, costa supra plana, infra prominenti, convexa, venis lateralibus ca 15, arcuatis, 1.5-2 cm distantibus, venis tertiariis leviter pinnatiformibus; stipulae non visae, caducae. Inflorescentiae terminales, pyramidali-paniculatae, ad 10 cm longae, pedunculo compresso tortoque, basi ca 0.5 cm lato, ramis oppositis, divergentibus, usque ad 8 cm longis, jugis ramorum ca 4, bene distantibus, ca 3 cm longis, cymis terminalibus, patulis, paucifloribundis, bracteis plerumque persistentibus, patulis, angusto-lanceolatis, maioribus ad 1.5 cm longis. Flores sessiles aut subsessiles; calyx cupula elliptica, ca 3.5 mm longa, carnosa, puberula, lobis 4, subtriangularibus, ultime obtusis, ir- regularibus inaequilateralibusque, ciliolatis, ca 0.8 mm longis, marginibus erosulis; corolla tubo subcampanulato, basim contracto, tunc dilatato, 3-5 mm longo, carnoso, extus minute villosuloso, lobis 3-4, ellipticis, 3-4 mm longis, usque ad 3 mm latis, plerumque quam tubo longioribus, reflexis sed apice involutis; stamina 3-4, antheris sagittatis, ca 3-4 mm longis, glabris, exsertis, dorsifixis, filamentis ca 3 mm longis, dense barbatis praeter basim; ovarium disco quattuor lobis rotundis coronato, uniloculare ovulis oo in duabus brevibus placentis intrusis, stylo basi gracili, supra medium dilatato, usque ad 6.5 mm longo, stigmatibus 2, erectis, ca 1.5 mm longis. Fructus non visi. Panama: Río Ucurganti, Bristan 1187 (holotype MO). This is the first report of the genus Bathysa north of South America. It is readily distinguished by its leaf-blades being truncate or briefly auriculate at the base. 2. Cephaelis bristanii Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Suffrutices ad 30 cm lati, caulibus in sicco nigris, laevibus, glabris vix nodosis, plerumque prostratis et radices longos angustos ferentibus. Folia petiolis ad 4 cm longis, ad 1.5 mm latis; lamina oblonga, apice cuneata, ultime obtusa, basi contracto-cuneata, 9-16 cm longa, 3.5-6 cm lata, rigido-papyracea, concolor, glaber, ANN. Missourt Bor. Garp. 55(1): 34-47, 1968. 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 35 costa supra gracili, subtus prominula aut plano-convexa, venis lateralibus 15-30, 0.5-0.8 cm distantibus, arcuatis, venis intermediis evanescentibus; stipulae connatae, depresso-annulares, 1-2 mm longae, utraque minute obtuso-apiculata. Inflores- centiae axillares, pedunculo solitario, ad 2 cm longo, in sicco nigro, laevi, floribus crebris in 1-2 capitula rotunda ad 1 cm aggregatis; bracteae multae aggregataeque, bracteis interioribus gradatim angustioribus, oblongis, acutis, puberulis. Flores calyce infundibuliformi, vix 2 mm longo, corona cupiformi petaloidea instructo, lobis indistinctis, fortasse 4, brevibus, truncatis vel obtusis aut saepe redactis tunc marginibus irregulari-erosis, saepe paucis ciliis rectis ornatis, tubo marginibusque omnino ca 0.8-1 mm longis; corolla tubo angusto-cylindrico, ad 7 mm longo, in medio ca 1 mm lato, petaloideo, extus glabro, intus supra medium tubi dense albido-piloso, lobis 4, usque ad 2 mm longis, obtusis; antherae 5, exsertae, oblongae, ca 0.8 mm longae, filamentis linearibus, usque ad 2 mm longis, supra medium tubi affixis; ovarium disco prominenti, coronuliformi, obtuso, 0.5-0.8 mm longo, in sicco fusco, 2-loculare, stylo lineari, ca 3 mm longo, stigmatibus 2, rectis, ca 1 mm longis, ovulis 2, basaliter affixis, septo crasso. Fructus rubri (fide Bristan). COSTA RICA: rain forest nr Río Toro Amarillo, vic Aera ca al ca 350 m, Godfrey 66248 (MO). PANAMA: BOCAS DEL TORO: premontan n forest, Quebrada Lugron & Cerro Bonyik nr Río Teribe, alt 300- a ft, Pkirkbride H Duke 641 (MO). DARIEN: cloud forest, Cana-Cuasi Trial, Cerro Campaniento nr Tres Bocas, Rio Cuasi headwaters, Kirk- bride & Duke 1243 (MO); Cerro Pirre, Bristan 575 (holotype MO). 'The new species, named in honor of the native Panamanian collector, Narcisco Bristan, is readily distinguished by its leaf-blades being very obtuse or rounded at the apex and having lateral veins which are numerous, strict, and parallel; these in general give a corrugated effect to the blade. The flower heads are reduced and compact; the flowers have delicately petaloid floral tubes with the anthers exserted and borne on relatively elongate filaments. The Cuna name (Prov. Darien) for the species is “hinupichica” (fide Duke). 3. Cephaelis camponutans Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Suffrutices ad 0.75 m lati, ramulis laevibus, glabris, subnodosis, radicibus gracilibus, lignosis. Folia valde ascendentia, petiolis gracilibus, ad 3 cm longis; lamina angusto-elliptica, apice attenuato-acuminata, acumine ad 3 cm longo, basi vix inaequilaterali, acuta, ad 18 cm longa, ad 5 cm lata, subcoriacea, laevis, glabra, in vivo subtus purpureo-fusca, costa subtus vix prominula ad plana, proxi- maliter ca 2 mm lata, venis lateralibus 15-20, in sicco evanescentibus, fortiter ascendentibus, marginibus leviter crassis; stipulate obovato-rotundae, apice obtusae (vix bifidae?), ad 1.5 cm longae, — 1 cm latae, tenues, raphidibus minutis ornatae, marginibus erosulosis. Inflorescentiae axillares, 1-3 per axillam, terminaliter in pedunculo dispositae, cernuae capitulataeque, pedunculo ad 1 cm longo, capitulis compresso-rotundis, ad 2 cm latis, in sicco nigris, bracteis exterioribus solitariis, subovatis, ad 1.5 cm longis, coriaceis, in dorso mediano-carinatis, bracteis interiori- bus minoribus angustioribusque, jugo florem solitarium includente, apice eroso- marginatis. Flores ex parte vidimus; calyx tubularis, lobis 5-6, erectis, inaequila- teralibus, subulatis quam tubo longioribus, marginibus scariosis; corolla purpurea; ovarium biloculare, septo integro mediano, ovulo 1 per loculum, basaliter affixo, [Vor. 55 36 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN stigmatibus 2, erectis, digitiformibus, ca 1 mm longis, stylo fortasse nullo. Fructus hic immaturi, calyce persistenti coronati, pyrenis 2, ellipticis, seminibus superficie adaxiale plano, leviter mediporcato, superficie abaxiale convexo, endospermio laevi, testa modice pigmentifera, im bilamellosa, cellulis macroscopicis parenchymatis icri. s dia TORO: Pu fia, vic Chiriquicito, ca 2700 ft elev, Lewis et al. 2171 (MO). PANAMA: com Jefe, alt 2700 ft Dwyer & Gauger 7346 (holotype MO). As the axillary inflorescences are cernuous and bell-shaped the name camponu- tans (L. nutans = bent) was chosen for the specific name. Its narrowly lanceolate and subcoriaceous leaves with the blades purple beneath in the fresh state and the lateral veins of the blade evanescent are unique among the Central American species of Cephaelis. No styles were observed in several flowers dissected, although the stigmas were evident. 4. Cephaelis correae Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov.—Fig. 1. Arbores parvae, ad 5 m altae, ramulis meri laevibus. Folia petiolis 0.5-8 cm longis, gracilibus, ad 0.25 cm latis, laevibus, glabris; lamina oblonga, apice obtusa, basi cuneata, ad 17 cm longa, ad 8.5 cm lata, membranacea, laevis, glabra, costa supra vix prominula, ad 2.5 mm lata, subtus prominula, venis lateralibus, ca 20, 1-1.5 cm distantibus, strictis non nisi prope marginem arcuatis, venis inter- mediis leviter pinnatinervis; stipulatae connatae, corporibus brevibus interpetiolari- bus, truncatis, ad 5 mm longis, lobis intrapetiolaribus connatis, ad 1 cm longis, subscutiformibus, apice bifidis. Inflorescentiae ultime cernuae, solitariae, ad 25 cm longae, pedunculo ad 20 cm longo, in medio ca 3 mm lato, distaliter ca 4.5 mm lato, glabro, in sicco porcato, bracteis exterioribus 2, ad 4.8 cm longis, conspicue nitido-rubris aut purpurascentibus, capitulis interioribus ad 1.5 cm longis rubris ad purpurascentibus. Flores albi, ca 1.5 cm longi, calyce subquadrato, ad 3 mm longo, dentibus 5, utroque dente irregulari-marginato; corolla tubo cylindrico, ad 10 mm longo, intus prope basin filamentorum staminum puberulo, lobis 5, tri- angularibus, ca 3 mm longis; antherae 5, filamentis infra medium tubi affixis. Fructus nitido-azurei, obovato-oblongi, ca 1.5 cm longi, calyce persistenti, fusco, pericarpio carnoso, in sicco atro-fusco, seminibus funiculo basi loculo conspicue affixis, subtriangularibus, superficie ventrale plana et in medio breviter sulcata, testa fuscata. : EI Valle de Antón, foot of Cerro Pilón, alt ca 2000 m, Duke 1247 (MO); id., Lewis ph al 1759 (MO). The new species is readily distinguished by its large pendent inflorescences and conspicuous subscutiform stipules. It is named in honor of Panama’s first woman systematic botanist, Miss Mireya Correa. 5. Cephaelis rigidifolia Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Suffutices parvi, ramulis nodosis, teretibus sed in sicco internodiis contractis sic angularibus, glabrescentibus. Folia petiolis 1-2 cm longis, ca 0.2 cm latis, lignosis; lamina oblonga, apice acuta, ultime acuminata, acumine ad 1.3 cm longo, basi acuta, ad 13 cm longa, ca 6.5 cm lata, rigido-coriacea, discolor, supra in sicco fusca, subtus opaco-luteo-viridis, subtus aureo-strigiloso-puberula, costa supra 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 37 id M ETE wy ray a Y Ses Soe aN SSAA ee BESS CERO ON WARS KA ee SES s £v CARS «x SSH LLL ASS 0916 0 77 Sn See esi EPIRO Ic CN AY OAS DA | uU Soh A G Fig. 1. Cephaelis correae Dwyer & Hayden: A, habit (X15); B, flower showing calyx and corolla (X2); C, longitudinal section of calyx, large ovarian disc and ovary with two ovules (X4); D, longitudinal section of corolla tube showing five stamens and pubescence of tube (X2); E, two stamens: a, axial view (X3); b, abaxial view (X6); F, calyx cup, style and two stigmas (X2); G, cross-section of seed showing median sulcus on ventral face (X3). After Lewis et al. 1759 (MO). [Vor. 55 38 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN prominula, subtus prominenti, venis lateralibus ca 15, arcuatis, prominentibus, venulis minoribus intermediis ornatis, venis tertiariis pinnatiformbus; stipulae 2, connatae, compresso-cupiformes, ca 5 mm longae, coriaceae, utraque stipula denti- bus 2 erectis rigidis ciliolatis, ca 3 mm longis, instructa. Inflorescentiae (hic in fructu) ad 10 cm longae, ad 2.5 cm latae, spiciformes, pedunculo compresso-torto, lignoso, puberulo, ramis paucis, basalibus, distantibus, ad 1.5-2 cm longis, simplici- bus vel ramulis paucis brevibus lignosis terminatis, fructibus terminali-aggregatis, plerumque 1-2 in utroque capitulo persistentibus. Fructus sessiles, compresso- rotundi, didymi, apice cicatrice parvo plerumque excentrico notati, ad 0.8 cm diam quam longi latiores, puberuli, in sicco virides, pericarpio crasso, seminibus in X-sect. rotundis, septo crasso. PANAMA: Cerro Jefe, alt ca 2700 ft, Dwyer 8075A (holotype MO). C. rigidifolia has markedly stiff-coriaceous leaves with a golden puberulence beneath. This vegetative character coupled with the large didynamous fruits borne on a spike-like inflorescence readily distinguishes the species. 6. Coussarea enneantha Standley, Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 18: 282, 1928. DARIEN: La Boca de Pirre, Bristan 1272 (MO); s. loc., Duke 13781 (MO). 'These are the third and fourth collections of this species, all of which are from the province of Darien, Panama; the other collections are Terry 1476 (MO) from the Cana-Cuasi Trail (Camp 2) and William 841 (F, photo of type) from Cana. 'The mature fruits of Duke 13781 are noteworthy as the fruits of C. enneantha have not been described. Thus: fruits stipitate for 3 mm, the stipe rufo-pubescent, the pericarp oblong or ovate-oblong, cuneate at the apex, obtuse at the base, 2-2.5 cm long, 0.9-1.1 cm wide, pilose, capped by a cylindrical calycine tube, 5-10 mm long, ca 2 mm diam, the lobes 4, unequal, ca 3 mm long, truncate or rounded, the seeds solitary, vertical, the testa membranaceous, the endocarp smooth, fibrous, the endosperm horny, turning blue-black on drying. While the membranous seed coat has the cell pattern characteristic of Cous- sarea, the usual wall thickenings are not apparent throughout. One side of the seed coat is much more vascular and thicker than the other; the raphides are abundant. 7. Duroia panamensis Dwyer, sp. nov. Arbores ad 8 m altae, ramulis subteretibus, in sicco leviter longitudinali- rimosis, junioribus dense pilosis, nodosis. Folia petiolis 1-2.5 cm longis, lignosis, pilosis; lamina obovato-elliptica, apice late cuneata, acuminata, acumine ad 1.5 cm longo, usque ad 26 cm longa, ad 15 cm lata, rigido-papyracea, subconcolor, in sicco fusca, supra appresso-albido-ciliata, ciliis ca 1-2 mm distantibus, ad tactum scabri- diuscula, infra pilosa, ciliis aliquibus uncinatis rigidioribusque, costa supra promi- nula, infra prominenti convexaque, venis lateralibus ca 12, primo a costa divergenti- bus, tunc ad marginem leviter arcuatis, in foliis maioribus 2-2.5 cm distantibus, infra prominentibus, venis tertiariis irregulari-pinnatiformibus, marginibus ciliola- tis; stipulae ovato-ellipticae, deciduae, hic junioribus ad 1.5 cm longis, dense pilosis. 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 39 Flores solitarii, terminales vel axillares sessiles; calyx cupula campanulata, ca 0.8 cm longa, ca 0.5 cm lata, dense barbata, ciliis albido-luteis, adscendentibus, fortasse 4-5 mm longis, lobis ad 3 mm longis, extus dense pilosis, in fructu persistentibus; corolla tubo tubaeformi, ad 4.5 cm longo, ca 0.6 cm in medio lato, extus dense albido-piloso, lobis hic 5, ellipticis erectis obtusis, ca 1 cm longis, dense albido- pilosis, intus glabris. Fructus elliptici, nuciformes, calyce persistenti coronati, usque ad 3 cm longi, usque ad 1.5 cm lati, 5-7-costati, dense albido-luteo-pilosi, pariete pericarpii crasso, ad 2 mm lato, placentis 2, intrusis, T-formibus, seminibus multis, M Mad. ca 2 mm longis, trigonis, sub lente minute favosis. DEL TORO webdulup Peak, N of Río Teribe at Quebrada Huron, behind chiefs edis alt 300-900 ft, K irkbride & Duke 571 (holotype MO). This is the first report of the genus in Panama. Only one other species of Duroia is known from Central America, D. costaricensis Standley, endemic to Sierpe, Costa Rica (Pittier 6903, type); this has smaller leaves and presumably much smaller calycine lobes. Noteworthy is the fact that Duroia is dioecious; Standley’s type description is based on material with ¢ flowers. With only one flower available for dissection I am electing to describe only its external morphology. The flower is 9 and all the material deposited at MO is fructiferous. Vegetative and reproductive features point to Duroia, although the fruits, which seem mature, are devoid of any gelatinous covering. Superficially the 9 flower in the pressed condition looks like a large-flowered Clitoria. In their field-notes Duke & Kirk- bride describe the corolla tube as green-white, the anthers yellow, and the stigmas green. Obviously g flowers were observed in the field and perhaps were collected. The collection site of the new species is the home of the few remaining survivors of the Teribe Indians of Bocas del Toro. 8. Exostema mexicanum A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 5: 180, 1861. CANAL ZONE: Madden Dam, Boy Scout Camp Rd, Dwyer & Elias 7510 (MO); id., Dwyer 8391 (MO). This is the first report of the genus in Panama. It is well known in Mexico where it is native. Exostema caribaeum (Jacq.) Roem. & Schult. occurs in Costa Rica and ranges from Florida to the West Indies and to Mexico. 9. Faramea caput-anguis Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov.—Fig. 2. Arbores ad 8 m altae, ramulis in sicco glabris, laevibus. Folia petiolis 2-4 cm longis, laevibus; lamina oblonga, apice acuta vel acuminata, acumine ad 1.5 cm longo, basi acuta, ad 20 cm longa, ad 10 cm lata, tenui-coriacea, plerumque subtus luteo-viridis, minute luteo-puberula, costa supra subplana, infra prominenti, venis lateralibus ca 20, arcuatis, prominentibus, 1-2 cm distantibus, venulis intermediis pinnatiformibus; stipulae persistentes, triangulari-subulatae, acutissimae, ad 3 cm longae, ad 0.8 cm latae, lignosae, glabrae. Inflorescentiae per axillam plures, hic ad 4, pedunculis divergentibus, laevibus, glabris, ad 9 cm longis, capitulis termi- nalibus solitariis condenso-cymosis, primo gemminoideis, oblongo-fusiformibus, ad 2 cm longis, ca 1 cm latis, bracteis exterioribus fortasse 5, late oblongo-fusiformibus, glabris, foliosis, floribus 7-9 per capitulum, jugo utroque bracteolis duabus vel pluribus (?) instructo. Flores glabri, calyce angusto-campanulato, ad 8 mm longo, [Vor. 55 40 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 2. Faramea caput-anguis Dwyer & Hayden: A, habit, showing leaves, axillary inflorescences, ni erect stipules (ca X14); B, inflorescence showing diagrammatically in cross section. (X115); c, flower, showing calyx and corolla (X2); D, pistil with style, h : f endosperm with T-shaped septum, adaxial view (X1); G, fruit in cross-section (xin). A-E, after Dwyer 7248 (MO); F-G after Dwyer et al. 8236 (MO). 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 41 lobis 4, inaequilateralibus, subulatis, brevioribus, ca 4 mm longis, longioribus ca 8 mm longis; corolla tubo ca 25 mm longo, angusto ad medium, tunc supra diliatato lobis 4, lanceolatis, acutis, ad 7 mm longis; antherae 4, oblongo-lineares, ca 5.5 mm longae, filamentis proxime medium tubi affixis; ovarium ca 1 mm longum, unilocu- lare, ovulis 2, orbicularibus, geminatis, ca 0.5 mm longis, jugo ovulorum septo incompleto basali affixo. Fructus glabri, longitudinaliter elongati, oblongi, ca 1.4 cm longi, ca 1 cm lati, calyce persistenti, cylindrico, ca 5 mm longo, pericarpio carnoso, endocarpio fibroso tenui-friabili, azureo-purpureo, endospermio corneo, sulco ad aream junctionis seminum duorum ornato, seminibus solitariis magnis, testa cellulis exterioribus sclerenchymatis bene distantibus, polymorphis, plerumque oblongis aut triangularibus, 34.5-69 longis X ca 46u latis, eis stratum unum cel- aco parenchymatorum tegentibus NAMA: Cerro Jefe, alt ca 2700, Dues 7248 (MO); id., Dwyer & Gauger 7375 (holo- type dum id. , Dwyer et al. (MO). The new species is named caput-anguis because of the fancied resemblance of the floral heads to that of a snake. The pattern of the inflorescence is unmatched by any Faramea seen. The field notes for Dwyer & Gauger 7375 describe the external bracts as persistent and black-purple. The pulp of the seed is soft- cartilaginous. The sclerenchyma elements of the testa are typical of Faramea seeds; the testa was prepared for microscopic examination by soaking the same for 15 minutes in warm 5% NaOH solution. 10. Psychotria carnosocarpa Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Frutices, ramulis rigidis, divergentibus, cinereo-fuscis, glabrescentibus praeter ad apicem dense hirsutis, ciliis pellucidis, subulatis. Folia petiolis ad 1.5 cm longis, dense villosulis; lamina oblonga, apice cuneata, acumine ca 1 mm longo, basi cuneata, ad 13 cm longa, ad 5.5 cm lata, rigido-papyracea, discolor, costa prominula, infra conspicue villosa, ciliis crebris appresso-ascendentibus, venis lateralibus ca 12, primo stricto-ascendentibus, tunc proxime marginem arcuatis, 0.5-1.2 cm dis- tantibus; stipulae biaristatae, corpore hic indistincto, aristis subulatis, ad 0.9 cm longis, dense hirsutis. Inflorescentiae terminales, paniculatae, dense puberulae, breves, ad 6 cm longae, ca 4 cm latae, pedunculo ad 2.2 cm longo, ramis paucis, inferioribus fortasse quattuor, radiate dispositis, ad 4 cm longis; Flores non vidimus. Fructus didymi, lobis calycinis brevibus plerumque puberulis coronati, subrotundi vel compresso-rotundi, +5 mm longi, 4.5-7 mm lati, in vivo manifeste carnosi, in sicco nigri, glabrescentes, pyrenis 2, hemisphericis, testa rubro-fusca, cellulis fortasse uno strato dispositis, subisodiametricis, pigmentis luteis ad aurantiacis coloratis, endocarpio superficie ventrale plana sed dorsaliter ecostata et sulco alto mediano instructa, etiam minutum basalem porum gerente, albumine non ruminato, ca 3.5 mm n 2.5 mm lato. OCAS DEL o: Changuinola to 5 mi S at jct Rios Changuinola & Terebe, alt 100- 200 M Lewis, Dwyer, Elias & Robertson 964 (holotype MO). The new species is readily distinguished from the vast majority of Psychotria of the New World by its biaristate stipules, radiately branched panicle, and didyna- mous fruits. The structure of the fruit and the conspicuously acuminate leaf- blades suggest P. cuspidata Bredem and P. patens Sw. These three species differ [Vor. 55 49, ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN widely in the patterns of the inflorescence. Psychotria carnosocarpa can be easily distinguished from the pair by its leaf-blades being densely hairy beneath. ll. Psychotria grandicarpa Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Suffrutices, ramulis teretibus glabris, laevibus. Folia petiolis 1-4 cm longis, subteretibus lignosis glabris; lamina late elliptica, apice cuneata vel rotunda, basi acuta inaequilateralique, 10-19 cm longa, 5-10 cm lata, tenui-coriacea, in sicco hic griseo-viridis, costa supra prominula, infra prominenti et proximaliter ad 2.5 mm lata, venis lateralibus 10-12, supra planis, late arcuatis, subtus prominulis, ultime in venam tenuem submarginalem undulatam conjunctis; stipulae semicirculares, ad 1.5 mm longae, brunneae, deciduae. Inflorescentiae fortasse pseudo-terminales (hic in fructu), pedunculis 3-6, umbellate dispositis, 4-6 cm longis, lignosis, glabris, simplicibus aut ramulis terminalibus brevibus paucis instructis, floribus in capitula terminalia, ad 0.8 cm longa, aggregatis. Fructus subsessiles aut pedicellati, pedicel- lis ad 2 mm longis, in sicco nigri, magni, oblongi aut subfalcato-oblongi (plerumque semine uno abortivo), apice basique obtusi, apice calyce opaco-luteo persistenti coronato, lobis calycinis obtusis, omnino ca 5 mm longis, pubescentibus, ad 1.5 cm longi, distincte 10-costati, pyrenis 2, utraque pyrena utrinque plana, seminibus 2 aut | abortu. : Cerro Jefe, alt ca 2700 ft, Dwyer 7244 (holotype MO); Cerro Jefe nr Rio Indio, ‘Duke 15228 (MO). The new species is readily recognized by its coriaceous leaf-blades, its inflores- cence with several peduncles radiately disposed, and its very large ribbed fruit. The pyrenes which appear ruminate in cross-section suggest the sect. Mapouria. 12. Psychotria horizontalis Sw. subsp. basicordata Dwyer, subsp. nov. Suffrutices. Folia superiora sessilia, aliquibus infimis vix petiolatis, lamina basi ici ics marginibus in sicco crispis. Fructus puberuli. ANAL ZON t Sherman, Dwyer 5160 (MO). veracuas: Isla de Coiba (Penal Col- ony), ee 20 holotype O). Superficially the two collections appear to be quite different from the numer- ous Panamanian collections of P. horizontalis. On closer examination the fruits of the material cited above exhibit the typically persistent calycine lobes, although admittedly the pyrenes are pubescent. The fact that the leaf-blades are often subcordate at the base distinguishes them from all other Panamanian Psychotria, except P. insignis Standley, widely separated phylogentically from P. horizontalis. The leaves of the new subspecies resemble those of typical P. horizontalis in hav- ing minute domatia on the undersurface of the lamina. The domatia often have ostioles from which project minute tufts of hairs. 13. Psychotria olgae Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov.—Fig. 3. Frutices ad 7 m alti, ramulis primo teretibus tunc saepe ultime subplano- compressis laevibus vix nodosis. Folia valde ascendentia sub-sessilia aut vix petio- lata, petiolis ad 5 cm longis, lignosis; lamina obovato-elliptica aut elliptica, saepe angusto-elliptica, apice late cuneata, rotunda aut obtusa, basi cuneata, 4.5-11 cm longa, 1.5-4 cm lata, crasso-coriacea, glabra, marginibus conspicue revolutis, costa supra prominula, subtus versus basim prominula, proximaliter ad 1.5 mm lata, 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 43 venis lateralibus ca 6, arcuatis, 0.8-1.5 cm distantibus, supra evanescentibus, subtus vix prominulis, gracilibus; stipulae deciduae (unam juvenilem vidimus) integrae, triangulares. Inflorescentiae ad 11 cm longae, gemmis oblongo-rotundis, hic ca 3 mm longis; calyx ca 1.5 mm longus, cupula calycina intus jugum glandularum minutarum nigrarum ferente, utroque jugo lobis calycinis alternanti, lobis 5, triangularibus, ca 0.5 mm longis; corolla tubo brevi, intus basi puberulo, lobis 5, apice galeatis; antherae hic immaturae quadratae, ca 1 mm longae, in dorso raphidibus ornatae; ovarium septo crasso integro instructum, ovulis 2 basaliter affixis. Fructus in vivo vivido-rubri, obovato-oblongi, ca 2 cm longi, ca 1 cm lati, apice obtusi, basi acuti, in sicco carnosi, sulcis 12 longitudinalibus ornati, utroque putamine superficie interiore plana superficie exteriore ruminata seminibus 2, endo- carpio fibroso infra corpus endospermii, ad 3 mm caudate disposito, ultime acuto, basi porum minutum ferente, testa opaco-rubra, cellulis epidermidis parenchymatis, endospermio albo-ruminato. Fig. 3. Psychotria olgae Dwyer & Hayden: A, habit (XV5); B, floral bud: a, lateral view Ke ng calyx and corolla lobes (X3); b, top view with five valvate corolla lobes X3); C, fruit, external view showing costae and apical calycine ring (X11); D, cross- section of fruit, ruminate endosperm shown (X115). A-B after Dwyer 7288 (MO); C-D after Dwyer et al. 8193 (MO). [Vor. 55 44 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN : Cerro Jefe, alt ca 2700 ft, Dwyer 7288 (MO), 8193 os betw Cerro Jefe & Eneida, "dit 2100-2900 ft, Dwyer, Duke & Dressler 8193 (holotype MO A combination of characters readily segregates the new Rm from all New World Psychotria: the thick coriaceous leaves with the secondary veins evanescent, the large red fleshy fruits, and the calyx cup with internal glands. Miss Olga Herrera, in whose honor the species is named, discovered calycine glands in several species of Psychotria found in Panama: P. horizontalis Sw; P. chagrensis Standley; P. psychotriaefolia (Seem.) Standley, P. carthaginensis Jacq., P. undata Jacq., P. fruticetorum Standley, and P. graciliflora Benth. The ruminate endosperm of P. olgae suggests the sect. Mapouria. 14. Psychotria umbelliformis Dwyer & Hayden, sp. nov. Frutices, ramulis valde ascendentibus, saepe strictis, teretibus, opaco-cinereis. Folia petiolis ad 0.7 cm longis, dense aureo-villosulis; lamina ovato-elliptica, apice acuta ad distincte acuminata, basi obtusa, 6-10 cm longa, 3-4.5 cm lata, rigido- papyracea, subtus dense villosula, costa gracili, supra prominula, subtus prominenti, venis lateralibus principalibus 6-10, arcuatis, in sicco luteis, infra prominentibus, 0.7-2 cm distantibus, venis minoribus intermediisque valde irregularibus, aliquibus a costa stricte orientibus vel aliquibus a costa reflexis, omnibus mox evanescentibus, venis tertiariis irregulari-pinnatiformibus, patulis; stipulae connatae, puberulae, corporibus brevibus, truncatis, 1-2 mm longis, utroque duo cornua vix divergentia lateralia, ad 5 mm longa, ferente. Inflorescentiae terminales, puberulae, pedunculo 3-4 cm longo, rigido, ramis 3, radiate dispositis, ca 2 cm longis, plerumque ad apicem dilatatis, uno medio strictiore, bracteis inferioribus 2, divergentibus vel vix reflexis, lineari-lanceolatis, ad 0.4 cm longis, capitulo solitario in utroque ramo et terminaliter disposito, pauciflora (fortasse +10 floribus), ad 1 cm longo, quam longo latiore, bracteis exterioribus paucis, uniseriatim in involucrum aggregatis, late triangularibus, ad 4 mm latis, ca 3 mm longis, leviter pubescentibus, sub- anthesi divergentibus, bracteis interioribus angustioribus, paucis ovatis, in gemmis fortasse jugo bractearum florem solitudinum includente. Flores calycis tubo camp- anulato, ca 2.5 mm longo, modice crasso, puberulo, lobis 5, ovatis vel triangulari- bus, apice obtusis vel acutis, ca 0.8 mm longis; corolla in gemmis subfusiformis sed apice obtusa, albido-puberula sub anthesi ad 20 mm longa, subcarnosa, puberula, intus infra medium tubum pilosa, lobis 5, sublinearibus, ca 8 mm longis, +0.8 mm latis, extus puberulis, patulis; antherae 5, lineari-oblongae, ca 3 mm longae, ca 0.35 mm latae, dorsifixae, filamentis gracilibus, ca 0.8 mm longis, glabris, a basi tubi ca 8 mm affixis; ovarium vix 1 mm longum, biloculare, septo integro, ovulis 2, modice magnis, basaliter affixis, disco in sicco nigro, ca 0.6 mm alto, stylo ca 16 mm longo, ca 0.35 mm lato, stigmatibus 2, rectis, ca 2 mm longis, subcrassis. Fructus non iow E slope Cerro Pilón, nr El Valle de Antón, cloud forest, alt 700-900 m, Duke 12154 (MO). PANAMA: degraded cloud forest, peaks of Cerro Trinidad, Duke & Kirkbride 1641 (holotype MO). Several characters serve to distinguish the new species: the umbelliform inflorescences which often assume the form of a Neptunian trident, the densely villulose undersurface of the leaf-blades with the veins drying yellow, and the few- 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN-——RUBIACEAE 45 flowered capitate inflorescences subtended by an involucral-like series of bracts. The flowers are described by Duke & Kirkbride as white and presumably the shrubs are common, 15. Ronabea hie Aublet, Hist. Pl. Gui. Fr. 154, 1775. R. erecta Aublet, loc 156. Psychotria axillaris Willd. in L., Sp. Pl, ed. 4 [i.e. 5] 1: 962, 1798. Shrub 0.5-8 m high, the branchlets quadrangular, ridged, often nigrescent, sericeous or glabrescent. Leaves short-petiolate, the petioles 6-16 mm long, often stout, sericeous or glabrescent; blade elliptic to oblong, acuminate at the apex, sometimes abruptly short-acuminate, attenuate or obtuse at the base, 9-15 cm long, 3-12 em wide, subcoriaceous, olive-black when dry, glabrous above, sparsely sericeous beneath, sometimes abundantly so along the veins, the midvein prominent beneath, the lateral veins 6-12, arcuate, clearly anastomosing close to the margin, the veinlets conspicuous; stipules subpersistent, free, entire, lanceolate or subulate, acuminate or obtuse at the apex, sericeous. Inflorescences axillary, geminate or soli- tary, bearing a few sessile flowers, up to 8 mm long, larger in fruit, the peduncle and bracts densely sericeous; peduncle rather thick, up to 7 mm long, equalling the petals or smaller; bracts minute, up to 1 mm long, triangular-ovate, acute or obtuse at the apex. Flowers ca 5 mm long, white or yellow; calyx cupuliform, the tube ca 2 mm long, subtruncate or minutely and irregularly toothed, glabrous; corolla with the tube ca 3 mm long, glabrous on the outside, sericeous in the throat, the lobes suboblong, strongly cucullate, ca 2.5 mm long, glabrous on the outside, papillose within; stamens attached to the throat of the tube; anthers oblong, short-acuminate at the apex, ca 1.2 mm long; disc cylindraceous, 0.8-1 mm long; ovary ca 2 mm long, the style rather thick, ca 2.8 mm long, dilated above, the stigmas obtuse, ca 0.6 mm long. Fruits (here immature), elliptic, 5.5-7.5 mm long, 2.5-6 mm wide, black, glabrous; pyrenes 2, the ventral face of the seed plane, the dorsal face ecostate but perhaps muricate. Known from Panama and Costa Rica, both in lowlands and highlands. BOCAS DEL TORO: Fish Creek Mts, von Wedel 2358 (MO); Punta Pefia, vic Chiriquicito, alt ca 1000 ft, Lewis et al. 2187 (GH, MO, US). canat zone: W of Pine Base Camp, n 1593 (MO). npanmw: E] Real on Río Pirre, Duke 5425 (MO); s. loc., Duke 8351 MO); Loma Cuasi behind Manene, Duke 13613; Tumaganti, Duke 14242 (MO). PANAMA: Cerro Azul, alt ca 2000 ft, Dwyer 2796; ws Ee alt 2700- 3000 ft, Dwyer & Hayden 4363 (MO); id., Dwyer & Gauger 7344 (M O). Las: rd betw Mandinga & Cangandi, Duke 14742 (MO); betw Rio Diabolo & Rio perc nr z Nargana Duke 14894 (MO); Rio Diabolo & Rio Acuati, nr Nargana, Duke 14898 (MO). In view of the wealth of collections from Panama of this little known species it is deemed appropriate to present a detailed description. The species obviously does not belong in Psychotria as is evidenced by the muricate surface of the mature pyrenes. A less important but obvious character is the few-flowered, axillary inflorescence, although a few species of Psychotria admittedly have axillary inflo- rescences. 16. d blumii Dwyer & Hayden, Phytologia 15: 59, 1967. erro Pilón, El Valle, alt ca 3000 ft, Duke 14996 (MO). panama: Cerro Jefe, alt 2900 d Tyson et al. 3218 (holotype MO). [Vor. 55 46 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN In studying Duke 14996 we encountered the first collection with complete flow- ers. In describing the species Dwyer & Hayden had only fruit with the persistent calyx. It seems appropriate, therefore, to describe the flowers: calyx ca 1 mm long, ir- regularly dentate at the apex, glabrous; corolla-tube cylindrical, surrounded for 1.7 cm of its length by the calyx, the tube and the valvate lobes up to 2.5 cm long, the upper portion of the tube with white silky hairs within, the lobes thick, leathery, acute; anthers rectangular, ca 6 mm long, subsessile or on filaments ca 1 mm long, dorsifixed; ovary 2-celled, the septum thick, entire, the axile placentae bearing numerous ovules, the style ca 7 mm long, the stigmas 2, erect, subulate, ca 2.5 mm long, papillate on the inner surface. 17. Uragoga emetica (L.f.) Baillon, Hist. Pl. 7: 371, 1880. Psychotria emetica L.f., Suppl. * 144, 1781. Cephaelis emetica Pers., Syn. PI. 1: 203, 1805. C. plagiantha Standley, SUL Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 11: 190, 1936. Shrubs up to 1 m tall, the roots rather thick and gnarled; stems simple, terete, strigose. Leaves short-petiolate, the petioles 5-16 mm long, flattened, puberulent; blade elliptic-oblong to oblanceolate, acute to attenuate at the base, acute or short- acuminate at the apex, sometimes abruptly acuminate, the acumen often pungent, 8-15 cm long, 3-6 cm wide, membranaceous, glabrous above, strigose beneath, more densely so along the veins, otherwise glabrous, the costa prominent beneath, the lateral veins 7-11, arcuate, clearly anastomosing close to the margins, elevated beneath; stipules subpersistent, free, entire, triangular-lanceolate, sometimes subu- late, acuminate or obtuse, puberulent. Inflorescences axillary, solitary or geminate, subcapitate, up to 8 mm long, larger in the fruit, strigose; peduncle rather slender, up to 7 mm long, ca equalling the petioles or shorter; bracts ovate, acuminate or subulate, up to 2 mm long. Flowers 5-merous, white, subsessile; calyx cupuliform, the tube 0.8-1.5 mm long, glabrous, often irregularly lobed, the lobes ovate to oblong, acuminate or obtuse, 0.9-2 mm long; corolla ca 5 mm long, the tube glabrous, the 5 obtuse lobes slightly shorter than the tube, elongate pilose within; anthers narrowly oblong, ca 1.5 mm long, elongate-pilose, attached in the middle of the tube; ovary 2-loculate, with a single basally attached ovule per locule. Fruit bright-blue, drying black, capped by the persistent calyx, elliptic, 0.5-1 cm long, 0.2-0.25 mm wide, glabrous; pyrenes 2, twisted, each pyrene hemispherical in cross- sect, the ventral face of the seed plane and with a median ridge, with a small pore at the base, the dorsal face ecostate, the albumen entire. Ranging from Guatemala to Bolivia. As DEL TORO: Changuinola Valley, Dunlap 436 (F); vic of Chiriqui Lagoon, von Wedel 1258 (MO). CANAL zone: Barro Colorado I, Aviles 10 (F); id., Bailey & Bailey 0 (F); id., Hayden 122A (MO), 1038 (MO); id., Ebinger 549 (MO). DARIEN: vic of 1 Real alt ca 15 m, Allen 955 (MO); La Boca de Pirre, Bristan 1276 (MO); S of El Real, Duke 5047 (MO); El Real on Río Pirre, ca 10 mi S, Duke 5445 (MO); s. loc., Duke 8345 (MO); cuipo forest nr Sante Fe, Duke 12264 (MO); forested ridge parallel to Río Sancanti, ca 2 mi upstream from Piria, alt ca 120 m, Duke 14386 (MO); Puerto St Dorotea, Dwyer PA : Río Bayano a SAN BLAS: headwaters of Río eee "Elias 1773 (MO). 1968] DWYER AND HAYDEN—RUBIACEAE 47 The numerous collections cited above permit us to describe this important species. The twisted pyrenes and pilose anthers immediately segregate this species from Psychotria and Cephaelis. The axillary inflorescences are striking and are suggestive of those of Hoffmannia. The roots have a strong and somewhat nauseous odor and are the source of the drug ipecacuanha, but it is said to be inferior to Cephaelis ipecacuanha. According to Duke’s field notes the plant is known as “raicillo macho” in Spanish and as “macua” or “moncoa” among the Choco Indians (Darien, Panama & Colombia). We are placing this species in Uragoga with some reluctance as the limits of Uragoga are not well-defined. NOTES ON ASCLEPIADACEAE OF PANAMA By Louis O. WILLIAMS Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois ABSTRACT Three new species of Asclepiadaceae are described: Cynanchum infimicola, Gonolobus inaequalis and G. lewisii. The center of diversity of the Asclepiadaceae in North America is in Mexico with the greatest concentration of species in Chiapas and in adjacent Guatemala. The number of asclepiads diminishes rapidly as one proceeds southward from this center. There are a fair number of species known in Costa Rica and Panama. Certainly there are more to be expected as botanical exploration continues, es- pecially in Panama. It would not be surprising if the number now known, 29 native species and one introduced, were doubled in the course of time. The Asclepiadaceae are considered a difficult family and often, I suspect, avoided in the field as well as in the herbarium. It is a fascinating group of plants very much in need of a friend. Cynanchum infimicola L. Wms., sp. nov. Lianae parvae, herbaceae. Folia lanceolata vel angusti-ovata, acuminata, glabra. Inflorescentia umbelliformis, pauci- ad multiflora. F lores pedunculis graci- libus; lobi calycis elliptici vel lanceolati, acuti; corolla campanulata, lobis lanceo- latis acutis intus barbellato-puberulentibus; lobi coronae filiformes; gynostegium stipitatum. Folliculi ignoti. Small herbaceous vines, the stems twining, sparsely crisped-pubescent in lines, mostly less than 1 mm in diam, with | or more dactyliform glands on the in- terpetiolar scar. Leaves lanceolate to narrowly ovate, acuminate, with ca 7 pairs of lateral nerves, glabrous or nearly so; mature blades 1.5-4.5 cm long and 0.8-2 cm broad; petioles slender, crisped-pubescent, 3-9 mm long. Inflorescences um- belliform, few to many-flowered, axillary or nearly so, the peduncles slender, crisped-pubescent, mostly 6-10 mm long, the pedicels 2 mm or less long. Flowers white, ca 2-5 mm long; calyx lobed to the base, lobes elliptic to lanceolate, acute, sparsely puberulent to glabrous, ca 0.7 mm long; corolla campanulate, ca 2.5 mm long; lobes twice as long as the tube, lanceolate, acute, slightly spreading at an- thesis, barbellate-puberulent along the margins within; corona ca as long as the gynostegium, the lobes filiform, as long as and attached near the base of gyno- stegium; gynostegium stipitate, ca 2.5 mm long. Follicles unknown. CANAL ZONE: K-2 rd, Dwyer & Hayden 7540 (holotype F; isotype MO). cocré: rd to El Cope ca T mi fro x nie isin Hwy, Correa 403 (MO). Panama: Río Mar, along rd to beach, Blum & Dwyer 2485 (MO); nr beach at Nueva Gorgona, 8 Oct 1961, Duke 4491 (F, MO); Isla Taboga, alt 0-186 m, 23-24 July 1938, Woodson a P 1499 (MO). This is unusual among the species of sect. Metastelma in that it is a lowland species, occurring not far from the Pacific Ocean; most other species grow in the mountains. The specific name is derived from this fact. The species is allied to ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55(1): 48-50, 1968. 1968] WILLIAMS——ASCLEPIADACEAE 49 Cynanchum sepicola (Pittier) L. Wms. from which it is easily distinguished by the filiform corona lobes attached near the base of the gynostegium instead of lobes nearly as broad as long attached near the apex of the gynostegium. Gonolobus inaequalis L. Wms., sp. nov. Liana herbacea, sparse hirsuta vel glabra. Folia ovata vel oblongo-ovata, cordata, acuminata, sparse hirsuta vel glabrescentia, petiolis gracilibus. Inflores- centia axillaris vel extra-axillaris, subracemosa. Flores calyce usque ad basim diviso, lobis lineari-oblongis vel lanceolatis acutis vel obtusis; corolla rotata, pro- funde lobata, tubo perbrevi, lobis inaequalibus, 3 lobis lineari-oblongis, 2 lobis lanceolate-ovatis, annulo subnullo; corona carnosa, 5-lobata et undulata; ap- pendices antherarum lobo suborbiculari munitae. Herbaceous vines, sparsely hirsute or glabrous, internodes 6-12 cm long. Leaves ovate or oblong-ovate, cordate, acuminate, glabrous or very sparsely hirsute and glabrescent, the blade 5-11 cm long and 2-5 cm broad, the petioles slender, ob- scurely hirsute, shorter than the blade, 3-6 cm long. Inflorescence axillary or extra- axillary, subracemose, 1-4-flowered, the peduncles hirsute, 1-2 cm long, the pedicels slender, to 4 cm long. Flowers with the calyx divided to near the base, glabrous, lobes linear-oblong to lanceolate, acute or obtuse, ca 5 mm long and 2 mm broad; corolla rotate, the tube short and inconspicuous, deeply lobate, ca 3.5 cm across, the lobes inequal, 2 smaller than other 3, 3 lobes linear-oblong, acute or acuminate, 15-17 mm long and ca 5 mm broad, 2 lobes lance-ovate, acute, ca 11-13 mm long and 5 mm broad; annulus of corolla very obscure; gynostegium ca 3 mm high, corona fleshly, 5-lobate and undulate, ca 1 mm high; dorsal appendage of the anther with a central suborbicular lobe ca 1 mm long. Follicles unknown. The specimens have all been determined as G. dubius Pittier but R. E. Wood- son, Jr. had indicated some of the differences on the type sheet. The specimens available show the unusual inequality in size of the corolla lobes which would seem to be a o toward zygomorphy. Madden Dam, alt 90 m, 8 Oct 1939, Allen 2012 (MO); Palo Seco, 7 Nov 1940, "Allen. Ae (MO). PANAMA: vic of Pacora, alt ca 35 m, 5 Nov 1939, Allen 2031 (holotype MO, isotype F). Gonolobus lewisii L. Wms., sp. nov. Lianae herbaceae vel suffruticosae. Folia ovata vel oblongo-ovata, acuminata, cordata, utrinque strigosa. Inflorescentia subumbellata vel subracemosa, pauciflora. Flores calyce sparse strigoso, lobis lanceolatis acutis vel acuminatis; corolla rotata, praeter annulum ciliatum glabra, lobis ovato-lanceolatis acutis; corona erecta, carnosa; stigma stellatum; appendices antherarum rotundatae cum utrinque pro- cesso auriculiformi vel lunato. Herbaceous or possibly suffrutescent vines, the stems slender and sparsely crisped-pubescent. Leaves ovate to oblong-ovate, acuminate, cordate to the base, strigose-pubescent on both surfaces, with 4-6 pairs of secondary veins; blade 4.5-7.5 cm long and 2.5-4 cm broad; petiole slender, sparsely strigose, 1.5-3.5 cm long. Inflorescence subumbellate or subracemose, few-flowered, shorter than the leaves, [Vor. 55 50 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN the peduncles extra-axillary 14 as large as the stem, 2-3 cm long, the pedicels to ca 2 cm long. Flowers with the calyx sparsely strigose, divided to near the base, the lobes lanceolate, acute or acuminate, ca 5 mm long and 2 mm broad; corolla green, rotate, glabrous (except annulus), 2.5-3 cm across, lobed to near the center, the lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute, ca 10 mm long and 5 mm broad, the annulus (outer corona) inconspicuous, barbellate-ciliate; corona erect, fleshy, “scalloped,” ca 0.5 mm high; anther appendages rounded with a lateral auriculiform or lunate process on either side; gynostegium ca 2 mm high and 5 mm broad, the stigma stelliform. Fruits unknown. Species of the subg. Gonolobus are an interesting lot often quite easily dis- tinguished by characters in the gynostegium. This is the only one I know with lateral processes on the dorsal appendages of the anthers. Vegetatively it is like a dozen others but the umbelliform inflorescence is less compact than in other Panamanian species. SANTOS: cloud forest & disturbed margins, Loma Prieta, Cerro Grande, alt 2400- 2800 d 8 June 1967, Lewis, Baker, MacBryde & Oliver 2248 (holotype F; isotype MO). BOMBACACEAE NEOTROPICAE NOVAE II. NEW SPECIES OF ERIOTHECA, HAMPEA AND QUARARIBEA BY ANDRE ROBYNS Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri & National Foundation for Scientific Research, Belgium ABSTRACT Seven species from the neotropics are described as new to the Bombacaceae: Eriotheca peruviana (Peru), Hampea dukei (Panama), H. micrantha (Panama), d eae Peru), Q. longitubulosa (Peru), Q. sanblasensis (Panama), and Q. wurdackii (Peru). addition, a key to the Panamanian species of the genus Hampea is given Eriotheca peruviana A. Robyns, sp. nov. [subg. Millea (Standley) A. Robyns]; a E. discolori (H.B.K.) A. Robyns (Bull. Jard. Bot. État Brux 33: 159, 1963) et E. ruizii (K. Schum.) A. Robyns (loc. cit. 162) floribus longioribus et 3.2-4 cm longis, staminibus numerosioribus et 75-80 primo visu sat distincta; etiam E. vargasii (Cuatr.) A. Robyns (loc. cit. 165) affinis, sed floribus leviter longioribus pedicello dense minuteque stellato-puberulo, receptaculo calyceque extus minute stellato-tomentello, staminibus tantum 75-80 valde differt.—Fig. 1. Arbor (?), decidua, ramulis teretibus minute puberulis sed glabrescentibus. Folia alterna, digitata, 5-foliolata; petiolus teres, basi leviter dilatato-complanatus apiceque leviter dilatato-subglobosus, usque ad 13 cm longus, sparsissime pilosus pilisque simplicibus, foliola articulata, sessilia; lamina elliptica ad subobovata, basi cuneiformis, apice acuta ad breviter acuminata inconspicueque mucronata, usque ad 10.7 cm longa et 4.5 cm lata, membranaceo-chartacea, marginibus ser- rulatis, leviter discolor, supra glabra laevisque (ad scabridula et stellato-puberula?), subtus pallidiora et dense scabridulo-stellato-arachnoidea, nervo mediano infra prominenti, nervis lateralibus infra vix prominulis. Inflorescentiae praecoces, cymoso-paniculiformes, laxiflorae, axibus pedicellisque dense minuteque stellato- puberulis. Flores usque ad 4 cm longi; pedicellus usque ad 8 mm longus, 3-bracteo- latus bracteolisque caducis; receptaculum 1.5-2 mm longum, minute stellato- tomentellum, pauciglandulosum; calyx cupuliformis, apice truncatus vel vix sub- lobatus, 3.5-5 mm longus et apice ca 5 mm diam, extus minute stellato-tomentellus, intus basi longe sericeo-villosus apiceque breviter adpresseque sericeus, persistens; petala oblongo-linearia, basi tubi staminei adnata, 3.2-4 cm longa et 4-5 mm lata, utrinque praeter basin glabram velutina; stamina 75-80, glabra; tubus stamineus cylindricus, 6.5-7 mm longus, in medio 2-2.3 mm diam, basi leviter dilatatus, apice disciformi-dilatatus discoque 3.5 mm diam 5-undulato et sulcato; filamenta in disci sulco inserta, erecta, filiformia, inaequalia, 1.5-2.3 cm longa, apice dilatata; antherae oblongae, horizontales, extrorsae, ca 0.8-1.5 mm longae, uniloculares, longitudinaliter dehiscentes; ovarium sessile, plus minusve piriforme, ca 2.5 mm longum et basi 2 mm latum, tomentellum, 5-loculare, ovulis oo in columella cen- trali affixis, stylo filiformi usque ad 2.5 cm longo praeter basin stellato-puberulam glabro, stigmate truncato (vel inconspicue 5-undulato?). Capsula ut videtur ANN, Missourt Bor. Garp. 55(1): 51-59, 1968, [Vor. 55 52 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 1. Eriotheca peruviana A. Robyns: A, leaf (X15); B, indumentum of lower leaf- surface jee enlarged); C, flower (X2); D, androecium (X114); E, anther (X15); F, gynoecium (X3); G ovary, cross-section (X13). After Hutchinson et al. 6228 obovoidea, apice breviter apiculata, valvis ochraceis induratis extus stellato-puberulis pilisque hyalinis; semina late ovoidea, ca 4 mm longa et 3.5 mm lata, testa fusca minuteque punctata; lana copiosa ferrugineaque. ERU. LA LIBERTAD: Prov Pataz, Canyon of the Río Marafion, E side of river on rd t Buldibuyo, 5 km above Chagual, alt 1300 m, 9 Aug 1964, Hutchinson, Wright & Straw 6228 (holotype UC, isotype US). As the type collection is leafless, the description of the leaves was made from cultivated plants originating from the seeds of the type collection (Honolulu Botanical Garden, cultivation number 65.1166, pressed by Hutchinson in July 1967 and deposited at UC under the type collection number). Hampea dukei A. Robyns, sp. nov.; H. punctulatae Cuatr. (Phytologia 4: 472, 1954) affinis, sed floribus hermaphroditis multo minoribus et usque ad 14 mm longis valde distincta. 1968] ROBYNS—BOMBACACEAE 53 Arbor trunco 15 cm diam, ramulis novellis dense et minute granuloso-tomentel- lis pilisque ochraceis et stellatis sed glabrescentibus. Folia alterna, simplicia, longe petiolata petioloque tereti usque ad 14 cm longo stellato-tomentello ad stellato- puberulo; lamina latissime ovata, basi aperte cordata ad late rotundata, apice breviter acuminata, usque ad 15 cm longa et lata, tenuiter chartacea, marginibus integris, discolor, atro-punctulata, supra praecipue secus nervos minute stellato- puberula glabrescensque, infra pallidiora et stellato-tomentella, e basi distincte 5-T-nervia, nervis principalibus supra prominulis infraque valde prominentibus. Flores axillares, paucifasciculati fasciculisque usque ad 4-floris, hermaphroditi, pedicellis longitudinaliter striatis usque ad 15 mm longis dense et minute granuloso- tomentellis pilisque ochraceis et stellatis; bracteolae non visae; calyx campanulato- cupuliformis, usque ad 6 mm longus, apice 5-lobatus lobisque transverse anguste triangularibus et vix 1 mm longis, extus minute denseque ochraceo-stellato-tomen- tellus, intus glaber et atro-punctatus; petala 5, usque ad 14 mm longa, tubo ventricoso ca 6 mm longo glabroque, lobis albis contortis inaequilateralibus obovatis leviter cucullatis extus dense minuteque stellato-tomentellis intusque glabris et atro-punctatis; tubus stamineus usque ad 3 mm longus, dense barbatus, filamentis usque ad 2. mm longis glabrisque, antheris hippocrepiformibus; ovarium late oblongum, usque ad 3 mm longum, breviter villosum, 3-loculare loculisque pauci- ovulatis, stylo filiformi apicem versus sensim dilatato usque ad 12 mm longo apice declinato parte inferiore glabro parteque superiore papillato. Fructus nondum visus. Pan. SAN : Rio Chucunaque, 2-10 mi above the Cuna-Darien boundary, 21 Aug 1966, Duke 8554 po MO). Hampea micrantha A. Robyns sp. nov.; ab ominibus speciebus generis Hampeae Schlecht. floribus masculinis brevissime pedicellatis parvibusque facile distincta. Frutex vel arbuscula 2-4 m altus, ramulis conspicue fusco-punctatis, novellis stellato-puberulis sed glabrescentibus. Folia alterna, simplicia, longe petiolata petioloque tereti 3.5-125 cm longo conspicue fusco-punctato stellato-puberulo glabrescentique, stipulis subulatis usque ad 7 mm longis stellato-puberulis cadu- cisque; lamina aequilateralis ad interdum inaequilateralis, ovata, basi rotundata ad late obtusa, apice acuminata acumineque obtuso, 10-25 cm longa et 4.5-12 cm lata, tenuiter ad rigide chartacea, conspicue fusco- ad atro-punctata, marginibus integris ad leviter sinuatis, supra glabra, infra praecipue secus nervos stellato-puberula glabrescensque, e basi distincte 3(-5)-nervia, costa supra elevata et infra valde elevata basique glandulo elongato ornata, nervis secundariis supra prominulis infraque prominentibus ad prominulis. Flores axillares, paucifasciculati fascicu- lisque usque ad 4-floris, unisexuales. Flores masculini ca 10 mm longi, breviter pedicellati pedicelloque crasso usque ad 3 mm longo minute stellato-tomentello; braeteolae 3, calycis basi insertae, anguste oblongo-ovatae, usque ad 2.5 mm longae, minute stellato-tomentellae; calyx cupuliformis, apice truncatus et breviter 5- denticulatus, ca 4.5 mm longus et apice 4 mm diam, fusco-punctatus, extus minute stellato-tomentellus, intus glaber; petala 5, tubo obconico farcto ca 2.5 mm longo glabroque, lobis contortis inaequilateralibus obovatis 7.5 mm longis et 4 mm latis [Vor. 55 54 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN conspicue fusco-punctatis extus praeter partem glabram petalum vicinum tegentem minute stellato-tomentellis intusque glabris; tubus stamineus anguste conicus, farctus, apice breviter 5-lobulatus, usque ad 4 mm longus, glaber, parte dimidia superiore filamenta ferens filamentisque brevissimis et vix 1 mm longis glabrisque, antheris ca 45 1-2 in quoque filamento hippocrepiformibus; pistillum nullum. Flores foeminei non visi. Capsula calyce persistenti circumcincta, distincte stipitata, late obovoidea, apice emarginata et minute mucronulata, usque ad 1.5 cm longa, coriacea, extus minute fusco-tomentella, in valvis 3 intus glabris loculicida; semina l-2 in quoque loculo, usque ad 8 mm longa, testa nigro-fusca cum venulis pal- lidioribus, arillata. PANAMA. PANAMA: betw 2 Jan & “School House,” NE of Cerro Azul, forest, Por at edge of road, Dressler 3227 (staminate flowers, holotype MO); betw Cerro Jefe & L Eneida, by rd, 16 Febr 1968, ie 3383 (capsules, MO). Only one species of Hampea [H. appendiculata (J. D. Sm.) Standley] was reported in my revision of the Bombacaceae for the Flora of Panama (Ann. Mis- souri Bot. Gard. 51: 62, 1964). A key which permits separation of the three species now reported from Panama follows: a. Leaf blades auriculate-appendaged at the base; flowers 16-18 mm long appendiculata aa. Leaf blades without auriculate appendages at the base; flowers up to 14 mm Leaf blades very. broadly ovate, shallowly cordate to broadly rounded at a base, short-acuminate at the apex, stellate-tomentellous beneath; flowers lon peii el " 15 mm "long; staminal tube densely barbate, ndun ent ochraceou H. dukei , Leaf blades ovate, rund to broadly obtuse at the base, acuminate at the apex, stellate-puberulous especially along the veins to glabrescent beneath; flowers to mm long; pedicel to 3 mm long; staminal tube glabrous; indument not ochraceous H. micrantha ro Hd c > Quararibea bilobata A. Robyns, sp. nov.—Fig. 2 Arbor 10 m alta, ramulis novellis breviter stellato-ferrugineo-tomentellis sed glabrescentibus. Folia alterna, simplicia, breviter petiolata petioloque crasso 0.8-1 cm longo breviter stellato-ferrugineo-tomentello sed glabrescenti, stipulis deltoideis ca 0.3-0.6 mm longis persistentibusque; lamina leviter asymmetrica, elliptica ad subobovata, basi subrotundata vel obtusa acutave, apice obtusa, 12-25 cm longa et 5.5-11 cm lata, tenuiter chartacea, utrinque sordida, supra sparse stellato-puberula glabrescensque, infra stellato-pubescens, basi conspicue triplinervia, nervatura supra manifesta sed non prominula, costa nervisque secundariis subtus prominentibus, nervulis venulisque subtus reticulum prominulum formantibus. Flores solitarii, oppositifolii (2) vel ramis brevibus inserti; pedicellus brevis, usque ad 1 cm longus sed vulgo brevior, breviter stellato-ferrugineo-tomentellus, bracteolis deltoideis ca 1.5 mm longis nigricantibus persistentibusque; alabastra claviformia; calyx cam- panulatus, longitudinaliter et conspicue nervatus nervisque prominentibus, usque ad 2 cm longus, extus scaber et dense breviterque stellato-ferrugineo-tomentellus, intus dense sericeus, apice 3-lobatus lobisque inaequalibus obtusis usque ad 6 mm longis; petala 5, alba, anguste obovata, apice rotundata, usque ad 4.5-5 cm longa et 1.5 cm lata, membranacea, utrinque praeter basin stellato-tomentella ad stellato- 1968] ROBYNS—BOMBACACEAE 55 2. Quararibea bilobata A. Robyns: A, leaf (X145); B, flower (X1); C, upper part of s al tube with anthers, and upper part of style with stigmas (X2); ovary, cross- section (X6). After Wurdack 2450. puberula; androecium inclusum, 3-3.7 cm longum, tubo cylindrico apice breviter 5-lobato lobisque rotundatis 2-4 mm longis praeter basin stellato-albido-arach- noideo, antheris sessilibus tubi apice et lobis insertis ca 1.5-2 mm longis; ovarium conicum, adpresse stellato-tomentellum, 2-loculare loculisque 2-ovulatis, stylo androecio longiore 3.5-4.5 cm longo stellato-arachnoideo-tomentello apicem versus dilatato et manifeste bilobato, stigmatibus flabelliformibus usque ad 4.5-5 mm latis. Fructus ignotus. PER ORETO: Prov Alto Amazonas, rainforest at upper end of Pongo de Manseriche, Rio Marañón, alt 250 m, 26-28 Oct 1962, Wurdack 2450 (holotype UC, isotype US). Quararibea bilobata is close to Q. amazonica Ulbr. (Verh. Bot. Ver. Prov. Brandenburg 50: 91, 1909) from the State of Amazonas in Brazil (type Ule 37b, probably destroyed in Berlin; photo Field Museum of Natural History 9552 at MO). These species can be separated as follows: a. Young branchlets and petioles shortly stellate-ferruginous-tomentellous; leaf blades sparsely stellate-puberulous to glabrescent above, stellate pubescent beneath; flowers 4.5-5 cm long; bracteoles deltoid, ca 1.5 mm long; calyx densely ‘and shortly ieee ea tomentellous outside; staminal column 5-lobate, the lobes 2-4 mm long Q. bilobata [Vor. 55 56 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN a. Young branchlets ies nd E leaves glabrous except for a few stellate hairs along the veins on the lower surface; flowers 3.5-3.7 cm long; bracteoles subulate mia ho dde calyx lepidote outside; staminal column dentate at the apex, the teeth 0.75-1 mm long Q. amazonica Quararibea longitubulosa A. Robyns, sp. nov.—Fig. 3. Arbor 25-35 m alta, ramulis teretibus dense minuteque stellato-puberulis sed glabrescentibus. Folia alterna ad subopposita, simplicia, petiolata petioloque tereti 2.5-13 cm longo basi apiceque parum dilatato et dense minuteque stellato- puberulo, stipulis lineari-ovatis acutis obtusisve usque ad 19 mm longis et 4 mm latis stellato-tomentellis mox deciduis; lamina parum asymmetrica, elliptica ad late elliptica, interdum leviter obovata, basi cordata, apice obtusa ad breviter ob- tuseque acuminata, 10-30 cm longa et 5.5-19 cm lata, chartacea, leviter discolor, praecipue supra subnitida, utrinque sed praecipue secus venas sparse minuteque stellato-puberula, basi 7-9-nervia, nervatura supra prominula, costa nervisque secundariis subtus prominentibus, nervulis venulisque subtus reticulum prominulum formantibus. Flores ramiflori et cauliflori, paucifasciculati, pedicello apicem versus 3. Quararibea longitubulosa A. Robyns: A, leaf (X15); B, inflorescence and flower ia i detail of a lobe of the staminal column with 2 anthers (X6); D, ovary, cross- section (XT). After Wurdack 2102. 1968] ROBYNS—BON EIQ AMA CE AF 57 sensim dilatato usque ad 2.5 cm longo minute stellato-tomentello, bracteolis prope pedicelli basin insertis caducisque; alabastra claviformia; calyx infundibuliformis, a 2 cm longus, apice 3-lobatus lobisque inaequalibus rotundatis usque ad 8 mm longis, extus minute stellato-tomentellus, intus dense sericeus; petala 5, alba, an- guste obovata, apice asymmetrica, ca 3.5 cm longa et 9 mm lata, membranacea, extus dense stellato-tomentella, intus villosa; androecium longe exsertum, tu stamineo cylindrico saltem in sicco obtusiuscule 5-subangulato basi leviter dilatato usque ad 5.5 cm longo (lobis exclusis) stellato-tomentello indumentoque interdum apicem versus paucis pilis glandulosis longioribusque intersperso apice in 5 lobos antheriferos producto, lobis linearibus carnosis usque a cm longis stellato- puberulis et sparse glanduloso-pilosis, antheris ca 12-18 in quoque lobo ses- silibus oblongis et ca 2-3 mm longis; ovarium conicum, 5-obtuso-angulatum, stel- lato-tomentellum, 5-loculare loculisque 2-ovulatis, stylo androecio parum breviore dense stellato-tomentello apice parum dilatato curvato et breviter 5-lobato. Fructus ignotus. PERU. LORETO: se Alto Amazonas, high rainforest along Rio Marañón nr Teniente nglo, just above Pongo de Manseriche, alt 250-300 m, occasional, 4-7 Oct 1962, Wurdack s (holotype US, Mic F, UC). uararibea sanblasensis A. Robyns, sp. nov.; ab affini Q. leptandra Cuatr. (Lloydia 11: 185, 1948) foliorum lamina angustiore basi obtusa ad subrotunda et mem- branaceo-chartacea, pedicello 6-8 cm longo, bracteolis longe persistentibus primo visu sat recedit.—Fig. 4. rbor mediocris et 10-20 m alta, ramulis novellis stellato-puberulis. Folia alterna, petiolo robusto tereti usque ad 2.4 cm longo et stellato-puberulo; lamina plus minusve inaequilateralis, anguste oblongo-elliptica ad anguste elliptica sub- obovatave, basi obtusa ad subrotundata, apice plus minusve longe acuminata acumineque minute mucronulato, 12-40 cm longa et 4-11.5 cm lata, membranaceo- chartacea, marginibus integris ad leviter sinuatis, utrinque minute puberula, e basi manifeste 3-5 nervia, costa nervisque secundariis subtus prominulis infraque valde prominentibus, nervis tertiis plus minusve transversis cum venulis in reti- culum prominulum anastomosantibus. Flores oppositifolii, solitarii, longe pedicel- lati pedicelloque tereti 6-8 cm longo stellato-puberulo, bracteolis 3 pedicelli apicem versus insertis plus minusve distantibus inaequilateralibus subulato-deltoideis ad anguste deltoideis usque ad 15 mm longis et basi 3.5 mm latis utrinque minute puberulis longe persistentibusque; calyx tubulosus, usque ad 18 mm longus et 8 mm diam, apice 3(-5)-lobatus lobisque inaequalibus usque ad 4 mm longis, in vivo viridis, extus dense minuteque puberulus, intus dense sericeus, accrescens; petala ut androecium nondum visa; ovarium 5-loculare loculisque biovulatis. Capsula calyce accrescenti late campanulato et usque ad 2 cm diam circumcincta, drupacea, ovoidea, apice truncato-mamillato et minute apiculato, usque ad 3 cm longa et 1.5 cm diam, in vivo viridis, in sicco fulva, lepidato-stellato-tomentella, fibroso-lignosa, e loculisque ut videtur uniseminalibus. ANAMA. SAN : headwaters of Río Cuadi, Camp Diablo (Drill Site 22, N 82.2, E 87.8, alt 273.4 t p evergreen forest along river, 18 Dec 1967, Duke, Robyns & ka ae (holotype MO); plain of Sperdi, nr Puerto Obaldia, nr sea level, Pittier [Vor. 55 58 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 4. Quararibea sanblasensis A. Robyns: A, leaf and capsule (X15); B. bracteoles and calyx (X2); C, capsule, cross-section (X1). After Duke et al. 3634. Quararibea sanblasensis can readily be distinguished from the other seven species of Quararibea occuring in Panama (cf. A. Robyns, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 51: 54-62, 1964 & 54: 185-186, 1967) by a combination of the following characters: leaf blades + inequilateral, distinctly 3-5-nerved from the base; flowers oppositifolious; pedicels elongated, 6-8 cm long; bracteoles 3, inserted towards the apex of the pedicel, + distant, to 15 mm long, persistent; calyx tubular, to 18 mm long and 8 mm in diam, wingless, broadly campanulate and up to 2 cm in diam. when surrounding the fruit; ovary 5-locular, each locule 2-ovulate; capsule ovoid,. truncate-mamillate and minutely apiculate at the apex, to 3 cm long and 1.5 cm in diam. Quararibea wurdackii A. Robyns, sp. nov. Arbor 6-8 m alta, ramulis novellis fusco-stellato-tomentellis sed mox glabres- centibus. Folia alterna, simplicia, petiolo tereti apice leviter pulvinato 2.7-5 cm longo praecipue apicem versus fusco-stellato-tomentello, stipulis caducis; lamina anguste elliptica ad elliptica vel subobovata, interdum asymmetrica, basi obtusa ad rotundata, apice acuminata, 17-35 cm longa et 6-14 cm lata, tenuiter chartacea, 1968] ROBYNS—BOMBACACEAE 59 subtus glabra, infra secus costae partem inferiorem stellato-puberula, basi con- spicue 3(-5)-nervia, costa nervisque secundariis subtus prominentibus, nervulis venulisque subtus reticulum prominulum formantibus. Flores axillares, ramis brevi- bus inserti, longe pedicellati pedicelloque tereti gracili usque ad 7 cm longo minute stellato-puberulo ad stellato-tomentello, bracteolis 3 pedicelli parte superiore in- sertis lineari-subulatis usque ad 16 mm longis et ca 1 mm latis stellato-tomentellis caducisque; calyx tubuliformi-campanulatus, apice 3-4-lobatus, usque ad 2.3 cm longus, extus minute fusco-stellato-tomentellus, intus sericeus, lobis inaequalibus acutis et usque ad 5 mm longis; petala eburnea, asymmetrica, anguste obovata, apice rotundata, usque ad 3.5 cm longa et 7-8.5 mm lata, membranacea, extus praeter basin stellato-puberula indumentoque parte superiore pilis glandulosis in- termixto, intus fere glabra, marginibus glanduloso-ciliolatis; androecium longe exsertum, tubo cylindrico saltem in sicco leviter sigmoideo usque ad 6 mm longo, antheris in quoque lobo 6 biseriatis sessilibus oblongis inaequalibus usque ad 3 mm longis; ovarium depresse conicum minute stellato-tomentellum 5-loculare loculisque 2-ovulatis, stylo androecium aequanti vel androecio leviter breviore pa ut ipei obscure 5-lobulato. Fructus ignotus. U: LORETO: Prov Alto Amazonas, high rainforest along Río Marañón nr Teniente "s dus ace Pongo de Manseriche, alt 250-300 m, 4-7 Oct 1962, Wurdack 2129 (holo- Es US, isotype F). NEW SPECIES OF LISIANTHUS (GENTIANACEAE) FROM PANAMA By ANDRE RoBYNs AND THoMas S. ELIAS Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri & National Foundat for Scientific Research, Belgium, and Saint Louis Gay. St. Louis, Missouri ABSTRACT Two species of Lisianthus L. from Panama are described as new: L. jefensis and L. scopulinus. Study of collections of Lisianthus L. from hitherto uncollected areas in Panama, viz. Cerro Jefe in the Province of Panama and the mouth of Río Concepción in the Province of Veraguas, yielded the following two new species: L. jefensis and L. scopulinus. During the December 1967 Missouri Botanical Garden’s expedition to Panama under the direction of Walter H. Lewis (in which the senior author took part), collecting along the mouth of Río Concepción and in other inaccessible areas was made possible through a grant from the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Grant No. F44620-67-C-0055). This included transportation by heli- copter from Albrook Air Force Base in the Canal Zone to sites in the Provinces of Colón, Darien, Los Santos, Panama, Veraguas, and in the Comarca de San Blas. Lisianthus jefensis A. Robyns & Elias, sp. nov.; a L. seemannii (Griseb.) O. Ktze. foliorum lamina subcoriacea, inflorescentiis laxis pauciflorisque, pedicellis 1-2.5 cm longis, floribus leviter minoribus, calycis tubo longiore, corolla tubulosa lobisque valde minoribus et tantum 4-5.5 mm longis, antheris ca duplo longioribus valde distinctus; a L. scopulino A. Robyns et Elias foliorum lamina subcoriacea, dichasiis simplicibus vel interdum compositis sed paucifloris, floribus minoribus, calycis tubo longiore, corollae lobis multo longioribus et 4-5.5 cm longis, antheris majoribus et ca 3.5-4 mm longis primo visu sat differt.—Fig. 1 Herba vel frutex 1.2-2.4 m altus, omnino glaber, caulibus viridibus teretibus sed apicem versus subangulatis. Folia opposita, decussata, petiolata petiolisque amplexicaulibus; lamina anguste obovata ad ovata, basi in petiolum longe attenuata decurrensque, apice acuminata, usque ad 12 cm longa et 4 cm lata, subcoriacea, costa subtus prominenti, nervis lateralibus utroque latere 2-3 arcuatis subtus vix conspicuis ad inconspicuis. Inflorescentiae terminales et axillares, laxae, dichasiales, dichasiis simplicibus vel interdum compositis sed paucifloris, pedunculis usque ad 4.5 cm longis, pedicellis 1-2.5 cm longis, bracteis oppositis et 2-5 mm longis. Flores 2.8-3.2 cm longi, 5-meri; calyx tubulosus, 7-9.5 mm longus, lobis anguste ovatis dorsaliter leviter carinatis apice longe acuminatis 4-6.5 mm longis et ca 2-2.5 mm latis secus margines plus minusve scariosis; corolla vivide flava cum lobis viridi-flavis, 2.8-3.2 cm longa, tubulosa, parte 1⁄4 inferiore constricta, lobis erectis triangularibus apice acuminatis 4-5.5 mm longis et ca 3 mm latis; stamina plus minusve corollam aequantia vel manifeste exserta, filamentis tubo corollae ca 1, supra basin insertis filiformibus et 19-24 mm longis, anthersis introrsis versatilibus ANN. Missouni Bor. Garp. 55(1): 60-63, 1968. 1968] ROBYNS AND ELIAS—LISIANTHUS 61 . l. Lisianthus jefensis A. e & Elias: A, habit M B, flower (ca X1 15); C, "i x ngitudinal section (ca X1 4%); D, anther (ca X4); E, ovary, cross-section oe enlarged). A, after Elias & Hayden 1798 (MO); B-E, after Tyson et al. 3203 (MO oblongis ca 3.5-4 mm longis basi bilobatis apice mucronatis mucroneque curvato et ca 0.3-0.4 mm longo; ovarium anguste ovatum, basi leviter obtuseque 4-angula- tum, 6-7 mm longum et ca 1.5-2 mm diam, 2-loculare, stylo filiformi plus minusve tubum corollae aequanti ad longe exserto, stigmate capitato et ca 1 mm diam. Capsula calyce persistenti corollaque marcescenti circumcincta, fusiformis, usque ad 12 mm longa, apice rostrata, 2-septicidali-valvata; semina irregularia, ca 0.5 mm n e parvis acutisque tecta. AMA: Cerro Jefe, Duke 9413 (MO); id., 10-13 mi S of Goofy Lake, Febr 1966, Duke 8010 (MO); id., alt ca 2900 ft, roadside thicket, Aug 1967, Dwyer & Hayden 8087 (MO, UC); id. cloud. forest, Aug 1967, Elias & Hayden 1798 (holotype MO, isotype UC); [Vor. 55 62 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN id., vate & forests along rd beyond summit, Aug 1967, Hayden 1008 (COL, DUKE, MO, UC); id in Clusia forest, alt 2700-3000 ft, Jan 1966, Tyson et al. 3203 (MO); id., top, very common, July 1966, Tyson et al. 4438 M 0). This new species can readily be distinguished from L. seemannii by the sub- coriaceous leaf blades, the loose few-flowered inflorescences, the much longer pedicels (1-2.5 cm long in L. jefensis versus 2-5 mm long in L. seemannii), the somewhat shorter flowers, the longer calyx tube, the tubular corolla with lobes only 4-5.5 mm long, and the anthers about twice as long; from L. scopulinus it can be separated by the subcoriaceous leaves, the simple or sometimes compound but few-flowered dichasia, the shorter flowers, the longer calyx tube, the much longer corolla lobes and the longer anthers. Lisianthus jefensis is closely related to L. peduncularis L. Williams (Fieldiana: Bot. 31: 408, fig. 1, 1968), but differs mainly in the more coriaceous texture of the leaves and the much smaller flowers (2.8-3.2 cm long in L. jefensis versus 4.2-6 cm in L. peduncularis). Lisianthus scopulinus A. Robyns & Elias, sp. nov.; L. skinneri (Hemsl.) O. Ktze. proximus, sed calycis lobis anguste ovatis apice longe acuminatis longioribus et 5-5.5 mm longis primo visu sat differt; etiam L. jefensi A. Robyns et Elias affinis, sed dichasiis compositis amplis multiflorisque, floribus majoribus, calycis tubo ca dimidio breviore, corollae lobis ut antheris etiam brevioribus praecipue recedit.—Fig. Frutex 1.5 m altus, omnino glaber, caulibus teretibus sed apicem versus angulatis canaliculatisque. Folia opposita, decussata, petiolata petiolisque amplexi- caulibus; lamina obovata ad obovato-elliptica, basi in petiolum longe attenuata, apice longe acuminata, 6.5-18.5 cm longa et 2.8-6.6 cm lata, chartacea, costa et nervis lateralibus subtus conspicuis, nervis lateralibus utroque latere 2-3 arcuatis. Inflorescentiae axillares, dichasiales, dichasiis compositis amplis multifloris laxis oret g. 2. Lisianthus scopulinus A. Robyns & Elias: A, flower (ca X1 1⁄4); B, id., longi- me section (ca X1 14). After Lewis et al. 2/99 (MO). 1968] ROBYNS AND ELIAS—LISIANTHUS 63 saepeque irregularibus, pedunculis teretibus ad angulatis 1.5-3.5 cm longis, pedicel- lis 0.8-2.2 cm longis, bracteis oppositis ovatis ca 1.5 mm longis. Flores 3.8-4.6 cm longi, 5-meri; calyx tubulosus, 6.5-7 mm longus, lobis anguste ovatis dorsaliter carinatis apice longe acuminatis 5-5.5 mm longis et basi ca 2 mm latis secus margines membranaceis; corolla flavo-viridis, 3.8-4.6 cm longa, tubulosa, parte 1/4 inferiore constricta, lobis erectis ovatis apice acutis 2-3 mm longis et basi latis; stamina breviter exserta, filamentis tubo corollae ca 1⁄4 supra basin insertis filiformi- bus et 2.6-3.5 mm longis, antheris introrsis versatilibus oblongis 2-3 mm longis basi bilobatis apice mucronatis mucroneque ca 0.5 mm longo; ovarium anguste ovatum, basi leviter 4-angulatum, 6-11 mm longum, 2-3 mm latum, 2-loculare, stylo exserto filiformique, stigmate capitato et ca 1.5 mm diam. Capsula calyce persistenti corollaque marcescenti circumcincta, fusiformis, 11-14 mm longa et ca 4 mm diam, longitudinaliter carinata, apice rostrata rostroque usque ad 5 mm longo, 2-septici- dali-valvata; semina irregularia, ca 0.5 mm longa, processibus parvis acutisque tecta. VERAGUAS: mouth of Río Concepción, cliffs, Dec 1967, Lewis, Croat & Hawker 2799 (holotype MO; isotypes DUKE, F, K). The new species is related to L. skinneri but differs strongly in having narrowly ovate calyx lobes which are long-acuminate at the apex and are longer (5-5.5 mm long, in contrast with 2-3 mm in L. skinneri); it is also close to L. jefensis from which it can easily be separated by the large, compound, many-flowered dichasia, by the larger flowers, by the calyx tube about half as long, and by the shorter corolla lobes and anthers; from L. peduncularis it can be distinguished by the large, compound, many-flowered dichasia, the shorter calyx tube, the shorter corolla lobes (2-3 mm long in L. scopulinus versus 6-8 mm long in L. peduncularis), and the smaller anthers. KARYOTYPES IN RELATION TO CLASSIFICATION AND PHYLOGENY IN CLAYTONIA By WALTER H. Lewis AND YUTAKA SUDA! Center for the Biology of Natural Systems, Washington University and the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis ABSTRACT mosomal ia iie d in Claytonia involving symmetry, large size and few satel- lites is cud de the gross sone ag asa d e specialized species and their clases Similar to C. sibirica to sect. Limnia In the classification of the genus Claytonia L. (Portulacaceae) proposed by Gray (1887) and as recently modified (Swanson, 1966; Nilsson, 1966), one annual and three perennial sections are recognized. "Those species in the sect. Caudicosae with heavy taproots are considered primitive, those with rhizomes or runners in the sect. Rhizomatosae intermediate between the caudicose perennials and the specialized geophytic species of the sect. Claytonia, while the annual species of the sect. Limnia are also thought to be advanced. This subgeneric classification and proposed phylogeny are based only on morphological characters to which we now add data from chromosomal morphology. Species of each section were studied: (1) C. sibirica L., sect. Caudicosae, 2n — 24 (British Columbia: N of Squamish, Black Tusk recreational area, Lewis 6810, nr Sechelt, Sechelt Peninsula, Lewis 6827; Vancouver I, Cougar Creek at Hwy 19, Lewis 6822); (2) C. cordifolia S. Watson, sect. Rhizomatosae, 2n = 10 (Washington: Kittitas Co, Table Mt Rd, Lewis 6736); (3) C. sarmentosa C. A. Meyer, sect. Rhizomatosae, 2n = 10 and 15 from one population (Alaska: Hatcher Pass, Talkeetna Mts, Mitchell 927D1); (4) C. virginica L., sect. Claytonia, 2n = 12 (North Carolina: Buncombe Co, 0.2 mi W of Swannanoa, Lewis 6582) and 2n = 14 (Texas: Bowie Co, Texarkana, Suda 6); (5) C. perfoliata Donn ex Willd., sect. Limnia, 2n = 12 (Washington: Kittitas Co, 10 mi W of Cle Elum, Lewis Plants were grown in an underground room with 12 hr of light (500 ft candles) at 24°C and 12 hr of darkness at 18°C. Root tips excised from pot-bound plants were pretreated with low temperatures (0-2°C) for 16 hr and fixed by modi- fied Carnoy’s solution (4:3:1, chloroform-absolute ethanol-glacial acetic acid) for 30 min. After maceration in N HCl for 45 min, roots were immersed in 2% acetic- orcein for 24 hr. Temporary slides were made by the squash method; the best slides were then made permanent (McClintock, 1929) and are deposited in the Missouri 1We wish to thank Dr. Wm. W. Mitchell, Alaska Agricultural Experiment Station, Palmer, for sending material of Claytonia E and U. S. Public Health Grant No. 1 P10 ES 00139 ERT for financial assistan Ann. Missourt Bor. Garb. 55(1): 64-67, ie 1968] LEWIS AND SUDA—CLAYTONIA 65 Botanical Garden Herbarium (MO). Chromosomal measurements were made from photomicrographs enlarged 5600X; idiograms (Fig. 1-5) are based on arm ratios of chromosomes from 3-4 metaphase plates each from different root tips. Chromosomal symmetry, length, number and satellite frequency for seven races of five species are summarized in Table 1. Certain trends are striking. For example, symmetry, expressed by pairs of V (+ median and symmetrical) and I (subterminal and asymmetrical) chromosomes and by percentages of subterminal chromosomes, is of three kinds. More or less symmetrical karyotypes are character- istic of C. cordifolia (Fig. 2) and C. sarmentosa (Fig. 3), those of C. virginica (Fig. 4-5) are strongly asymmetrical, while the karyotypes of C. perfoliata (Fig. 1) and C. sibirica are intermediate between these extremes. This grouping correlates at least in large part with the subgeneric classification, viz. species in the sect. Rhizomatosae differ markedly in chromosomal symmetry from C. virginica (sect. Claytonia), both of which differ from C. perfoliata of the sect. Limnia. The latter is similar to C. sibirica which is, however, an atypical member of the sect. Caudicosae forming a connecting link with the sect. Limnia (Swanson, 1966) a conclusion entirely confirmed by the degree of chromosomal symmetry. On the basis of chromosomal lengths the five species separate into four groups corresponding exactly to their sectional classification (Table 1). Shortest chromo- somes averaging 2.24 are found for the annual C. perfoliata (sect. Limnia), those of C. sibirica (sect. Caudicosae) are short to medium, those of C. virginica (sect. Claytonia) are still longer, while the longest chromosomes averaging 8u and 8.6u are found for C. cordifolia and C. sarmentosa (sect. Rhizomatosae), respectively. Since phylogeny and chromosomal size may be correlated with plants having larger chromosomes lacking evolutionary specialization (Davis & Heywood, 1963), the more primitive C. cordifolia and C. sarmentosa should possess large chromosomes. They do and, in fact, are the longest in the genus. The annual C. perfoliata with many specialized features (Swanson, 1966) has in contrast the smallest chromo- somes; hence small chromosomes and evolutionary advancement are seemingly correlated as found for example in Crepis (Babcock et al, 1942). Chromosomes of the annual or perennial C. sibirica are also small and thus parallel C. perfoliata in this character as well as in symmetry and number. But only the tetraploid race Table 1. Chromosome number, length, symmetry, and number of satellites per plate for Ciaytonte species. Length (u) Symmetry Number 2n= range average pairs of per cent V:iI I satellites C irica 24 2.5-3.7 3.2 5:7 58 2 C. cordifolia 10 6.4-9.8 8.0 4:1 20 I C. sarmentosa IO 1.5-9.8 8.6 5:0* 0* I C. sarmentosa 15 — — 7.5:0* 0* 1 C. virginica 4.0-7.3 4.9 1:5 83 4 C. virginica 14 3.9-5.4 4.8 0:7 100 2 C. perfoliata 12 1.6-2.5 2.2 2:4 6T 4 * one pair tending toward subterminal (I). [Vor. 55 66 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN of C. sibirica was examined and as polyploids within a ploidy series generally have smaller chromosomes than diploids a direct comparison between this tetraploid and the other species studied (only diploid races) is not really possible. As noted the chromosomes of C. virginica are intermediate in size, yet a relationship with those of C. cordifolia and C. sarmentosa is indicated, i.e. structural alterations and loss in one arm of each chromosome of C. cordifolia (Fig. 2) or C. sarmentosa (Fig. 3) would give rise to smaller, asymmetrical chromosomes typical of C. virginica (Fig. 4-5). We noted also that the number of satellites per karyotype varied by species and section (Table 1): maximum satellite frequency of species in the morphologi- cally evolved sect. Claytonia and Limnia is 3.3 per mitotic plate, whereas those species in the more primitive sect. Rhizomatosae and the tetraploid C. sibirica average only 1.3 per plate. It appears that a multiplication of satellites is related to evolutionary advancement of chromosomes and of species per se quite apart from their level of ploidy. Finally brief mention should be made of two infraspecific chromosomal differ- ences illustrated by our results. Claytonia sarmentosa has been examined from only two localities in Alaska and already plants with 2n = 10, 14, 15, 16, 28 and 32 are known. Further sampling will undoubtedly expand this impressive infra- specific aneuploidy and polyploidy and hopefully lead to an understanding of such divergence. These numerical differences, however, are not unique: C. virginica is known with no fewer than 45 races at many levels of ploidy and including extensive aneuploidy even at the diploid level (Lewis, 1967; Lewis et al., 1967a; Lewis et al., 1967b). A hint as to the origin of a diploid race is suggested by the 2n = 12 cytotype (Fig. 4) which has a large median pair of chromosomes with secondary constrictions, a pair clearly absent from the 2n = 14 race (Fig. 5). It would not be difficult to imagine breakage of the median pair at the centromere to form two -- similar pairs, such as those observed in the 2n = 14 race, in which the (now) subterminally positioned secondary constrictions function as centro- meres. Such an occurrence would give rise to a 2n = 14 race from a presumed base of x = 6 for the species. LITERATURE CITE Bazcock, E. B., G. L. STEBBINS, Jr. & J. A. JENKINS. "1942, Genetic evolutionary processes in Crepis. Amer. Nat. 76: 337-363. Davis, P. H. & V. = oo 1963. Principles of Angiosperm Taxonomy. D. v. Nostrand Co., Gray, A. 1887. XV. Contributions to American Botany, Portulacaceae. Proc. Amer. Acad. Lewis, W. H. 1967. ue evolution in plants. Bot. Rev. 33: 105.115. —— . SUDA. Pac Cytogeography of Claytonia virginica and its allies. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 54: -171. —, Y. Su B. MacBRYDE. ed Chromosome numbers of Claytonia virginica in the St. Louis, Missouri area. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 54: 147-152. McCuintocx, B. 9 9. A method for making acetocarmine smears permanent. Stain apes Ö. “1966. Studies in Montia L. and Claytonia L. and allied genera, III. Pollen rphology. Grana Palynolog. 7: 279-363. ened J. R. . A synopsis of relationships in Montioideae (Portulacaceae). Brittonia 18: 229-241, (Lew Sees [ERI] ares is E E o TERN] e Eas RD fama pm eae io aa a EENE Q, NEN aa 1-5. Chromosomal idiograms of Claytonia species. "e l. C. perfoliata, 2n = lz wis 5728). Fig. 2. C. cordifolia, 2n — 10 (Lewis 6736). . 3. C. sarmentosa, 2n = 10 (Mitchell 927DI). Fig. 4-5. C. virginica, 2n — 12 (Lewis S. 2n = 14 (Suda 6). NOTES A NEW SPECIES OF STELIS (ORCHIDACEAE) FROM PANAMA Stelis fimbriata R. K. Baker, sp. nov.—Fig. 1. Herba caespitosa, epiphytica, glabra, usque ad 15 cm alta, caulibus secundariis brevibus gracilibus ad 5 mm longis, vaginis tubularibus deciduis usque ad 10 mm longis. Folia lamina coriacea elliptica ad ovata marginata 4-5 cm longa et 2-3 cm lata apice obtusa minuteque tridentata basi in petiolum 5-8 mm longum breviter angustata. Inflorescentia usque ad 13 cm longa, folio subtento multo longior, parte 7/4 distali florifer, bracteis infundibuliformibus roseis 1 mm longis pedicellos persistentes 1.5 mm longos includentibus. Flores rosei et albi; sepala 3-nervia, late ovata, 3 mm longa, 2.5 mm lata, rosea, basibus marginibusque albis, apicibus obtusis aut rotundatis, marginibus undulatis dense fimbriatis candidisque; petala claro-lutea, depresse obovata, undulata, 0.6 mm longa, 0.8 mm lata, secus costam i Inour EI, Fig. l. Stelis fimbriata R. K. Bakar: A, habit (X1); B, flower (X10). After Baker 249 (MO). ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55(1): 68-79, 1968. 1968] NOTES 69 solitariam aliquantum incrassata, aliter ecarnosa; labellum luteum, ovatum, undu- latum, 1 mm longum, 0.8 mm latum, in unguem brevem attenuatum, costae dimi- dio basali in callum angustum longitudinalem unguem breviter acuteque bifurcatum incrassato, venis lateralibus parallelis etiam incrassatis sed leviter brevioribus; columna lutea, 0.6 mm longa, valde alata, basin versus angustata, alis labelli margines basales subinvolutos amplectentibus; ovarium gracile, pedicellatum, 1.4 mm longum. Herb, caespitose, epiphytic, glabrous, up to 15 cm tall; secondary stems short, slender, up to 5 mm long; sheaths tubular, deciduous, up to 10 mm long. Leaves 4-5 cm long, 2-3 cm wide, coriaceous, elliptic to ovate, marginate, obtuse, the apex minutely tridentate, the base attenuated into a short petiole up to 5 mm long. Inflorescence up to 13 cm long, much longer than subtending leaf, upper 24 flori- ferous; bracts pink, 1 mm long, infundibuliform, enclosing a persistent 1.5 mm pedicel. Flowers pink and white, showy; sepals 3-nerved, broadly ovate, 3 mm long, 2.5 mm wide, pink, with clear white bases and margins, the apex obtuse to rounded, the margin densely white-fimbriate, undulate; petals bright yellow, depressed obovate, undulate, 0.6 mm long, 0.8 mm wide, somewhat thickened along a solitary mid-vein, otherwise not fleshy; lip yellow, ovate, undulate, 1 mm long, 0.8 mm wide, attenuated into a short claw, the basal half of the mid-vein thickened into a narrow longitudinal callus which is shortly and acutely bifurcate at the claw, the parallel side-veins also thickened, but somewhat shorter; column yellow, 0.6 mm long, strongly winged above, tapering toward the base, the wings clasping the d s i of the lip; ovary slender, pedicellate, 1.4 mm long. Cerro Jefe, mossy forest jio m alt 2900 ft, 11 Febr 1967, Baker 249 (holotype 1 MO; living specimen MBG 67 This attractive species (subg. Stelis, sect. Concavae Garay) is reminiscent of S. eublapharis Reichb. f., but is distinctive in the relative simplicity of the lip, and in the absence of pronounced marginal thickenings of the petals.—R. Kendall Baker, Department of Botany, Washington University & Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. A NEW SPECIES OF AFRICAN LAGENARIA (CUCURBITACEAE) While on a botanical expedition to the northern regions of Ghana during the latter part of December, 1966, I came across a curious Lagenaria at Gambaga near Wali Wali. The plant is cultivated for shells which are used for manufacturing musical drums and vessels. The fruits are large with bitter pulp and two-horned (bicornate) seeds. The description and illustrations are based on plants raised in the college nursery from seeds gathered during the expedition. Lagenaria bicornuta Chakravarty, sp. nov.; L. siceraria (Molina) Standley affinis a quo semine majore et bicorni, fructu giganteo et fere rotundo differt.—Fig. 1-2. Monoecious vines with thick, 5-ridged, hairy stems which harden at maturity. Leaves with petiole erect, thick, biglandular (glands turbinate 2-3 mm in diam at the base) at apex, merged with narrow marginal basal veins of the blade; lamina Sao PEN i : Ex M ED, = Sp Seiwa tate UR 1 DN Ramee Cana DDR E Bo a SEN TS AP > | ee aN DOT EREMO ee QC UL UNAM M Ee s o o SL Me P S cC ar Fg Ser E US BS 1968] NOTES 71 ae ow A — | hoe banco — Ke * ? f ie Er ee Fig, 2. Sor ome massive fruits of Lagenaria Vicornuta growing in a field at reum Northern Ghana; photo taken by the author on 1 Jan 1968. softly hairy, cordate-orbicular, shortly 7-angled or lobed, apex filiform-mucronate, 10-25 cm long and 15-35 cm broad, the margin glandularly serrate except mucronate midrib-end, the basal sinus deep-semilunar, 3-costate, 2 lateral costa divided at the base and outer lateral vein again redivided near the base; veins reticulate promi- nently raised on the lower surface, almost at the same level with the blade on the upper. Flowers axillary, solitary, male and female usually occurring on different branches, the female branches few and arising laterally from the longer and more vigorous male branches. Male flowers with peduncle 5-ridged, longer than the petiole (10-25 cm long); perianth tube deeply cupular ca 1 cm in diam, the lobes triangular remote softly hairy; corolla lobes white later brownish-white, 5-6 cm in diam, -- spathulate, the incurved margin somewhat lobed, the midrib with a bearded apex, mucronate, the veins whiter than brownish-white blade and distinctly raised on the lower surface, ca 3 cm long, and 2 cm broad at upper part, the lower part + cuneate, unlobed and thicker, thickly 5-nerved; stamens 3, attached at base of throat of tube, 2 bithecial, 1 monothecial, the filaments of two thicker than the third, 5-6 mm long, with a glandular cup-shaped disc (metamorphosed Fig Lagenaria bicornuta Chakravarty: A, part of one flowering branch showing male and ae flowers (X15); B, male flower split open to show back portion of bithecous D, female fl out petals showing hairy ovary and thickened stigma (X12); E, longitudinal section of female flower (X15); F, cross section of ovary (XI); G, seeds (X34). [Vor. 55 72 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN pistillodium) forming honey chamber, the anther not glossy, ca 1 cm long, 0.7-0.8 cm broad, loculi long convoluted in an ornamental pattern, the lower surface of anther (connective) smooth and creamy white, shortly ovate-acuminate, glandular hairs present between the folds of loculi. Female flowers with peduncle much shorter than the petiole (2-5 cm long); perianth tube very short or almost absent; corolla lobes much smaller than in the male; ovary oblong, conspicuously softly hairy, triplacentiferous, the style short, the stigma trilobed each lobe again deeply bilobed i.e. stigma apparently 6-lobed, the lobes glabrous on upper surface, the lower hairy. Fruit very large, almost perfectly round, 35-40 cm in diam, almost white when fully mature; seeds bicornate, ca 3 cm long (including horns), ca 1.1 cm broad, the horns somewhat incurved, ca 4 mm thick, 2-3 mm high, the surface a zs bon ipid: lines having pyramidal apex and open base. arm Akotokyir, 20 Febr 1967, Chakravarty C1001: K, Kl ‘ces X (UCCC): r5 (OCC). C1003 (K, UCCC). The species differs from Lagenaria siceraria (Molina) Standley by the presence of conspicuous two-horned seeds (almost double the size of the seeds of L. siceraria) and in having gigantic (35-40 cm in diam) and almost perfectly rounded fruits.— H. L. Chakravarty, Department of Botany, University College, Cape Coast, Ghana. NOTES ON THE GENUS INGA. II Two poorly known species of Inga can now be adequately described as to flowering and fruiting material and one of the species, I. brenesii, placed in its proper section. Distributional records from recent field work for Darien and San Blas areas of Panama are also given for several members of the genus. Inga brenesii Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 18: 495, 1937. This species previously known only from two collections from the forest of the central highlands of Costa Rica was placed by León (Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 53: 330, 1966) in sect. Inga without having seen the fruit. Series Inga is distin- guished from all other series and sections of Inga by having a rounded, sulcate legume. Recently, however, a specimen was collected from Costa Rica (Jimenez 2620 F, 2 sheets & 1 bag fruit) with both flowering and fruiting material thus making possible the accurate placement of this species. The fruit is flattened, 20 cm long, 3-3.4 cm broad, 1.1 cm thick, densely ferrugineous-hirsute, slightly curved with elevated margins. Although varying in two minor series characters, gland shape and stipule dura- tion, this species as supported by other vegetative, floral and especially fruiting characters should now be placed with sect. Inga ser. Vulpinae sensu León. Series Vulpinae is restricted to South America excepting this species and the closely related I. tonduzii J. D. Sm. both of which are found in Costa Rica but are not known from Panama. Inga saffordiana Pittier, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 18: 176, 1916. This species previously known only from an incomplete specimen collected in the forest of Cerro de Garagará in Darien, Panama was believed to be intrageneri- 1968] NOTES 73 cally unique in exhibiting a cauliflorous condition. The type specimen, Pittier 5676 (US) is without flowers and has only immature legumes. One of the distin- guishing characters used by Pittier was that the inflorescences seem to come from the old wood of the trunk. León (Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 53: 354, 1966) described the flowers apparently from a Colombian collection (Fernandez 267) which he regarded as matching the type closely. The Colombian specimen differs, however, by having only 2-3 pairs of leaflets and a long pedunculate inflorescence which is ramiflorous instead of being cauliflorous. In August, 1967 James Duke and I discovered on the slopes of Cerro Pirre in Darien, Panama a specimen of I. saffordiana (Duke & Elias 13865 GH, MO). The tree was small, forming a part of the understory and its flowers were cauliflorous with some of the inflorescences issuing from older branchlets. The flowers are long-pedicellate, the calyx conical, 10-12 mm long, with small, acute teeth, the corolla tubular, 14-17 mm long, expanding slightly toward the apex, the lobes 3-4 mm long, ovate, acute at the apex. Both the calyx and the corolla are covered with spreading hairs. Since the flowering material of the Duke & Elias collection matched the description of the Colombian specimen, I feel that this species can now be adequately described as to flowering and fruiting material and is probably restricted to the mountain slopes in Darien, Panama and the neighboring Chocó region in Colombia. Recent collections in Panama in the province of Darien and the Comarca de San Blas have yielded species which were previously unknown from those areas and the eastern one-third of the country. DARIEN: I. thibaudiana DC.: nr Rio Canglon, Duke & Bristan 356 (MO). er 2226 a I. pauciflora Walp. & Duchass.: Rio Tuira e etw Río Punusa & Río Mangle, Duke 14609 ( ; Río Pucro, below village of Pucro, Duke 13127 (MO); along Río Tuira below El Real, Stern et al. 968 E I. hayesii dr 3 mi E of San a Fe, Tyson et al. 4669 (MO); vic of Campamento Buena ista, nr Quebrada Felix, Stern et al. 964 (MO). I. spectabilis (Vahl) Willd.: vic of El Real, Stern et al. 762 (MO). I. portobellensis Beurl.: main stream of Río Cuasi, 0-2.5 m S of Tres Bocas, Kirkbride & o 132 (MO, NY). SAN B : multijuga Benth.: opposite Ailigandi, Lewis et al. 149 (GH, K, MO, UC, US), 194 (GH, , US); along headwaters of Río Mulatupo, Elias 1728 (GH, MO, US). I. spectabilis (Vah 1) Willd.: opposite Ailigandi, Lewis et al. 139 (GH, K, MO, NY, UC); Ailigandi, Duke 10838 (MO). Pe n Pittier: opposite Ailigandi, Lewis et al. 190 (GH, MO, UC, US). . mucuna Walp. & Duchass.: Ailigandi, Dwyer 6847 (MO). . quaternata Poeppig: Ailigandi, Dwyer 6844 (MO). —Thomas S. Elias, St. Louis University, St. Louis. Lames | MMC HA [Vor. 55 74 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN A NEW ANNUAL ERIOGONUM FROM UTAH? Soon after the manuscript for the Eriogonum deflexum complex (Brittonia 20: 13-33, 1968) was accepted, a population of dried stems was found which did not seem to belong to any of the species recognized in that paper. On returning to this site near Westwater, Grand Co, Utah in September, 1967, the dried stems were found to represent an undescribed species which may now be known as: Eriogonum scabrellum Reveal, sp. nov. A Eriogono deflexo Torrey (subg. Ganysma) differt involucris horizontalibus sessilibus, perianthiis 1-1.5 mm longis pustulosis basi obtusis, ramis omnibus scabrellis. Annual herbs, 1-3(-5) dm high, with one or rarely two or more stems arising from thin tan caudices. Stems erect, slender, 5-15 cm long, sparsely tomentose with tangled white hairs covering the green, scabrellous surface. Leaves subbasal and sheathing up the stems 2 cm, the leaf-blades 1-3 cm long and wide, cordate, the apices rounded, the bases cordate, with crispate margins, densely tomentose below, lightly floccose and green above; petioles as long as or longer than the leaf- blades, prominently winged. Inflorescences sparsely branched, tending to become flat-topped, the crowns up to 4 dm long and 15 dm across. Branches dichotomous, rarely trichotomous, lightly to sparsely floccose with white hairs over the green scabrellous branches; main branches with 1-4 secondary branches each with a series of alternating short tertiary branchlets mostly less than 10 cm long at right angles to it. Bracts scalelike, ternate, 1 mm long, the acute apices widening to the connate base. Peduncles lacking. Involucres solitary, horizontal, arising from the bracts at each node, 1.5-2.5 mm long, 1.5-2 mm wide, the 5 acute lobes less than 0.5 mm long, scabrellous. Bractlets linear, 1.5-2.5 mm long, hirtellous. Pedicels up to 3 mm long, glabrous. Perianth 1-1.5 mm long, white with green midribs at anthesis, becoming 1.5 mm long and pink to rose or red in fruit, minutely pustulose over the entire abaxial surface. T'epals dissimilar, the outer whorl of segments 0.6-0.8 mm wide, obovate, the apices rounded, the bases obtuse, the inner whorl of segments 0.2-0.5 mm wide, ovate, the apices acute. Stamens excluded, up to 1.5 mm long, the filaments glabrous except for a few microscopic projections near the point of attachment, the anthers 0.3 mm long, red, oblong, the pollen grains pale-yellow, elliptic. Achenes light brown, 2 mm long, the globose base tapering to a long, ui) minutely roughened beak. Chromosome number n=20. of U.S. Hwys 50 & 6 on the dirt road to Westwater, jct 6.8 mi W of Cretaceous clay soil where it is locally common, Grand Co, A 8 Sept 1967, Reveal & Davidse 949 (UTC holotype; 34 isotypes will be distributed from U Additional collection: 3.5 mi S of U. S. Hwys 50 and 6 lons the Westwater Rd, 12 Oct 1967, Reveal 958 (BRY, DAOM, NY, UTC). Eriogonum scabrellum is a member of the sect. Pedunculata Benth. in DC. of the subg. Ganysma (S. Wats.) Greene and is most closely related to the mem- 1 The field work was supported by the Texas Research Foundation. This paper submitted to the Department of Botany, Brigham Young University as partial fulfillment of three hours of Doctoral Research. 1968] NOTES 75 bers of the E. deflexum complex. The species in this complex have involucres that are either erect or deflexed. However, E. scabrellum has involucres that are in a horizontal, or intermediate, position. Other species, such as E. deflexum and E. hookeri S. Wats., which have sessile involucres, have their scalelike bracts ar- ranged so that the involucres are positioned below the branches. In E. scabrellum the bracts are arranged so that the involucres are positioned to the side of the branches and project outwardly although in fruit, the involucres tend to tip down- wardly slightly. The disposition of the involucres for this new species is unique to the genus. Unlike any other annual species in the genus, stems and branches of E. scabrellum are scabrellous, a characteristic known only in E. heermannii Dur. & Hilg. and its related taxa, a perennial shrub.—James L. Reveal, Department of Botany, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. A SECOND SPECIES OF COCHLOSPERMUM (COCHLOSPERMACEAE) FROM PANAMA Since the publication of the Cochlospermaceae for the Flora of Panama (Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 54: 61-64, 1967) four fruiting collections of Cochlospermum williamsii Macbr. collected in the Canal Zone, in the Province of Darien, and in the Comarca de San Blas were received at the Herbarium. This species, originally described from Amazonian Peru, belongs to the sect. Diporanda and can be readily distinguished from C. vitifolium (Willd.) Spreng. by the compound-digitate leaves and by the mature seeds with only a tuft of long, wooly hairs. Cochlospermum williamsii Macbr., Candollea 5: 388, 1934.—Fig. 1. Tree 12-23 m tall, the trunk to 15 cm in diam, the wood soft, the branchlets densely brownish-puberulous, becoming glabrous. Leaves compound-digitate, usu- ally 5-7 foliolate, the petiole to 25 cm long, longitudinally sulcate, angulate-dilated at the apex, puberulous when young, glabrescent, the stipules small, deltoid, to 5 mm long, caducous; leaflets inarticulate, subsessile, the petiolule canaliculate above, the blade narrowly elliptic, sometimes subobovate, attenuate and decurrent at the base, short-to long-acuminate at the apex, entire-margined, up to 20 cm long and 6.5-9 cm wide, thin-chartaceous, very brittle when dry, the upper surface -- Justrous and glabrous, the lower surface dull and puberulous especially along the very prominent costa and prominulous lateral veins, glabrescent. Inflorescences apparently both terminal and axillary, paniculate, few-flowered, the axes thick, divaricate, brownish-puberulous. Flowers bright yellow, to 6 cm long, the pedicels ca 1 cm long, elongated and to 3 cm long in fruit, + densely brownish-puberulous; calyx imbricate, the 2 outer sepals smaller than the 3 inner ones, subcoriaceous, brownish-tomentellous outside, very minutely so inside, caducous; outer sepals elliptic, obtuse to subacute at the apex, to 1.7 cm long and l.l cm wide; inner sepals elliptic to subobovate, rounded at the apex, thinner towards the margins, to 2.5 cm long and 1.7 cm wide; petals obovate to broadly obovate, apically deeply 2-lobed, to 6 cm long and 5.8 cm wide, thin-membranous, the lobes rounded, to 2 [Vor. 55 76 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 1. Cochlospermum williamsii Macbr.: A, leaf (X15); B, capsules (X15); C, seed (X2); D, id., later stage of development (X4). A & D, after Duke 11818 (MO); B & C, after Dressler 3487 (MO). cm long; filaments oo, unequal, 5-18 mm long, glabrous, the anthers narrowly ob- long, somewhat arcuate, to 4 mm long, glabrous or sparsely and minutely pilose, apically 2-porate; ovary subsessile, broadly obovoid, obtusely triquetrous, ca 5 mm long and 4.5 mm in diam, minutely fulvous-tomentellous; style filiform, to 13 mm long, densely short-villous at the base, otherwise glabrous, the apex recurved (?). Capsule obovoid, triquetrous, long-attenuate at the base, emarginate at the apex, to 7 cm long and 4 cm wide, dark brown, longitudinally striate, and minutely velvety tomentellous outside, 3-valvate, the exocarp separating from the endocarp the latter cream-colored to reddish-brown; seeds coiled into a ring, densely lanate, the hairs tan-colored and 5-10 mm long, the outer seed coat (to which the hairs 1968] NOTES 77 are attached) thin and easily detachable at maturity leaving only a small tuft of hairs at the hilum, the inner seed coat dark brown to nearly black and + lustrous. Reported for the first time in Panama as well as North America; Colombia, Amazonian Peru, and incip Brazil. PANAMA. CANAL ZONE: Piña rd, 21 Apr 1968 (fr), Dressler 3487 (MO). parten: Rio Uruti (fol, fr), Duke & pits 231 ps O); woods nr El Real, 4 June 1967 (fol, fr), (Bristan for) Duke 11818 (MO). san stas: along the headwaters of the Río Malatuppu, seasonal evergreen forest, 17 Aug ise bn = p 1757 (MO). COLOMBIA. A amazónico, Río Loretoyacu, alt m 100 m, Pah d 1944 (fol, fl, fr jav), po 6025 (US), 20-30 Oct 1945 (fol, fr), 6616 (US); Río zonas, nr mouth of Río Loretoyacu & Puerto Narifio, 13-15 Sept 1966 (fol, fl, fr), Schultes et al. 24115 5 (ECON), the Amazon River, ~ July id (fol, fl, fr juv) Williams 1778 (Œ U $.. 1964 POL F); Cabollo-Cocha on the Amazon River, forest, Aug 1929 Sess fl), Williams 2090 (F); Alto Rio Itaya, alt 145 m, Sept- De 1929 (fol, fr), Williams gw Red AZONAS: Basin of Río Solimoes, Municipality Sáo Paulo x Olivença, nr Palmares ee Ge "high land, Sept-Oct 1936 (fol, fr), Krukoff 8313 (F, MO). Cochlopsermum williamsii is very closely related to and perhaps conspecific with C. wentii Pulle (Enum. Vasc. Pl. Surinam 310, pl. 13, 1906) from Surinam, from which it seems to differ only by the sepals being minutely tomentellous in- side, those of C. wentii being glabrous inside. Study of the type of C. wentii is needed, however, in order to establish the synonomy.—André Robyns, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri & National Foundation for Scientific Research, Belgium. HASSELTIA RIGIDA WOODSON EX A. ROBYNS, A NEW SPECIES OF FLACOURTIACEAE FROM PANAMA Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Robyns, sp. nov.; affinis H. monagensi Steyer- mark (Fieldiana: Bot. 28: 407, 1952), sed arboris magnitudine, foliorum lamina coriacea marginibusque integerrimis et leviter recurvatis, floribus minoribus et usque ad 3 mm longis primo visu sat differt.—Fig. 1. Arbor usque ad 30 m alta, ramulis glabris vel fere glabris. Folia alterna, petiolo robusto usque ad 2 cm longo supra canaliculato adpresso-puberulo sed glabrescenti; lamina elliptica ad anguste elliptica vel subcordata, basi cuneata, apice obtuse acuminata, usque ad 10 cm longa et 4 cm lata, coriacea, marginibus integerrimis leviterque recurvatis, utrinque sordida, e basi manifeste 3-nervia, supra glabra basique 2-glandulifera, infra praecipue secus nervos 3 principales prominentes adpresso-puberula ad glabrescens, nervis secundariis infra prominulis. Inflorescentiae ut videtur terminales, composito-umbellatae umbellisque iterum atque interum 3-4-radiatis, axibus adpresso-puberulis ad adpresso-tomentellis, bracteis parvis deltoideisque. Flores flavido-fusci, hermaphroditi, pedicellis usque ad 5 mm longis et adpresso-tomentellis; sepala 4, in aestivatione valvata, leviter inaequalia, ovata, apice acuta, usque ad 3 mm longa et 1.8 mm lata, extus tomen- tella, intus puberula, persistentia; petala 4, in aestivatione valvata, ovata, apice acuta, sepalis paululo breviora, extus tomentella, intus puberula, persistentia; stamina oo, filamentis filiformibus usque ad 2.5 mm longis sparseque puberulis, [Vor. 55 78 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 1. Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Robyns: A, leaf, upper surface (X15); base of leaf blade upper surface with 2 glands (X2); C, flower (X8); D & E, upper bs of filament and anther (X30); F, gynoecium (X8); G, bacca (X2). After Allen 3733. antheris minutis subglobosisque; ovarium globosum, glabrum, biloculare, placentis multiovulatis, stylo simplici usque ad 2.2 mm longo glabroque. Bacca rubra, sub- globosa, usque 7-8 mm longa, glabra, seminibus 2-4 glabris. cocLÉ: region N of El Valle de Antón, alt 1000 m, Sept 27, 1946, Allen 3733 (holotype —André Robyns, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri & National Foun- dation for Scientific Research, Belgium. MAYNA ZULIANA (PITTIER) A. ROBYNS, COMB. NOV. (FLACOURTIACEAE) The revision of the genus Mayna Aublet for the Flora of Panama has turned up two species for that country, i.e. M. longicuspis (Standley) Standley and another species, represented by several collections from the provinces of Darien and Panama, which I was unable to name until I examined the holotype of Carpotroche zuliana Pittier in the U. S. National Herbarium (Pittier 10513, San Martin on Río Palmar, Zulia, Venezuela). As the baccate fruits are bristly (in Carpotroche the capsular fruits are longitudinally alate) transfer to the genus Mayna is needed: Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns, comb. nov., based on Carpotroche zuliana 1968] NOTES 79 Pittier, Bol. Com. Ind. (Venezuela) 4(34):38, 1923 (Arboles y Arbustos Nuevos de Venezuela, secunda y tercera decadas). — André Robyns, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri & National Foundation for Scientific Research, Belgium. À NEW ORMOSIA (LEGUMINOSAE) FROM PERU Ormosia peruviana Rudd, sp. nov. Arbor usque ad 18 m alta; ramuli novelli fulvo- vel ferrugineo-subsericei; stipulae deltoideae, tomentulosae, circiter 1-2 mm longae, basi 1 mm latae, caducae; folia 7-9-foliolata, axe subtiliter sericeo, glabrata, 6-12 cm longo, petiolo 2-4 cm longo, jugis inter sese plerumque 2-2.5 cm distanotibus, petiolulis circiter 5 mm longis, 2 mm diametro, laminis coriaceis vel subcoriaeceis, ovatis, 5-10 cm longis, 3-5 cm latis, apice obtusis, nonnunquam retusis, basi obtusis vel subcordatis, supra glabris, subtus plus minusve glabris praeter venis maioribus saepe sericeis, venis secundariis mediocriter elevatis, utrinsecus circiter 10, fere parallelis, inter sese 4-10 mm distantibus, angulis venarum costaeque circiter 45°-50°, inflorescentiae cum axibus fulvido-subsericeis, nec bracteis bracteolisque nec floribus completis visis, calyce (effracto) fortasse circiter 10 mm longo; fructus dehiscens coriaceus vel sublignosus, rugulosus, brunneus et fulvo-sericeus, glabrescens, 1-spermus (fortasse 2- vel 3-spermus), 5-6 cm longus, circiter 3 cm latus, 1-1.2 cm crassus, valvulis 0.5-1 mm crassis; semina cinnabarina, circiter 17 mm longa, 16 mm lata, 9 mm crassa, hilo elliptico apicali, 3 mm longo et 1.5 mm lato. MARCA: open place, mountain slope, alt 2100 m, Colasay, Woytkowski 6964 (holo- type MO, isotype US). ernacular name: huayruru. This species is readily referable to my Ormosia series Isthmenses (Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 32: 317, 1965). The pods most resemble those of O. colombiana Rudd but the large seeds are only matched in O. venezolana Rudd.—Velva E. Rudd, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. The previous issue of the ANNALS OF THE CAL GARDEN, Vol. 54, No. 3, pp. 201-421, ites E iL i 1968. PUBLISHED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN AND WASHINGTO ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 63110 ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 OF THE | Em. NUMBER 2 CONTENTS FLORA OF PANAMA, PART VI Family 112. Vitaceae by Thomas S. Elias Family 128. Flacourtiaceae by Andre ROP Wee uoo RICO eu T -. 93-144 FLORA OF PANAMA, PART VIII Family 154. Sapofaceae by Will H. Blackwell, Jr. 145-169 ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 of the NUMBER 2 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN A journal containing scientific contributions from the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Department of Botany of Washington Uni- versity in affiliation with the Missouri Botanical Garden. Outside contributions in systematic botany and allied fields will also be con- sidered. These papers are subject to a charge of $25 per printed page. EprroriaL COMMITTEE TER H. Lewis, Editor Missouri Botanical eo & Washington oe Sue M. Hutsen, Assistant to id Edito Missouri Botanical Gar Derex Burcu, Missouri Botanical Garden & ie. University Joun D. Dwyer, Missouri Botanical Garden & St. Louis University Duncan M. Porter, Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington University Information THE ANNALS OF Missourr BoranicaL GARDEN appears three tim during ic calendar year. Three numbers totaling about 400 pages puo a volume Beginning with Volume 53, 1966: Subscription Price $15.00 per volume Single Numbers 5.50 each Contents of previous i issues of the ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GanDEN are listed in the Agricultural ed published by the H. W. Wilson Company. Beginning n 1, 1962 the Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, Inc, 31 East 10th St. New Y ae became sole agent for the ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN. ency handles all subscriptions, all claims begin- ning with volume 50 (1963 and all ae for back issues. Out-of-print numbers will be reprinted as may be req Under the arrangement with the Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, the Agency handles also all purchases of any portion of the ANNALS subseries known as the “Flora of Panama. All matters regarding exchange continue to be handled by the ee Botanical Gude en, 2315 Tower Grove Ave., St. Louis, Missouri 63110, ast. Printed by the Eden Publishing House, St. Louis, Missouri, 63103. ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 of the NUMBER 2 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN FLORA OF PANAMA BY RoBERT E. WoopsoN, JR. AND ROBERT W. SCHERY AND COLLABORATORS Part VI FAMiLx 112. VITACEAE’ BY THomas S. ELIAS St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri Climbing shrubs, vines or rarely erect shrubs or small trees, unarmed or rarely armed, stems usually sympodially branched, often with watery juice, bearing tendrils which may end in discoid suckers; nodes often swollen or jointed, the stem occasionally winged. Leaves alternate or the lower sometimes opposite, usually 2-ranked, simple, digitately or bipinnately compound, often pellucid-punctate, usually stipulate. Inflorescences cymose, racemose, spicate or paniculate, usually well developed and opposite a leaf; axis occasionally flattened and expanded; peduncles? often cirrhose; bracteoles present. Flowers minute, bisexual or unisexual (the plants then usually monoecious), actinomorphic, numerous; calyx entire or toothed, the sepals (3-) 4-5 (-7), distinct or basally connate, the petals as many as the sepals, valvate in bud, minute or obsolete, flat, distinct (connate in Leea) or as in Vitis apically connate, separating from each other at the base and falling away as an early deciduous cap; disc evident, annular or lobed; stamens as many as the petals and opposite them, somewhat perigynous, arising from the base of the disc, the anthers distinct, rarely connate, introrse, rarely extrorse, 2-thecate, de- hiscing longitudinally; pistil 1, the ovary superior, 2-(3-8)-loculed and carpelled, the placentation axile, the ovules 1-2 on each placenta, anatropous, the style 1 and usually short, the stigma discoid, capitate, or shallowly 2-4-lobed. Fruit a berry, "Assisted by National Science Foundation Grant No. GB-5674 (Principal Investigator, Walter H. Lewis). *Due to the existing confusion concerning the terminology of inflorescences, the term “peduncle” is used in this paper to refer only to the main supporting branch of the in- florescence. ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55 (2): 81-92, 1968. [Vor. 55 82 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 1-4 (-6)-seeded, the seeds with a small, straight embryo and copious to some- times ruminate endosperm. The family contains 11 or 12 genera with 600-700 species occurring mainly in subtropical and tropical areas of the world. The Old World genus Leea has been placed by some workers in a subfamily of the Vitaceae (Gilg in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3(5): 427-456, 1896) or in a family of its own (Suessenguth in Engler & Prantl, loc. cit. ed. 2., 20d: 372-390, 1953; Cronquist, The Evolution & Classification of Flowering Plants, p. 261, 1968). Two genera, Cissus and Vitis, are to be found in Panama. iir rp Planchon, J. E., Monographie des Ampélidées Vraies. In DC., Monogr. Phaner. 5(2): 305- a 1887. a. Inflorescence a well developed panicle; flowers 5-merous; petals fused at the apex, dropping off as an early deciduous cap; leaves simple; pith brown .............. l. Vitis aa. Inflorescence cymose; flowers y* -merous; petals free, expanding, dropping singly; leaves simple or 3- foliolate; pith white 2. Cissus 1. VITIS Vitis L., Sp. Pl. 202, 1753. Woody vines, deciduous, rarely evergreen, scandent or climbing by tendrils borne opposite the leaves or arising from the peduncles, the bark often shredding and falling away, the pith usually interrupted by nodal diaphragms, brown; tendrils usually branched, rarely simple. Leaves simple or palmately compound, often lobed, usually rounded and cordate, dentate. Inflorescence a panicle. Flowers pedicellate, usually umbellate clustered, polygamodioecious, some plants with per- fect flowers, others staminate with a rudimentary ovary, 5-merous; calyx cupular, fused with an entire or shallowly lobed margin; petals fused at the apex to form a deciduous cap; stamens 5, the hypogynous disk of 5 + free or connate glands alternate with the stamens and adnate to the base of the ovary, lobed; ovary bicarpellate, the style short, conical, the stigma usually shallowly bilobed, the carpels 2-celled. Fruit baccate, usually edible, pulpy, 2-4-seeded, the seeds usually pyriform and narrowly rostrate basally. A genus of 60-70 species, mostly of the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. Two species are found in Panama, V. vinifera, the common cultivated grape which has been occasionally planted and the native V. tiliifolia which occurs throughout Middle America. l. Vitis tiliifolia Humb. & Bonpl. ex Roem. & Schult. in L., Syst. Veg. ed. 15, 5: 320, 1819.—Fig. 1. V. caribaea DC., Prodr. 1: 634, 1824. Vine becoming woody, often climbing, with thick angulate to terete, striate stems, the pith interrupted by nodal diaphragms, the young branches densely floccose-tomentose, becoming glabrate, the nodes slightly swollen. Leaves char- taceous, rounded-ovate to orbicular, frequently with 3 shallow lobes, fmely to coarsely dentate, rarely subentire except at the apex, lateral veins conspicuous 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 112. Vitaceae) 83 Fig. 1. Vitis tiliifolia Humb. & Bonpl. ex Roem. & Schult.: A, ms (X15); B, mature bud shoving apically. verre petals (X10); C, perfect cn s 10); D, staminate flower with abortive pistil (X10); E, seed, ventral surface (X5); eed, side view. A-C after von Wedel 1539 (MO), D after Davidson 567 (MO), E&F is "Blum & Tyson 531 (MO). [Vor. 55 84 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN beneath, ending at the apex of the marginal teeth, acute to short acuminate at the apex, shallowly to deeply cordate at the apex, 5-15 cm long, 4.5-12.5 cm broad, floccose-tomentose above when young becoming sparsely floccose-tomentose to glabrate with age, densely floccose-tomentose beneath, the tan to light ferrugineous tomentum close to lax, usually persistent. Inflorescences of well developed panicles, the peduncles 4-15 cm long, sparsely to densely floccose-tomentose. Flowers pale yellow to greenish-yellow, unisexual or bisexual, the calyx undulate, scarcely toothed, the pedicel 1.5-3 mm long, the corolla 1-1.5 mm long, the lobes oblong to oblong-obovate, the unisexual flowers with well developed stamens and an abortive pistil, the perfect flowers with short stamens, the hypogynous glands + united, the pistil 1-1.5 mm long, the ovary orbicular, the style short, ending with a shallowly bilobed stigma. Berries green becoming purplish-black with maturity, 4-6 mm in diam, orbicular, usually 2-seeded; seeds 3-4 mm long, pyriform, slightly curved, + stipitate. Mexico, Central America, the West Indies and northern South America. s DEL TORO: vic of Chiriquí iae Water Valley, von Wedel 829 (GH, MO), E: BOCA 954 (MO), 1539 (GH, MO, US). us ZON slope of Ancon Hill, Woodson et al. 717 (A, MO): s. loc, Blum 555 MO); Barro Colorado L Frost 152 (F); Shattuck 736 ; 624 (F i San José I, Johnston 591 (GH, MO, US). s oie MOLD. Duke 855 The original spelling was tiliaefolia, a name widely adopted. Other spellings like tilifolia and tiliifolia have also been used. According to note 2 of Article 73 and recommendation 73G of the Code (Regnum Veget. 46: 73, 1966) the use of a wrong connecting vowel or vowels in a name or epithet is considered an ortho- graphic error. Recommendation 73G states that before a consonant the final vowel in Latin is reduced to i. Thus in place of tiliaefolia the corrected epithet should read tiliifolia. Commonly referred to as “uva” in Panama, the grapes of this species are re- ported by Duke (personal communication) to be more often used for making wine and vinegar than for eating. In addition the larger vines contain quantities of potable water. The tough stems are occasionally used for cordage by the indians. 2. CISSUS Cissus L., Sp. Pl. 117, 1753. Climbing vines, herbs or small shrubs, often woody, occasionally fleshy and succulent; roots often tuberous; stems terete or angulate, glabrous to densely pubescent, often ramifying, tendrils always present and opposite the leaves, simple or bifurcate; stipules paired, always present, generally caducous. Leaves usually simple cr 3-5-foliolate, often lobed, petiolate, the shape, pubescence and texture highly variable, the venation pinnate or palmate, the margins entire or frequently 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 112. Vitaceae) 85 toothed. Inflorescences always opposite the leaves, cymes regular or corymbiform or umbelliform, pedunculate, with bracts and bracteoles. Flowers 4-merous, perfect, pedicellate, the calyx cupular, entire or with 4 valvate lobes; corolla generally ovoid or campanulate at the base, the petals valvate, inwardly cucullate, opening at anthesis and falling away separately; stamens opposite the petals, inserted on the receptacle at the base of the disc, the filaments erect, the anthers introrse, the disc surrounding the ovary, the margin 4-lobed; ovary bilocular with 2 anatropous ovules, the style cylindrical and often persisting after anthesis, the stigma small, discoid. Fruit a 1(-2)-seeded berry, the seeds obovoid, attenuate at the base, often trigonous. A pantropical genus of ca 400 species of which six are reported from Panama. This genus exhibits great variation. In C. sicyoides, for example, the amount of variation expressed within the species is greater than the differences between the trifoliolate species. The neotropical members of this genus are in need of serious monographie study. The name Cissus was derived from the Greek kissos meaning ivy. a. Leaves : foli olat Terminal jen rhombic; plants densely pubescent with glandular &/or condos hairs; Bpa ules on the younger branches ee to lanceolate, 3- à ae ong bb. Terminal. leaflets elliptic to obovate; plants usually glabrous or a sp. eglandular — iE on the younger branches broadly ovate to pru rotund, 2-4 c. Mature ee (6-) 7-12 cm long; stems 4-gonous, often ane fruits 4-6 mm in diam 2. C. erosa cc. Mature peduncles 1-1.8 cm long; stems terete to subangulate, unwinged; fruits 6-10 mm in diam. d. Terminal leaflets with a petiole 0.5-2 cm long; leaves mucronate- serrate, mature leaves 4-10 long; flowers red or reddish-orange; fruits 6-8 mm in diam C. microcarpa dd. Terminal leaflets sessile; leaves sparsely, PA mature leaves 2-4 cm long; flowers pale green; fruits ca 1 cm in diam ......4. C. martiniana aa. Leaves simple. Be erries "10-12 mm in diam; buds 3-4 mm long, dark red; leaves Pr orphic, mature leaves coriaceous, glabrous C. biformifolia ee, Berries 4-6 in dia ds 1-1.5 mm long, greenish- white white t yellow, rarely red; leaves Re strongly dimorphic, mature leaves dcus glabrous to densely villou: 6. C. sicyoides 1. Cissus rhombifolia Vahl, Eclog. Amer. 1: 11, 1796.—Fig. 2A, B. Vine becoming woody, often climbing, the stems subangulate to terete, striate, frequently canaliculate, unwinged, slightly swollen at the nodes, densely pubescent with glandular and/or eglandular hairs, the eglandular hairs to 2 mm long, septate and transparent except for the darkened junctions of the cells, the glandular hairs to 0.5 mm long, usually more abundant than the eglandular hairs; stipules on the younger branches linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, 3-6 mm long, becoming ovate to broadly ovate on the older stems, 6-12 mm long, subpersistent, usually densely pubescent. Leaves 3-foliolate, densely villous, especially beneath, the petiole 1.5-8 cm long, striate, densely pubescent, the leaflets chartaceous to subcoriaceous, ser- [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 86 Ste Ns che Nisi — BITTE 2. A, Cissus rhombifolia Vahl, leaf & pure (X15); B, C. rhombifolia vau. owes (X10 artiniana Woodson Seibert, leaf & inflorescence (X15); D, C. erosa L. Rich., ‘Ie af & inflorescence (X14); E, C. microcarpa Vahl, leaf & inflorescence (X12). A-B after Lewis et al. 1544 (MO), C after Seibert 241 (MO holotype); D after Stern et al. 305 (MO). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 112. Vitaceae) 87 rate, the lateral veins 5-7 pairs, ascending and terminating at the apex of the ser- rations; tendrils borne opposite the leaves; terminal leaflet 4.8-13 cm long, 2.2-6.5 cm broad. rhombic, the young leaves commonly narrowly ovate, cuneate at the base, sessile or petiolulate to 5 mm long, acute to short acuminate at the apex; lateral leaflets 3.6-10 cm long, 1.8-7 cm broad, rhombic to broadly ovate, strongly oblique at the base, acute to short acuminate at the apex. Inflorescences cymose, often appearing corymbose with the flowers congested in pseudoumbels, the peduncles 1-3 cm long, often bright red with exposure to the sun, pubescence of densely spreading hairs. Flowers pale yellow to greenish-yellow, the pedicel 3-8 mm long, the calyx cupular with four scarsely discernible teeth, densely pubescent, the corolla of four free petals, oblong to oblong-ovate, acute at the apex, ca 1 mm long; pistil 1.5-2 mm long, the ovary 2-locular. Berries green becoming black with maturity, 6-8 mm in diam, orbicular, l-seeded; seeds broadly pyriform, 5-7 mm long, 4-5 mm broad. Mexico, Central America, the West Indies and South America. CANAL ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Shattuck 252 (A), Wetmore & Woodworth 873 (A), Wetmore & Abbe 139 (A, MO), Ba iley & Bailey 337 (GH); vic of Miraflores Lake, White 242 (MO); K-9 road at bridge, Stern et al. 975 (GH, MO); Fort Clayton; Cardenas Creek 3 (GH, MO US). LO gen Rio Tonosi, vic of pod Lewis et al. 1544 (MO); 1-2 of Candelaria, Duke 12451 (MO). PANAMA: vic of El Llano, Duke 3921 T MO); of La Mesa, Blum & Tyson 659 (MO), 665 (MO); 12 mi from Santiago toward Divisa, Dwyer & Kirkbride 7436 (MO); 2-4 mi E of Santiago, roadside savanna, Duke 12359 (MO). This species is easily. recognized by the rhombic-shaped leaves and dense pubescence. The glandular hairs characterizing most of the Panamanian material were not observed on collections from southern Mexico or Guatemala. Although this condition may warrent subspecific status, I am hesitant about creating another taxon in this genus until this species has been adequately studied through its range. 2. Cissus erosa L. Rich., Act. Soc. Hist. Nat. Paris 1: 106, 1792.—Fig. 2D. C. salutaris Kunth in H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 5: 225, 1821. Vitis salutaris Baker in Mart., Fl. Bras. 14 (2) :211, pl. 52, 1871. Vine becoming woody, often climbing, the stems angulate, tetragonal, fre- quently winged on the margins, slightly nodose, glabrous or with a few scattered, appressed, pilose hairs; stipules broadly ovate to subrotund, subpersistent, 3-4 mm long, the apex obtuse, glabrous. Leaves 3-foliolate, the petiole 1.8-6.5 cm long, 4-gonal especially at the base, glabrescent, occasionally winged, the wing up to [Vor. 55 88 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 1.5 mm broad; leaflets chartaceous to subcoriaceous, sharply serrate to sparsely dentate, occasionally shallowly so, glabrous to sparsely pilose beneath, especially on the costa, the lateral veins 4-6 pairs, ascending and terminating between the teeth; terminal leaflet 4.5-15.5 cm long, 1.5-8 cm broad, elliptic to elliptic-ovate to ovate, cuneate at the base, acute to subobtuse at the apex, sessile to short- petiolate, rarely to 1.5 cm long; lateral leaflets 3.5-12 cm long, 2-6 cm broad, inequilateral, ovate to ovate-elliptic, oblique and rounded to subcuneate at the base, acute to obtuse at the apex. Inflorescences cymose, appearing corymbose with the flowers congested in pseudoumbels, the mature peduncles (6-)7-12 cm long, glabrous or with a few scattered, appressed, pilose hairs. Flowers bright red to reddish-orange, the pedicel 2-5 mm long, pilose often sparsely so, the calyx with four short lobes, often indiscernible, the corolla of four free petals, oblong, acute at the apex, ca 1 mm long; pistil 1-1.5 mm long. Berries green becoming black with maturity, 4-6 mm in diam, orbicular to subpyriform, 1-seeded; seeds pyriform, 4-5 mm long. Southern Mexico, Central America, the West Indies and South America. ANAL ZONE: Ancon Hill, Duke 4587 (MO); Barro Colorado I, Brown 33 (F), Wood- worth & Vestal 530 (A, F); Gamboa, Tyson et al. 4588 (MO); vic of Miraflores, White 135 (GH, MO); vic of Rio Cocoli, K-9 road, Stern et al. 36 (GH, MO), 305 (GH, MO); Frijoles, nr boat dock, WA 70 (MO); Howard Air Force Base, SE of Kobbe Beach, Oliver & MacBryde 1890 (MO). cocré: vic of El Valle de Antón, Allen 750 (GH, MO, US); betw Las Margaritas & El Valle de Antón, Woodson E E 1763 (GH, MO) E vic of Río Piedras, along road to Puerto Bello, Blum et al. 2536 (MO); vic of Sardinilla h ] tupo, Elias 1727 (MO). uu hills W of Soná, Allen 1035 (GH, MO, US). Cissus erosa occurs frequently throughout Middle and South America and shows considerable variation in leaf margins and the occasional presence of indu- mentum on the lower leaf surfaces. Despite Planchon's (in D.C., Monogr. Phan. 5(2): 548-9, 1887) reduction of C. salutaris to a synonym of C. erosa, some workers (Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 24: 302, 1949) have maintained the two as distinct based mainly on the degree of pubescence of the leaves. As specimens assigned to the two species show an intergradation of characters, the reduction by Planchon is apparently justifiable. 3. Cissus microcarpa Vahl, Eclog. Amer. 1: 16, 1796.—Fig. 2E. Vine, usually woody, the stems terete, sulcate, unwinged, lenticels sparse and inconspicuous, glabrous except for occasional appressed pilose hairs on the younger stems, the nodes swollen; stipules broadly ovate to subrotund, subpersistent, 3-4 mm long, the apex acute to obtuse, glabrescent. Leaves 3-foliolate, the petiole 1.5-6 cm long, striate, glabrous or occasionally appressed-pilose on the juvenile forms, the lateral veins conspicuous beneath, chartaceous to subcoriaceous, mucronate- serrate; terminal leaflet 3-10 cm long, 1.4-6 cm broad, broadly elliptic, elliptic, ovate-elliptic, cuneate at the base, petiolule 0.5-2 cm long, acuminate at the apex, mucronate, the lateral veins 5-6 pairs; lateral leaflets 3-8 cm long, 0.6-5 cm broad, 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 112. Vitaceae) 89 obliquely elliptic or ovate to rhombic, obliquely rounded at the base, acute to shortly acuminate at the apex, mucronate, the lateral veins 3-5 pairs. Inflorescences cymose-umbellate and appearing corymbiform, the peduncles 0.6-1.8 cm long, glabrous or with a few scattered hairs. Flowers appearing red or reddish-orange, the pedicel 1-4 mm long, glabrous to sparsely pilose; calyx cupular, the lobes indiscernible; corolla ca 1 mm long, the lobes ovate to ovate-triangular, acute at the apex, pistil 1-1.5 mm long. Berries green, turbinate to spherical (?), ca 6-8 mm in diam, usually l-seeded, the seeds pyriform, 4-6 mm long. Mexico, the West Indies, Central and South America. AS DEL TORO: vic of Chiriquí Lagoon, von Wedel 1040 pee MO, US), 1334 (GH, MO), 1517 (GH, ; Almirante, on rd mba, Blum ; Changuinola lley, Potrero I, Dunlap 7 (F); Rio Cricamola, betw Finca St e & Konkintoe, - son et al CANAL ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Ebinger 277 ; vic of Sala nca Hydrographic Station, Rio Pequerí, Woodson et al. 1626 (MO); Coco Solo, ic Test Center, Mine Emplacement Center, Dwyer & Du (GH, MO, US) COCLÉ: foothills of Cerro Pilon, nr El Valle de Antón, Duke & Correa 14714 (MO); betw erro Pilón e Antón, e & Dwyer 13 (MO) AMA: along Pan-Am H e & El Llano, m 5657 Pa. ped of Río Chagres, 5 mi SW of Cerro Brewster, Lewis et al. 3372 (DUKE, K, , NY, UC), 3458 (DUKE, K, MO, UC); Cerro Jefe, 10-13 mi beyond Goofy Lake, Bute! 8027 (M O). In Panama this species has been consistently confused with C. rhombifolia. Cissus microcarpa can be readily identified by long petiolate leaves which are mucronate-serrate and the generally glabrous condition. Like several other species of Cissus the upright inflorescences are often showy due to the bright red peduncles. 4, Cissus martiniana Woodson & Seibert, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 24; 191, 1937.—Fig. 2C. Woody vine or small prostrate shrub, the stems subangulate to terete, un- winged, conspicuously lenticellate on the older stems, glabrous except for occasional appressed pilose hairs on the younger stems, the nodes slightly swollen; stipules broadly ovate to subrotund, persistent, 2-3 mm long, the apex obtuse to subacute, glabrescent. Leaves 3-foliolate, the petiole 1.5-2.5 cm long, striate, glabrous or rarely with a scattered, ferrugineous-pilose indumentum, sessile, obtuse at the apex, minutely mucronate, the lateral veins 4-5 pairs, inconspicuous, subcoriaceous, sparsely denticulate; terminal leaflet 2-4 cm long, 1-2.2 cm broad, obovate to elliptic, cuneate at the base; lateral leaflets 1.5-4 cm long, 0.8-2 cm broad, obliquely obovate to obovate-elliptic, unequally cuneate at the base. Inflorescences cymose, appearing corymbiform, the peduncles 1-3 cm long with a few scattered tomentose hairs. Flowers pale green, the pedicel 2-4 mm long, glabrous; calyx with 4 subreni- form to broadly ovate lobes, the lobes rounded at the apex; corolla 1-1.5 mm long, the lobes oblong to ovate-triangular, acute at the apex; pistil 1-2 mm long. Berries green, spherical, ca 1 cm in diam, usually l-seeded, the seeds pyriform, 6-8 mm long. Guatemala southward to Panama and (?)northern South America. CHIRIQUÍ: valley of the upper Río Chiriquí Viejo, vic of Monte Lirio, Seibert 241 (MO holotype, GH isotype); vic of Bajo Chorro, Woodson & Schery 676 (MO), Davidson 248 (A, F, MO, US); valley of the upper Rio Chiriquí Viejo, White 72 (GH, MO, US). [Vor. 55 90 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN This species is closely related to C. erosa but can be distinguished by its much smaller leaves, flowers and berries. 5. Cissus biformifolia Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4: 225, 1929 C. cardiophylla Standley, loc. cit. 226. Vine, often climbing and hanging; stems terete to 4-gonal, sulcate to canalicu- late, glabrous except for the appressed pilose hairs on the young stems, swollen at the nodes, with sparse minutely elevated lenticels. Leaves dimorphic, the younger ones narrowly elliptic to narrowly obovate, 4-10 cm long, 1.5-4 cm broad, long cuneate at the base, short acuminate at the apex, glabrous, chartaceous, the petiole 1.5-4.5 cm long, the older leaves ovate to broadly ovate, 10-18 cm long, 5-13 cm broad, rounded, cordate or deeply cordate at the base, short acuminate to acute at the apex, glabrous, coriaceous, the petiole 3.5-7 cm long, often sulcate and canalicu- late; all leaves with 5-7 pairs of ascending lateral veins and entire at the base becoming sparsely and shallowly serrate toward the apex; stipules broadly obovate, 3-4 mm long, early caducous, subrotund at the apex. Inflorescences of sma compacted cymes appearing as pseudoumbels, the peduncles up to 2 cm long, younger ones appressed pilose; buds 3-4 mm long. Flowers dark red, the pedicel 1-2 mm long, with scattered appressed pilose hairs; bracts and bracteoles 2-3 mm long, ovate, acute at the apex; calyx cupular with four rotund teeth which persist in fruiting; corolla of four free petals, the petals ovate-oblong, 3-4 mm long, obtuse at the apex; pistil 2-3 mm long, 2-locular. Berries green becoming purple at maturity, 10-12 mm long, 8-10 mm broad, suborbicular to obovoid, apex rounded and usually with a small persistent beak, l-seeded, the seed 8-10 mm in diam, obovoid. Reportedly from British Honduras and ranging southward to Panama. The dimorphic leaves, larger flowers and fruits and the glabrous condition distinguish this species from the common C. sicyoides. BOCAS DEL TORO: Changuinola valley, Dunlap 323 i holotype, F isotype); 10-15 mi inland from mouth of Changuinola River, gts et al. 861 i , UC, vic of Chiriquí Lagoon, von Wedel 2983 (GH, MO); ap Peak, N of Rio Teribe across from Quebrada Huron, Kirkbride & Duke 576 (MO, NY); Santa Catalina, river bank & beach. Blackwell et al. 2692 (MO). 6. Cissus sicyoides L., Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 2: 897, 1759. obtusata Bentham, Bot. Voy. Sulphur, 77, 1844. Vitis sicyoides (L.) Morales in Poey, Repert. Fis-Nat. Isla Cuba, 1: 206, 186 Cissus brevipes Morton & Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. in 653, 1937. Vine, occasionally shrubby, climbing or sprawling; stems terete, striate, + canaliculate, glabrous, tomentose to villous, lenticels usually sparse, inconspicuous, + swollen at the nodes, the older stems often woody with the epidermis becoming loose to form a sheath around the stem and peeling off. Leaves variable, broadly ovate to ovate-elliptic to oblong to subrotund, 2.5-15 cm long, 1.7-12.5 em broad, truncate to rounded to cordate at the base, acute to short acuminate at the apex, the margins shallowly serrate, the teeth short tipped, the lateral veins 4-6 pairs, ascending, the costa and veins + conspicuous beneath, chartaceous; petiole 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 112. Vitaceae) 91 1-6.5(-8.5) cm long, terete, + swollen at the base, glabrous to densely villous; stipules narrowly ovate to ovate-oblong, acute to obtuse at the apex, 2-4 mm long, caducous. Inflorescences of small congested cymes, often appearing as pseudo- umbels, the peduncles 1-5 cm long, terete to angulate, + sulcate, densely villous to glabrous; buds ca 1 mm long, ovoid. Flowers greenish-white, white or yellow, becoming red when growing in bright, exposed areas, the pedicel 2-3 mm long, densely villous to glabrous, the calyx cupular with 4 shallow rotund lobes, the lobes often persisting in fruit, the corolla of 4 free, oblong petals, 1.8-3 mm long, pistil 2-3 cm long, bilocular; the 4-lobed disc conspicuous, persisting in fruit. Berries 4-6 mm in diam, obovoid, I-seeded, often with the style persisting as a beak, green turning dark red to black at maturity; seeds 3.5-5 mm in diam, obovoid. Southern United States, the West Indies, Central and northern South America. DEL TORO: vic of Chiriqui Lagoon, von Wedel 1367 (GH, MO); id., Old Bank I, von n. Wedel 1891 (MO), 1958 (MO), 2070 (MO); id. Water Valley, von "Wedel 838 (GH, MO), 1811 (MO); id., Isla Colon, von Wedel 2470 (GH, MO), 2952 ier pu region of Almirante, Cooper 183 (F), Blum 1334 (MO); Chiriquicito to 5 m Río Guarumo, Lewis et al. 2015 (GH, MO); vic of Nievecito, Woodson et al. 1854 (MO): 10-15 mi inland, S So mouth of Changuinola River, Lewis et al. 981 (GH, MO, US); CANAL ZONE: Ancon Hill, Duke 4588 (GH, MO); Barro s I, Shattuck 268 (MO 588 (E. No (F), 810 (F), Woodworth & Vestal 38 (F), 154 (F, GH), 553 (F), Wilson 3 (F); Fort Amador on causeway & I, Tyson 2009 (MO), D» (MO), 2020 (MO), Chagres, Fendler 32 (MO); 5 mi N of Cocoli Tyson 3874 (MO); Farfan beach, from Thatcher to Palso Seco, Lewis et al. 54 (GH, K, MO, UC, US); Farfan Beach road, Kirk- bride & Elias 59 (MO); 5 mi N of Ga mboa on nipelin ne rd, Blum & Loftin 2305 (MO); vic of Rio Chilibre bridge, Blum & Dwyer 2133 (MO); Fort San Lorenzo, Tyson & Blum 3674 (MO); Trans Isthmian Highway ca 19 mi from Colón, Burch et al. 1001 (DUKE, F, GH, 1 TRIQUI: vic of San Bartolomé, Peninsula de Burica, Woodson & Schery 913 (MO); vic of Puerto Armuelles, Woodson & Schery 832 (MO); Boquete, Davidson 67. ) E rim of El V. de Antón, nr Cerro Turega, oodson & Schery 182 O), corów: vic of San Juan at Cement Plant Lake, Blum & Tyson 5. DARIEN: Can io San Jose below former goldmine headquarters, Stern L 635 (GH, MO); forest nr Sante Fe, Duke 8431 (MO); 3 mi E of Santa Fe, Tyso et al 465 0-4 mi up Río Sal ana from Santa Duke 4138 (GH, Sere Rio trail to pst Pirre, Stern et al. 291 (CH, MO), 295 (GH, MO); Tucutí, Terry ry 4 H, MO); Río Balsa, betw Manene & Tusijuandra, Duke 13575 (MO); Patiño, Duke 10507 (MO); Río Piñas, Duke 10559 (MO). HERRERA: rd from La Avena to out- skirts of Pesé, Burch et al. 1310 (GH, K, MO, UC, US); Pesé, ca 50 mi, Allen 792 (F, GH, MO). tos santos: 1-2 mi W of Candelaria, Duke 12448 (MO); 5-9 mi from Chitré on rd to Las Tablas, Burch et al. 1221 (GH, MO); Monagre beach rd, 0.3-1.5 mi from O O beach, ca 5 mi SE of Los Santos, Lewis et al 1681 (COL, MO, ); Tonosi, on river bank, Tyson et al. 2996 (MO). panama: Río Cajfiasas, gravel Lad ir 14514 (MO); l mi N of Río Chagres along Roosevelt Boyd Hwy, Blum & Tyson 1985 (MO), 1986 (MO); Chimán, Lewis et al. 3324 (MO), 3336 (MO); ca 6 mi E of Chepo on Pan-Am Highway, Duke 4031 (MO), 4041 (MO), oe (GH, MO); Gorgona Beach, Woodson et = 1697 (GH, MO); Las carn E of Panama City, Maurice 811 (MO); Las Sabanas, r Chepo, Hunter & Allen 96 (MO); savanna nr Playa Río Mar, Duke 11763 (MO); vic of Pacora, Allen 1007 (MO); Pedro Gonzales J, Dwyer 6 80A (MO), Allen 2584 (MO); San José I, d s (GH, Md Duke 12518 (MO); Taboguilla I, Duke 5876 (MO); Tocumen, Dwyer 8 (MO). san BLAs: Soskatupu, Elias 1687 (MO). Cissus us a highly polymorphic species, is one of the more common [Vor. 55 92, ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN vines in the neotropics. Readily adapting to disturbed areas, it is one of the few plants to invade successfully the very rocky beaches along lakes and the seacoasts. In this habitat, the leaves are usually small, subrotund and are glabrous. An alternate form is encountered in more protected, less exposed habitats where the leaves are usually ovate, truncate at the base and usually quite pubescent. I hesitate to attempt assigning varietal names since Planchon (loc. cit. 521-531) listed 16 varieties in 1887 and since then no adequate work exists on the neotropical species of Cissus. Although some Panamanian collections of C. sicyoides can be assigned to a variety, e.g. C. sicyoides var. ovata Planchon, the majority of the material seems to defy placement. The tough stems are often used for cordage. In addition, the leaves when macerated in water yield a soapy solution which may be utilized for washing clothes. Practically every specimen I examined from Panama showed varying de- grees of infection by the smut, Mycosyrinx cissi (DC.) Beck. The internodes of severely infected plants are reduced, the leaves fail to develop properly and the plant has the appearance of “witches broom.” The diseased plant is so strange that Presley (Rel. Haenk. 2: 35, t. 53, 1834) described a new genus (Spondylantha) of flowering plants from such a specimen. INDEX OF LATIN NAMES Numbers in boldface tvpe refer to descriptions; numbers in roman type refer to synonyms; numbers with dagger (+) refer to names incidentally mentioned. Cissus 827, 84, 857, 89t, 92t Leea 82+ biformifolia 90 Mycosyrinx cissi 927 revipes Spondylantha 92+ cardiophylla 90 Vitaceae 81, 827 erosa 87, 881, 907 Vitus 82 martiniana 89 caribaea 82 microcarpa 88, 897 salutaris 87 obtusata sicyoides 90 rhombifolia 85, 89+ tiliaefoliea 84+ salutaris tilifolia 84+ d 85, a Olt, 92+ tiliifolia 82, 84+ —var. 92+ vinifer a 82t FLORA OF PANAMA BY ROBERT E. Woopson, JR. AND ROBERT W. SCHERY AND COLLABORATORS FamiLy 128. FLACOURTIACEAE* BY ANDRE ROBYNS? Missouri Botanical Garden e woe n of ened Washington University, uis, Missou Trees or shrubs, the branchlets sometimes spine-tipped or axillary spinose. Leaves usually alternate and/or distichous, rarely opposite or verticillate, persistent, the petiole short to long, sometimes 2-glandular at the apex, the stipules usually small and caducous, sometimes large, foliaceous and persisent, rarely absent; blade simple, entire or not, sometimes 2-glandular at or near the base, penninerved or 3-5-nerved from the base, sometimes with pellucid dots or lines. Inflorescences axillary or terminal, fasciculate, racemose, spicate, corymbose or paniculate, some- times flowers axillary and solitary, the peduncles or pedicels sometimes adnate to the petioles of the subtending leaves, the bracts and bracteoles minute. Flowers actino- morphic, $ or 4 9, sometimes dioecious or polygamous; sepals 2-several, contorted or imbricate, rarely valvate, sometimes undifferentiated from the petals, usually distinct, sometimes more or less united into a tube, sometimes persistent or even accrescent; petals, when present, hypogynous or + perigynous, rarely epigynous, equal in number to the sepals and alternating with them, or sometimes more numerous than the sepals, contorted or imbricate, sometimes with a scale within the base; torus often glandular or sometimes expanded into a glandular disk (be- tween androecium and gynoecium); stamens usually more numerous than the petals, often oo, l- or many-seriate, or isomerous with the petals and opposite to them; filaments free or in fascicles alternating with glands, rarely united into a tube; anthers 2-thecate, sometimes appendaged, usually longitudinally dehiscent, rarely opening by terminal pores; pollen grains usually 3-colporate; ovary superior, semi-inferior to rarely inferior, I-locular with several (2-10) parietal placentas, the later sometimes + deeply protruding into the middle of the ovary, infrequently 3-5-locular; ovules usually œ on each placenta, anatropous or amphitropous; styles isomerous with the placentas, free to completely united, rarely absent. Fruit a valvately dehicent capsule, or fleshy or dry and indehiscent, the pericarp some- times alate or prickly; seeds few to numerous, sometimes conspicuously arillate, the endosperm usually copious and fleshy, the embryo straight or curved; cotyledons usually broad, often cordate. —x = 10, 11, 12 A family of about 85 genera and 1300 species, nearly all woody, chiefly of tropical distribution, with some extensions into the temperate zone; 15 genera, at 1 Assisted 2 National Science Foundation Grant No. GB-5674 (Princival Investigator, Mad am Lew iting Cut of the Flora of Panama, Missouri Botanical Garden; Chargé de Recherche of the National Foundation for Scientific Research, Belgium ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp, 55(2): 93-144, 1968. [Vor. 55 94 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN present, reported from Panama, several additional genera occurring in Central America, namely: Bartholomaea Standley & Steyermark, Macrohasseltia L. Wms. (Honduras, Costa Rica), Olmediella Baillon, and Pleuranthodendron L. Wms. (from Mexico, through Central America, to northern South America). Economically the family is of little importance; Oncoba spinosa Forsk. from Africa, cultivated at the Plant Introduction Garden at Summit, Canal Zone (Steyermark s.n., MO, in 1935) has edible fruits. The Flacourtiaceae are characterized by a combination of several characters: numerous stamens, receptacle often glandular or often expanded into a glandular disc, ovary superior and l-locular with parietal placentation, copious endosperm, and often undifferentiated perianth. In some genera the placentas are deeply pro- truding into the middle of the ovary and the ovary is sometimes even plurilocular, e.g. in Prockia with a 3-5-locular ovary and Hasseltia with a 2(-3)-locular ovary; these genera are perhaps better placed in the T'iliaceae (see Hutchinson, The Genera of Flowering Plants 2: 476, 478, 1967). The family is somewhat indeterminate and, as noted by Sleumer (in Van Steenis, Fl. Males., ser. I, 5: 2, 1954), “no single character exists wherewith to distinguish Flacourtiaceae from other families or to recognize them in the field." The following key to the genera is based only on Panamanian collections. a. r^ present. . Petals more numerous than the sepals. c. Fruits echinate. d. Styles simple; stigma shortly 3-lobulate; flowers % or 4 by abortion 1. Lindackeria dd. Styles 3, each one 2-lobed, the lobes laciniate; flowers dioecious ayna cc. Fruits with broad, vertical wings 3. Carpotroche bb. Petals isomerous with the sepals. 3-nerved from the base. Flowers small, in large compound, repeatedly 3- to 4-radiate mbels; anthers small, subglobose; ovary 2(-3)-celled .................. 4, Hasseltia ff. Flowers large, in few-flowered racemes; anthers elongated-linear; ovary orale 5-9-locular by the intrusion of the placentas 9. Neosprucea ee. Leaves aN ved. g. Sepals 3(-4); stamens pluriseriate, ru on a densely villosulous isc; p superior, with 5-8 intruding, lamelliform placentas Banara gg. Sepals (5-)6-7; stamens in fascicles of 3, rarely 2, the fascicles a uero with minute ly med iud. ovary half mx with 2-6(-8) cational placenta Homalium aa. Petals absen h. Flowers Y, branchlets unarmed (except in Casearia stjohnii). i. Stipules large, foliaceous, and persistent or not. j. Stipules inequilateral, glandular-crenate along the margins, persistent; leaves slender and rather long-petiolate; des pedicellate, in racemes; calyx 5.5 to 6.5 mm long; stam mens 90; ovary 3-5 locular ....8. Prockia jj. Stipules somewhat fa Ic ate, entire-margined, oe leaves short- petiolate; flowers sessile, URDU. SUE densely crowded or not along de secondary rachises; calyx to 3.5 mm long; stamens 4; cular 9 acta ary ii. Stipules dir to usually very small, caducous, or absent; ovary 1-locular 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 95 k. Inflorescences mostly fasciculate, sometimes cymose or flowers solitary; leaves stipulate, penninerved; S 4-6(-9). l. Staminodes alternating with the stamen Style n simple or divided at the apex into 3 un fee mas 1-3, capitate Casearia mm, Sty * absent hd ‘obsolete, the stigma thick and peltate .. Bis Zuelania ll. Siamimodes abse. Indumen um ot simple rel leaf blades a -punctate; sepals to 9 mm long; anthers not appendaged .................... 12. Laetia nn. jdn. mostly stellate Res blades paar sepals 1.3-5 cm long; anthers mucronate 13. Ryania kk. a racemose; leaves A 3-(5-)nerved from the calyx, at length, split into 2-3 lobes 14. Lunania hh. Flowers 4 É (or a Raon): branchlets often with axillary spines; leaves estipulate 15. Xylosma 1. LINDACKERIA Lindackeria C, Presl, Reliq. Haenk. 2: 89, pl. 65, 1835. Shrubs or trees, unarmed. Leaves alternate, petiolate, the petiole often elongate and pulvinate at the apex, the stipules none or early caducous, the blade rather large, entire-margined or the margins dentate, glabrous or pilose below, the hairs simple or stellate, penninerved. Inflorescences axillary or terminal, short to elongate, racemose or paniculate, usually many-flowered, infrequently flowers solitary. Flowers rather small, $ or g by abortion, pedicellate, the bracts early caducous; sepals 3, imbricate; petals 6-12, imbricate, equalling + the sepals; stamens oo, the fila- ments filiform, free or rarely united into a tube, the anthers basifixed, linear, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary shortly stipitate, smooth, muricate, or echinulate, usually hairy, l-locular, with 3 parietal placentas, the placentas pauci- or multi- ovulate, the style simple, the stigma simple or obscurely 3-lobulate. Fruits capsular, globose, coriaceous to ligneous, tuberculate or echinate, tardily 3-valvate; seeds few, ovoid, the endosperm copious, the embryo large, the cotyledons large, cordate, foliaceous. About 12 species in the tropics of Africa and America; only the following species reported from Panama and Central America. l. Lindackeria laurina C. Presl, Reliq. Haenk. 2: 89, pl. 65, 1835.—Fig. 1. Mayna laurina (C. Presl) Bentham, Jour. Proc. Linn. Soc., Bot. 5 (Suppl. 2): 87, 1861. Oncoba laurina (C. Presl) Warb. in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3(6a): 18, 1893. Tree 3-8 m high, sometimes to 15(-35) m high, the trunk 5-35 cm in diam, the branchlets angulate, striate, glabrous, often grayish. Leaves glabrous, the petioles 2.5-11 cm long, slightly pulvinate at the apex; blade narrowly elliptic, elliptic or + ovate, obtuse to rounded at the base, long-acuminate at the apex, the margins entire to usually undulate, 10-31 cm long and 5-11 cm wide, papyraceous, + shiny above, paler beneath, the costa prominent beneath, the secondary veins slightly prominent beneath. Inflorescences axillary and terminal, paniculate, to 22 cm long, the rachis glabrous. Flowers white, the pedicels angulate, to 1.5 cm long, glabrous, + shining; sepals + obovate or largely obovate, cucullate, reflexed at anthesis, 6-9 mm long and 4.5-5.5 mm wide, glabrous or inconspicuously [Vor. 55 96 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. D Lindackeria laurina C. Presl: A, habit "or B, flower (X4); C, stamen Du. , gynoecium (X5); E. dehiscent capsule (X1). A-D after Blum 1271 (MO); E after e et al. 516 (MO). puberulous and shining outside, caducous; petals elliptic to narrowly elliptic, obtuse to + rounded at the apex, + undulated along the margins, 9-12 mm long and 25-5 mm wide, glabrous, shining outside; stamens 26-40, the filaments scarcely connate at the base, unequal, 2-4.5 mm long, glabrous or sparsely and inconspicu- ously puberulous, the anthers + oblong, emarginate at the base, slightly bifid at the apex, ca 3.5-4.2 mm long, glabrous or sparsely and inconspicuously puberulous 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 97 at both ends; ovary very shortly stipitate, the stipe ca 0.5 mm long or less, ovoid, densely appressed-soft-echinate, the bristles minutely puberulous; style 5-6 mm long, minutely puberulous especially on the lower half, the stigma shorty 3-lobulate. Capsule long surmounted by the persistent style, echinate, to 1.5 cm in diam (without bristles), the pericarp rugose, shiny, and inconspicuously puberulous, the bristles to 8 mm long and inconspicuously puberulous; seeds few - 1, + angulate, to 7 mm long. Southern Mexico, Guatemala, British Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, and per- haps Colombia and Venezuela; known colloquially in Panama as uvre (cf. Cooper & Slater 167) and chopo cucullo (cf. Duke & Bristan 394). This species is generally known in Panama under the name Oncoba laurina. According to Duke & Bristan the fruits have a bad flavor and the leaves are used in the Province of Darien to cure snakebites. ~ ZONE: Mojinga swamp nr mouth of Rio Chagres, alt below 1 m, Allen 907 (F, O, NY, US); Barro Colorado I, Aviles 110 (F), Bangham 406 (F, US), Frost 137 (F), eee 687 (F, MO), 1088 (F, MO, US), Starry 296 (F); vic of Cerro Viejo on K 16 C, Blum 1271 (MO): drowned forest of Río Puente nr jet with Río Chagres, alt 66 m Dodge et al. 16828 (MO); Thatcher Ferry Rd, Duke 5755 (MO); Madden Dam, Boy Scout Camp Rd, roadside woods, Dwyer & Elias 7472 (MO); Gatun Discs. Hayes 15 (MO, US), 92 (NY); s. loc., Hayes 18 (US); rd W of Pina Base Camp, John 1589 (MO), 1770 (MO); vic of Frijoles, Piper 5794 (NY, US); Agua Clara, on i Trinidad pui alt 10-40 m, Pittier 3991 (NY, US); betw Corozal & Ancon, alt 10-30 m, Pittier 6727 E 5 mi NW of Cocoli, alt 500 ft, Tyson 1616 (MO). cHmiQuí: vic of Remedios, 5228 T NY, US). COLÓN: vic of uns Pina, alt 25 m, Allen 3675 (MO, NY, US). DARIEN: , . E I ( L io unusa & R a Bristan 394 (MO); vic of Cana, summit of Cerro Cana, alt 2500 ft, Stern et al. 516 (MO, S). PANAMA: vic of La Chorrera, alt 30 m, Allen 2751 (MO, US); Rio Tocumen down road from La Siesta, Dwyer 4338 (MO); Chimán, rain forest, Lewis et al. 3236 (MO); La Chorrera, Bro. Paul 501 (MO, US). 2. MAYNA Mayna Aublet, Hist. Pl. Gui. Fr. 921, pl. 352, 1715. Dendrostylis Karsten & Triana, Linnaea 28: 431, 18563. Shrubs or small to medium-sized trees. Leaves alternate, petiolate, the petiole pulvinate at the apex, the stipules early caducous, the blade entire-margined or the margins dentate. Flowers dioecious; staminate flowers axillary, in small fascicles or sometimes solitary; pistillate flowers axillary and usually solitary; sepals 3, imbricate; petals 6-9, imbricate, longer than the sepals; staminate flowers with oo stamens, the filaments inserted on a scarcely thickened torus, free or almost so, pilose, the anthers linear, longitudinally dehiscent; pistillate flowers with the ovary echinulate, 1-locular, with 3 parietal placentas, the placentas multi-ovulate, the styles 3 or 4, each one 2-lobed, the lobes laciniate. Fruits baccate, globose, 3 According to a note by A. Dugand in the S. a Herbarium the correct citation for Dendrostylis dis ead: Dendrost aaa Kars n & Triana in Triana, Nuevos Generos i Especies di Plantas para i Flora Neo- Granadina : 21, 1854 (Bogota). [Vor. 55 98 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN bristly, indehiscent; seeds co, the testa red or orange, fleshy; endosperm copious; embryo straight; cotyledons cordate. A small genus much in need of revision; about 15 species in tropical America, mainly in northern South America; two species reported from Panama. In the absence of fruits it is very difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish this genus from Carpotroche Endl. a. Leaf blades ee staminate ier with the con 5-7 mm long and with the petals 10-11.5 mm long; fruit to 2.5 cm in dia 1. M. longicuspis aa. Leaf blades with mo upper surface prodr hirtellous especially along the veins and with the lower surface softly hirsute; staminate flowers with the sepals to 8 mm long and with the petals 12-14.5 mm long; fruit to 1.5-2 mm in diam 2. M. zuliana l. Mayna longicuspis (Standley) Standley, Trop. Woods 52: 27, 1937. Sloanea longicuspis Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4: 229, 1929. Carpotroche subintegra Standley, loc. cit. 236. Shrub or small tree 2-5 m high, the trunk 2.5-5 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, ochraceous, glabrous or almost so. Leaves clustered towards the tip of the branchlets, the petiole 1-4 cm long, thickened at the apex, canaliculate above, sparsely puberulous to glabrous; blade elliptic to obovate, usually narrowly s0, attenuate and acute to obtuse at the base, acuminate to long-acuminate at the apex, the margins entire to remotely and obscurely serrulate, sometimes coarsely serrate towards the apex, the serrations often mucronulate, 15-23 cm long and 4-8.5 cm wide, chartaceous, glabrous, the costa prominent beneath, the lateral veins prominu- lous beneath. Staminate flowers white, in few-flowered fascicles, the pedicels 1-3 mm long, shortly appressed-puberulous, the bracteoles triangular-filiform; sepals -- rotund, conchiform, 5-7 mm long and 6-6.5 mm wide, shortly appressed-puberu- lous; petals 7, obovate, rounded at the apex, 10-11.5 mm long and 5.5-6 mm wide, glabrous; stamens co, the filaments ca 0.5-0.6 mm long, strigillose, the anthers oblong-linear, ca 1.8 mm long, strigillose along the margins. Pistillate flowers not seen. Fruit yellow or green, globose, to 2.5 cm in diam (without bristles), sur- mounted by the 3 persistent styles, densely bristly, the bristles to 7 mm long and hirtellous as the pericarp; seeds orange, to 1 cm long, the testa striate, shining. Only reported from Panama. This species is close to and perhaps conspecific with the Colombian M. suaveolens (Karsten & Triana) Warburg (in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3(6a): 19, 1893). CANAL ZONE: Quebrada Lopez, alt 30 m, Allen 2127 (F, MO, US). cuirigui: Progreso, Cooper & Slater 234 (type US); vic of San Bartolomé, Peninsula de Burica, alt 0-50 m, Woodson & e did n MO). cocré: N rim of El Valle de Antón, alt 600-1000 m, Allen 1646 (F, MO). "Quebrada Bidoto (Peccary Creek) off Río Areti, Duke 13591 (MO). PANAMA: Cerro "Trinidad, alt 800-1000 m, Allen 3771 (F, MO). saw sras: Permé, ied 638 (type Carpotroche subintegra F, NY); along headwaters of Río Malatupu, asonal pps forest, Elias 1763 (MO); forest around Puerto Obaldía, alt 0-50 m, Pittier 4296 (F, US). 2. Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 55: 78, 1968.—Fig. 2. Carpotroche zuliana Pittier, Bol. Com. Ind. (Venezuela) 4(34): 38, 1923 (Arboles y Arbustos Nuevos de Venezuela, secunda y tercera decadas). 1968] Fig. 2. Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns: A, habit (X15); B, staminate flower (ca X2); C, fruit (X1). A & C after Duke 4994 (MO); B after Allen 4630 (MO). [Vor. 55 100 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Shrub or small tree, 4.5-7.5 m tall, the trunk 7.5-15 cm in diam, the branchlets hirsute when young. Leaves with the petioles slender, 0.8-3 cm long, canaliculate above, hirsute, the stipules subulate, 7.5-10 mm long, hirsute; blade narrowly obovate to elliptic-obovate, long-attenuate towards the base, + obtuse at the base, acuminate at the apex, remotely serrulate-ciliate along the margins, 11-30 cm long and 4-11.5 cm wide, chartaceous, the upper surface + shiny and sparsely hirtellous especially along the veins, the lower surface dull and softly hirsute, the costa prominent beneath, the secondary veins prominulous. Staminate flowers solitary or in small fascicles towards the end of the branchlets, the pedicels to 10 mm long, densely short-sericeous, the bracts subulate, 4-6 mm long, densely short-sericeous; calyx valvate, the sepals rotund-conchiform, to 8 mm long and wide, densely short-sericeous outside except on the margin covered in prefloration, glabrous inside; petals 7-8, white, obovate, rounded, 12-14.5 mm long and 5-7 mm wide, appressed-silvery-sericeous in the middle outside, glabrous inside and marginally outside; stamens ca 50, the filaments almost free, ca as long as the anthers, silvery-pilose, the anthers oblong, ca 2 mm long, very sparsely pilose, longitudinally dehiscent; rudimentary ovary lacking. Pistillate flowers not seen. Fruit with the pedicel to 8 mm long, articulate below the middle (?), densely short-sericeous, the bracts and sepals as in the staminate flowers, long-persistent; bacca globose, surmounted by the persistent styles, 1.5-2 cm in diam (without bristles), densely bristly, the bristles ca 3-5 mm long, hirtellous, the styles 3 or 4, hirtellous below, each style deeply bifid, the lobes laciniate; seeds few, broadly ovate-angulate, to 7.5 mm long, striate, glabrous. cena and Venezuela (Dept Zulia). : headwaters of Rio Chico, alt 500- 750 ft, fairly frequent in heavy forest, Allen H i SE a 14648 (MO); in pasture belonging to Mr. Pablo Othon, Duke & Bristan 290 (M Patifio, on cliffs along the beach, Pittier 6673 (US); vic of eid A Vista, ey Chucunaque above confluence with Rio Tuquesa, growing on muddy , Stern et a 908 (MO, US). panama: woods along PanAmer Hwy ca halfway betw “El "Llano & Rio Mamoni, Duke 5629 (MO); Tocumen, Dwyer 1179 (MO). 3. CARPOTROCHE Carpotroche Endl., Gen. Pl. 918, 1839. Shrubs or trees. Leaves alternate, short- to long-petiolate, the stipules early caducous, the blade entire-margined or the margins mostly serrate. Flowers odori- ferous, rather large, monoecious, dioecious or rarely polygamo-dioecious, the stami- nate flowers axillary, in short racemes or almost fasciculate, the pistillate ones axilary and solitary or few-fasciculate; sepals 2-3, imbricate, persistent; petals 4-12, += biseriate, imbricate; stamens oo (pistillate flowers lacking any rudiments of stamens), the filaments short, inserted on a slightly thickened torus, pubescent, the anthers linear, basifixed, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary superior (no rudimen- tary ovary in staminate flowers), longitudinally costate, l-locular, the placentas 4-8, many-ovulate; styles isomerous with the placentas, short, persistent, the stigmas 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 101 scarcely capitellate. Fruits capsular, rather large, coriaceous to ligneous, longitudi- nally alate, the wings up to 16, large and undulated, crowned by the persistent styles, indehiscent; seeds numerous, smooth, immersed in a fleshy pulp; albumen copious; embryo straight; cotyledons foliaceous. A neotropical genus of about 20 species; one species reported from Panama. 1, Carpotroche platyptera Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12: 178, pl. 19, figs. 15, 16, 1909.—Fig. 3. Shrub 1.50-2.40 m high, or small tree up to 6 m high, the trunk to ca 7.5 cm in diam, the young branchlets inconspicuously puberulous. Leaves on petioles to 5 cm long, thick, and inconspicuously puberulous; blade obovate to narrowly obovate, long-attenuate towards the base, obtuse at the base, acuminate at the apex, coarsely serrate to serrulate along the margins, to 50 cm long and 18 cm wide, chartaceous, inconspicuously puberulous mainly along the costa and lateral veins beneath, the costa very prominent and the lateral veins prominent below. Staminate flowers fasciculate in the leaf-axils (or on the trunk?), the pedicels short, puberulous; sepals 2, concave, to 6.5 mm long, puberulous outside, glabrous inside; petals 4 or more (5 or 6 in Panamanian material), oblong-elliptic to nar- rowly oblong-elliptic, the apex involute at least in bud, to 6.5 mm long and 1.7-2.7 mm wide, sparsely appressed-pilose in the middle especially outside; stamens oo (21-26 counted in Panamanian material), the filaments ca 0.5 mm long, densely barbate, the anthers to 3.5 mm long, appressed-pilose. Pistillate flowers (not seen; description acc. to Pittier, loc. cit. 179), solitary, to 30 mm in diam; sepals as in staminate flowers but larger; petals 8, elliptic-obovate, + obtuse; ovary ovoid, longitudinally 8(-10)-ribbed, pilose, with 4(-5) placentas, the styles 4(-5), distinct, very short. Capsule + globose, reddish or purplish, 2.5-4.5 cm long (wings in- cluded), ligneous, with 8-10 broad, vertical, undulate-margined wings, these 0.8-2 cm broad in the middle, rigid-chartaceous, inconspicuously puberulous; seeds ovoid, angulate, to 0.8 cm long. Guatemala to Panama, along the Atlantic coast, in forest. Fig. 3. Carpotroche platyptera Pittier: Capsule (X1), after von Wedel 1453 (MO). [Vor. 55 102 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN It is difficult to say whether the plants are monoecious or dioecious. On several herbarium sheets, however, staminate flower buds and capsules are present (although the latter are never attached to the specimens) and this suggests that the flowers are monoecious. I did not see pistillate flowers! Carpotroche crassiramea Pittier (loc. cit. 180) from Costa Rica is probably synonymous with our species, the only significant difference being the number of wings on the capsule: 10 wings in C. crassiramea and 8 wings in C. platyptera. This species is called colloquially rabo de gallo in Panama (cf. von Wedel 2186). According to Seibert (1571) the bark and wood smell much like potassium cyanide. BOCAS DEL TORO: region of Almirante, Daytonia Farm, Cooper 367 E US), 377 (F, NY, US); e a Valley, Dunlap 129 (F); 10-15 mi S from mouth of Changuinola River, Lewis et al. 879 (MO); Nievecito, United Fruit Co., Seibert 1571 (US); lower Changuinola River, Stork 129 (US); vic of Chiriquí Lagoon, von Wedel 1029 (MO, US); Wat er Valley, vic of Chiriqui Lagoon, von Wedel 1453 A 1471 (MO), 1650 (MO); Fish Creek, vic of Chiriquí Pen von Wedel 2186 (MO, US). 4. HASSELTIA Hasseltia H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 7: 231, pl. 651, 1825. Shrubs or trees. Leaves alternate, petiolate, the stipules soon caducous; blade entire or serrate along the margins, 3-nerved from the base, with 2 glands on the upper side at the base. Inflorescences terminal or axillary, in large, compound, repeatedly 3- to 4-radiate umbels. Flowers small, %4, pedicellate; sepals (3)4, valvate, persistent; petals (3)4, valvate, persistent; stamens oo, free, inserted on a glandular or eglandular disc, the filaments filiform, the anthers small, subglobose, 2-thecate, basifixed, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary free, superior, 2-(3-)celled by complete union of the 2(3) opposite parietal placentas, the ovules oo, the style simple, entire. Fruits baccate, each cell usually l-seeded; seeds pendulous, the testa coriaceous, the endosperm present; embryo straight; cotyledons foliaceous. A neotropical genus of about five to eight species; three species reported from Panama. a. Leaf blades chartaceous, coarsely and irregularly serrate along the margins 1. H. floribunda aa. Leaf blades subentire- to entire-margined. b. Leaf blades charteaceous, the margins subentire; sepals ca 4 mm be ovary 2 mire ulous cf. guatemalensis bb. Leaf blades coriaceous, the margins entire and slightly ee sepals to 3 mm long; ovary glabrous 3. H. rigida 1. Hasseltia floribunda H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 232, pl. 651, 1825.—Fig. 4. Shrub or small tree 3-10 m high, the trunk to 30 cm in diam, the branchlets glabrous or appressed-puberulous. Leaves dark green, with the petioles to 4 cm long, canaliculate above, glabrous or appressed-puberulous; blade from narrowly to broadly-elliptic, sometimes oblong-elliptic, acute at the base, obtusely acuminate at the apex, coarsely and irregularly serrate along the margins, to 22.5 cm long and 11 cm wide, chartaceous, glabrous above, glabrous or appressed-puberulous especially along the veins below, the main veins and secondary veins prominent 1968] g. 4. Hasseltia floribunda H.B.K.: A, habit (X1); B, flower (X9); C & D, stamen x30 ye E gynoecium (X8); F, bacca surmounted by the persistent style (X5). A- E after Erlanson 380 (US); F after Shattuck 855a (MO [Vor. 55 104. ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN beneath, the network of the veins prominulous below. Inflorescences usually large and many-flowered, the axes puberulous. Flowers greenish, yellowish-white or white, the pedicels slender, to 1 cm long, puberulous to tomentellous; sepals 4, reflexed, ovate, acute, to 2.8 mm long and 1.3-1.7 mm wide, puberulous to tomentel- lous; petals 4, reflexed, obovate, acute, to 2.7 mm long and 1.2-1.4 mm wide, puberulous to tomentellous; stamens 30-40, inserted on a glandular disc (apparently 8 separate glands), the filaments 3-4 mm long, puberulous to sparsely puberulous, the anthers ca 0.25-0.3 mm long; ovary substipitate, globose-ellipsoid, ca 1.5-1.8 mm long and 1.3-1.5 mm wide, puberulous to subglabrous, the style ca 1.5-2 mm long. Bacca subglobose, surmounted by the persistent style, 4-6 mm long, the pericarp succulent, red to black, puberulous, becoming glabrous; seeds 1 or 2, 3.5-4.5 mm long, the testa glabrous. From Honduras to Panama, and in northern South America. BOCAS DEL TORO: nr Bocas del Toro, Carleton 198 (F, US); Changuinola Valley, Dunlap 550 (F). caNaL zone: Barro Colorado I, Bailey & Bailey 534 (F), Bangham 539 S Brown 39 (F), 57 (F), Dwyer 1450 (F), Shattuck 674 (MO), 855a (MO, US), Sei (MO), Standley 31441 (US), 40929 (US), Wetmore & Abbe 196 (F), Wilson 58 (F), 103 (F), Woodworth & Vestal 448 (F), 646 (F), Zetek 5071 (F); on Las Cruces Trail, vic Trans-Isthmian Hwy, Blum & Miller 2283 (MO); 12 m S of Colón, vic Río Providencia, Blum & Tyson 2318 (MO); nr Quebracho on Panama Railroad, Christopherson 122 (US); 4389 (MO); Ma m. iis ad ); Empire Station, Hayes 36 (MO); Bojio Station, Hayes 946 (NY); y places along Panama Railroad, Hayes 1016 (NY); vic of Gatuncillo, "Piper "5604 (NY, Ù S), 5 (US); hills N of es, Standley 27428 (US); Darien Station, moist thicket, Standley 31614 (US); Obispo, Standley 31686 (US); rd from Ft. She to Gatun Locks, Tyson & Blum Portobello, La Cruzio Traii, Ebin MO); betw France Field, Canal y and Catival, woode swamp, Standley 30266 D 30297 (US). DARIEN: trail betw Pinoga d Yavisa, alt ca 15 m, Allen 246 (F), 2 F, MO, ); headwaters Río "Chico, alt 500-750 ft, Allen 4604 (F, MO); Río Pirre, pt mi above El Real, Duke MO); hills nr Pidiaque, Leopold HI 104 (MO); forest around Pinogana, Pittier 6528 (US); EI Real de Sta. Maria, Pittier 6967 (NY, US); vic of Paya, Río Paya, Stern et al. 186 (MO, US); Río Tuira, S of El Real, Don Pablo Othon's pasture, foothills of Cerro Pirre, Stern ei al. 748 (MO, US); Cana & vic, alt 2000-6500 ft, Williams 984 (NY, US). panama: along Río Juan Diaz above Juan Díaz, alt ca 30 m, Allen 940 (F, MO, NY, US); Bohio Soldado, Cowell 243 (NY, US); nr confluence of Río Pacora & Río Corso, alt ca 450 m, Duke 11968; San José t leas 380 (NY, US), Johnston 372 (MO, US); nr Chepo, Kluge 32 (F), s.n. (US); Rio Tapia, Standley 26139 (US), 28231 (US); Rio Tocumen, moist forest, Standley 29330 T 29360 (US); Juan Diaz, Standley 31597 (US). PROVINCE UNKNOWN: s. loc., Seemann s.n. (NY 2. Hasseltia cf. guatemalensis Warb. in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 3(6a): 32, fig. 12, D-E, 1893 . Tree to 30 m tall, the trunk to 55 cm in diam, the branchlets puberulous when young. Leaves with the petioles to 2 cm long, canaliculate above, appressed-puber- ulous when young; blade elliptic, obtuse to acute at the base, obtuse to obtusely short-acuminate at the apex, subentire-margined, to 12.5 cm long and 5.5 cm wide, chartaceous, somewhat shiny and glabrous above, dull and sparsely appressed- puberulous when young especially along the veins beneath, the main veins an secondary veins prominulous beneath. Inflorescences large and many-flowered, the axes puberulous to tomentellous. Flowers with the pedicels slender, to 1 cm long, 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 105 tomentellous; sepals (3-)4, ovate, acute, ca 4 mm long and 3 mm wide, tomentel- lous; petals (3-)4, ovate, acute, ca as long as the sepals but somewhat narrower, tomentellous; stamens inserted on a glandular disc, with glabrous filaments to 3 mm long; ovary puberulous, 2- or 3-celled, the style ca 1.5 mm long. Bacca (im- _ — sparsely puberulous. HIRIQUI: nr mill on Rio Chiriquí Viejo, 3 km N of Camp EI Volcán, alt 4300 ft, NES rain en “Little 6063 (F, MO, NY). The above described collection is very close to H. guatemalensis (see Standley & L. Williams, Flora of Guatemala, Fieldiana: Bot. 24(7):94, 1961) (Mexico to Nicaragua), but differs by the tomentellous pedicels and sepals, and by the sparsely puberulous young fruits. Furthermore, some flowers are 3-merous (3 sepals and 3 petals), and the dissection of one ovary showed clearly a 3-celled condition. More material is needed, however, to evaluate these characters. 3. Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Robyns, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 55: 77, 1968. Tree to 30 m tall, the branchlets glabrous or nearly so. Leaves with the petioles robust, to 2 cm long, canaliculate above, appressed-puberulous, becoming glabrous; blade elliptic to narrowly elliptic, or subobovate, cuneate at the base, obtusely acuminate at the apex, the margins entire and slightly recurved, to 10 cm long and 4 cm wide, coriaceous, dull on both sides, glabrous and with the venation in- conspicuous above, appressed-puberulous especially along the 3 prominent main veins to glabrescent beneath, the secondary veins prominulous and the network of the venation inconspicuous below. Inflorescences apparently terminal, large, many-flowered, the axes appressed-puberulous to appressed-tomentellous, the bracts small, deltoid. Flowers tan-colored, the pedicels to 5 mm long, appressed-tomentel- lous; sepals 4, slightly unequal, ovate, acute, to 3 mm long and 1.8 mm wide, tomen- tellous outside, puberulous inside; petals 4, ovate, acute, slightly shorter than the sepals, tomentellous outside, puberulous inside; stamens with the filaments to 2.5 mm long, sparsely puberulous, the anthers minute; ovary globose, glabrous, the style to 2.2 mm long and glabrous. Bacca red, subglobose, to 7-8 mm long, glabrous; seeds 2-4, glabrous. Known only from Panama. COcLE: region N of El Valle de Antón, alt 1000 m, Allen 3733 (holotype MO). 5. NEOSPRUCEA Neosprucea Sleumer, Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Mus. Berlin 14: 47, 1938. Spruceanthus Sleumer, loc. cit. 13: 362, 1936, non Verdoorn (Ann. Bryol. Suppl. 4: 151, 1934). Small trees. Leaves alternate, petiolate, the stipules minute and caducous; blade 3-5-nerved from the base, distinctly 2-glandular at the base on the upper surface or eglandular, the margins remotely and obtusely glandular-serrate. In- florescences axillary or terminal, few-flowered, racemose. Flowers large, 5, the pedicels articulated; sepals (3)4, valvate, persistent; petals (3)4, similar to the sepals, valvate, persistent; stamens oo, subperigynous, multiseriate, the filaments filiform, distinct, short, the anthers elongated-linear, basifixed, 2-thecate, dehiscing [Vor. 55 106 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN by an oblique introrse slit at the apex; receptacle (or disc?) densely pilose be- tween the filaments; ovary free, superior, incompletely 5-9-locular by the intrusion of the placentas, the ovules oo; style simple. Fruits baccate, dry, indehiscent, sur- rounded by the persistent perianth and surmounted by the persistent style; seeds numerous, small, angulate, the testa smooth. A genus of six species occuring in tropical South America, but with one species extending northwards into Panama. 1. Neosprucea aff. sararensis Cuatr., Trop. Woods 101: 21, 1955. Small tree (?), the branches glabrous. Leaves with the petioles to 15 mm long, canaliculate above, rounded beneath, short-strigose; blade narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong-elliptic, + rounded to attenuate (and somewhat oblique?) at the base, long-acuminate at the apex, remotely crenate along the margins, the crenations distinctly glandular below, 14-20.5 cm long and 4.5-7.5 cm wide, char- taceous, distinctly 3-nerved from the base, sparsely short-strigose beneath especially along the prominent main nerves, the secondary nerves transversely subparallel and prominulous. Flowers light green, in short, axillary racemes, the (fruiting) pedicels to 12 mm long, terete, rather thick, articulated close to the base, densely and rather stiff-puberulous; sepals (surrounding the fruit) unequal, broadly ovate, apparently shortly united at the base, obtuse at the apex, 11-13 mm long and 9-13 mm wide, rather fleshy, tomentellous outside, glabrous inside in the middle but tomentellous towards the margins; petals (surrounding the fruit) ovate, obtuse, 11 mm long and 5-6 mm wide, rather fleshy, tomentellous outside, puberu- lous inside; stamens not seen; receptacle densely short-hirsute (the hairs ca 1 mm long). Fruit globose, longitudinally several-lobed, ca 1 cm in diam, apiculate (base of persistent style), the pericarp thin, brittle, blackish, glabrous, + shiny, incompletely several-locular; seeds to 4.5 mm long, the testa brown, shiny, thin. Panama and Colombia. cocLé: El Valle de Antón at the foot of Cerro Pilón, cloud forest, alt ca 2000 ft, io MO & Correa 7997 (GH, MO, US); El Valle de Antón & vic, alt 500-700 m, Seibert In P of flowering material, especially of stamens, it is impossible to name the above collection with certainty. In the key to the genus published by Cuatrecasas in 1955 (Trop. Woods 101: 24-25) it is closest to N. sararensis de- scribed from the Dept Norte de Santander, Colombia. This collection was deter- mined: N. grandiflora (Spruce) Sleumer by Williams in 1962 (Fieldiana: Bot. 29: 376). According to Cuatrecasas (loc. cit.), in N. grandiflora the leaves are glabrous, the flowers are sessile or subsessile, the calyx is ca 7 mm long, the fila- ments 2 mm long, and the anthers 5 mm long, while in N. sararensis the leaves are subglabrous beneath, the pedicels 12-14 mm long, the calyx 9-10 mm long, the filaments 3-4 mm long, and the anthers 2 mm long. 6. BANARA Banara Aublet, Hist. Pl. Gui. Fr. 547, pl. 217, 1775. Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, distichous, short-petiolate, the petiole some- times l- or 2-glandular at the apex, the stipules small and fugacious; blade simple, 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 107 + inequilateral and oblique at the base, the margins glandular-serrate (the glands on the lower side of the serrations), penninerved. Inflorescences usually terminal, infrequently oppositifolious, paniculate or racemose, rarely corymbose. Flowers small, 5, rarely polygamous or dioecious, the pedicels articulated above the base, the bracts and bracteoles deltoid, minute; sepals 3(-4), valvate, shortly united at the base, persistent; petals isomerous with the sepals and similar to them, + imbri- cate in bud, persistent; stamens oo, hypogynous or the outer ones slightly epigynous, pluriseriate, inserted on a glabrous or villosulous disc, distinct; filaments filiform; anthers small, introrse, didymous-subglobose, basifixed, 2-thecate, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary sessile, 1-locular or incompletely pseudo-3-8-locular, the placentas 3-8, parietal, filiform or lamelliform and intruding into the ovary, the ovules oo, small and pluriseriate; style simple, the stigma minutely capitate. Fruits baccate, fleshy or coriaceous, surmounted by the persistent style, indehiscent; seeds numerous, embedded in a fleshy pulp, the testa crustaceous; endosperm copious, carnose; embryo small; cotyledons thick. A neotropical genus of about 30 species; one species reported from Panama. I, Banara guianensis Aublet, Hist. Pl. Gui. Fr. 548, pl. 217, 1775.—Fig. 5. Shrub or small tree 3-15 m high, the trunk up to 20 cm in diam, loosely branched, the branchlets whitish-gray-appressed-tomentellous. Leaves with the petioles (3-)6-12 mm long, canaliculate above, whitish-gray-appressed-tomentellous, the apex (junction of blade and petiole) often provided with 1 or 2 somewhat stalked cupulate glands; stipules narrowly triangular, to 4 mm long, whitish-gray- appressed-tomentellous; blade ovate or oblong, sometimes narrowly oblong, rarely oblong-cbovate, equilateral to markedly inequilateral, rounded or truncate or sub- cordate at the base, bluntly caudate-acuminate and usually inconspicuously mucronate at the apex, coarsely serrate along the margins, 7-16 cm long and 3-7 cm wide, chartaceous, discolor, the upper surface dark grayish-green when fresh, -- shiny and usually dark brown when dry, and sparsely appressed-pubescent, the lower surface dull, pale, densely to sparsely appressed-puberulous, the costa very prominent and the secondary veins prominent beneath. Inflorescences termi- nal or rarely oppositifolious towards the end of the branchlets, paniculate, some- times + racemose, the axes whitish-gray-appressed-tomentellous. Flowers with the pedicels 3-5 mm long, whitish-gray-appressed-tomentellous; sepals 3, rarely 4, oblong-ovate, obtuse to acute at the apex, ca 4.5 mm long and 3 mm wide, ap- pressed-tomentellous on both sides; petals + obovate, rounded at the apex, + crispate along the margins, slightly longer than the sepals; stamens inserted on a densely villosulous disc; ovary ovoid, glabrous, with 5-8 lamelliform placentas, the stigma minutely capitate and obsoletely 5-8-lobulate. Bacca subglóbose, 6-10 mm in diam, the pericarp thin-coriaceous, green when fresh, blackish when dry; seeds ovate, ca 1-1.5 mm long, the testa black, shining, longitudinally sulcate. A rather variable species (especially regarding leaf shape) distributed in Costa Rica, Panama, and northern South America. According to field notes, the flowers are said to be ex yellow-green, cream tinged with e green, or pale purple. ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Aviles 894 (F), Bailey 225 (F), 308 (F), 61 ) Bangham "ar (P), 402 (F), Kenoyer "e ) (US). 663 (US), ‘Shattuck 894 (US), Starry 226 [Vor. 55 108 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN (F); Albrook, U. S. Army Tropic Test Center, Dwyer 6712 (MO); betw Chagres Batteries & Fort a Lorenzo, Fort Sherman Military Reservation, Maxon & Valentine 6981 (US); Cerro ordo, dier alt 50-290 m, Pittier 3738 (F, US); Chiva Chiva Trail nr Miraflores n "Tyson 1361 u Dwyer 4453 (MO). IRIQUÍ: T aar o 5 BER [4] — e [a yy JD. A” (or; Un G ey d pia < e B Un [e] Fr [e] o 9. pi = oO B @ E < fay) Ct mm. wyer 1242 (F, MO, NY). ya vic of Sardinilla, ca 7-8 mi E of cement plant, t, Blun & el E MO). PAN : Duke 8652 (MO); San José I, along rd betw Bodega Bay & Rio Mata Puer erco, common even in abandoned road bed, Duke 12564 (MO), vic of Naval Station, Erlanson 498 (NY, US); Chilibre, vic 1030 (MO), 1130 di thickets & forests nr Arraijan, alt ca 15 m Woodson et al. 1351 (F, MO, NY). AGUAS: ca 5 mi N of Santiago by the Santa Maria River, Blur um & Tyson 609 (MO); isla de Coiba, “Penal Colony, Diouer 2349 (MO); Cerro de Tute, Dwyer 4319 (MO). Fig. 5. Banara guianensis Aublet: A, habit (X12); B, bacca surrounded by t persistent calyx and corolla (X2). A after Woodson et al. 1242 (MO); B, after pes 4319 (MO). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 109 7. HOMALIUM Homalium Jacquin, Enum. Syst. Pl. Ins. Carib. 5, 24, 1760. Trees or shrubs. Leaves usually alternate, petiolate, the stipules minute and caducous, rarely absent, the blade entire to usua y serrate-crenate, the teeth glandular beneath, penninerved, without pellucid glands. Inflorescences axillary, racemose or paniculate. Flowers 95, sessile or pedicellate, the pedicels articulated, the bracts usually minute, caducous or + persistent; calyx tube (or receptacle?) turbinate, adnate to the base of the ovary; calyx lobes 2-8(-12), usually narrow, persistent or accrescent; petals isomerous with the calyx lobes, inserted in the throat of the calyx, alternating with the calyx lobes, persistent or accrescent; stamens epipetalous, isomerous with the petals or in fascicles of 2-8(or more), the filaments filiform, the anthers small, extrorse, dorsifixed, longitudinally dehiscent; disk represented by a gland opposite each sepal and alternating with the filaments or fascicles of filaments; ovary with the lower half adnate to the calyx tube (or half inferior?), 1-locular, the placentas parietal, 2-6(-8), each with (1-)2-7 ovules near the apex, the styles isomerous with the placentas, the stigmas simple or capitellate. Fruits capsular, half inferior, + coriaceous, indehiscent or incompletely 2-8-valvate from the apex; seeds few or solitary, small, angulate, the testa crustace- ous; endosperm copious. A large pantropical genus of over 200 species (cf. Hutchinson, The Genera of Flowering Plants 2: 216, 1967). All the neotropical species of Homalium belong to the subg. Myriantheia Warb. (stamens in fascicles) sect. Racoubea Aublet; at present, only one species is reported from Panama. Useful references: Blake, S. F., The genus Homalium in America. Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 20: 221-235, 1919. Williams, L. O., Homalium Jacq., In Tropical American plants, II. Fieldiana: Bot. 29: 262-263, 1961. I. Homalium racemosum Jacquin, Enum. Syst. Pl. Ins. Carib. 24, 1760.—Fig. 6. H. stenosepalum Blake, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 20: 234, 1919. Tree to 30 m tall, the trunk to 90 cm in diam, the bark grayish, the branchlets glabrous to finely puberulous, lenticellate. Leaves with the petioles 3-13 mm long, glabrous or finely puberulous; blade elliptic to oblong-elliptic, sometimes narrowly so, acute to obtuse at the base, acuminate at the apex, the acumen often blunt, the margins undulate-crenulate to crenate, 8-15 cm long and 3-6 cm wide, thin- chartaceous to chartaceous, + shiny on both sides, glabrous or almost so, the costa prominent below, the lateral veins slightly prominent below. Inflorescences usually racemose, sometimes paniculate, to 12 cm long, the rachis minutely puberulous. Flowers white, the pedicels to 10 mm long, articulated above, near or below the middle, puberulous, the bracteoles narrowly triangular, to 1.5 mm long, minutely puberulous, caducous or + long persistent; calyx tube turbinate, minutely puberu- lous; calyx lobes (5)6-7, ovate to narrowly oblong-ovate, subobtuse to acute at the [Vor. 55 110 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fur EH ^ anm Cun DUM VELA i D E DAE; t "77 VA Fig. 6. Homalium racemosum Jacquin: A, habit (X5); B, flower (X4); C, sepal (X5); D, petal (X5); E, gynoecium, glandular disc, and one fascicle of stamens (X8). After Stern et al. 917 (MO). apex, 2.5-5 mm long and 1-1.5 mm wide, minutely puberulous, persistent; petals ovate to broadly ovate, subobtuse at the apex, to 5-6 mm long and 3.5 mm wide, minutely puberulous, persistent; stamens in fascicles of 3, rarely 2, the filaments to 4 mm long, glabrous, the anthers ca 0.5 mm long; glands + transversely elliptic, to 1.3 mm X 0.8-1 mm, minutely tomentellous; ovary conical, tomentellous, the styles 3 or 4, distinct from the base, to 1.2 mm long, glabrous or puberulous beneath, the stigmas simple. Mature fruit not seen. Mexico, Central America, northern South America, and the West Indies; called colloquially guayabillo in Panama (cf. Duke & Bristan 234). CANAL ZONE: S. loc., Christopherson 139 (US); around Frijoles, alt 10-30 m, on river bank, Pittier 2693 (NY, US); along Rio Chagres, below Gatun, nr sea level, Pittier 2804 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae ) 111 (holotype H. stenosepalum US; isotypes F, MO, NY). paren: Río Ucurganti, Bristan 1180 (MO); Río Chucunaque betw Río Membrillo & Rio Subcuti, Duke 8586 (MO); Uruti, Pucro, Duke & Kirkbride 14059 (MO); vic of ane Buena Vista, Rio Chucunaque above confluence with Rio Tuquesa, Stern et al. 917 (MO, US). Analysis of immature fruits (Christopherson 139 & Pittier 2804) shows that the capsules are only l-seeded at maturity. The inner walls of the pericarp are hairy. 8. PROCKIA Prockia P. Br. ex L., Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1074, 1759. Shrubs or small trees. Leaves alternate, slender-petiolate, the stipules usually large, foliaceous, persistent; blade membranous, 5-7-nerved from the base, glandular- serrate along the margins (the glands on the lower side of the serrations), 2- glandular above at the base. Inflorescences terminal, racemose or fasciculate, rarely flowers solitary. Flowers %, the pedicels articulated above the base, the bracteoles 2, narrowly triangular; sepals 3, rarely 4, valvate, persistent; petals isomerous with and smaller than the sepals, persistent, or none; stamens co, pluriseriate, free, inserted on the slightly elevated receptacle, the filaments filiform, the anthers small, didymous-subglobose, basifixed, 2-thecate, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary free, 3-5-locular, the ovules co; style simple, the stigma scarcely enlarged. Fruits bac- cate, dry, surmounted by the persistent style, indehiscent, 3-5-locular; seeds numerous, small, imbedded in a white pulp, the testa brittle; endosperm copious; embryo straight; cotyledons thick. A neotropical genus of about 10 species; one species known, at present, from Panama. l. Prockia crucis P. Br. ex L., Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1074, 1759.—Fig. 7. Shrub or small tree 1.2-10 m high, the trunk to 10 cm in diam, the branchlets grayish-puberulous or glabrous. Leaves with the petioles to 20 mm long, glabrous or softly hirtellous, the stipules conspicuous, sessile or nearly so, extremely inequi- lateral, oblique at the base, acuminate at the apex, glandular-crenate along the margins, up to 17 mm long, usually ca 5-8 mm long, glabrous or softly hirtellous; blade broadly to narrowly ovate, usually rounded or sometimes subcordate at the base, acuminate at the apex, glandular-crenate or -serrate along the margins, 4-11 cm long and 2-7 cm wide, thin-chartaceous, slightly discolor, glabrous or shortly puberulous above, glabrous or softly hirsute below, 5-7-nerved from the base, the main nerves slightly prominent. Inflorescences racemose. Flowers with the pedicels terete, slender, 7-17 mm long, glabrous or softly hirtellous, the bracteoles narrowly triangular, 3-5 mm long; sepals ovate, attenuate and obtuse to acute at the apex, 5.9-6.9 mm long and 3.5-4 mm wide, green, short-hirsute outside, glabrous below to tomentellous towards the apex inside; petals none; filaments unequal, 4-6 mm long, yellow, glabrous, the anthers ca 0.3 mm long; ovary subglobose, ca 2-2.5 mm long and 2.5-3 mm in diam, shortly appressed-hirsute, the style to 4 mm long, short-hirsute below to glabrous above, the stigma slightly thickened. Bacca + globose, 6-7 mm in diam, the pericarp thin, green when young, becoming light red [Vor. 55 112 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Prockia crucis P. Br. ex L.: A, M (X15); B, base of leaf blade, upper sur- anther (ca ; F [Vor. 55 140 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 3. Xylosma flexuosa (H.B.K.) Hemsley, Biol. Centr.-Amer. 1: 57, 1879, sensu lato. Flacourtia flexuosa H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 7: 239, 1825. Hisingera nitida sensu Seemann, Bot. Voy. Herald 2o. 1854. i : 6, 185 Myroxylon ellipticum (Clos) O. Kue, Rev. Gen. Pl. 1: 14, 1891. Shrub or small tree, 2.12 m high, the cane to 10- 125 c cm in diam, armed or not, the spines on the trunk often branched, the spines on the branches simple, the branchlets inconspicuously puberulous to glabrous. Leaves short-petiolate, the petiole to 5(-7) mm long; blade polymorphic, glabrous, commonly elliptic to broadly elliptic, infrequently ovate (or even narrowly ovate), acute at the base, obtuse to acute at the apex, seldom obtusely acuminate, distinctly glandular- crenate-serrate along the margins, to 6(-8) cm long and 45 cm wide, rigid- chartaceous, + lustrous and with the network of the veins conspicuous on the upper surface, rather dull and with the costa prominent below, the network of the veins less conspicuous on the lower surface. Flowers in fascicles or contracted racemes, dioecious, greenish to yellowish, the pedicels to 5 mm long, minutely puberulous or glabrous, bracteate at the base; sepals 4 or usually 5, broadly ovate or deltoid, acute, ca 1.5-2 mm long, spreading in g flowers, ciliolate along the margins, usually minutely puberulous on both sides; stamens ca 16-20, the filaments to 2.5 mm long, glabrous; ovary oblong-ovoid, glabrous, the placentas 2-3, each one 2-ovulate. Bacca subglobose, 5-6 mm in diam, at first green, turning bright red at maturity, surmounted by the persistent, 2-3-lobed style, the fruiting pedicel elongated and to 8 mm long, usually distinctly articulate ca 2 mm above the base; seeds 4-6, angulate-ovoid, to 4 mm long, the testa reddish-brown, glabrous. Mexico, Central America, and northern South America; in Panama, this species is found only in the Province of Chiriqui at 900-2250 m altitude; known in Panama as cachito (cf. Stern et al. 2029) and roseto (cf. Pittier 3330). Xylosma flexuosa, treated here in a rather broad sense, can be easily distin- guished from X. panamensis by the leaf blades distinctly crenate-serrate and by the network of the veins clearly noticeable when dry on the upper surface. Further- more, the mature berries are said to be bright red in X. flexuosa, while they are black in X. panamensis. Finally, the habitat of the two species is quite different. curQuí: llanos on slopes of Volcan de Chiriqui Viejo & along Rio Chiriqui Viejo, alt 1200 m, Allen 969 (F, MO); 2 Boquete Distr, alt 3800-5500 ft, Davidson 615 Lewis et al. 577 (MO); Bajo p alt 900-1300 m, Bro. Maurice 736 (MO), Pittier 3330 (US); vic of El Boquete, Maxon 5141 (US); vic of. Boquete, Finca Collins, alt 5800-6700 : Stern et al. 2029 (MO); Camiseta, Volcan de a alt 7500 ft, Terry 1360 (MO); o Chiriquí Viejo Valley, on lanos, White 56 (MO), 109 (MO); Finca Lérida to Boquete, d. ca 1300-1700 m, Woodson et al. 1104 (F, MO), 1168 rA MO). 4, Xylosma hispidula Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 18: 724, Shrub or small tree, the trunk provided with numerous, long, slender, compound spines, the branchlets slender, densely short-hispid, the hairs brownish, the axillary 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae) 141 spines to 2.5 cm long. Leaves very short-petiolate, the petiole 2-4 mm long, densely short-hispid; blade narrowly elliptic to elliptic, obtuse at the base, acuminate to caudate-acuminate at the apex, the acumen from acute to obtuse, the margins obtusely serrulate, the serrations glandular on the lower side, to 9 cm long and 3.5 cm wide, rigid-chartaceous, glabrous or nearly so above, hispidulous below especially along the slightly prominent costa and prominulous lateral- veins. Inflorescences axillary, fasciculate, up to 10-flowered, bracteate at the base. Flowers dioecious (or polygamous?). Male flowers not seen. Female flowers (young fruits) (or hermaphrodite flowers?) with slender hispidulous pedicels to 5 mm long; sepals 4, subcircular, rounded apically, 1-1.5 mm long, the margins densely ciliolate, glabrous or nearly so dorsally, pilose inside. Bacca (juvenile) globose-ovoid, ca 4 mm long, glabrous, surmounted by the 2 persistent, subsessile, spreading stigmas. Known only from one collection from Panama. BOCAS DEL TORO: Changuinola Valley, Spur 2, Dunlap 561 (holotype, F, isotype US). There is some doubt whether the flowers are dioecious since one occasionally observes what appears to be a filament of a stamen around juvenile berries and within the glandular disc. 5. Xylosma intermedia (Seemann) Tr. & Pl., Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot. sér. 4, 17: 100, 1862. Hisingera intermedia Seemann, Bot. Voy ede 249, 1854. Myroxylon intermedium (Seemann) O. K Rev. Gen. PI. 1: 44, 1891. Shrub ca 3 m high, eg Kn branchlets lenticellate. Leaves short- petiolate; blade oblong-elliptic, narrowed towards the base, acuminate at the apex, obtusely serrate along the margins, 10-12.5 cm long and 3.5-5 cm wide, coriaceous, lustrous and glabrous on both surfaces. Inflorescences racemose, 8-10-flowered, ca 3.5 cm long, the peduncles and pedicels pubescent. Flowers polygamous (originally described as hermaphrodite), the calyx 4-merous, the sepals oblong, obtuse; stamens 25-30 or more, the filaments slender, somewhat longer than the sepals, glabrous, the anthers globose; ovary ovoid, attenuate at the apex into a short, 3-lobed style, the stigmatic lobes cuneate, the ovules 6. Bacca with 1-2 oblong seeds. Known only from Panama. CHIRIQUÍ: nr village of San Lorenzo, Seemann 1623 (type K, not seen; photo NY). As I have not seen the type, which is the only known collection of this species, the description given here has been taken from the original publication by Seemann and from the description given by Triana & Planchon. The species is remarkable on account of the racemose inflorescences and the polygamous flowers. 6. Xylosma sp. 1 Shrub or small tree to 5 m tall, the trunk unarmed or with branched spines, the branchlets unarmed or with small, axillary spines, glabrous. Leaves glabrous, the petiole to 5 mm long; blade narrowly ovate, obtuse to acute at the base, long-acuminate at the apex, obtusely glandular-crenate to -serrate along the mar- gins, to 11.5 em long and 4 cm wide, chartaceous to rigid-chartaceous, + shiny on both surfaces, the costa slightly prominent below, the network of the venation [Vor. 55 142 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN prominulous on both sides. Flowers yellow, dioecious, in axillary fascicles, the pedicels to 7 mm long, articulated in the lower 4 (in g flowers) or + in the middle or slightly above the middle (fruiting pedicels), inconspicuously puberu- lous; sepals (in g^ flowers) usually 4, very broadly ovate, obtuse, ca 2-2.5 mm long and 2 mm wide, inconspicuously ciliolate or not along the margins, puberulous especially at the apex externally; stamens ca 35, the filaments slender, long-exserted, to 6 mm long, glabrous. Bacca ellipsoid to subglobose, ca 6 mm long, not sur- rounded by the calyx (calyx apparently caducous), orange-pink, glabrous, sur- mounted by the short, persistent, 4-5 lobed style, the lobes short and spreading; seeds angulate-ovoid, to 4.5 mm long, the testa reddish-brown, glabrous. bin Dus and Panama. : Barro Colorado I, Bailey & Bailey 484 (F), Woodworth & Vestal 419 (Bic ; on een iom Chepo to El Llano, Tyson & Smith 4125 (MO). This species has been erroneously determined as X. intermedia (Seemann) Tr. & Pl. (cf. Standley, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 27: 213, 1928). In the latter species the inflorescences are racemose and the flowers are polygamous while in our species the inflorescences are fasciculate and the flowers are dioecious. The above species is close to X. excelsa Standley & L. Williams (Ceiba 1: 245, 1951) from Costa Rica. The leaves of both species are very similar, but X. excelsa differs from the above by the large size of the tree (to 25 m) and by the polygamous flowers (own observation of type collection: Allen 5650 in F, MO, US). 7. Xylosma sp. 2 Small tree to 4 m tall, the branchlets unarmed, glabrous or inconspicuously puberulous. Leaves glabrous, short-petiolate, the petiole to 2-3 mm long; b ade elliptic to broadly elliptic, acute at the base, short-acuminate at the apex, glandular- serrulate along the margins, the serrations sometimes very small and + obtuse, to 6 cm long and 4 cm wide, chartaceous, the costa slightly prominent beneath, the network of the venations slightly prominulous above. Flowers fasciculate, dioecious. Male flowers yellowish, the pedicel to 3.5 mm long, inconspicuously puberulous; sepals 4, ovate to oblong-ovate, acute or rounded apically, 1.5-2 mm long and ca 1 mm wide, finely ciliolate along the margins, glabrous outside, puberulous inside; glandular disc ca 0.5 mm high; stamens 8-12, the filaments to 2 mm long, glabrous. Female flowers and fruit not seen. cocLÉ: N rim of El Vallé, Allen & Alston 1856 (F, MO, US). 8. Xylosma sp. 3 Shrub or tree (?), the branchlets glabrous, armed, the axillary spines 1-4 cm long. Leaves glabrous, subsessile or the petiole to 2 mm long; blade elliptic, obtuse to acute at the base, obtuse to rounded-obtuse at the apex, appressed-glandular- serrulate along the margins, the serrations obtuse, inflexed towards and slightly overlapping the margin, to 4 cm long and 2.5 cm wide, rigid-chartaceous, some- what shiny especially above, the costa prominulous beneath, the network of the venation slightly prominulous on both sides. Flowers fasciculate, polygamous. Male flowers not seen. Bacca subglobose, 5-6 mm in diam, glabrous, surmounted 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 128. Flacourtiaceae ) 143 by the persistent, deeply 2-lobed style, the fruiting pedicel to 8 mm long, glabrous, the persistent sepals 4, deltoid, to 2 mm long, ca 1 mm wide, glabrous, the persistent filaments of the stamens to 3.5 cm long; seeds 1 or 2, orbicular or semi- orbicular, 3.5-4 mm long, the testa reddish-brown, glabrous. COCLÉ: Aguadulce, along outskirts of tidal belt, Pittier 4991 (US). 9. Xylosma sp. 4 Shrub 2.4 m tall, the branchlets with stout, axillary spines to 7 mm long, inconspicuously puberulous. Leaves with the petiole to 1 cm long or slightly longer, + canaliculate above, inconspicuously puberulous; blade elliptic to ovate- elliptic, acute and somewhat decurrent at the base, long-acuminate at the apex, rather coarsely and obtusely glandular-serrate along the margins, to 13.5 cm long and 6.5 cm wide, rigid-chartaceous to subcoriaceous, dull on both sides, inconspicu- ously puberulous along the veins to glabrescent above, minutely hirtellous below, the network of the venation inconspicuous above, the costa prominent and the secondary veins and veinlets prominulous beneath. Inflorescences contracted-race- mose, Flowers dioecious. Male flowers pale yellow, the pedicels to 6 mm long, minutely puberulous, bracteolate at the base; calyx 4- or 5-merous, the sepals + subrotund, somewhat acute at the apex, to 2.8 mm long and 2.3 mm wide, eciliolate, glabrous outside, short-pilose inside; glandular disc around the stamens ca I mm long; stamens 16-17, the filaments slender, to 3-3.5 mm long, glabrous. Female flowers and fruit not seen. BOCAS DEL TORO: N slopes of Cerro Horqueta, Robalo Trail, alt 6000-7000 ft, Allen 4941 (F, MO). INDEX or Latin NAMES Numbers in boldface type refer to descriptions; numbers in roman type refer to synonyms; numbers with dagger (t) refer to names incidentally mentioned. Banara 106 laevis 121 guianensis 107 myriantha 123 Bartholomaea 94+ itida 121 Carpotroche 987, 100 ramiflora 120 crassiramea 102f stjohnii 119 platyptera 101, 102+ sylvestris 122 subintegra 98 Dendrostylis 97 i Edmonstonia 113 Casearia 116, 125+ pacifica 114 aculeata pd 125f Flacourtia flexuosa 140 arborea Flacourtiaceae 93, 94t, 131 arguta TR 125+ Guidona procera l banquitana 121 Hasseltia 94+, 10 var. laevis 121 floribunda commersoniana 123 guatamalensis 105+ corymbosa 121 cf. guatamalensis 104. grandiflora 118 rigida guianensis 120 isingera hirsuta 125+ elliptica 140 javitensis 123 intermedia 14 144 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN nitida 140 Homalium 10 subg. Myriantheia 1097 e coubea 1097 Laeti 8 idonia 125 micrantha 128 procera l pittieri 134 Macrohasseltia 94f na aurina 95 ongicuspis 98 de ae 98t Myro on 136 ellipticum 140 anamense 138 Olmediella 94+ ncoba laurina 95, 97T spinosa 947 Patris Ploranthodendon 94t Prokia 941, 1 crucis Ryania 131 angustifolia 131} spec a 131t r. pos 131, 1331 —var. speciosa 133f amyda arborea 117 sea t sae s 122 oanea scm 98 Zuelania 125 guidonia 125 roussoviae 125 FLORA OF PANAMA BY Ropert E. Woopson, JR. AND ROBERT W. SCHERY AND COLLABORATORS Part VIII FAMiLY 154. SAPOTACEAE? ? BY Wixi H. BLACKWELL, JR. Missouri Botanical Garden and Department of de Washington University, St. Louis, Missour Trees or shrubs with milky latex (lactiferous sacs present in the pith and cortex and the leaves and fruit), glabrous or pubescent (the trichomes unicellular and 2-armed). Leaves alternate or rarely opposite, petiolate, estipulate; blades simple, entire, often leathery, penninerved. Flowers usually 5, regular, axillary to leaves and/or leaf-scars, fasciculate or occasionally solitary, the pedicels ses- sile; sepals 4-12, imbricate or spiralled, in one or two whorls, free or united only at the base; corolla gamopetalous, the lobes 4-8, shorter or longer than the tube, as many as or fewer than (rarely more than) the sepals, with or without basal petaloid appendages; stamens epipetalous, usually equal in number to and op- posite the corolla-lobes, an outer antisepalous whorl of staminodes often present (typically equal in number to and appearing to be in the same whorl with the stamens); ovary superior, (1-)4 to 14-carpelled and -loculed, completely septate, with 1 ascending, lateral or basal, anatropous, bitegmic ovule in each locule, the style single, entire or lobed at the summit. Fruit a berry, often fleshy, the exocarp frequently becoming corky or sclerotic; seeds I-several, large, with or without endosperm, the testa hard and shiny, the scar lateral to basal, large or small. A family of about 40 genera and 600 species, widespread in the tropics of the New and Old World; six genera occur in Panama. Several representatives are economically important. Key ro GENERA’ a. Each corolla-lobe with a pair of petaloid appendages arising from the base (the appendages dorsal or lateral), if these oe then the sepals in two dis- tinct whorls of three each; staminodes present and petaloid. b. Sepals biseriate (3 + 3); corolla-lobe Wider in dorsal or absent; ovules attached laterally; seed-scar lateral or essentially so, exem or ur ing beyond the middle of the seed Manilkara * Assisted by National Science Foundation Grant No. GB-5674 (Principal Investigator, Walter 5 Lewis). onyms presented. in this paper included, in addition to names used in a previous flora dealing with a portion of Panama (e.g. Standley, Flora of the Panama Canal Zone, ntr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 27: 299-301, 1928), only those based on Panamanian types or those relegated to synonymy for the first time. For additional information on nomeclature and synonymy, reference should be made to Cronquist's excellent publications. (enumerated after the generic descriptions) and to Moore & Stearn (The identity of ccu zapota L and the names for the sapodilla and the sapote. Taxon 16: 382-395, 1 o genera is intended for n of Panamanian one only. Broader application may lead to misidentificatio ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55(2): 145-169, 1968. [Vor. 55 146 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN bb. Sepals not in two distinct whorls though sometimes quincuncial; corolla- lobe appendages lateral; ~~ attached ma seed-scar basal or basilateral, not reaching the middle of the s c. Plants unarmed; dem borne at defoliated nodes only; ovary glabrous, the style 1.5-2 mm long; apex of fruit abruptly tapering to the persistent style; seeds with endosperm 2. Dipholis cc. Plants often with spines; flowers axillary to Soke ae occasionally also leaf- — ovary pubescent, the style 3- apex of fruit rounded or subtruncate, not tapering to the E phis lacking en- Bumelia dosperm aa. Corolla-lobes lacking appendages; sepals usually uniseriate (though often strongly imbricate or spiralled), if distinctly biseriate then 2 + 2; staminodes present (often not petaloid) or absent. d. pall lateral veins + paralleling the primary laterals; staminodes hrysophyllum dd. Secondary laterals not paralleling (often essentially perpendicular to) the primary laterals; staminodes present (frequently scale-like or linear- lanceolate or ee occasionally petaloi e. Leaf-blades usually canaliculate above the midvein, the channel terminating in a small cu at the base of the blade; petiole usually l5 the length of the blade or more; ovary glabrate; seed-scar ies elongate but not reaching the middle of the seed; ndi d prese Mastichodendron ee. Leaf-blades not as above; petiole less than 14 the blade a ovary conspicuously Ro e ent; seed-scar excseding the middle of the seed; endosperm 6 Pouteria 1l. MANILKARA Manilkara Adanson, Fam. 2: 166, 1763. Trees, unarmed. Leaves alternate; blades coriaceous, the primary laterals numerous, fine, rather closely spaced, often subobscure, straight (not arcuate near the margin). Flowers fasciculate in the axils of leaves or leaf-scars or solitary; sepals usually 6, infrequently 4 or 8, in 2 whorls of (2)3(4); corolla-lobes as many as the sepals, each with a pair of dorsal + petaloid appendages arising from the base, occasionally these fused to the lobes or lacking; staminodes usually petaloid, rarely minute or replaced by functional stameris; stamens as many as corolla-lobes or rarely twice as many (morphologically 2 whorls), typically at- tached to the corolla at the juncture of the tube and lobes; ovary often pubescent, 6 to 14-celled, the ovules affixed laterally. Fruit 1 to several-seeded, fleshy; seed compressed, the scar rather elongate, lateral or basilateral (but equalling or sur- passing the middle of the seed), + linear, the endosperm copious. Thirteen species are known in North America, four occurring in Panama. Useful reference: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, IV. The North American species of Manilkara. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 72: 550-562, 1945. a. Flowers 2-12 per axillary, fascicle; corolla- aang shorter than the corolla- lobes; ovary glabrate or pubescent only on upper b. Pedicels glabrous; outer sepals gla ee ‘by an nthesis corolla- lobes equalled in length by dorsal appendages arising from t se (each appendage a bifid or trifid); ovary glabrate; fruit imo or but slightly pun ned M. bidentata 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) 147 bb. Pedicels and outer sepals sericeous-strigulose; corolla-lobes lacking dorsal appendages; ovary pubescent on the upper portion; fruit mealy roug e M. chicle aa. Flowers solitary in the leaf-axils; corolla-tube usually exceeding the corel. lobes; el densely pubescent over the entire surface. C s la-lobes narrowly oblanceolate or T penu 0.5-1 mm broad, equalled Am gth by simple dorsal appenda . meridionalis cc. Corolla. lobes oblong to ovate, 1.5-3 pet broad, lacking dorsal Busen M. zapota l. Manilkara bidentata (DC.) Chevalier, Revue Bot. Appl & Arg. Trop. 12: 270, 1932. Mimusops darienensis Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 18: 249, 1917. Manilkara darienensis (Pittier) Standley, Trop. Woods 31: 45, 1932. Tree to 35 m. Leaves with petioles 1.3-4.2 cm long; blades narrowly obovate or sometimes elliptic, obtuse or rounded to shallowly emarginate or short-acu- minate, 6-30 cm long, 3-12 cm broad, glabrous, the primary laterals fine and rather closely spaced, occasionally subobscure. Flowers 3-12 per fascicle, the fas- cicles axillary to both leaves and leaf-scars; pedicels glabrous, 1.2-3 cm long; sepals ovate or ovate-oblong, 4-6 mm long, the inner minutely appressed-sericeous, the outer soon glabrate; corolla 5-7 mm long, subrotate, the tube ca 1% the total length, the lobes narrowly elliptic-lanceolate, the dorsal appendages as broad as and usually slightly longer than the lobes, free from the lobes to the tube, distally divided for ca 24 of their length into 2 or 3 slender lanceolate segments; staminodes 1.2-3 mm long, ovate-lanceolate, erose; staminal filaments equalling or slightly exceeding the staminodes; ovary glabrate, the style glabrous, 4-5 mm long. Fruit smooth or slightly roughened, globose or ellipsoid-globose, 2-3.5 cm long. Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Lesser Antilles, northern South America and Panama. BOCAS DEL TORO: s. loc, Cox Me (US). caNAL zone: hills aroud Gatun, Pittier 2699 (US). panama: nr Chepo, Kluge 55 (US). saw sras: hills nr Puerto Obaldia, Pittier 4318 (holotype of Mimusops E US), 4384 (US). Manilkara bidentata is important as a source of balata, a nonelastic rubber obtained from the latex which is a nonconductor, resistant to water. Balata and a similar product, gutta-percha (obtained from another member of the Sapotaceae), are used in the construction of marine cable, machine belting, telephone receivers, golf balls, waterproofing, adhesives and a number of other items. 2. Manilkara chicle (Pittier) Gilly, Trop. Woods 73: 14, 1943.—Fig. 1. Achras calcicola Pittier, Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 9: 438, 1919. Manilkara calcicola (Pittier) Gilly, Trop. Woods 73: 15, 1943. Tree to 40 m. Leaves with petioles 1-3.5 cm long; blades 8-24(-29) cm long, 3-7(-10) cm broad, oblanceolate or narrowly obovate to elliptic or elliptic-oblong, obtuse or rounded to acute or acuminate, paler and more yellowish beneath, ap- pressed-sericeous-strigulose below when young but eventually glabrate. Flowers yel- lowish- or grenish-white, 2-5 per fascicle; pedicels strigulose, 0.5-3 cm long; sepals 5-9 mm long, ovate to ovate-lanceolate or ovate-oblong, the inner and outer sericous- tomentulose; corolla 5.5-9 mm long, the tube 14-14 the total length, the lobes ovate, often erose or erose-dentate at the apex, lacking dorsal appendages; sta- [Vor. 55 148 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fi = Manilkara chicle (Pittier) Gilly: A, habit (<4); B, ae opened to show attachmen of stamens and staminodes (X , flower with corolla removed (X515); D, fruit T E, seed (X24). A-C after Sumn 5294 (MO); D-E after DR 753 (GH). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 149 minodes 2.5-4.5 mm long, distally erose-laciniate, often shallowly bifid; stamens equalling the staminodes; ovary minutely sericeous on top, glabrous elsewhere, the style 6-9 mm long, glabrous except at the base. Fruit mealy-roughened, 2-4 cm in diam, subglobose or obovoid, several-seeded; seeds 14-19 mm long, flattened, the basilateral scar barely reaching the middle. Oaxaca, Mexico through Central America to Colombia. CANAL ZONE: area W of Limon Bay, Gattn Locks & Gatün Lake Johnston 1535 (A); Ancon Hill, Standley 26384 (US). DARIEN: pud i s Duke 10653 (MO); Patifio, Pittier 5698 (GH, US). Los santos: pastures ca l/j m edasi, Stimson 5294 (MO). PANAMA: San José I, Johnston 336 (GH), 342 (MO, Gn, 646 (GH), 753 (GH, MO, US); around Alhajuela, Chagres Valley, Pittier 3457 (holotype of Archras calcicola US). Although bearing the specific epithet chicle, this species is not the principal source of chicle gum. The latex is difficult to coagulate and inferior to that o M. zapota. 3. Manilkara meridionalis Gilly, Trop. Woods 73: 12, 1943. M. tabogaensis Gilly, loc. cit. 10. Tree to 30 m. Leaves clustered toward the branch tips; petioles 1-2.7 cm long; blades elliptic or oblong-elliptic to narrowly obovate, 5.5-13 cm long, 1.7-4.5 cm broad, glabrous or sparsely rufescent along the midrib beneath. Flowers soli- tary in the leaf-axils; pedicels 1-2.3 cm long, tomentulose or eventually glabrate; sepals ovate, 6-9 mm long, minutely tomentulose externally; corolla cylindric, glabrous or pubescent, ca 9 mm long, the tube usually comprising 14-24 of the length, the lobes narrowly oblanceolate or spatulate, 0.5-1 mm broad, the dorsal appendages ovate-lanceolate to elliptic or obovate, broader than but ca equal in length to the lobes, simple (not divided into elongate segments distally), basally united with the lobes for ca 14 of their length; staminodes + ovate, erose-fimbriate, 2.5-5 mm long, exceeding the staminal filaments; ovary tomentose, the style 5.5-8.5 mm long, glabrous except at the base. Fruit brown, mealy-roughened, to 3.5 cm long; seed strongly compressed, ca 2 cm long, the linear scar extending from near the base to well beyond the middle of the seed. odd Mexico to Colombia and Venezuela; introduced in the West Indies. PANAMA: Taboga I, Standley 27099 (US), Woodson et al. 1455 (holotype of M. tabo- gaensis NY, not seen; isotypes A, MO). 4. Manilkara zapota (L.) van Royan, Blumea 7: 410, 19534. Achras zapota L., Sp. Pl. 1190, 1753. Tree to 40 m. Leaves clustered toward the branch tips; petioles 0.8-3 cm long; blades elliptic or oblong-elliptic to somewhat obovate or oblanceolate, 4-15 cm long, 1.5-6 cm broad, subconcolorous, glabrate at maturity, the reticulation usually evident below. Flowers solitary in the leaf-axils; pedicels 1.2-2.5 cm long, rufous-tomentulose (some of the pubescence deciduous with age); sepals 6-10 mm long, ovate or occasionally oblong, tomentulose, the outer often losing some For a discussion of nomenclature and complete list of synonyms of M. zapota see Moore & Stearn, Taxon 16: 382-395, 1967. [Vor. 55 150 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN (rarely all) their pubescence with age; corolla 6-11 mm long, the tube usually comprising 14-24 the total length, the lobes oblong to ovate, 1.5-3 mm broad, entire or erose or dentate at the apex, lacking dorsal appendages; staminodes petaloid, rather narrowly ovate-lanceolate, 3-4.5 mm long, erose; stamens 24-34 as long as the staminodes; ovary densely sericeous, the style 4.5-8 mm long, glabrous except at the base, the apex often irregularly toothed or lobed. Fruit brown, mealy- roughened, ellipsoid or ovoid or subglobose, to 10 cm in diam; seeds brown, com- pressed, 16-24 mm long, the linear scar extending from near the base to beyond the middle. Mexico (as far north as San Luis Potosi and Nayarit) to northern South America and from southern Florida through the West Indies; probably native only from Mexico to Costa Rica. CANAL ZONE: Balboa, Standley 27121 (US), 30860 (US). The latex of the sapodilla or chicle-tree is the commercial source of the gum base of the chewing gum industry. It contains 20-25% of the gutta-percha-like gum and is obtained by tapping the trunk by a series of connected, half-encircl- ing, zig-zag gashes. To prevent death of the trees, they are tapped only once every two or three years. The United States is the leading consumer of chicle, the bulk being imported from British Honduras. The pear-shaped fruit is esteemed by people of tropical America and is eaten uncooked. 2. DIPHOLIS Dipholis DC., Prodr. 8: 188, 1844. Trees or shrubs, lacking spines or thorns. Leaves alternate, the blades cori- aceous or subcoriaceous. Flowers small, white or green, numerous or few per axil- lary fascicle, occasionally solitary, the clusters axillary to leaves, leaf-scars or both; sepals (4)5(-9), uniseriate; corolla rotate or funnelform, 5(6)-lobed, each obe with a pair of lateral appendages arising from the base; staminodes petaloid, these and the appendages of the corolla-lobes often erose, fimbriate or laciniate; anthers often exserted; ovary glabrous or rarely appressed-puberulent, 5-celled, the ovules attached basilaterally. Fruit fleshly, usually l-seeded at maturity, abruptly tapering to the short, persistent style; seed with a small, virtually basal scar and copious endosperm, the cotyledons thin. Approximately 15 species; heavily centered in the West Indies (principally the Greater Antilles) but also occurring in Central America, Mexico and southern Florida; one species is known from Panam Although Stearn (Jour. Arnold M 49: 282-283, 1968) argues impressively against the recognition of Dipholis as an entity generically distinct from Bumelia, I favor its retention at present. I have found the delimiting characters listed by Cronquist (Jour. Arnold Arb, 26: 445, 1945) to hold up rather well in the species I have examined personally and there can be no doubt of their validity with re- gard to Panamanian representatives. Useful reference: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, III. Dipholis and Bumelia. Jour. Arnold Arb. 26: 435-471, 1945 (Dipholis p. 435-445). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 151 l. Dipholis minutiflora Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 13: 464, 1912.—Fig. 2. Tree to 35 m. Leaves with petioles 0.5-1.8 cm long; blades elliptic-oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic-obovate, rounded to acute or subacuminate, 5-20 cm long, 2-10 em broad, glabrous or finely white-strigulose (particularly below). Flowers Fig. 2. E minutiflora Pittier: A, habit (X15); B, corolla opened to -T at- tachment of stam and staminodes (X 8); C, flower with corolla removed (X10); D, fruit (X115). A De ee et al. 995 (MO); B-C after Allen 1564 (MO); D after Hinton 7600 (MO), Mexic [Vor. 55 153 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN often numerous per fascicle, the fascicles occurring only at defoliated nodes, each borne on a small woody cushion; pedicels 3-10 mm long, very sparsely to moder- ately appressed-sericeous; sepals 5(-8), closely imbricate, sometimes unequal, sub- orbicular or broadly ovate, glabrate, carnosulous, ca 2 mm long; corolla 4-4.5 mm long, the 5 lobes erose, ca 3 mm long, + ovate, narrowed toward the base, the appendages lance-ovate, laciniate, 1-34 the length of the lobes; staminodes 2-3 mm long; narrowly ovate, erose; staminal filaments ca 2 mm long; ovary glabrous, I mm long, the style 1.5-2 mm long, glabrous, conical, evenly tapered from the ovary, virtually as broad as the ovary at the base. Fruit broadly ovoid, 1.5-2.5 cm -2 cm broad, conical-apiculate, the flesh scant; seed ellipsoid, slightly com- pressed, 14-18 mm long, the scar 3-5 mm long. n of Mexico to Panama. HiRIQUÍ: vic of Cerro Punta, Allen 1564 (F, MO); Quebrada Velo, vic of Finca Lerida, Allen 4676 (MO); end of the upper Río Chiriquí Viejo, White 109b (F, MO), White & White 1 (MO); Bajo Mona, mouth of Quebrada Chiquero, along Río Caldera, Woodson et al. 995 (F, MO). PANAMA: hills above Campana, Allen 1314 (F, MO). 3. BUMELIA Bumelia Swartz, Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. Prodr. 49, 1788. Shrubs or trees, usually spiny or thorny. Leaves alternate or casually opposite, the blades firm. Flowers few to numerous per axillary fascicle, rarely solitary, green or white, (4)5(6)-merous; sepals uniseriate; corolla-lobes well exceeding the tube, each with a pair of lateral appendages arising from the base or these rarely lacking; staminodes petaloid, entire to erose or laciniate; anthers often ex- serted; ovary pubescent or less frequently glabrous, usually 5-locular, the ovules affixed basilaterally, the style slender to virtually filiform. Fruit fleshy, l-seeded, broadly rounded or subtruncate or retuse at the apex (not tapering to the persistent style); seed with a small subbasal scar, lacking endosperm, the cotyledons fleshy. A New World genus of about 23 species, the majority in the United States, Mexico and the West Indies but several extending into Central and South Amer- ica; one species occurs in Panama. Useful reference: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, III. Dipholis and Bumelia. Jour. Arnold Arb. 26: 435-471, 1945 (Bumelia p. 445-471) 1. Bumelia persimilis Hemsley subsp. persimilis, Biol. Centr.-Amer., Bot. 2: 298, 1882.—Fig. 3 B. panamensis Standley, Trop. Woods 4: 9, 1925. ub or tree to 18 m, possessing spines. Leaves with petioles 2-10(-12) mm long; blades elliptic- or somewhat ovate-lanceolate to elliptic or elliptic-oblanceo- late, acute or acuminate to obtuse, 3.5-12.5 cm long, 1.3-5 cm broad, glabrous and lustrous above, at first sparsely appressed-rufous- or cinereous-sericeous below, soon glabrate, with 10-30 pairs of primary lateral veins, these brochidodrome. Flowers white, several to numerous per fascicle, the fascicles axillary to leaves and occasionally also leaf-scars; pedicels 3-6 mm long; sepals ovate, 1.8-3.7 mm long, unequal, quincuncial, glabrate to moderately appressed-sericeous; corolla rotate- 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 153 3. Bumelia persimilis Hemsley subsp. persimilis: A, habit (X12); B, portion of corolla yes attachment of stamens and staminodes (X715); C, flower with id a removed (X715); D, fruit (X2). A after Williams 16585 (MO), Costa Rica; B-C afte Schipp 1077 (MO), British Honduras; D after Hunter & Allen 298 (F). [Vor. 55 154 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN funnelform, the tube ca 1.5 mm long, the lobes 3-45 mm long, oblong-ovate, subtruncate and erose at the apex, narrowed at the base, the appendages lance- filiform, ca 34 the length of the lobes; staminodes 2.5-3 mm long, lanceolate to obovate, + laciniate; staminal filaments 3-3.5 mm long, the anthers 0.7-2 mm long; ovary appressed-sericeous, the style 3-7 mm long, a stigma not apparent. Fruit spheroid or ellipsoid, smooth, 1.2-2.5 cm long, the apex rounded. iir Cruz aL Oaxaca, Mexico through Central America to Venezuela. El e Antón, along Río Indio trail, nra & Allen 298 (F). PANAMA: nr Chepo, K luge E tudo of B. panamensis US, not The other subspecies of B. persimilis, subsp. eiaa (Hemsley) Cron- quist, is exclusively Mexican (Chihuahua and Durango to Michoacán and Oaxaca) and is characterized, among other features, by a dense, rufous, spreading pubescence of the young twigs and lower leaf-blade surface. 4. CHRYSOPHYLLUM Chrysophyllum L., Sp. Pl. 192, 1753. Shrubs to medium-sized trees. Leaves alternate; blades with the secondary laterals and areoles + paralleling the primary laterals. Flowers several to nu- merous in each axillary cluster, occasionally solitary; sepals (4)5(6), uniseriate, often quincuncial when 5, united at the base; corolla not exceeding 6 mm in length, the lobes (4)5(6), lacking appendages; staminodes absent; staminal fila- ments attached to the top of the corolla-tube or base of the corolla-lobes; ovary appressed-pubescent, 4 to 12-celled, the ovules affixed laterally or basilaterally, the style short (less than 1.75 mm in Panama taxa), columnar, the stigma discoid, marginal lobes often evident. Fruit fleshy; seeds l-several, the scar large, broadly elliptic to subcordate, at least 5 mm long, lateral or basilateral, the endosperm copious. Approximately 40 species occur in the New World and a number of Old World species are known; two species are found in Panama. Useful references: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, I. The North American species of Chrysophyllum. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 72: 191-204, 1945. —— Studies in the Sapotaceae, V. The South American species of Chrysophyllum. loc. cit. 73: 286-311, 1946. a. Blades sparsely white- stri gulone below or als a corolla-lobes less than ze as long as the tube; stigma 5-lobed; fruit to 2 cm broa . panamense aa. Blades densely iy econ ees below (with a coppery sheen, even on rre specimens); corolla-lobes sped or slightly exceeding the tube; stigma i to 12-lobed; fruit 3 cm broad or 2. C. cainito l. Chrysophyllum panamense Pittier, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 18: 165, 1916.— Fig. 4 C. panamense var. macrophyllum Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 22: 366, 1940. Tree to 15 m. Leaves with petioles 0.8-2.5 cm long; blades elliptic or broadly oblong to elliptic-obovate, acuminate, to 25(-33) cm long and 11(-14) cm broad, 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) B: ^ Ní A ® v A z. Ñ he: P j PN M: W he 3 DONI m ees Sal Fig. 4. Chrysophyllum ated Pittier: A, habit NOE B, corolla opened to show attachment of stamen wer with corolla s d (X); D, fruit (X194). A after Starry 82 (F) and Shattuck 1024 (F); B-C after Zetek 3810 (F); D after Zetek Z4327 (F). [Vor. 55 156 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN glabrous above, glabrate below or sparsely and finely white-strigulose. Flowers several-numerous in each axillary cluster, the pedicels 3-7 mm long, appressed- gray-pubescent; sepals to 2 mm long, ovate or suborbicular, strigulose externally (occasionally losing some of the pubescence); corolla subcylindric, pale green to yellow or white, 3.5-5.5 mm long, externally often appressed-rufous-sericeous on the lobes and adjacent portions of the tube, the lobes deltoid-ovate, + erect, less than L4 the length of the tube; anthers 0.4-0.6 mm long, the filaments attached at the juncture of the corolla-tube and lobes; style 1-1.5 mm long, the stigma with 5 small marginal lobes. Fruit several-seeded, to 2 cm broad, oblate-spheroid to ovoid, often lightly ribbed; seeds pale brown, ca 1 cm long, with the basilateral scar extending to the middle or beyond. Panama and Costa Rica, chiefly on the Atlantic slope. BOCAS DEL TORO: region of pc ud 353 (F); s. loc., von Wedel 230 (F, MO). CANAL ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Aviles 969 (F), Bailey & Bailey 397 (F), Bangham 591 (F), Ebinger 210 (MO), Shattuck 778 je 969 (MO), 1024 (F, MO), Starry 82 (F), n F). Wetmore & Abbe 169 (F), Zetek 3810 (holotype of var. macrophyllum F, iso- pe MO), Z-4327 (F). Z- "s (F); s. loc, Hayes s.n. (F, MO); along the Trinidad River, Pitier 4005 (holotype US). 2. Chrysophyllum cainito L., Sp. Pl. 192, 1753. Tree to 30 m. Leaves with petioles 0.8-2.3 cm long; blades elliptic or oblong, occasionally ovate or somewhat obovate, short-acuminate, to 15(-19) cm long and 8.3 cm broad, shiny-glabrous above, appressed-rufous-tomentulose below. Flowers often numerous per axillary cluster, the pedicels 5-16 mm long, appressed- rufous-sericeous; sepals ca 1 mm long, suborbicular or broadly ovate, closely rufescent; corolla green, yellow or purplish-white, 3-5 mm long, rotate-funnelform, the tube glabrous, the lobes appressed-sericeous externally cxcept at the margins, ovate or lance-ovate, equalling or slightly exceeding the tube; anthers 0.6-09 mm long, the short filaments attached to the corolla-lobes near the base; style 0.5 mm long or less, the stigma with 7-12 small marginal lobes. Fruit 3-10 cm broad, subglobose, several-seeded; seeds oblique-obovate, flattened, 1-2.5 cm long, the scar lateral, extending nearly the length of the seed. Probably native to the West Indies; cultivated and often naturalized in Cen- tral America and Mexico and occasionally in northern South America and southern Florida. CAS DEL Toro: Changuinola Valley, Dunlap 24 (F); vic of Chiriqui Lagoon, von Wedel 2523 (MO). CANAL zonE: nr Madden Dam & along Azote Caballo Rd nr Alajuela, Dodge 16573 (MO); upper Chilibre River, 14-1 mi below Chilibre, Seibert 1505 (MO). O : 5033 (M & Slater 247 (F), 264 (F). cocté: floor of El Valle de Antón, Allen 2747 (F). DARIEN: Rio Sabana above Sante Fé, Duke 14104 (MO); vic of Campamento Buena Vista, Rio hucunaque above confluence with Rio Tuquesa, Stern et al. ). HERRERA: vic of Oct, Allen 3647 (MO). Los santos: from 1 mi S to 10 mi N of orar Duke 12488 (MO). PANAMA: woods along Pan-Am Hwy ca halfway betw El Llaon & moni, Duke 5527 (MO): Chepo, Kluge 49 (F); Taboga I, Woodson et al. 1537 (M O). VERAGUAS: dry slopes of Cerro Tute, region W of Santa Fé, Allen 4441 (MO); Coiba I, Dwyer 2331 (MO). Chrysophyllum cainito is the best known species of the genus and is widely planted as a shade tree and for its succulent, edible fruit which resembles a small 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) 157 apple. When the fruit is cut in cross-section, the several compressed, brown seeds are seen to radiate in a star-like fashion around the central axis—hence the common name “star apple.” The foliage is bright blue-green above and coppery or golden beneath and offers a striking contrast when stirred by the wind. 5. MASTICHODENDRON Mastichodendron Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 245, 1946. Trees, unarmed. Leaves alternate or subopposite; blades typically exceeding 6 cm, + canaliculate above the midrib, the channel often terminating in a small pouch at the base of the blade. Flowers in clusters at defoliated nodes; sepals 5, uniseriate; corolla subrotate to + cylindric, the lobes 5, exceeding the tube, lack- ing appendages; staminodes not petaloid; staminal filaments attached to the corolla near the level of the sinuses; ovary glabrate, usually 5-locular, the ovules at- tached basilaterally. Fruit fleshy, l-seeded at maturity; seed 1-2.7 cm long, the scar basilateral, as much as 9 mm long but not extending to the middle of the seed, the endosperm copious. Five species are known in North America, one reaching Panama; the status of several Chinese species is open to question (Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 245, 1 Useful reference: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, II. Survey of the North American genera. Lloydia 9: 241-292, 1946 (Mastichodendron p. 244-252). l. Mastichodendron capiri (DC.) Cronquist var. tempisque (Pittier) Cron- quist, Lloydia 9: 250, 1946.—Fig. 5. Tree to 25 m. Leaves often clustered toward the branch tips; petioles 3-9 cm long, 1-1.5 mm broad, usually 12-24 the blade length; blades elliptic or elliptic- ovate to elliptic-obovate, acuminate or acute to rounded or emarginate, 6.5-15 cm long, 3-7 cm broad, glabrate, the secondary laterals angled at ca 45° with respect to the primary laterals or irregularly anastomosing, the reticulation prominulous and rather coarse. Flowers several-numerous per cluster, the clusters occasionally closely spaced (seemingly one large cluster below the leaves of the season}; pedi- cels 3-8 mm long, glabrate or pubescent; sepals 1.5-3.2 mm long, rounded or broadly ovate; corolla yellow or greenish-yellow, 5-8.5 mm long, the lobes broadly oblong to obovate, slightly cucullate, imbricate; staminodes squamiform, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, erose, 0.75-1.5 mm long, not more than 1% the length of the staminal filaments; anthers 2.3-3.8 mm long, sagittate at the base; style 2-3 mm long, thickening gradually toward a vitually imperceptible juncture with the ovary, with several longitudinal creases, the stigma inconspicuous, the lobing scarcely evident. Fruit ovoid or ellipsoid, yellowish, apiculate, to 4 cm long and 2.5 cm thick, the flesh scant; seed ellipsoid, 1.5-2.5 cm long, only slightly com- pressed, the scar ovate-ellipsoid, 6-9 mm long. Panama to Oaxaca, Mexico and perhaps occasionally north-westward. cocLÉ: Penonomé & vic, Williams 421 (F, US). Mastichodendron capiri var. capiri, characterized by pubescent leaves, occurs primarily from Oaxaca to Nayarit, Mexico. [Vor. 55 158 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN g. 5. Vier due sa capiri (DC.) Cronquist var. tempisque (Pittier) Cronquist: A, hab (X14); olla opened to show attachment of stamens and staminodes (X5); C, flower with n od (X6); D, fruit (A). A-C after Godfrey 67075 (MO), Costa Rica; D after Smith 2508 (MO), Guatemala 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 159 6. POUTERIA5 Pouteria Aublet, Hist. Pl. Gui. Fr. 85, pl. 33, 1775. Trees or occasionally shrubs, lacking spines. Leaves alternate or sometimes subopposite; blades membranous or coriaceous, the primary lateral veins strongly arcuate near the margin, not crowded, the secondary laterals often + perpendicu- lar to the primary laterals (at least toward the margin), occasionally irregular. Flowers white to yellow or green, pedicellate or sessile, the fascicles axillary to leaves or leaf-scars; sepals 4-12, uniseriate or biseriate (always 2 + 2); corolla cylindric to subrotate, the lobes 4-6(-7), lacking appendages; staminodes petaloid or more often not petaloid (lance-filiform, linear or small and inconspicuous) ; staminal filaments attached at or near the top of the corolla-tube, less frequently at the middle or near the base (virtually free); ovary pubescent, (1-)4 to 10- loculed, the ovules attached laterally. Fruit fleshy or woody or gall-like; seeds l-several, lacking endosperm, the scar lateral, exceeding the middle of the seed, often broad. About 40 species occur in North America; 15 species, as recognized in this treatment, are found in Panama. Useful reference: Cronquist, A. Studies in the Sapotaceae, II. Survey of the North American genera. Lloydia 9: 241-292, 1946 (Pouteria p. 257-292) a. Sepals 4-7 [unknown in P. lucentifolia but presumably so]. b. Flowers obviously pedicellate (the majority of the pedicels more than 2 mm long c. Leal. blades sericeous beneath. Pubescence pale; corolla-lobes fringed-ciliolate; staminal filaments tadhal at the middle of the corolla-tube 1. P. euryphylla dd. iere rufous; corolla-lobes not ciliolate; staminal filaments ttached at the level of the sinuses 2. P. calistophylla cc. Teal lade deis or pubescent only on the main veins beneath. e. Sepals 2-3 m f. Reticulation of leat- e coarse; fruit 5-seeded, 4-5 cm m ad; eed s P. ucentifolia ff. Retieulation a Teaf- blades fine; fruit l-seeded, less than 9 c ; seed s ^d 10 mm broad 4, P. stipitata ee. Sepals d: 12 mm g. Secondary ees veins without specific orientation Cw rly anastomosing) ; sepals 4; corola glabrous externally "E P unn gg. Secondary laterals + perpendicular to the primary ME. nd p to ne other; sepals (4)5-6; corolla sparsely sericeous- gose externally P. ene bb. = i or subsessile (the majority of the pedicels less than 2 m "Although Cronquist’s study of Pouteria is a careful and invaluable revision, the limited amount of herbarium material available precludes, even now, the possibility of i O the type collection and the complete morphology of the flower and/or fruit remains un- known for several, e.g. P. cooperi, P. sambuensis, P. lucentifolia. The key to species should be regarded as only a tentative guide. [Vor. 55 160 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN h. a * ieu tube shorter than bra corolla-lobes long; secondary lateral veins pint an- dine rather coarse; outer sepals ovate, the oblon spatulate; corolla tubular or campanulate; ovary 4- loela aor P. ahiricana . Petioles 15-33 mm long; secondary laterals fine, close, regularly disposed (though sinuous); all sepals ovate; corolla subrotate; ovary 5-locu P. subrotata hh. Sepals 4, 6 or 7; corolla-tube exceeding the corolla-lobes juninown in P. sambuensis j. Sepals 6-7; coro rolla- lobes 5; staminal ean attached at the top of the corolla-tube; fruit pyriform or obovoid ....... ere 9. P. sclerocarpa . Sepals and corolla-lobes 4; staminal flam nts attached at th middle or base of the corolla- iu fruit oblate- = to ellipsoid [only sepal characters matte . sambuensi . Iry Fruit conspicuously 10. P. sambuensis e glabrate in age); outer spal ovate and finely rufescent, the i -3 mm Ms staminal filaments e at the base of the ee P. stylosa : Leaf- blades glabrate; sepals all += s the outer soon glabrate; corolla 4.5-8 mm long; staminal filaments at- tachcd at the middle of the corolla- “tube or slightly below 12. P. caimito — — aa. pue 8-12 or m Secondary keal veins mostly perpendicular to the primary laterals, decidedly more D than the e peur sepals conspicuously obose ene 13 P. sapota nn. Primary laterals 12-20 pair; sepals entire or scarcely emarginate; fruit obovoid, yellowish-green, the surface irregularly wrinkled (at least in herbarium specimens) and also mealy roughened ...... 14. P. fossicola Secondary laterals raher dul disposed, scarcely more prominen than. the coarse reticulum; sepals glabrous; fruit woody ................... 15. P. cooperi or more. deeply bilobed at the apex; fruit ellipsoid to ovoid or su d m 3 1. Pouteria euryphylla (Standley) Baehni, Candollea 9: 249, 1942.6 “Tree about 15 m high; leaves elliptic or elliptic-obovate, rather abruptly and narrowly acuminate, about 10-22 cm long, 4-12 cm wide, glabrous above, very closely and finely sericeous-strigose with pale hairs beneath; primary lateral veins about 9-13 pair, not becoming crowded and obscure near the base of the blade, as they do in many species; secondary lateral veins, except those near the midrib, nearly perpendicular to the primary ones, but also somewhat sinuous and often branched; petioles about 1.5-6 cm long; flowers few in the axils, the closely seri- ceous-strigose pedicels about 4-5 mm long; sepals 4, about 3.5 mm long, broadly elliptic-ovate, the outer closely hairy on the back, the inner glabrous except for a strip down the middle of the back; corolla about 3.7-4.5 mm long, the lobes a little shorter than the tube, evidently fringed-ciliolate; filaments attached about ‘Quotation ae are used for descriptions when material was extremely poor or not ipe for study and the text is a direct quote from Cronquist’s descriptions (Lloydia : 251-292, 1946). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 161 at the middle of the corolla-tube, and trace raised and conspicuous to the base; anthers about 1 mm long, short-cuspidate; staminodes about 1 mm long, triangular- lanceolate, ciliolate like the corolla-lobes, and alternating with them, nearly or quite in the same series; ovary densely hairy, 4-loculate, the style a little over 2 mm long; fruit unknown." pude bud n ii E collection. a Camp on Chiriquí Trail at 1250 ft, Almirante region, Cooper 6l. 1 y E ae NÝ; not seen). 2. Pouteria calistophylla (Standley) Baehni, Candollea 9: 419, 1942. Tree ca 20 m high. Leaves with petioles 1-3 cm long; blades obovate or ellip- tic-obovate, acuminate, 10-22 cm long, 4.5-10 cm broad, glabrous above, rufous- sericeous-tomentulose beneath (the pubescence mostly appressed), the primary laterals 12-22 pair, prominently raised below, the secondary laterals (except the 2-3 most medial ones) subperpendicular to the primary laterals (although some- what sinuous), sometimes obscured beneath by pubescence, the reticulation sub- obscure. “Well-developed flowers unknown, but a very young flower has a stout pedicel 5 mm long, with 5 sepals and a 5-lobed corolla, the filaments attached at the level of the sinuses, the staminodes narrow, approximately triangular- lanceolate; an overmature flower has 5 deltoid-ovate very firm sepals about 2 mm long, the ovary parasitized, probably originally 2-loculate; fruit unknown.” le only from the type collection. CAS DEL TORO: region of Almirante, Cricamola Valley, Cooper 481 (holotype F, not seen; pes US). 3. Pouteria lucentifolia (Standley) Baehni, Candollea 9: 424, 1942. Lucuma pentasperma Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4: 251, 1929. Pouteria pentasperma (Standley) Baehni, Candollea 9: 353, 1942 Tree ca 11 m high. Leaves with petioles 8-24 mm long; blades elliptic-obovate, acuminate or occasionally obtuse or acute, 7-25 cm long, 3.3-10 cm broad, lustrous, glabrous or occasionally sparsely hirsutulous on the midrib beneath, the primary lateral veins 8-15 pair, the secondary laterals prominent below and often slightly raised, becoming + perpendicular to the primary laterals toward the margin al- though somewhat irregularly anastomosing, the reticulation coarse, often prominent below. “Flowers unknown, but a young developing fruit has a thick pedicel 5 mm long and nearly glabrous ovate sepals 3 mm long; pedicels evidently not elongating in fruit.” Fruit golden-brown, mealy-roughened, globose, 4-5 cm in diam, the fruiting pedicel 5-6 mm broad; seeds 5, ellipsoidal, strongly flattened, 2.5-3.5 cm long, 1.3-1.6 cm broad, lustrous-brown, the seed-coat 0.4-0.6 mm thick, the scar linear, 1.5-2 mm broad. extending the length of the seed. = Costa Rica and Panama. EL TORO: region of Almirante, Cooper 369 (holotype of Lucuma pentasperma F, ue seen; pm A); Chanauincls "Valley, Dunlap 591 (F). 4. Pouteria stipitata Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 265, 1946. Tree to 10 m. Leaves with petioles 4-17 mm long; blades narrowly obovate to elliptic, acuminate, 5.5-13 cm long, 2-45 cm broad, glabrate or appressed- [Vor. 55 162 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN pubescent along the main veins beneath, the primary laterals 7-11 pair, the sec- ondary laterals conspicuous but often irregularly anastomosing, sometimes be- coming + perpendicular to the primary laterals toward the margin, the reticula- tion fine. Flowers fasciculate at defoliated nodes; pedicels 2-5 mm long; sepals 4-5, suborbicular or broadly ovate, 2-2.5 mm long, finely strigulose to glabrate; corolla thin, 2.4-3.2 mm long, the lobes 4, subrectangular, 0.7-1.2 mm long, fringed- hairy on the margin; staminodes oblong-spatulate, 0.3 mm long, marginally fringed-hairy (especially near the tip); staminal filaments attached at the middle of the corolla-tube; ovary 4-locular, densely ascending-hirsute externally with pale trichomes, the style glabrous, 1-1.5 mm long. Fruit yellow, finely warty- roughened, the body ellipsoid or obliquely-ellipsoid, 2-2.5 cm long, ca 1.6 cm broad, constricted basally to a stipe ca 7 mm long and 3 mm broad; seed 1, ellipsoid, ca 1.5 em long, not compressed, the scar elliptic-obovate, 8-10 mm broad, extend- ing the length of the seed. Panama; known only from Barro Colorado Island and the Perlas Archipelago. ANAL ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Shattuck 1125 (F), Zetek 4693 (holotype F). PANAMA: San José I, Erlanson 324 (GH, US), Johnston 634 (GH, MO, US), 1291 (GH). 5. Pouteria dominigensis (Gaertner f.) Baehni var. dominigensis, Lloydia 9: 218, 1946 Lucuma serpentaria H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 242, 1819. Tree to 10 m. Leaves with petioles 0.5-2 cm long; blades obovate-oblanceolate, rounded to subacute, 4-13 cm long, 1.8-6 cm broad, glabrate except when very young, lustrous, usually conspicuously reticulate-veiny on both sides, the primary laterals less than 1 cm apart, the secondary laterals without specific orientation, sometimes subequalling the primary laterals. Flowers l-several per axil; pedicels 3-8 mm long; sepals 4 (2 + 2), 4-9 mm long, subequal, ovate, the outer finely appressed-rufous-sericeous, the inner similarly pubescent down the middle, other- wise glabrous; corolla cylindric, yellow or white, minutely papillose but glabrous, 8-16 mm long, the tube comprising ca 2⁄4 of the total length, the lobes (5)6, = oblong; staminodes linear-subulate, ca 3 mm long; staminal filaments 1-2 mm long, attached at the top of the tube, the anthers 1.3-2 mm long; ovary densely rufous-pubescent, (5)6(-8)-loculed, the style 6-11 mm long, glabrous except at the base. Fruit yellow, fleshy, oblate, 2-5 cm long, 3-6 cm broad, the base of the persistent style surrounded by a conspicuous light-colored areola 1-2 cm broad; seeds l-several, 1-3 cm long, the scar 3-10 mm broad. est Indies and southern Florida; cultivated in the Canal Zon CANAL ZONE: s. loc, Johansen 36 (F); Ancon, Mell s.n. (F); Balboa, - 26894 (F), 30859 (F). The other variety of P. dominigensis, var. cuprea (Urban & Ekman) Cron- quist, is apparently limited to Haiti and the Dominican Republic and is distin- guished by the leaves which are strongly rufous-strigose beneath or only tardily glabrate. 6. Pouteria campechiana(H.B.K) Baehni, Candollea 9: 398, 1942.—Fig. 6. Lucuma salicifolia H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 241, 1819. 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) 163 Fig. 6. Pouteria campechiana (H.B.K.) Baehni: A, habit (X15); B, corolla opened to show attachment of "rs mens and staminodes (X4); C, flower with corolla removed (X315); D, fruit (X34); seed (X14). A after Piper 6027 (F); B-C after Palmer 386 (MO), Mexico; D after ae 9185 (MO), Mexico; E after Allen 2609 (F). [Vor. 55 164 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN L. glabrifolia Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 20: 481, 1922 Pouteria glabrifolia (Pittier) Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 282, 1946. Tree to 25 m. Leaves with petioles 6-33 mm long; blades oblanceolate or narrowly obovate to elliptic, often acuminate but sometimes acute or broadly obtuse or virtually rounded, 6.5-30 cm long, 2-8.5 cm broad, glabrous, the sec- ondary laterals subparallel, + perpendicular to the primary laterals (the 3-4 most medial secondary laterals rather strongly arcuate and joining the midvein), the reticulation fine, prominent to subobscure. Flowers 1-9 per leaf-axil; pedicels -17 mm long; sepals (4)5-6, ovate (sometimes very broadly so), appressed- puberulent externally, 4-12 mm long, the innermost the longest; corolla cylindric, 7-16 mm long, sparsely to moderately sericeous-strigose externally (glabrous toward the lobe-margins and on the lower portion of the tube), the tube comprising l5-2/5 of the total length, the lobes (4)5(-7), oblong; staminodes narrowly linear- lanceolate, often minutely papillose, 2.5-5 mm long; staminal filaments attached slightly below the top of the tube, ca 1.5 mm long, the anthers ca 2 mm long; ovary densely rufous-pubescent, usually 5-locular, the style 5-12 mm long, glabrous except at the base but minutely papillose, the stigma subcapitate, usually 5-lobed. Fruit edible, subglobose or pyriform, apiculate, brown to orange or yellow at maturity, to 7 cm long and broad, the pulp orange or yellow; seeds 1-4, brown, polished, 2-4 cm long, the scar 1-2 cm broad, extending the entire length. Mexico (as far north as Colima and San Luis Potosi) to Panama; also in Cuba and the Florida Keys but probably introduced. CANAL ZONE: vic of Ancon, Piper 6027 (F, US). cocré: Penonomé & vic, Williams 56 (US). coLon: vic of Donoso, Holdridge 6202 (MO). panrw: Casaya I, Duke 10374 (MO); vic of Pifias, Duke 10589 (MO); forests around Pinogana, Pittier 6542 (holotype i P. glabrifolia US; isotypes F, GH); 2 mi E of Santa Fé, Tyson et al. 4839 d NAMA: Trapiche I, Allen 2609 (F), 2627 (F); Chepillo I, Duke 10320 (MO); Saboga Duke 10343 (MO); San José I, Erlanson 201 (US), 235 (US), 396 (US), Pon. 2 (MO, US), 733 (MO, US), 1171 (MO, US). Though pointing to a close relationship, Cronquist (Lloydia 9: 282, 1946) considered P. glabrifolia distinct from P. campechiana by virtue of its larger flowers with corollas more loosely hairy on the back. However, I find nothing distinctive in the corolla pubescence of the type of P. glabrifolia and, save for the slightly larger flowers, it would seem to be a typical specimen of P. campechiana. 7. Pouteria chiricana (Standley) Baehni, Candollea 9: 421, 1942. Tree to 30 m. Leaves with petioles 6-17 mm long; blades elliptic or oblong- elliptic to somewhat obovate, acuminate, 8-16 cm long, 2.5-6.2 cm broad, glabrous or sparsely sericeous below along the midrib, usually conspicuously reticulate- veiny beneath, the secondary laterals irregularly anastomosing, often slightly raised below. Flowers subsessile in small axillary clusters; sepals 5, 2.2-2.6 mm long, closely pubescent, the outer ovate, the inner oblong-spatulate; corolla tubular or campanulate, 3-3.2 mm long, the lobes 5, ca 2 mm long, rounded; staminodes small and inconspicuous; ovary 4-locular. Fruit ca 3.5 cm long, broadly ellipsoid, smooth, l-seeded, narrowed to a + definite, short and broad, stipitate base; seed ellipsoid, ca 2.4 cm long and 1.8 cm broad, the seed-coat dull, with a fine raised 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) 165 honeycomb pattern on the external surface, 0.5-0.7 mm thick, the scar oblanceolate, ca 8 mm broad, extending the length of the seed. Panama. BOCAS DEL TORO: region of Almirante, Cooper 457 (F). currigui: Progreso, Cooper & Slater 230 (A, US), 254 (holotype F, isotype Y; not seen). 8. Pouteria subrotata Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 277, 1946. Tree 10-15 m high, the limbs and branchlets erect. Leaves with petioles 1.5- 3.3 cm long; blades obovate to elliptic-obovate, acuminate, 10-23 cm long, 5-11.5 cm broad, glabrous above, glabrous or sparsely strigulose below (the trichomes scattered and not concentrated along the main veins), not conspicuously reticulate- veiny, the primary lateral veins prominent, 8-11 pair, the secondary laterals nu- merous, fine, close, sinuous but regularly disposed and subperpendicular to the primary laterals except near the midrib (there strongly curved). Flowers subsessile (pedicels to 2 mm), clustered in leaf-axils and at defoliated nodes; sepals 5, ovate, 1.7-2 mm long, densely appressed-puberulent externally (the margins of the inner sepals glabrous), more sparsely pubescent within; corolla white, subrotate, 3.5-3.8 mm long, the lobes 5, 2.5-3.1 mm long, ovate-oblong, sparsely to moderately ap- pressed-sericeous externally except near the margins; staminodes linear-filiform, ca 2 mm long; staminal filaments 1.7-1.9 mm long, attached at the base of the corolla-lobes, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary densely appressed-white-sericeous, 5-locular, the style stout, 1.5-2.5 mm long, glabrous except at the base. Fruit green or yellow-green, turning red, oblong-ellipsoid, 2-2.5 cm long, ca 1.2 cm broad, l-seeded, the flesh scant; seed ellipsoid, ca 2 cm long, filling the fruit, the scar 8-9 mm broad, extending the length of the seed. iain di ARIEN; Río Paya, Duke & Kirkbride 14073 (MO); forests around Pinogana, Pittier 6548 ee US). 9. Pouteria sclerocarpa (Pittier) Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 287, 1946. Tree to 25 m. Leaves with petioles 1-2.2 cm long; blades rather narrowly elliptic-obovate, acuminate, 10-25 cm long, 4-8 cm broad, glabrous, the primary laterals 13-20 pair, the more marginal secondary laterals + perpendicular to the primary laterals, the reticulum slightly raised beneath. Flowers subsessile (pedi- cels to 2 mm long), several per fascicle, the fascicles occurring at defoliated nodes; sepals 6-7, ovate, the 2 outermost sepals appressed-pubescent externally, 3-4 mm long, the inner sepals glabrate externally and 5-6.5 mm long, all sepals. pubescent within; corolla 6-8 mm long, the tube comprising ca 24 of the total length, the lobes 5, ovate; staminodes ca 2 mm long, petaloid, narrowly ovate, subtruncate; staminal filaments attached at the top of the corolla-tube, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary 5-locular, densely ascending-sericeous externally, the style glabrous, 9-7 mm long, the stigma 5-lobed. Fruit yellow, sclerous, pyriform to obovoid, somewhat narrowed toward the base, 5-7.5 cm long, 3-4.5 cm broad; seed solitary, to 4 cm long and 2.5 em broad, the large scar extending its full length. Known only from the type collection. SAN BLAS: plain of Sperdi, nr Puerto Obaldía, Pittier 4357 (holotype US, isotype MO). [Vor. 55 166 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 10. Pouteria sambuensis (Pittier) Baehni, Candollea 9: 250, 1942. Labatia sambuensis (Pittier) Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 20: 481, 1922. “Tree 10 m high; leaves glabrous, oblanceolate to obovate, acute at the base, acuminate at the tip, mostly 20-25 cm long and 5-9 cm wide; primary lateral veins about 13-15 pair; secondary lateral veins prominent, anastomosing, some- what irregular; petioles short, about 1-1.5 cm long; sepals 4, presumably large; other flower parts unknown; fruit sessile or subsessile, fleshy, densely hairy, ovoid, about 5.5 cm long, 4 cm thick, obscurely sulcate from base to top." — only from the type collection. RIEN: foothills of the Garagará Mts, Sambi Valley, Pittier 5621 (holotype US, ea p not seen). 11. Pouteria stylosa (Pierre) Dubard, Not. Syst. 1: 381, 1909. Lucuma standleyana Pittier, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 18: 166, 1916. Labatia standleyana (Pittier) Pittier, loc. cit. 20: 481, 1922. Pouteria standleyana (Pittier) Baehni, Candollea 9: 255, 1942. Tree to 7 m. Leaves with petioles 3-10 mm long; blades elliptic to narrowly obovate, acuminate, 7-20 cm long, 2.5-7 cm broad, glabrous above, finely and closely appressed-sericeous below (the trichomes white to slightly fulvous) or sometimes glabrate in age, the primary laterals 10-20 pair, the more marginal secondary laterals perpendicular to the primary laterals, the more medial skewed at about 45°, the reticulation more apparent above. Flowers axillary to- leaves and leaf-scars, l-several per axil, sessile (often several borne on a low, woody cushion); sepals 4 (2 + 2), 2.5-3.6 mm long, the outer broadly ovate and finely rufescent, the inner rather narrowly oblong-spatulate and glabrous except down the middle; corolla cylindric, glabrous, 2.5-3 mm long, the tube 24 of the total length or more, the lobes 4, broad, subtruncate or slightly emarginate; staminodes lanceolate, 0.7-0.8 mm long; staminal filaments attached at the base of the corolla- tube; ovary densely ascending-rufescent, 4 to 6-locular, the style usually glabrous, 1-2 mm long, the stigma 4 to 6-lobed, the lobes readily evident. Fruit woody, glabrous, ca 3 cm long and 3.5 cm broad; seeds 2, to 2 cm long and 1.6 cm broad, somewhat compressed, the seed-coat 1-2 mm thick, firmly grown to the pericarp. Panama; perhaps also Honduras, Costa Rica and Colombia. BOCAS DEL TORO: region of Almirante, ng e 10 mi above Holstein, Nay ides 09 (F). CANAL ZONE: area W of Limon Bay, Gatun Locks & See Lake, Johns 1820 (A, MO); Mamei Hill, Pittier 3807 (holo ed of eum a standelya a US, not seen; isotype F). PANAMA: vic of El Cermeño, Allen 2572 (F), "Zetek 4804 (P: Vista Alegre, Rio Aguacate, 2 mi beyond Arraijan, Zetek 551 5 (F, US). PRoviNCE UNKNOWN: s. loc., Hayes 67 (type, not seen). Cronquist (Lloydia 9: 273, 1946) states that several sterile specimens from Costa Rica and Honduras (Standley 40129, 54634, 55606 & 55816, all F) resemble this species but have much larger (to 50 cm long and 20 cm broad) and less markedly acuminate leaves possesing 20-40 pairs of primary lateral veins and petioles 2-7 cm long. He indicates that these plants may prove to represent a distinct species when better known. I have seen a similar specimen from Colombia (Killip et al. 38307 US). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae) 167 12. Pouteria caimito (Ruiz & Pavon) Radlkofer, Stizungsb. Akad. Wissens. München 12: 333, 1882. Tree to 30 m. Leaves with petioles 5-17 mm long; blades obovate-oblanceolate to elliptic, acute or acuminate, 5-24 cm long, 2-11 cm broad, glabrate, the sec- ondary laterals without particular orientation, the reticulation close. Flowers I-several per axil, sessile or subsessile (pedicels to 1.5 mm); sepals 4 (2 + 2), 3-45 mm long, ovate to oblong-ovate, the inner appressed-sericeous down the middle, otherwise glabrous, the outer soon glabrate; corolla cylindric-urceolate, glabrous, 4.5-8 mm long, the tube 24 of the total length, the lobes 4; staminodes linear, flattened, ca 1.5 mm long; staminal filaments ca 2 mm long, attached at the middle of the corolla-tube or slightly below, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary 4-locular, densely ascending-sericeous externally (the trichomes 1-2 mm long), the style glabrous, 2-4.5 mm long. Fruit yellow, fleshy, globose to ellipsoid, 5-10 cm long, 4-8 cm broad; seeds 1-4, the scar extending the entire length. Brazil and Peru to Trinidad and southern Panama. DARIEN: Sambü River, Pittier 5555 (F, US). 13. Pouteria sapota (Jacquin) Moore & Stearn, Taxon 16: 383, 19677. un mammosum (L.) Pierre in Urban, Symb. Antill. 5: 97, 1904, auct. quoad esc. Tree to 30 m. Leaves clustered toward the branch ends, the branch ends often fulvous-tomentose; petioles 1-4.5 cm long; blades oblanceolate or obovate, often acuminate, 10-40 cm long, 4-14 cm broad, glabrate or tawny-sericeous below along the midvein and primary laterals, the primary laterals 20-50 pair, the secondary laterals essentially perpendicular to and connecting the primary laterals, more prominent than the close reticulum. Flowers subsessile (pedicels to 2 mm long), clustered at defoliated nodes, each cluster often borne on a small woody cushion; sepals 8-12, spirally imbricate, + orbicular, densely appressed-sericeous externally except at the margins (there entirely glabrous), often emarginate or more deeply bilobed at the apex, 2-6 mm long, the innermost the longest; corolla + cylindric, 6-10 mm long, the tube comprising 24-4 of the length, the lobes 4-5, oblong- obovate, appressed-sericeous except at the margins; staminodes linear-lanceolate, 2-3 mm long; staminal filaments attached at the top of the tube, 2-3.5 mm long, the anthers ca 2 mm long; ovary densely ascending-sericeous, 5-locular, the style 3.5-7 mm long, often pubescent on the basal 14-14, the stigma 5-lobed. Fruit fleshy, ellipsoid or ovoid or subglobose, mealy-roughened, 8-20 cm long, brown, the pulp yellow to red or pink, often milky; seed 1, ellipsoid, not compressed, often 5-6 cm long, lustrous brown, the elliptic or obovate scar extending the entire length, ca 2-2.5 cm broad. Southern Mexico to northern South America and the West Indies; widely ipis: Man natural range uncertain. NAL ZONE: ló-l mi below Chilibre, Seibert 1517 (MO, US); Balboa, Standley 26080 (US). peer banks of Río Tabasará, on hwy, Woodson et al. 441 (MO). coc: "For a discussion of nomenclature and complete list of synonyms of P. sapota see Moore & Stearn, Taxon 16: 382-395, 1967. [Vor. 55 168 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN vic of Ola, Pittier 5089 (US). HERRERA: rd betw Las Minas & Pesé, Duke 12307 (MO). PANAMA: Laguna de Portala, nr Chepo, Pittier 4628 (US); Taboga I, Standley 27916 (US). SAN BLAS: Ailigandi, eia 6849 (MO); mainland opposite Ailigandi, from mouth of Ailigandi River to 2.5 mi inland, Lewis et al. 163 (MO). PROVINCE UNKNOWN: s. loc., Duchassaing s.n. (F-Iragment). Pouteria sapota, like several other members of the Sapotaceae valued for their edible fruits or other uses, has numerous common names, the most frequent prob- ably being "sapote." 'The fruit is a favorite among natives throughout tropical America and is eaten raw or used to make sherbets, preserves and beverages. 14. Pouteria fossicola Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 289, 1946. Tree 10 m high. Leaves + clustered toward the branch tips; petioles 1.2-4 cm long; blades obovate, often acuminate, 8-30 cm long, 4-13 cm broad, finely white-strigulose on the main veins beneath, sometimes also with a few similar hairs scattered over the lower and occasionally the upper surface, the primary laterals 12-20 pair, the secondary laterals regularly disposed, mostly perpendicular to the primary laterals, decidedly more conspicuous than the fine reticulum. Flow- ers clustered at defoliated nodes; pedicels ca 5 mm long; sepals ca 8, broad, densely appressed-grayish-sericeous dorsally except for thin glabrous margins, rounded or scarcely emarginate, spirally arranged, increasing the size centripetally, the largest ca 6 mm long; other flower parts unknown. Fruit obovoid, fleshy, 8.5 cm long, 45 cm broad, yellow-green, the surface irregularly wrinkled (at least in herbarium specimens) and also mealy-roughened; seed 1, obovoid, not compressed, 7 cm long, 3.5 cm broad, the scar obovate, basally acuminate, 3 cm broad, extend- ing the length of the seed, the seed-coat firm, shiny, yellowish-tan. Known only from the type localit CANAL ZONE: Barro Colorado I, Bian 583 (A, F), Salvoza 999 (holotype A), Zetek 3870 (F). 15. Pouteria cooperi Cronquist, Lloydia 9: 291, 1946. Tree ca 15 m high. Leaves with petioles 0.7-3.1 cm long; blades elliptic or narrowly obovate, acuminate, 8-17 cm long, 3-7 cm broad, loosely hirsutulous on the main veins beneath, in addition with a few scattered hairs on the lower surface, the primary laterals 8-13 pair, the secondary laterals irregularly anas- tomosing or occasionally + perpendicular to the primary laterals, scarcely more prominent than the coarse reticulum. “Flowers (separately preserved) apparently sessile or nearly so; calyx of about 12 or perhaps more thick and fleshy broad sepals, increasing in size centripetally, the inner about 4-5 mm long when dry, all finely warty-wrinkled when dry, otherwise apparently glabrous, with narrow thin margins; other flower-parts unknown; fruit reputedly woody.’ Known = from the type collection. EL TORO: region of Almirante, Cricamola Valley, Holstein farm, Cooper 499 ie NY, acl seen; isotypes F, US). 1968] FLORA OF PANAMA (Family 154. Sapotaceae ) INDEX or Latin Names 169 Numbers in boldface type refer to descriptions; numbers in roman type refer to synonyms; numbers with dagger (t) refer to names incidentally mentioned. Achras calcicola 147, 149+ panamensis ce 1541 persimilis —subsp. persimilis 152 —subsp. spose 154t Calocarpum mam m I Chrysophyllum 154 1 d 154 —var. paso vll 154, 1561 Dipholis és 1521 minutiflora 151 Labat sam cene 166 standleyana 166 Lucuma glabrifolia 164 pentasperma 161 salicifolia 162 standelyana 166 darienensis 147 meridionalis 149 BEP 149 149 Mean 157 capiri —var. a Lott —var. tem isque 15 Mimusops dere 147 Pouteria 159 caimito 167 calistophylla 161 a. ae 162, 164+ chiric 16 cooper Sot 168 ominigensis —var. cuprea 162+ —var. dominigensis 162 tata 165 Sapotaceae 145, 1467, 1477, 1504, 1547, I57f, 1591, 1681 1521, T i p E - ER y EU = .*r i | Wh LI -i L ! Ur - 7 E B r= i = = P j a á ! i - a 1 = um "m s j | £ - i i] I = _- $ t ] t » s ^ - = ! i LC um za } i * 1 i R 1 a u - i s Bis i E i i r i i - P m " ' í i E a j — i i i 1 BD — í 3 | ' i » ] 1 [ " i E i » l i , T 2 = "P à t - ' 27 — mi j — í i E » " La M i - : i 1 "E d Cum T _ + d i A ) i = A | 1 - ) m LA = x = n i T » i m T 1 r m J - i en 21 zi = Li 1 Ea 1 æ mt - 3 - i i j E B i d n "T i - i ] z Ei D i j f i = 5 i H ' A E M - = = { si 1 t n rn | f t i P D a) | m i Ls i | - A - j j [e i " i " » " í ] i | - - i = 7 ^ [ [| I ij = í } f Da » 5 | ' É [ LN E i , a a ox —- ' > LU «> ~ 7, » - i t æ ! E t " f : "s x | j í = i = eUa E NL - | ig d * D - i aj ; å i j D ] i ! 1 E d . . i i A. i t , P| i t - f , — 1 i l K f i ee e v zi n i e i = i j i] i 7 r - j à 1 i= i = i pd " j = | < = 3 UE on a p EJ -— " i - = " i i T i Li " P i = x í i Í j [ - , = - E I ~ 3 I ! a m " - ! " - i B 1 ES | = loc. | ' Bs b X y -. s Í ' į a = La i »" * E "m 7 f = LI -- "4 " - sbg . E - â ia ci i = -a s * i ^ - i i p. . H ! - j B i n “ » i m " " i Í i P" E i - " i L i [ 7. L LI = e ru - ! f 1 4 i i j i C a s » i ] i P 2 k T i i i y K I~ } m ' E. d »" - ~ 1? mJ - 4 z " - m 1 T " E- = mm " i A ix = a : ~~ - hi - = á i R- =. E ° E E i ‘ LL E i ^ 1 E - - 3 TL i " E * i I P A H | 55. C- » a [ "^ ae iw — UU ee — Re "— — The previous issue E the ANNALS OF THE Missouni BoTanicaL GARDEN, Vol. 55, No. 1, p. 1-80, was published on September 9, 1968. PUBLISHED BY THE een OF TRUSTEES OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Micra UNIVERSITY PRESS . LOUIS, MISSOURI 63110 AN NALS VOLUME 55 1968 OF THE NUMBER 3 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN CONTENTS The Flora of Panama by Walter H. Lewis, The Flora of the Galápagos Islands by Duncan M. Porter, The Illustrated Flora of Illinois by Robert H. Mohlenbrock, Flora North America Project by Stanwyn G. Shetler ... 171-178 Experimental studies of the species concept by Edgar Anderson 179-192 Interspecific relationships in the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula omplex by A. Murray Evans 193-293 Palynotaxonomic study of the Phytolaccaceae by Joan W. Nowicke 294-364 Two new species of Polygala endemic to Panama by Walter H. Lewis 365-367 Psidium (Myrtaceae) in the Galápagos Islands by Duncan M. Porter Loss 308-37 | A revision of the Panamanian species of Rondeletia (Rubiaceae) by Joseph H. Kirkbride, Jr. 372-391 A new species of Cucurbifa from Ecuador by Hugh C. Cutler and Thomas W. Whitaker 392-396 NCTES 397-400 Hedyotis acerosa var. bigelovii, comb. nov. (Rubiaceae) 397. Sisyrinchum dimorphum (Iridaceae), a new species from Texas and Mexico 397. Notes on some American species of Voyria (Gentianaceae) 398-400. The First Jesse M. Greenman Award 400. Index to Volume 55 ...... 401-402 ANNALS VOLUME 55 of the NUMBER 3 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN A journal containing scientific contributions from the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Department of Botany of Washington Uni- versity in affiliation with the Missouri Botanical Garden. Outside contributions in systematic botany and allied fields will also be con- sidered. These papers are subject to a charge of $25 per printed page. EDITORIAL COMMITTEE TER H. Lewis, Editor Missouri Botanical Gi Garden & Washington P usum Suz M. HurszN, Assistant to the Edito Missouri Botanical Garden Derex Burcu, Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington University Joun D. Dwyer, Missouri Botanical Garden & St. Louis University Duncan M. Porter, Missouri Botanical Garden & Washington University Information Tue ANNALS OF THE Missounr BOTANICAL GARDEN appears three times during the calendar year. Three numbers totaling about 400 pages constitute a volum Beginning with Volume 53, 1966: Subscription Price $15.00 per volume Single Numbers 5.50 each Contents of previous issues of the ANNALS or THE Missovuni BOTANICAL GanDEN are listed in the Agricultural Index, published by the H. W. Wilson Company. Beginning June 1, 1962 the Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, Inc., 31 East 10th St., New York 3, N. Y., became sole agent for the ANNALS OF THE ‘Missourt BOTANICAL GARDEN ^i Agency handles all subscriptions, all claims begin- ning with vo olume O (1963) and all T for back issues. Out-of-print numbers will be RE dra as may be requir Under the arrangement with the Stechert-Hafner Service Agency, the Agency handles also all purchases of any portion of the Annars subseries known as the “Flora of Panama.’ All matters regarding exchange continue to be handled by the Missouri Botanical Garden, 2315 Tower Grove Ave, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, as in the past. Printed by the Eden Publishing House, St. Louis, Missouri, 63103. ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 of the NUMBER 3 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN THE FLORA OF PANAMA' BY WALTER H. Lewis Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis A pleasurable function Dr. Hugh Cutler gave me today is to introduce to you our first speaker this afternoon, Dr. Duncan M. Porter, our new staff member in the herbarium. But before we hear from him on the Galápagos Island project I want to give you a little propaganda on our own floral project, the Flora of Panama. In general style and approach the two Floras have much in common so I won't spend time on an aspect Dr. Porter will cover, but what I did want to do is to give you a brief history of the Panamanian project, its good and bad points and what value it has been in stimulating related systematic programs. Panama is an exceedingly rich floristic area with large elements of both the Colombian and northern cordilleran floras represented. In its 47,000 square miles we estimate no fewer than 8,000 species. How did the Garden become interested in this piece of the tropics and what are some of the factors relating to the Flora of Panama today? The Garden founded a tropical station in the Canal Zone in 1926, and began a series of expeditions from here in 1934. The first “Contributions toward a Flora . . ." appeared in 1937 with Dr. Robert E. Woodson, Jr. as editor and assisted first by Dr. Russell Seibert and later by Dr. Robert W. Schery. Seven Contributions were published through 1943, chiefly from collections made from 1934 till 1941 by members of the Garden staff (cf. Dwyer, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 51: 109-117, 1964). Earlier, collectors had concentrated their work in the Canal Zone or on off shore islands so what we had in fact was the initiation of the Flora of Panama in 1943, largely based on collections from the Canal Zone plus those from seven years of general collecting, some of it continuous, such as that by Paul H. Allen, but mostly by just periodic visits to Panama. Except for western Chiriquí and the El Valle region, no mountainous area north and west of the Zone was then conveniently accessible so of course little material was collected. The whole area The first of four papers and informal remarks on floristics given at the Missouri Buried Garden's 15th annual symposium on systematics during the afternoon session of € ber 19, 1968. ” The symposium on “The Practical Values of Systematics” was chaired r. Donovan S. Correll, Texas Research Foundation, Renner, and organized by Dr. Hugh C. Cutler of the Missouri Botanical Garden ANN. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55(3): 171-178, 1969. [Vor. 55 172 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN south and east of the Zone to the Colombian border had hardly been visited excepting by Pittier. My intention here is not to go into a long discourse on col- lecting or the lack of it, but rather to give an illustration of when not to start a flora; in this case with well over half of the country not yet visited by a botanist and when the richest area, the mountains, remained virtually untouched. But the Flora was started, ill-conceived in my opinion as a project for 1943, yet what is really worse is that by virtue of its beginning, collecting essentially stopped and was not reactivated until this decade, a lapse of nearly 20 years. It has become quite clear to us what a tragic mistake this was as we now uncover dozens of new species and dozens of generic extensions into Panama, particularly from South America. I think the lesson was learned, albeit the hard way, for apart from the quality of the Flora, which obviously suffered, we ignored the great stimulants to all aspects of an herbarium's operation, namely collecting and exploration. Yet on the basis of our collections since 1959 material has been almost doubled for families still to be treated in the Flora. With them we obviously have a better understand- ing of distribution and ecology of taxa, and a better opportunity for making correct taxonomic judgments. One very positive effect of the Flora both during the non-collecting and current phase has been its role in graduate education. Too few floras, particularly those involving the tropics, have been a part of the academic world where stimulus to graduate training and graduate exposure to floristics is maximumly possible. Fortunately, because of our close association with Washington University, we are currently managing direct graduate participation by insisting that students join one collecting expedition to the tropics, and in our advanced course in taxonomy, that students choose to study a small family as it occurs in Panama. Such exposure may not be very great but we think it sufficient for a student to develop an ap- preciation for what is involved in writing a flora, often his only direct experience with floristics during a graduate career. Apart from collecting and training as significant activities interwoven with our floral project, we have several others I want to mention only briefly. One has been our small help to the University of Panama in establishing their new her- barium (PAN). Miss Mireya Correa, its first curator who was trained at Duke University, arrived in St. Louis yesterday for about two months of study and de- termination of her collections. This perhaps best illustrates our desire to stimulate taxonomic resarch within Panama and to have a long-ranged program based at the University of Panama, now a reality of just a few months. We have for several years discussed the feasibility of including all green ter- restial plants in the Flora and thereby include the bryophytes. Our new Curator of Cryptogams, Dr. Marshall Crosby, will assume this responsibility as soon as our bryophytes are recurated and reorganized. Dr. Crosby comes to us from Duke Uni- versity where he worked under Dr. Louis Anderson. The last example I shall mention is the project of Dr. Thomas Croat who, in collaboration with the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in the Canal Zone, is doing a new concise manual of Barro Colorado Island. Dr. Croat has spent about five months on the Island during the past year collecting and making 1968] FLORISTICS 173 valuable notes on this typical rainforest community (he returned just two days ago brandishing a major leg wound inflicted by a charging peccary!). The manual he hopes to produce will include much needed biological data such as times of flowering and fruiting backed by complete herbarium specimens. I think it is a sad commentary of our manuals from the area that often one cannot associate fruiting material with the flowering specimens; flowers of course are needed for most keys and all too often fruiting specimens just remain undetermined. Dr. Croat plans to make a series of keys for the dominant taxa: to mature fruits, to vegetative parts alone and so forth. These ought to be very helpful for anyone working in the area including, for example, the mammologist who wants to know what his animals are eating . . . and as a matter of record, to help him find an answer provided the initial incentive for this manual. What the program is doing for the Flora of Panama is obvious, but what it will do as a practical guide to the rain- forest plants of Central Panama is even more important. Here then are our activities associated with the Flora, of Panama, but the hard work of putting many of the familial treatments together rests with our new Curator of the Project, Dr. Duncan M. Porter. Dr. Porter comes to us from the Galápagos Islands project under Dr. Ira L. Wiggins, he taught at the University of San Francisco and has his doctorate from Harvard University. It is my distinct pleasure to introduce to you our new Curator of the Flora of Panama and Assistant Professor of Botany at Washington University, Dr. Porter. THE FLORA OF THE GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS' BY Duncan M. PORTER Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis The Galápagos Islands lie astride the equator in the eastern Pacific Ocean, about 500 miles west of Ecuador. This archipelago consists of some 15 larger islands and numerous islets and rocks, covering a land area of approximately 3,000 square miles. The largest island is 75 miles long and 45 miles wide at its broadest. Several of the mountains of the group reach to a height of over 5,000 feet, although most of the land is relatively low. The islands in reality are immense piles of lava projecting out of the ocean, covered with craters, fumaroles, vents, and other volcanic phenomena. Great lava flows extend from the crater rims to the sea, and the area is one of the most vol- canically active in the world. About 1,200 people inhabit the Galápagos. They are concentrated in the few spots where there is either permanent water, or there is sufficient and constant enough rainfall to collect and store in barrels. Water is the great limiting factor '[ should like to acknowledge the many fruitful discussions on this topic with Dr. Ira L. Wiggins, Stanford University. Dr. Wiggins also kindly read the manuscript. [Vor. 55 174 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN on the islands for all forms of life. Permanent water holes are few and far between. The plants depend mainly upon the sporadic rain that usually falls from January to April or May, although plants at higher elevations are bathed in fog almost daily. Most animals obtain their water by eating the plants. Both this scanty rain- fall and the relatively cool climate (the thermometer rarely rises above 85°F) are due to the Humboldt Current, sweeping up from the south along the western edge of South America and bathing the Galápagos shores with the cool waters of the Antarctic Ocean. Scanty and sporadic rainfall, a relatively cool climate, and drying winds have here combined to produce literature’s classic desert islands. Their vegetation is much sparser than one would guess from their geographical position, and the number of species, subspecies, and varieties of vascular plants known to occur here is roughly 700. Two so-called “floras” have been published for the Galápagos Islands in this century: that of B. L. Robinson (Flora of the Galápagos Islands, Proc. Amer. Acad. 38: 77-270, 1902) and that of Alban Stewart (A botanical survey of the Galapagos Islands, Proc. Calif. Acad., ser. 4, 1: 7-288, 1911). In reality both of these works are merely annotated checklists, giving only some synonymy, locality data, and in only a few cases any plant descriptions, and these minimal. At present there is no single publication to which one with an interest in the plants of the Galápagos Islands may refer in order to key out specimens from the archipelago or to determine the currently accepted names to be applied to the plants growing there. In 1924 William Beebe wrote several sentences in his book Galápagos: World's End (Putnam, N. Y.) that still apply to the situation in 1968: “A very thorough list of plants has been published, giving exact distribution, elevation, ecological summary and relative abundance, but, except for the technical names, no hint as to the growths themselves. Professor Wheeler and I were very anxious to identify certain plants because of their relationships to animal organisms, but found it impossible from published works on the Galápagos. ... If explorers would give just a thought to others who might come after, and take the time to write out the simplest kind of a key, it would be a kindness beyond gratitude." Beebe is about to have his wish. Since July 1966 I have been privileged to be associated with Professor Ira L. Wiggins of Stanford University in the writing of a complete flora for the vascular plants of the Galápagos Islands. The Flora of the Galápagos Islands project was instigated by the late Dr. E. Yale Dawson, who was very much interested in the cacti of the archipelago. Upon Dawson's leaving the San Diego Natural History Museum in late 1964, and the consequent loss of institutional backing for his proposed governmental grant, Wiggins took charge of the Flora. Research on the bulk of the project was carried out after Wiggins had taken it over. The project was funded by the National Science Foundation and administered by the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. I was employed by the project for 13 months as a Postdoctoral Assistant. The primary function of a flora is to enable a person unfamiliar with the plants of an area to identify them and to determine the names to be applied to 1968] FLORISTICS 175 them. This we have attempted to do. However, this should not be taken to imply that The Flora of the Galdpagos Islands is only a handbook or manual. It is a comprehensive study of the vascular plants occurring in the archipelago. Not only does the Flora include a detailed description of each taxon of vascular plant known to occur on the islands, it also includes an illustration of at least one representative of each genus, keys to all taxa, complete synonymy (or a reference to where it may be found), citations of herbarium specimens examined, geographical distributions, notes on variation and relationships, and ecological data for every species, sub- species, and variety treated. Our chief concern has been with the plants as they occur in the archipelago. In the main, descriptions are based only upon specimens actually collected in the Galapagos Islands. The overwhelming majority of Galapagos collections are in the herbaria of the California Academy of Sciences, Harvard University, and Stanford University. Specimens in these herbaria and several others have been utilized in the preparation of the Flora. Field studies in the archipelago in 1964 and 1967 have added materially to previous collections and have helped us to gain a first-hand knowledge of the plants. Plants known to occur in the Galápagos Islands are not the only ones included in the Flora. Notes are provided on species reported from the islands, but which are not represented by any known collections. However, such species are not in- cluded in the keys. A number of cultivated plants also are included in the Flora. Some of these, such as Psidium guajava (the cultivated guava), have escaped from cultivation and become established in the native plant communities; others, like Tropaeolum majus (the garden nasturtium), have the capacity to do so; and still others, like Mangifera indica (the mango), may persist after cultivation has ceased and the native vegetation has moved back into the previously disturbed area. Such informa- tion is not usually to be found in a flora, unless an escape is able to reproduce itself in the wild. However, the non-taxonomist in particular is invariably inter- ested in every plant that catches his eye, and the spectacular flowers to be found on many cultivated plants make them the first noticed by many. Thus, The Flora of the Galápagos Islands is written not only for the specialist. A conscious effort has been made to provide a useful guide, not merely for the professional taxonomist, but for anyone interested in the Galápagos flora, whether he be an ecologist, a geologist, a herpetologist, an ornithologist, or a plant taxono- mist; whether he be in the laboratory or in the field. [Vor. 55 176 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN THE ILLUSTRATED FLORA OF ILLINOIS BY Rosert H. MOHLENBROCK Southern Illinois University, Carbondale A multi-volumed work on the complete flora of Illinois is under preparation at Southern Illinois University; I am editor and chief contributor to the series. The work will provide an account of every kind of plant known to occur in Illinois, except bacteria and certain groups of fungi. Keys for identification will be provided, along with the descriptions, synonymy, discussions of ecology and economic uses, chromosome numbers, and distribution maps for each species. In addition, line illustrations of each species, showing diagnostic features, are being prepared by a staff of illustrators. Publication will be by the Southern Illinois University Press. Financing for the project, thus far, has been by the University Press and the Graduate School of Southern Illinois University. A board of advisers has been created to screen the manuscripts and serve as consultants for the project. The board is composed of Dr. Gerald W. Prescott, Michigan State University; Dr. C. J. Alexopoulos, University of Texas; Dr. A. J. Sharp, University of Tennessee; Dr. Rolla M. Tryon, Jr, The Gray Herbarium; and Dr. Robert F. Thorne, Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden. The first volume dealing with the ferns of Illinois appeared in April, 1967. Two volumes on monocots (excluding grasses and sedges) are scheduled for release around August 1, 1969. The storage of the entire flora on magnetic tape is being investigated; computing techniques are already being employed in the recording of distributional data. FLORA NORTH AMERICA PROJECT BY STANWYN G. SHETLER Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Plant taxonomy serves an eminently practical function through floristics. Without the synoptical guides and floras that are the products of floristic research, neither the biologist nor the layman would be able to identify the plants of the earth and to know where each grows. Such diagnostic information is basic on the one hand to further scientific research and on the other hand to wise exploitation of our plant resources to meet human needs. North American taxonomists have just undertaken an immense, new, co- operative effort to compile and integrate our knowledge of the plants of this continent. This effort, estimated to take about 15 years, is called the Flora North America Project. Taxonomists hope that it will become their “Project Synthesis" of the 20th century, providing the organizing theme and the intellectual rationale for the broader, more cooperative approach to floristic-taxonomic research that is necessary to meet the challenges of our ecological age, when society is becoming increasingly more conscious of its natural environment and of the need to control the quality of this environment. Public officials and laymen alike are depending 1968] FLORISTICS 177 on the biologists more than ever for instant facts and correlations concerning our plant and animal resources. Flora North America should fill a great void by provid- ing for the first time in history a concise encyclopedia of all vascular plants in the whole of North America north of Mexico. The preparation of this flora will be accomplished through the cooperative labors of many taxonomists, organized and guided by several committees. Apart from the preparation of the flora itself, a second, supporting objective is to place floristic-taxonomic research on a modern, computerized, information- system basis. FNA must be a computer-age treatise—a taxonomically-structured data bank with an associated package of computer programs (“flora software”) to serve as a “kit of tools” for use in accessing and manipulating the data. The third, intangible goal is to stimulate new interest in taxonomy and the study of the higher levels of biological integration—organisms, species, populations, communities, floras—especially among the coming generations of students who should find in the FNA Project the philosophical rationale, unifying and organizing genius, and advanced technical resources to conceive and carry out taxonomic researches on a scale hitherto impossible. The time is overdue for plant taxonomists, who in a sense have always been the keepers of the botanical data bank, to develop a modern storage and retrieval system using the latest methods of electronic data processing and communication, so that they can regain their historic control of the data bank. Publication has exploded such that it no longer is possible to integrate new information rapidly and concisely by conventional methods and media. Floras and systematic monographs are time-honored, if non-automated, storage and retrieval systems, which through the years the taxonomist has produced as both the means and the ends of his research. In the FNA Project we propose to computerize such systems and thereby to update and extend the concept of the flora or monograph to cover not only the traditional printed book but also today’s dynamic electronic data bank. Output from a data bank can take many forms and present many different kinds of data. FNA output, in addition to the basic identification manual, may include distribution maps, illustrations, glossaries, indices, gazeteers, descriptions, ecological summaries, statistical calculations, phe- netic diagrams, and research reports. Thus, FNA will not be a single publication, embalming the state of knowledge. Instant update, revision, and cumulation will be cardinal attributes of the automated FNA information system. It is expected that the FNA data will be organized into a series of matrices which lend themselves to easy manipulation by computer. Computer programs are being developed to be used as a package or “black box” by taxonomists for performing automatically many of the purely mechanical chores of compiling, correlating, and editing floristic-taxonomic data. Some of the programs will enable the initiated user to construct by machine his own, up-to-the-minute identification keys, descriptions, maps, etc, from the data matrices. Time-share use of the computer will be exploited for on-line identification of plants from remote termi- nals. Data matrices and flora software will be constructed to serve not only the scientific research purposes of the taxonomists but also the practical needs of other [Vor. 55 178 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN scientists and laymen. FNA should help greatly to bridge the gap between scientist and layman. The electronic methods also should eliminate or simplify many of the routine labors which dilute the basic intellectual content of taxonomy. Then the taxonomist can be more scholar and less curator than in the past. EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE SPECIES CONCEPT By EDGAR ANDERSON Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis This review is dedicated to Dr. J. M. Greenman, former Curator of the Mis- souri Botanical Garden Herbarium and my colleague during much of the time these studies got underway. In answering my naive questions about the species problem, he frequently quoted to me the statement “Species are but judgments." It was due to him that I became fascinated with the problem of finding factual evidence as to the ways in which such judgments are formed. Figure 1 illustrates two extreme uses of the word SPECIES in discussions of the species problem. Such discussions are often at cross purposes because those participating are unaware of these differences. mm mm Fig. 1. Diagram of two extreme uses of the word Species. The diagram shows three taxa of one genus, they may be species, subspecies, or formae but each of the three is represented by individual plants or animals which have certain features in common. This is symbolized in the diagram by 5 individuals of taxon A with no markings, 5 of taxon B with dots and 5 of taxon C with crosses. At the top of the figure are symbolic representations of two gentle- men, Mr. X and Mr. Z, each of whom has been studying the 15 specimens. Above Mr. X's head is symbolized his concept of the taxonomic relationship of A, B, and C. Mr. Z's concept is diagrammed in a similar manner. The diagram would be exactly the same if the two men were in perfect agreement as to the classification of the 15 specimens or if they disagreed in part, or completely. Mr. X, for example, might feel that A with no markings should be species A, and that B and C were ANN. Missouri Bor. Garb. 55(3): 179-192, 1969. [Vor. 55 180 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN differing forms of that species. Mr. Z might think that all the differences among the 15 specimens were too minor for taxonomic recognition. In any such example, however, in discussions between Mr. X and Mr. Z, the word "species" might (1) be referring to groupings of the individual specimens of A, B, and C which merited recognition as species or (2) the word "species" might be equated to the concepts X and Z which had matured in the minds of the two men and in which examina- tions of A, B and C might or might not have played a part. These matters are well known to most authorities on the species problem. Few of them have made experimental analyses of the species as a concept, but these prejudices are now breaking down rapidly. Eight such papers were published between 1954 and 1966. They are reviewed below in the order in which they were published. In quoting from those papers of which I was one of the authors, the original text has been shortened but in no case has the sense been changed, though slight differences in shades of meaning are unavoidable in radical condensations. (1) Speciation in Uvularia, by Edgar Anderson & T. W. Whitaker (1934). This paper was (pp. 30-31) “an attempt to present objectively in a codified form the essential facts as to resemblances and differences within and between two similar but distinct species; to reproduce in a concise manner for non-taxonomists the kind of data which are consciously or unconsciously used by taxonomists in the delimitation of species. If a species cannot as yet be defined in terms that are meaningful to workers in other fields, one can present the range of variation within and between two closely-related species in a summarized form for non- taxonomists. “It is not a taxonomic thesis. The two species were chosen for study because there was general agreement that they were specifically distinct from one another and were closely related species of one genus.” By diagrams to scale, objective evidence was presented that Uvularia perfoliata and U. grandiflora had four meas- urable differences in the leaves, five in the nodes of the stem and inflorescence and four in the flowers. Of all these, only three were discontinuous; the acknowl- edged discontinuity between the two species is “a discontinuity of combinations reinforced by a few truly discontinuous differences.” It does not seem to be generally realized that species may be, and customarily are, thought of in different ways by different groups of biologists. Biologists en- gaged in taxonomic work will think of species in terms of the precise differences that permit their ready classification; that make it possible to arrange species in an herbarium or to construct a key to a genus. To them the essential differences between these two species of Uvularia will be those few discontinuous ones that are ordinarily used in identifying the species. “With this attitude we have no quarrel, recognizing systematics as a difficult and necessary business and that those who have it in hand must be allowed to develop their own methods. Yet there are those who are interested in the biologi- cal makeup of the units which are being classified. This group will include some taxonomists; the separation of the two kinds of thought is not absolute. To us 1968] ANDERSON—EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 181 the difference between two species is the difference between one kind of germplasm and another. As geneticists we have gained an impression of two different life- stuffs, each of which reacts variously with the environment. Individual plants produced cooperatively by the germplasm and the environment will show only one facet of that germplasm. For the full expression of a particular species there will be required a series of individuals produced under various environments.” In presenting evidence for differences between the two species of Uvularia in their branching patterns and leaf shapes and in the internode patterns of their stems, a combination of measurements and standardized glyphs was used (p. 32). These were developed into a series of charts for graduate classes and lectures at symposia and for the general public. They are discussed below in reviewing the fifth paper. The first paper in the field of this review presents little objective evidence about the concepts in the minds of systematists, but the diagrams (Fig. 1) do analyze the kinds of evidence that are before ones eyes when working in an her- barium, a museum, or an experimental plot. Taxonomists certainly differ greatly in their ability to form useful “judgments” from such subtle data as trends in shape. Greater skill in that direction is probably responsible for the “taxonomic intuition” of such taxonomists as George Engelmann. His judgments about the classification of western American plants were derived mostly from tiny scraps of material, but they have stood the test of time. (2) An experimental study of hybridization in the genus Apocynum, by Edgar Anderson (1936). In his Doctor’s thesis my colleague Dr. Robert E. Woodson published an interpretation of the phylogeny of the genus Apocynum which was decades ahead of its time. He envisaged it as a genus in which inter-specific hybridization has been so important that its evolutionary pattern is more like an anastomosing net- work than a branching tree. To me his ideas “though stimulating and interesting, seemed rather in need of experimental confirmation by other than purely mor- phological criteria. After much friendly argument an experiment was planned,” a simple progeny test of two common American species, Apocynum cannabinum and A. androsaemifolium, strikingly different plants, and their putative hybrid, Apocynum medium. oodson gathered seed from several different plants at a site in Indiana where all three species grew near one another, and I made supple- mental collections in New England. I supervised raising the seedlings to flower- ing age, scoring pollen fertility, photographing the flowers and making herbarium specimens of each mature flowering plant (Fig. 2). Since I was then working in Boston and Woodson in St. Louis, it was easy to get precise, objective data on his concepts of speciation in Apocynum from his labels on the 40 reticulately-related Apocynum specimens J sent him. They had all been collected the same day and were tagged with a randomized set of num- bers, the only key to which was in my record book. Woodson had no way of know- ing how the specimens fitted together to make 8 progeny tests until I sent him a 182 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Table 1. Progeny tests of one PER. = A. cannabinum (can), one of A. androsaemi- folium EN and five of A. medium (med Parent Plant Seedling Number Identification Remarks can-447 and-503 med-446 med-448 med-449 med-502 med-504 AHO GP -— C o0 -1O» OU 02 n5 Z [e] — a and m e D = C1 4x Whe D = KOC OUAR WHS Ut 4A 02 N = BOBRBRRRRRRB ppp p m » o > > > > as PP Pr RU PPS DDD Dp 3 cannabinum var. cannabi mung cannabinum var. . eannabinum androsaemifolium androsaemifolium androsaemifolium androsaemifolium androsaemifolium androsaemifolium androsaemifolium very typical fairly typical essentially typical ery typical 9 were lost before their determinations were recorded m cannabinum var. glaberrimum bably a glabrous A. medium medium medium medium medium androsaemifolium medium cannabinum var. glaberimum? androsaemifolium? medium? androsaemifolium? ediu androsaemifolium androsaemifolium? glabrous leaves like a small A a ca gla close to var. pP sparsely pubescent glabrous glabrous unusually small flowers but very small flowers quite typica but nearly glabrous but small flowers possibly a hybrid corolla rather small 1968] ANDERSON—EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 183 Fig. 2. Progeny tests of three species of Apocynum. Each flower was chosen as representative for one "sn all X l4. Left, A. androsaemifolium; Center, A. medium; Right, A. cannabinum rough copy of the information in Table 1. It confirmed all his hypotheses, in- cluding some I had been skeptical about. Table 1 demonstrates that all the 6 aberrant specimens that he labelled with questions marks, as well as all the 13 which were so variant that he added in- formal comments to the label, were seedlings of A. medium, the supposed hybrid, thus indicating it to be of hybrid ancestry. Table 1 also presents evidence for a phenomenon that I do not remember having talked, read or thought about up to that time, the various restrictions to free recombination of multiple-factor char- acters which operate in hybrid germ plasms. The total effect of these restrictions in Apocynum is so strong that two A. medium seedlings, 449-4 and 504-4 were labelled by Woodson as unquestioned A. androsaemifolium and one, 446-1l as unquestioned A. cannabinum var. glaberrimum! The paper concluded by suggest- ing that "the chief effect of hybridization in this genus in eastern North America at the present time is to increase variability in the parental species.’ It was these experiments with Apocynum which lead me to examine the gen- eral restrictions to recombination in multiple factor characters and eventually to describe, define and diagram introgressive hybridization. (3) The Concept of the genus IL. A survey of modern opinion, by Edgar Anderson (1940). From discussions with my colleague Jesse M. Greenman and our students, I became increasingly interested in species as a concept. I sensed that there might be a “Genus Problem" as well as a species problem. Accordingly, when a na- tional symposium on Genera was organized in 1938, I sent out a questionnaire asking in two different ways a basic question about genera and species. The ques- tionnaire was set up to allow any one of five different answers to the first question and four to the second one and was mailed to 43 taxonomists. [Vor. 55 184 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Question 1 No. of replies Genus the more natural unit 26 Species the more natural unit 8 Sometimes one, sometimes the other 11 No opinion l Question meaningless 2 Question 2 Genera originate in the same way as species 31 Genera may originate in a different way Genera may originate in same or in a different way No opinion A CO AW Forty-two taxonomists responded, so many of them with additional comments that a negative correlation between age of respondent and interest in the symposium could be demonstrated in tabular form (see below). The replies were more uniform than some of the respondents had expected. Twenty-one of them were identical. This orthodox opinion was that genera, on the average, are more natural groups than species, that they originate in the same way, and that generic differences could be compounded from specific differences. By dividing the respondent into two groups: one, taxonomists whose experi- ence had been mostly in monographie work, and group two, taxonomists who were not monographers or who had extensive experience in other biological dis- ciplines, this correlation could also be tabulated. Of the monographers, two-thirds were “orthodox”; of the non-monographers less than one-third. However, though I was still under 40 when the questionnaires were mailed out, I felt that the “genus problem" required extensive experience with more than one group of organisms, to answer such questions intelligently. I agreed with Liberty Hyde Bailey when he answered “A fair agreement has been reached as to the limits of genera and the limits of species, without much reference to philosophical considerations. Discussion is likely to be made by persons who have no taxonomic training and the conclusions would be of little practical value." C. W. Weatherby, then the assistant curator of the Gray Herbarium, appended to his answer a short distillation out of his own experiences that has important overtones : AGE OF RESPONDENT 0-55 ver 55 INTEREST OF RESPONDENT Under 40 Total Not in sympathy 0 0 2 Replied without comment 2 7 7 16 Replied with discussi 6 5 17 Replied and expressed interest 12 l I 14 Total 20 14 15 49 “Taxonomy is only a glorified guess—an attempt to construct a cross-section of the lines of descent in a form intelligible to the human mind. It always contains two variable quantities—the plasticity of organic nature and the differing points of view of the people who work at it. You can generalize successfully, if at all, only 1968] ANDERSON—EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 185 by keeping these facts constantly in mind. The only general rule is that there is no general rule. Therein lines the fascination of taxonomy for those who like it. Each group one tackles presents a fresh and original problem: for each, one has to work out anew the method by which he may best achieve that transforming of confusion into order which is the great satisfaction of pure taxonomy.”* When the replies to the questionnaire arrived they were of such interest to taxonomists and other biologists that they were bound and filed in the Missouri Botanical Garden Library. Unfortunately this volume was not put in the locked cases which house the Pre-Linnaean Library and other treasures. It was read so frequently that it became dog-eared. Twenty years later it disappeared from the shelf. (4) Concordant vs. discordant. Variation in relation to introgressive hybridiza- tion, by Edgar Anderson (1951). The above title is misleading for the purposes of this review. The extensive experimental studies of species concepts reported in the preceding review demon- strated great variation between able biologists in perceiving leaf shape and inter- node-pattern differences. This paper first presents evidence for the taxonomic validity of these characters. With mathematical precision it then constructs a demonstration of the differences in appearance to be expected between populations of plants in which extensive introgression has or has not taken place. The paper belongs in this review because it presents evidence about the importance of the complex differences it refers to as "trends", as measures of species differences in plants and animals. All taxonomists tested were aware of leaf-shape differences, though most non- taxonomists were more conscious of size than of shape differences. Correlated changes in size and shape, however, had proved so difficult for them to grasp* that a large half of this paper is a demonstration of that relationship with tracings, diagrams, and discussions. The first evidence presented is leaf shapes of two common wild cherries of the eastern United States, the choke cherry, Prunus virginiana and the rum cherry, P. serotina. “The outstanding difference is in the trend in proportion. As the leaves of Prunus virginiana get longer, they get correspondingly broader. As the leaves of P. serotina get longer they get only slightly wider. In P. serotina, there- fore, the largest leaves are the narrowest, the smallest the broadest; in P. virginiana the largest are the broadest, the smallest the narrowest. Such differences in trend of related parts seem to be generally characteristic of specific differences. I found such differences in trend in all the species (of several genera) for which I had made pressed population samples.” Trends in internode patterns became easy to demonstrate and to record precisely by a method originated by a botany major, Dorothy Schregardus. She used it to analyze the growth and development of the common sunflower and it * Italics added by the reviewer. * Though many of them apprehended them, apparently instinctively. [Vor. 55 186 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN was published as Anderson & Schregardus (c), a method for recording and analyzing variations of internode pattern. The internodes of the stem were diagrammed along the horizontal axis at regular intervals from left to right, 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. as in a scatter diagram of correlation. The length of each internode was then diagrammed vertically in centimeters to an appropriate scale, with a dot. The successive dots were connected with straight lines whose slope was a precise record of the rate of increase or decrease from one internode to the next for the internodes of the entire stem, 'This simple device has been effective in various studies of plant develop- ment and in making exact measures of plant-to-plant differences when interpreting the variation of introgressing populations. Its most extensive use has been in classifying Zea mays. Additional symbols were added to these maize-internode diagrams. A solid black circle marked the position of the last internode below the male inflorescence (the "tassel") and a solid black triangle the position of the corn ear, or of each ear in multiple ear varieties and races. Such diagrams, with minor variations, have been used in more graphs on the races of maize in Brazil, Cuba, Colombia, Central America, the West Indies, Chile, Peru, and Bolivia* sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences and the National Research Council. They are proving useful in develop- ing hybrid corn for Latin America and in the tropics and sub-tropics generally. They demonstrate how a concern for understanding the concepts by which taxono- mists evaluate differences between species grew into the use of basic physiological differences in classifying economic plants. (5) Efficient and inefficient methods of measuring specific differences, by Edgar Anderson, (1954). This reprint from Kempthorne, Bancroft, Gowen and Lush is included be- cause, though it was prepared for an audience of statisticians and mathematicians, it contains the only published evidence of my most extensive experimental investi- gations of the species as a concept. As in the first paper reviewed, Uvularia fur- nished the research material. “To get at the fundamentals of the species problem, one needs to choose the simplest possible species. Uvularia grandiflora and U. perfoliata were chosen for demonstration because there has been universal agree- ment among those who have dealt with them that they are both good species, that they belong to the same genus, and that they present no special problems of classification, distribution or ecology. Both are known to be diploids; there are no indications of other complicating factors. These two species differ in the presence or absence of hairs on the underside of the leaves and by curious glandular outgrowths on the inner face of the perianth in U. perfoliata that have no counter- part in U. grandiflora.” They also differ by many minor, more-or-less-correlated differences in the size, proportion, texture, number, and arrangement of the various internodes, leaves, and scales that make up the vegetative parts of the plant that * See for example, Races of maize in Bolivia, Ramírez et al., in collaboration with G. Edward Nicholson Calle, Edgar Anderson, William L. Brown. 1960. Publication 747: Nat. Acad. Sci.—Nat. Res. Council, vii + 159 pp. 1968] ANDERSON-——EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 187 are above ground. To analyze the nature of these differences it was necessary to choose a few from among the hundreds of sense impressions coming to us from each plant. The length of every leaf and the length of every internode was recorded, as well as the position of every flower and every scale-leaf (cataphyll). From these measurements and scores, an “ideograph”, a sort of diagrammatic skele- ton of each specimen, was reconstructed (Fig. 3). The width of the leaf, the angle of branching, the sizes of the flowers, and of the cataphylls at the base of the stem, were all conventionalized. Flowers are represented as black disks, leaves as wide lines but to scale, cataphylls as short narrow lines. The length and number of internodes is indicated by the positions of the leaves and cataphylls. The varia- tion of all these variables was analyzed mathematically. Uvularia grandiflora was shown to be “represented by a coherent group of individuals.” Uvularia perfoliata was not so coherent. Some of the specimens vary in the direction of U. grandiflora, suggesting that introgression from that species, previously unsuspected, may be responsible for these variants. These conclusions were confirmed and extended by Dietz (1952). Experimental studies of the perception of these species-differences were made with reproductions of the 20 ideographs on plain white cards, a little larger than playing cards, or with poster-size enlargements for public lectures. People being tested were usually not told how many species were represented. It was found that biologists differ greatly in ability to separate the two species correctly from these cards and in the speed with which they can do it. At one extreme was a graduate student in comparative anatomy. With no previous experience, he sorted all twenty y W . 3. Ideographs (to a of 5 plants each of two species of Uvularia, above U. T below U. grandiflora [Vor. 55 188 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN out correctly in less than ten minutes. At the other extreme was an able monogra- pher and museum curator. He studied the cards carefully and laid them out in little groups of almost identical ideographs. One or two of these he was able to unite, but most of his units he placed halfway between two others until the whole table-top was covered with a complex web-like arrangement of little groups of cards. He was intrigued by the challenge and kept at the problem intermittently for hours with no success. I suspect that he had more of the basic facts about each specimen in his mind than anyone else I ever tested, but that he had no instinctive way of ignoring maturity differences when looking for specific differences. I suspect also that he was not facile in apprehending differences in internode patterns. When the method of diagramming internode patterns described in the following review was adapted to the Uvularia ideographs, it produced diagrams which were easier for students to classify correctly. From testing students with these ideographs, and from observing taxonomists at work, I believe that there are innate differences between people in their ability to apprehend significant clusters of variables as indicators for malnutrition, ma- turity, specific differences, etc. Some of those most highly endowed are unaware that they have exceptional gifts in that direction. Able scientists with little of this ability can be helped by a good teacher. Some able taxonomists with little of it, and that little not well-developed, are prejudiced in appraising the work of those who are highly endowed. (6) An analysis of variation in a variable population of Cladonia, by Edgar Anderson and E. D. Rudolph (1956). This analysis of introgression between species of two lichens is included in these reviews because the same specimens studied by the authors were sent to an authority on Cladonia, identified only by numbers, for precise identification. His groupings of the specimens and the authors’ are in close agreement. The authors’ groupings confirm the generalization of the second review that one of the important results of hybridization is enrichment of variation in the parental species. The contrast between his concept of speciation and their approach to the problem is shown in detail in Figs. 7 and 8. They demonstrate his concepts as well adapted to cataloguing such a hybrid swarm, and the authors' as adapted to analyzing its evolutionary dynamics. This also justifies the paper's introductory remark “that populations which suggest hybridization to the experienced eye have much the same variation pattern as back-crosses of experimentally produced hybrids." More than any other study of introgression this paper shows step by step how precise measures were worked out for analyzing the variation. The methods adapted for measuring potential variation, demonstrated in figures one to four, could prob- ably be adapted to various kinds of non-vascular plants. (T) An experimental investigation of judgments concerning genera and species, by Edgar Anderson (1957). Having learned (No. 3 above) that taxonomists agree in their judgments of species and genera more than they realize, I gathered objective evidence about con- 1968] ANDERSON—EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 189 cepts of species and genera by a simple method. I compared the assignments to species and genera made in two rival floras dealing with the vegetation of the eastern United States. From Fernald’s last revision of Gray’s Manual and Gleason’s New Britton and Brown Illustrated Flora, I made extensive spot checks of their agreement or disagreement in various families and genera. For areas which they both cover they agree at least eight or nine times out of ten. “This is of course a rather limiting case. The flora of eastern North America is relatively stable and it has been well and intensively studied for over a century. In California speciation is much more intricate for all kinds of organisms. Microclimates are much more highly developed. Tertiary and Pleistocene sea-level, rainfall-pattern, and mountain-height changes have been extreme and have led to complicated speciation patterns. The flora furthermore has not been intensively studied for so long a time, yet when one takes two of the standard floras of the state and deals with comparable areas he finds complete agreement 4 to 6 times out of 10 and differences only in detail 2 to 3 times out of 10.” Acrimonious disputes between taxonomists have mostly been over the small percentages of instances in which they did not agree. These concurrences of opinion convinced me that there is a GENUS PROB- LEM worth studying as well as a SPECIES PROBLEM. Through the kind offices of Dr. Robert Cooper, 16 specimens of Uvularia perfoliata and U. grandiflora were studied in turn by three New Zealand systematists who were unacquainted with the North American Flora. None of them had specialized on the Liliaceae. All three placed all 16 in the same genus, proving that there is a Genus Problem worthy of extensive study in its own right. “The central core of the instructions accompanying the sheets was as follows: What I should like is your judgment after examining the specimens as to how many species, varieties, and genera are involved and (by the numbers) how these 16 plants are to be classified. I am not at all interested in having you identify them as to family or genus. Quite the opposite; I hope you will not refer to the literature until after you have dealt with the specimens (if then). This much I can assure you. They were chosen because their classification presents no problems and has never been under dispute. If, for instance, they belong to five species in two genera, then the species are all clear cut and the genera are universally recog- nized as coherent, distinct genera. If there are any varieties or sub-species present in the material then they too are well-marked variants but not so distinct as to merit specific recognition in the opinion of anyone who has dealt with them.” Note that the recipients were given no clue as to the number of genera, species and varieties included in the sample; they were, if anything, encouraged to believe that more than one genus was involved. They were assured that no problem genera, nor hybrid swarms, nor apomictic groups of doubtful relationship had been included in the sample. Of the three systematists, one was a distinguished monographer of another family of plants, and he worked independently of the other two. They discussed the specimens with each other but made their final judgments independently. One had carried on extensive field work in biosystematics, the third was an algologist. [Vor. 55 190 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN The latter separated U. grandiflora from U. perfoliata but divided each of them into two separate species. It was concluded that there is close agreement among taxonomists on the relation of species to genera even for specialists of different back- grounds and different kinds of training. Their judgments are apparently intuitive and inarticulate. The species-genus relationship deserves coordinated research with biological and psychological techniques. (8) Folk taxonomies and biological classification, by Brent Berlin, Dennis E. Breedlove and Peter H. Raven ( This short report summarizes the advancing understandings emerging from a remarkable project. It is Science’s first accurate, comprehensive attempt to analyze differing concepts of classification in studying the flora of an entire community. It begins with a refreshingly realistic appraisal of all recent work in this field, and the authors make an exception only for Harold Conklin’s Yale dissertation on the Hanuoo culture. “Unfortunately most of the data contributing to our under- standing of folk taxonomies are casually collected, non systematic, incomplete and anecdotal.” They ccncentrated on an area of about 160 square kilometers, the municipio of Tenejapa in Chiapas, Mexico. It ranges from 2700 feet above sea level with legume-evergreen forest in more moist areas, such as along rivers, to mixed pine- oak-sweet-gum forest in the more temperate, middle regions, rising to cloud forest at 9000 feet. “More than 1500 species of vascular plants probably occur in the municipio.” From repeated interviews with native informants they believe their sample of more than 1100 plant names in Tzeltal, the native tongue, “is nearing completion.” All their analysis of Tzeltal plant names is based on the “Tzeltal specific” as a unit. They define it as “any taxon which includes no other taxa” and continue “For the purposes of this report we have taken a sample of about 20 percent of our data by including the first 200 Tzeltal-specific names in our alphabetical files. We have no reason to believe that such a procedure biases the results in any significant manner." For exact comparisons between the taxonomies of Botanical Scientists and the Tzeltal specific names, they divided the latter into three categories, 1) under-differ- entiation, Tzeltal specifics which include two or more botanical species, 2) a one- to-one correspondence and 3) over-differentiation, when more than one Tzeltal specific corresponds to a botanical species. Approximately 41% of the 200 were under-differentiated, 25% were the same and 35% were over-differentiated. The cultural significance of these Tzeltal specifics to the Tzeltal was graded high, moderate, and low for (1) plants of little or no utility for them, (2) plants of moderate cultural significance, as plants used for fuel or firewood but not cultivated, (3) plants intensively cultivated such as maize, beans, chili peppers and squash, primarily food or cash crops. From these scorings, a strong positive correlation between cultural significance and degree of differentiation was revealed. Forty of the 50 over-differentiated species were judged to be highly significant. One unexpected result of the analysis was that 40 out of 68 of the plants with 1968] ANDERSON—EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF SPECIES CONCEPT 191 a one-to-one correspondence were introduced to Tenejapa after the Spanish con- quest. They are invariably used today for the same purposes and in many instances retain their Spanish names. The authors conclude on a philosophical note, telling us that when we put together such entities as species with the highest proportion of shared attributes, we cannot logically insist that these entities share any one particular attribute. This may tell us little about the structure of nature itself but a great deal about our own view of it! CONCLUSIONS During the period that I published the first seven. papers of this review, I was increasingly impressed with the importance of joint taxonomic-psychological in- vestigations of the two aspects of the species problem discussed and diagrammed in (1). For none of that time, however, did I have a colleague well-grounded in the fields of psychology pertinent to these studies. The 8th review demonstrates the ways in which such problems could have opened up fruitful new fields of investiga- tion had such collaboration been possible. Within the last decade I have become aware that experimental investigations of taxonomists’ conceptions of taxa above the species might produce more effective collaboration of taxonomists with physiologists and biochemists. When a taxonomic monograph of a group of plants has achieved its goal and put like ones close together that tend to share many common features, it can be widely useful. Taxonomists of the higher plants could be as helpful to biochemistry as were those medical school pharmacologists whose discoveries led to such useful concepts as "psychedelic drugs", in grouping whole sets of compounds together. A very little has already been done. The association of dangerous cyanogens with the Rosaceae had long been recognized. See Kingsbury (F) for discussion of this and many other examples. Various taxonomists are already using biochemical information in classifying plants. The relationship between biochemists and plant taxonomists could become genuine collaboration, profitable to both sciences. Sorbitol, for instance, is common to closely related Asiatic and American species of Larix (larch) but is not produced in less closely-related species (reviewer's unpublished information). Such facts are useful not only to monographers of the genus Larix but also to chemical manu- facturers looking for cheap sources of sorbitol. Before such a two-way association could become facile, there would have to be a wider understanding among taxonomists as to which sub-genera, genera, sub families and families of higher plants are based on a wide variety of characteristics, each of which is shared by most of the group, in other words is a "natural" group and not an "artificial" one. Various genera, families and higher categories in plant taxonomy are widely recognized as “natural” or "artificial". Taxonomists frequently discuss these matters informally among themselves, but I know of no exposition of the problem except the elementary one cited in (5). It is becoming widely understood, for instance, that the rose family is a natural group and less widely that one of its sub-divisions, the Pomoideae, (the pome [Vor. 55 199 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN fruits—apples, pears, quinces, hawthorns, etc., fruits with a core) are an introgres- sive, polyploid, apomictic complex whose genera, species and sub-species are arti- ficial. They form such a complex, interwoven network of relationships that there have been wide disagreements between experts in cataloguing them. No one or two taxonomists could yet compile a working list of outstanding natural and artificial taxa, complete enough to be generally useful. On the other hand, a modern taxonomist, familiar with computer techniques, could organize a survey of present day concepts that could be mechanically sorted. It would, at the very least, be a beginning that would call attention to the problem. It might grow into a catalogue that would be widely helpful. The closing three paragraphs of the paper by Berlin et al. (8) with a discussion of "general" versus "special" classification, indicate the advances of understanding and of utility to be expected from expert conceptual classifications. BIBLIOGRAPHY Numbers refer to Papers reviewed; letters to background informatio (1) ANDERSON, EDGA Tuomas W. WHITAKER. 1934. Speciation in in | Uvularia. Jour. rnold Arb. 28- (2) ud Encar. 1936. An rir E study of hybridization in the genus Apocynum. nn. Miss uri Bot. Gard. 23: 159- (A) ANDERSON, m 1939, Recombination in species crosses. Baia 24: 668-698. (B) a E. & H. C. CUTLER. 1942. Rare s of Zea Mays I: their recognition and classific . Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. (3) ANDERSON, oon The concept of ee genus IL a survey of modern opinion. Bull. Torr rey Bot. t Club 67: 363-369. (C) Anperson, Epc OROTHY ScHnEGARDUS. 1944. A method for pps and analyzing nni in internode pattern. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 31: (4) AwpxnRsoN, Encar. 1951. Concordant vs. discordant variation in relation to i eme hybridization. Evolution 5: 133-141 (D) Derz, Rozerr A. 1952. Variation in the perfoliate Uvularias. Ann. Missouri Bot. (5) ANDERSON, Epcar. 1954. Efficient ne inefficient methods of measuring specific differ- ences, in Kempthorne, Bancroft, Gowen and Lush. Iowa State College Press, 93-106. (6) ANDERSON, Epcar & E. D. UPON. " 1956. An analysis of variation in a variable population of Claudonia. Evolution 10: 147-156. (E) Roserts, L. M. er Ar. 1957. Races of maize in Colombia. Natl. Acad. Sci-Natl. Res. (7) ANpERsON, EpcaR. 1957. An experimental investigation of judgments concerning genera and species. Evolution E 260-262. (8) Bertin, Brent, Dennis E. BreepLove & Perer H. Raven. 1966. Folk taxonomics and biological classification. s 154: 273-275. (F) Kinespury, Joun M. 1965. Deadly "ui a guide to common poisonous plants. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, N. Y. 128 p INTERSPECIFIC RELATIONSHIPS IN THE POLYPODIUM PECTINATUM-PLUMULA COMPLEX* BY A. Murray Evans Department of Botany, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville ABSTRACT Studies of the life cycle, anatomy, morphology, cytology, ecology, distribution pat- s and an analysis of the probable evolu utionary relationships of taxa in the Polypodium ld studies in Florida, Jamaica, and Co , plus use e u wn plants s erica, have aided in the understanding of the biological interrelation- ships of t Specimens, including types, from 20 meri opean including five new species, three new varieties and six new combinations "Keys Aa uone typification, synonomy and specimen citations are included for each taxon INTRODUCTION In attempting to understand the interrelationships of the very closely related species of the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex, studies of the ecology, variation in certain populations, and the natural history of the several species, as well as traditional morphological and anatomical studies, were of considerable help. Because the group has a wide tropical distribution, extensive field studies were not possible, but field studies were made in Florida, Jamaica and Costa Rica, and I obtained living rhizomes of several species for culture from collectors in South America. Although it was necessary to rely heavily on data obtained from the species in Florida and in greenhouse culture, several aspects of the life cycles of these species were examined, and this information was useful in interpreting the remaining species. Historically, the major preoccupation of taxonomists has been in reducing the enormous and polyphyletic genus Polypodium to its present restricted sense. No systematic coverage of this whole group as a unit has ever been attempted, and the taxonomy has consisted mainly of the addition of new taxa one by one. Lindman (1903) treated eight of them in an overall study of tropical American 1 Contribution from the Botanical Laboratory, The University of Tennessee, N. Ser. 0 Based on a qaum submitted to the Graduate School of The University of c of The University of nanc and publication funds from the Faculty Research Fund o The bp of Tennessee. Acknowledgement is gratefully made to Dr. Warren H. Wagner, Jr., for oa ih of the research, to Mr. Conrad V. Morton for extensive nomen Atal ' aid, and to Mr. . Proctor of ihe Institute of Jamaica and the Director d MICH, MO, NY, P, R, ANN. Missouri Bor. Ga 55(3): 193-293, 1969. Stafleu, Index Herbariorum, [5 ed., 1956): B, BR, C, FI, FLAS, G, GH, HB, K, L, LE, M, [Vor. 55 194 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN species. De la Sota (1960), in his research on the Polypodiaceae of Argentina, grouped Polypodium into several complexes and treated the eight species of the present group from that country. MORPHOLOGY AND EcoLocy Microscopic morphological observations were facilitated by several techniques. The living material was first killed in FAA (formalin, acetic acid, alcohol) or dried material was relaxed in 5% NaOH for 2-3 days before sectioning. Rhizomes, roots, stipes, and blade segments were sectioned at 25u on a freezing microtome an mounted unstained in diaphane; or they were imbedded in paraffin, sectioned on a rotary microtome, stained in safranin and fast green, and mounted in diaphane. For studies of venation and epidermal patterns, leaf segments were cleared in 5% NaOH, bleached in 10% Clorox, stained by the tannic acid-ferric chloride method (Foster, 1934) and mounted in diaphane or piccolite. Spore preparations were made either by the acetolysis technique (Erdtman, 1943) and mounted in silicone oil (20,000 viscosity grade), or teased from the frond in 95% EtOH and mounted directly in diaphane. Gametophytes were grown on a variety of growth media. For young stages, spores were sown on either distilled water or liquid Biejerinck’s Solution (Brown, 1920). For later stages and mature gametophytes, spores were sown on agar fortified with Knop’s Solution (Brown, loc. cit.) in. petri dishes, or sown in 3” porous clay pots with either pulverized sphagnum or hardwood humus. The spores were sterilized by treating them with varying concentrations of Clorox, 10% for 10 minutes being optimal. However, good results were usually obtained in nonsterile conditions. The pots containing soil media were autoclaved, but the petri dishes with agar were not, because it was found that fungi were inhibited when the agar was not autoclaved. Spores, treated either by sterilization or from washed fronds which had been dried in sterilized envelopes, were sown in a sterile transfer chamber. Gametophytes were observed microscopically either in water mounts, mounted in Hoyer’s Solution without being killed, or were killed in 70% EtOH and cleared and stained as the leaf segments above. The small gametophytes were handled in quantity by transferring them in short upright sections of wide glass tubing with the bottom covered with cheese cloth. Voucher specimens of all experimental collections are deposited in the Univer- sity of Michigan Herbarium. RHIZOME The stem (Fig. 17-19) is a long-creeping to short-creeping or sub-erect rhizome, with the fronds short-spaced (never more than 1.5 cm apart) or approximate to fasciculate and articulate on short pseudopodia 1 to 2 mm long. The plants may be epiphytic, terrestrial, or epipetric, but the rhizomes are always exposed. The vary in diameter from 1 to 3 mm in small species such as P. truncorum to 10 to 13 mm in the larger species such as P. ptilodon or P. recurvatum. The internal anatomy is quite uniform. The vascular system is dictyostelic with 3 (in P. trun- 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 195 corum) to 17 small exarch bundles in a single ring (Fig. 1, A-C). The endodermis is thin-walled, but the inner wall of the ground parenchyma cells adjacent to the endodermis is always strongly thickened. Polypodium singeri and P. truncorum, two small epiphytic ferns, show a good deal of dark staining, thick-walled col- lenchyma tissue in all but the outer portion of the rhizome (Fig. 1, C). No true sclerenchyma tissue is present. 'The rhizomes are clothed with paleae throughout, which fall basically into two groups of scales—(a) the most common type, associated with the P. pectinatum allies, and (b) those found in the groups of P. cupreolepis and P. truncorum. The former group (a) has narrow- to linear-triangular, dark red-brown lustrous paleae, basifixed and with an acuminate or filiform apex. The paleae are either broadly expanded at the basal attachment or have a narrow base at the apex of the rhizome. They are dark colored along their margins, usually with a paler area at the base. The cells are narrow, except at the base of the scale, where they usually become shorter and nearly isodiametric. They are non-clathrate. This is in con- trast to several groups in Polypodium (such as the P. vulgare or the P. squamatum groups) in which the paleae are usually basally peltate, at least sub-clathrate, and are usually darker in the center rather than along the margin These paleae all have a dorsal cluster of unicellular hairs (and are therefore termed “comose”) toward the base of the paleae, which are usually visible under low magnification (Fig. 1, G, J-L). In certain species, such as P. pectinatiforme, P. atrum, or P. dispersum, the hairs are uniformly present, although they may not be conspicuous. In P. plumula, on the other hand, the comose hairs are sometimes absent. In P. bolivianum the hairs of the paleae are long and dense, and they mostly obscure the scales themselves except at the rhizome apex (Fig. 1, K, L), and in P. consimile var. pastazense they totally obscure the paleae. In the second group (b) the paleae are cordate or ovate, basifixed at a single point, not so polished or lustrous as in the previous group, and vary in color from golden to dark red-brown. They are non-comose and either concolorous or some- times paler toward the base (Fig. 1, I). Roors The roots are approximately 0.5 mm in diameter with an outer thin-walled cortex of 3-9 layers of parenchyma cells, and a sclerified darkly colored inner cortex usually 4-6 layers deep occupying one-fourth to one-half of the diameter of the root. The endodermis is a thin-walled and inconspicuous layer lining the inner cortex. The bundle is diarch with few (4-8) large tracheids and clusters of small tracheids at the two protoxylem points. * Roor PROLIFERATIONS Although root proliferation leading to sporophytic reproduction is known in pteridophytes, it is infrequent. Root proliferations are known in Platycerium, Amphoradenium (syn. Adenophorus), and Asplenium, and in the present 'study they have been found to occur in Polypodium dispersum, P. ferrugineum, P. filicula, P. pectinatum, P. plumula, P. siccum, and P. singeri (Fig. 7). [Vor. 55 196 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Although root proliferations have occasionally been thought to be new plants arising from slender elongated stems or rhizomes (similar to the stolons of Nephro- lepis), this is not the case in the present complex. As seen in cross-section, a single vascular trace of the root type crosses the cortex of the parent root. The new rhizome is usually first noticed as a small scaly bump approximately 1 mm in diameter on the side of the root. New roots and leaves develop in typical fashion from this small rhizome. JUVENILE LEAVES Within the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex, sporophyte leaves of a “juvenile type” can develop from any of three sources—from root proliferations in various species (as discussed above), from apogamous outgrowths in P. dispersum and from sexual embryos. Leaves produced from root proliferations and from gametophytes have the same morphological stages. Figure 2, D-F, shows the developmental leaf series of P. dispersum, P. plumula, and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum. The first leaves are invariably simple and elliptic with a single midvein of spirally thickened tracheids. The first leaves of P. ptilodon var. caespitosum are larger and more broadly elliptic than those of either P. dispersum or P. plumula. 'The three hair types, discussed below, appear on the first leaves of all the species listed (Fig. 15, C, D, F, G), except that ctenoid hairs are lacking on P. plumula. After the second or third leaf, the veins become forked and the blade becomes lobed. The leaves which fol- low are alternately lobed. Subsequent to these are leaves which are sub-oppositely lobed as in the mature leaf. The venation then develops the mature condition of being 2 or 3 times forked (Fig. 2). No young stages of any of the species with anastomosing venation were available for study, but presumably they follow the same pattern modified only by vein fusions. MATURE LEAVES The fronds may be upright, curved or pendent. Most of the species have up- right and rather stiff fronds, but certain of the epiphytic ones with upright rhizomes attached to vertical substrates tend to have more flexuous or pendent fronds, such as P. plumula (Fig. 3, F), P. curvans (Fig. 3, C), P. choquetangense, P. siccum, or P. truncorum. The frond outline is narrow-elliptic, -ovate, or -deltoid (Fig. 3). In those species that have narrowly elliptic fronds (e.g. P. plumula, P. alfredii, or P. cupreo- lepis) and those with narrow-ovate fronds (e.g., P. ptilodon, P. dispersum, P. atrum, or P. camptophyllarium) the stipe may be long or short. Several of the species have the lower segments contracted quite abruptly, as in P. plumula (Fig. 3, F), and a long stipe; in others, such as P. consimile or P. filicula, the stipe is reduced or almost absent, and the basal segments are very gradually reduced to lobes. The deltoid or subdeltoid fronds, such as those of P. recurvatum (Fig. 3, G) and P. bolivianum, have an abrupt demarcation between stipe and rachis at the base of the blade. The fronds are articulate, abscissing from a short pseudopodium. The tip of 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 197 the frond and the segments curl tightly adaxially in response to drought, either from atmospheric dryness or water loss after collection. The whole group possesses the ability to respond in this manner, but it is most strongly expressed in such species as P. plumula, P. dispersum, P. filicula, and P. cupreolepis. Both this curling ability and the articulation of the fronds reduce the exposed leaf surface, and appear to be adaptations to the epiphytic or epipetric mode of life and to periods or seasons of little atmospheric humidity. STIPE AND RACHIS The stipe and rachis are distinctive. In the mature leaf the main axes are either black or of various shades of red-brown; they always have a highly polished appearance. In juvenile fronds the main axis may be lighter or even stramineous, but it turns dark and lustrous as the blade matures. The only exception is that certain of the northern plants of P. hygrometricum have a light axis even at maturity, although the majority of specimens of this species have dark axes. The color may also vary between living and dried plants. The axes of P. dispersum and P. plumula are black in both states. In P. recurvatum, P. truncorum, and P. ptilodon var. ptilodon they are red-brown in both the living and dried state. Polypodium ptilodon var. caespitosum has a consistently red-brown axis and costa when dry, but the axis is quite blackish in living material. A wide sclerified layer in the outer cortex gives the axis its hard and lustrous external appearance. This layer also gives the rachis the characteristic springiness or elasticity readily recogniz- able even on herbarium sheets, particularly in the strongly pendent epiphytes, such as P. plumula. In P. curvans and P. choquetangense the main axis is usually sinuous or contorted, and the apex of mature fronds often remains circinate. The stipe and rachis are terete, and the stipe has either narrow wings or nar- row lateral green stripes along its entire length. 'TRICHOMES Three types of hairs are present on the fronds of these ferns, as illustrated in Fig. 4. (1) The first is a small, simple, clavate hair composed usually of only two or three cells, the terminal one being somewhat larger and blunt-tipped (Fig. 4, I,). These hairs are usually no longer than 150g. (2) The second type is ap- parently derived from the first. In its most characteristic form, this hair consists of an arched axis of approximately four cells, with lateral branches usually of only one, sometimes two, cells. 'There are usually three or four of these lateral branches all arising from one side producing a “ctenoid” hair. However, modifications of this type of hair are frequent in which the number of branches is reduced, some- times to one, thus suggesting intergradation with the simple clavate hair (Fig. 4, D. (3) The third hair type is a long, simple, acicular, multicellular hair (Fig. 4, Js, Kj). These hairs are usually pale on the young frond and turn a golden color at maturity. The acicular hairs vary considerably in length, from 0.2 to 2.0 mm. They are of diagnostic importance in several species, as indicated below. The three hair types are found on the stipe, rachis, costa, and lamina. The ctenoid hair is apparently present on all juvenile fronds, but is not present on the [Vor. 55 198 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN mature fronds of P. plumula, P. cupreolepis, P. truncorum and their immediate allies. The small, clavate hairs are universally present, primarily on the lamina. They are usually so short as to be overlooked, except in P. sursumcurrens, in which they are long, blackish, and visible to the naked eye. The acicular hairs have not only considerable variation in size, but vary also in density and distribution. They are absent in a few species, such as P. bolivianum, and are only scattered on the lamina in most species, but are quite abundant and dense in P. pectinatum, and P. camptophyllarium. In all four varieties of P. ptilodon the acicular hairs have a curious pattern of distribution such that the lamina is essentially glabrous except for an oval area of dense pilosity around the sorus, often visible to the naked eye or with a hand lens (Fig. 1, E). These are not to be confused with the receptacular paraphyses discussed below. PALEAE The most frequent type of rachis scales or paleae are those of the P. pectinatum allies (Fig. 5, H, K) which are long, filiform, inconspicuous, and few in number. They are uniformly dark red-brown and of long, thin cells, except that they have more lightly colored and small isodiametric cells at the base. They occur on both the upper and lower surfaces of the main axis, although usually only on the stipe and lower portion of the rachis. At the base of the stipe they tend to have broader bases and approach the shape of the rhizome paleae, which, in the P. pectinatum assemblage, are invariably linear-triangular. The margins are entire except in P. bolivianum, where they have simple or forked fimbriae on the margin, and in P. eurybasis, which occasionally shows slightly fimbriate margins. In both of the latter species this is an amplified condition as regards stipe paleae, and approaches the more fimbriate condition of the rhizome paleae of those species. Several other species, such as P. pectinatum or P. camptophyllarium, have inconspicuously fim- briate rhizome paleae, but have entire rachis paleae. This is thus apparently a relative change: those species with quite heavily fimbriate rhizome paleae show some indication of this on the rachis paleae, but those species with few or no fimbriae on the rhizome paleae lack any at all on the paleae of the rachis. The second group of species (P. atrum, P. dispersum, P. bermudianum, P. plumula, P. filicula, P. ferrugineum, P. cupreolepis, P. alfredii and P. sursumcur- rens) have rachis paleae which are non-filiform (Fig. 5). They may be narrow- elliptic (P. alfredii, P. sursumcurrens and P. ferrugineum) (Fig. 5, F), narrow- triangular with irregular hastate bases (P. dispersum, P. atrum, P. bermudianum, and, in part, P. plumula) (Fig. 5, A, ;, B, C, D, J) or they may be essentially cordate, as in P. plumula, P. filicula, and P. cupreolepis (Fig. 5, A, 4, G, I, L). In all but the narrow-elliptic paleae, the margins may be inconspicuously and ir- regularly fimbriate (Fig. 5). Polypodium filicula is the only species with cordate or triangular paleae in which most paleae have an entire margin. Except for overall shape, all of the paleae of this group of species are similar to those of the rhizome in coloration and cell structure. Those species with hard, lustrous, red-brown rhizome paleae have similar rachis paleae. Species such as P. cupreo- lepis (Fig. 1l, I and Fig. 5, G) and P. ferrugineum, with pale and dull rhizone paleae, have similar rachis paleae. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 199 The narrow-elliptic paleae on the rachis are sparse like the filiform paleae in the previous group. However, those species with hastate-triangular or cordate paleae possess them on the rachis in greater quantity, so that they are readily visible to the unaided eye. In all taxa except P. plumula and P. filicula the paleae are flat at the base. In the two exceptions the scales appear inflated or "bullate" at the base. This character appears occasionally also in the paleae of P. curpreolepis. The species with conspicuous and numerous rachis paleae (P. atrum, P. ber- mudianum, P. dispersum, P. plumula, P. filicula, and P. cupreolepis) also have paleae on the costae. In all cases, these are reduced paleae similar to those of the rachis. In some, as shown in P. plumula (Fig. 4, H), the homologies between paleae and hairs are apparent. Although there are basically only three hair types, as described above, in those taxa with costal paleae an additional large, many celled, clavate, simple hair is also present. It is evident that this is the ultimate reduc- tion of the paleae. SEGMENTS Figure 6 illustrates outlines and venation patterns of the segments of rep- resentative species. Figure 3 shows the orientation of the segments in selected species. All the species have simple and entire segments except P. eurybasis, P. curvans and P. paradiseae, which have crenate or crenulate segments, and P. choquetangense, which has pinnatifid segments. All species have inconspicuously ciliate segment margins. Whereas the segments are typically perpendicular to the rachis and straight or slightly falcate, several of the species (P. absidatum, P. curvans, P. truncorum, and P. choquetangense) have noticeably ascending segments (Fig. 3, C, D). In most species the segments have a symmetrical base in which both the lower and upper edges are dilated. However, in those species with ascending segments the upper edge meets the rachis abruptly at a nearly right angle. Also, several species, such as P. atrum, P. paradiseae, P. pectinatiforme, and P. filicula, have segments of the lower portion of the frond deflexed, and the lower edge of the segment correspondingly meets the rachis at a right angle or less (Fig. 3, B & Fig. 18). In P. alfredii, several plants from the northern part of its range have basal segments deflexed so that the lowermost segments are nearly or quite parallel to the stipe. There are several species, however, with all segments essentially at right angles to the rachis, but in which the lower edge of the segment meets the rachis at a right angle, or in which it may even be slightly incised to form a small sinus be- tween rachis and basal margin (Fig. 3, A). Figure 4 shows variations in the shape of the abaxial epidermal cells and the arrangement of the stomates. The cells over the lateral veins are character- istically narrower and more attenuated than those away from the veins. The stomates occur only on the abaxial surface. The guard cells are slightly elevated above the epidermal cells and are without modified subsidiary cells. Guard cell sizes, as they relate to the ploidal level, are discussed below. The internal tissue of the segments is compact and quite uniform from one [Vor. 55 200 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN species to another. They average approximately four layers of cells in the mesophyll (two to three in P. truncorum and five or six in P. pectinatiforme), two layers in a somewhat irregular palisade above and two (three, four) slightly less compact and more irregular layers in the spongy mesophyll (Fig. 1, D). Figure 6 shows the representative range of venation patterns in the segments. Although the group typically has free-forked venation, three species (P. filicula, P. siccum, and P. truncorum) have simple veins. Entirely simple veins are not common in the Polypodiaceae, although the condition is frequent in the Gram- mitidaceae, a reason why P. trucorum has been considered as a ctenopteroid fern by Copeland (1956). However, on the basis of the spores, sporangia, trichomes, and the characters of the rachis, all three of these simple-veined species are properly members of the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex (de la Sota, 1963). Anastomosing venation, while not the rule in the present complex, occurs all through the Polypodiaceae. In the group under consideration here, anastomosing occurs in varying degrees from casual, irregular junctures in each segment, as in P. pectinatum, to very regular and complete patterns in P. camptophyllarium var. macedoi. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. camptophyllarium has consider- able variation, although it usually has at least a sporadic distribution of areolcs. In some plants in southern South America the anastomosing in the latter variety becomes extensive and may even exceed that which is expected in var. macedoi (Fig. 6, Q. S). When anastomoses occur in this complex, they are always with a free included veinlet. This is opposed to the areolate condition in the Gram- mitidaceae, in which there are no included veinlets. The costa, in all cases, is sclerified, sometimes only in the abaxial portion of the bundle sheath (e.g. P. dispersum and P. pectinatiforme), and sometimes throughout the bundle sheath, but then usually more so on the abaxial side, as in P. truncorum and P. ptilodon (Fig. 1, D). In several of the species with large fronds, the bases of the secondary veins are also sclerified. Except in P. ferrugineum, in which the costae are black and the rachis brown, the costae and rachis are the same color. SORI The sorus is terminal on the first acropetal veinlet in all species (Fig. 6). In those with anastomosing venation this veinlet becomes the free included vein- let. Whereas the sorus is typically medially or extra-medially placed on the seg- ment, it may vary all the way from infra-medial (in P. consimile) to submarginal (in P. sursumcurrens, P. alfredii, and P paradiseae). Wilson (1959 a, b) has described in detail the sporangia of P. plumula and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum (as "P. pectinatum"). I have found these structures to be similar and with little deviation throughout the group. Although the annulus usually has 13 or 14 bow cells, P. camptophyllarium var. lachniferum has only 12, and P. sursumcurrens and P. curvans have 16. Wagner (1964) discusses and summarizes the known types of paraphyses in the ferns. Figure 4 illustrates the types found in this complex. Sori of all species produce receptacular paraphyses, and in all but two these are simple or occasionally 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 201 forked, multicellular, clavate hairs. In all but one species they are similar to the clavate laminar hairs, although they are often longer, and vary from 150- 250u long. In P. camptophyllarium var. macedoi the receptacular paraphyses are a curious mixture of the clavate and the acicular hair types (Fig. 4, M), being forked hairs with one clavate and one acicular branch. However, the same type of hair is also characteristic of the lamina. In P. sursumcurrens the paraphyses are unusual in differing considerably from the laminar trichomes (Fig. 4, P). They range up to 400p long. Their outline is contorted, and a multicellular, expanded portion is developed near the apex. In most species the receptacular paraphyses are few and hard to observe except by dissection and microscopic ex- amination, but in P. sursumcurrens they are numerous and visible even with low magnification. Unlike the elaborate “sporangiasters” of P. virginianum, ap- parently derived from modified sporangia (Martens & Pirard, 1943), the para- physes of P. sursumcurrens are evidently related to the simple, clavate, laminar hairs, as in the remainder of the complex. Capsular paraphyses (Fig. 4) also occur in approximately half of the species of the complex. They are always short, simple, l- to 3.celled hairs arising near the top of the capsule near the annulus. They vary in length from 45u in P. pectinatum to 100u in P. hygrometricum. They may be of quite regular number and occurrence—one per capsule in P. pectinatum; two in P. hygrometricum and P. ferrugineum; or of quite variable number, as in P. dispersum or P. plumula, in which they range from one to five per capsule. In several species they are present on young capsules but may be shed as the capsule matures. SPORES With two exceptions, spores in this complex are essentially alike. One ex- ception, Polypodium dispersum, has only 32 mitotically produced, globose spores per sporangium. The other, Polypodium camptophyllarium var. camptophyllarium, has, for the most part, normal, reniform, tuberculate spores, but a few collec- tions from Jamaica have quite irregular spores, which suggests that apogamous reproduction may be present in scattered populations of this species (see the tax- onomic description of this variety). The remaining taxa all have 64 spores per sporangium and are therefore presumed to have a normal sexual life cycle. The spores are uniformly reniform and monolete (Fig. 12, H), although they vary in shape from narrowly reniform and curved to globose-reniform. They are all without perispore and the surface is tuberculate, although the sculpturing varies from almost smooth to strongly tuberculate. The spore sizes, as they relate to the ploidal level, are discussed in the section on cytology and evolution. GAMETOPHYTES The gametophytes of Polypodium dispersum are so unusual that a separate section has been devoted to them in the section on sporogenesis. The gametophytes of the Polypodiaceae and Grammitidaceae have been treated by Stokey & Atkin- son (1958), and the gametophytes of P. plumula and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum [Vor. 55 902 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN (as "P. pectinatum”) were reported by Stokey (1959). All my observations agree with those previously described. The sex organs are typical of the Polypodiaceae, as described by Stokey. After fertilization the sporophyte plant is first seen as a tiny elliptic leaf (Fig. 2) and a root that appears either at the same time or slightly before the leaf. The leaves then develop as described above in the section on juvenile leaves. Ecorocv AND GEOGRAPHY These ferns extend from Bermuda, peninsular Florida, northern Mexico and the Galapagos Islands south to northern Argentina and southern Brazil (Fig. 8, B). I consider them to occupy five distributional zones (Fig. 8, D): (1) Central Amer- ica, (2) western South America, (3) southern Brazil, (4) northern and north- western South America, and (5) the West Indies, considered a sub-zone of the last. As the distribution maps show (Fig. 8-11), several species occur in more than one zone, although a particularly large number of species are confined to the Central American and southern Brazilian zones. I have included the West Indies as a sub-zone of the northern South American zone because, out of the nine species present in the West Indies, six are known also in northern South America and do not occur in Central America. The remaining three species (P. dispersum, P. plumula, and P. pectinatum) are wide-ranging and cross several zones (Fig. 9, 10). Although as a whole the genus Polypodium is primarily epiphytic, some species are terrestrial or epipetric. The same is true of the P. pectinatum-plumula complex. No species is strictly terrestrial, although P. ptilodon (including all its varieties) and P. consimile var. consimile are primarily terrestrial or occur on the bases of trees (Fig. 7, E). Polypodium bermudianum, P. dispersum (Fig. 7, A, G) and P. ferrugineum are primarily epipetric, although the two latter are recorded as occurring also epiphytically or terrestrially. Polypodium choquetan- gense, P. curvans, and P. cupreolepis are either epipetric or epiphytic. Polypodium sursumcurrens, P. siccum, P. singeri, and P. truncorum are evidently strictly epiphy- tic. Polypodium singeri is curious in that it apparently grows with its roots reach- ing the ground, so that it perhaps is only hemi-epiphytic. Polypodium truncorum has a particularly narrowly defined substrate, and is found only among the old stipe bases of tree ferns, especially Alsophila and Hemitelia. The remaining species are primarily epiphytic, but also occur occasionally as epipetric or terrestrial plants. On the whole, this is primarily a group of tropical and sub-tropical montane plants. Elevation data indicates that they grow from 1500-3500 m in altitude, but a few species are found at low altitudes. Polypodium dispersum, P. plumula, and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum occur in peninsular Florida at nowhere over 100 m in elevation, although they are known elsewhere at much higher elevations. Polypodium hygrometricum and P. recurvatum are known only from sea level to 1800 m and P. bermudianum is confined to the low lying Bermuda Islands. Certain of the epipetric species are recorded from exposed rocky areas or cliffs. No species grow in the lowland rain forests of the Amazon basin. Judging from the generally montane distribution, the response to drying (desiccation and curl- 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 203 ing of the frond without the death of the plant) and the articulate stipes, this group is not adapted to areas of constant high humidity, such as in the Amazon asin. ‘ECOLOGY OF RooT PROLIFERATIONS Several species in this complex reproduce partially by root proliferations; this appears to be related to their distribution and ecological requirements. Pro- liferations in P. ferrugineum, P. , P. siccum, and P. singeri were found only on herbarium specimens, so it is s difficult to note more than their mere pres- ence. However, P. singeri normally grows as an epiphyte on small woody twigs. Several herbarium sheets show that the individual rhizomes are often short (ca 2 to 3 cm long) and grow in a series along the twigs (Fig. 7, D). The rhizomes and roots are exposed and the rhizomes arise as root proliferations. Polypodium plumula and P. pectinatum grow either on the trunks or hori- zontal branches of trees, and are true epiphytes (Fig. 7, B). Root proliferations occur infrequently as small plantlets formed from the roots of larger plants. I have also observed small plantlets arising from the superficial roots of a green- house culture of the former species. though P. dispersum is capable of reproducing by spores (as discussed be- low in the treatment of sporogenesis), its primary mode of local dispersal is evi- dently by root proliferations. In Florida, for example, this species is usually seen as dense mats of juvenile plants completely covering limestone rocks (Fig. 7, G). Often none of these plants bear sporangia. I saw only three soriferous colonies of this species in the course of field trips in Florida, although I studied numerous populations. The root proliferations in nature usually occur only a few centimeters apart when the plants are growing on rock surfaces. However, at “Blechnum Ravine” in Annutalaga Hammock, Florida, P. dispersum was growing in sand and the plants were widely spaced. In one case proliferations were spaced approximately 0.5 m apart on a very long root. The rhizomes of these proliferations are always short and superficial on the substrate with no intermediate structure between parent root and rhizome, so that proliferations occur only on those roots that are close to the surface. As these seven species in which proliferations are known are all either epipetric or epiphytic, they normally grow where the substrate is thin and many of the roots are exposed or near the surface. These proliferations may be produced in response to reduced moisture or greater aeration around exposed roots. Increased light also might be a factor. However, the occurrence of proliferations in the dark at the bottom of the pot in greenhouse culture suggests that this is not so, unless a minimal exposure to light is sufficient. SPOROGENESIS AND THE LIFE CYCLE OF POLYPODIUM DISPERSUM I have carried out life cycle studies primarily on P. dispersum and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum. Experimental collections of P. dispersum have included a plant from Jamaica (Proctor 22896) and collections from Florida (Citrus Co, Wagner 62061, Evans 2008). Collections of P. ptilodon var. caespitosum have been from [Vor. 55 204 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Florida (Highlands Co, Evans 1157; Citrus Co, Evans 2005; Sumter Co, Evans 2004) Sporogenesis studies were carried out using a modified acetocarmine squash technique. Segments with sporangia of a suitable age for meiotic figures were killed and fixed in Newcomer’s Solution (Newcomer, 1953) and stored in a deep freeze until used. To prepare microscope slides, sporangia from a single sorus were placed in a drop of acetocarmine on a slide. No iron mordant was added, thereby avoiding overstaining of the cells. The sporangia were spread apart to avoid clumping, and a cover slip was added. The slide was heated slightly, but tapped only lightly with a dissecting needle in order not to spread the individual cells too far from the mother sporangium. Firm pressure was then applied with the thumb. The combination of few and wide-spaced sporangia, light tapping, and firm pressure with the thumb, resulted in preparations in which the cells were well squashed, but the individual cells of a particular sporangium were still in close proximity to each other. In this way numerous sporangia could be easily and quickly prepared and observed. The slides were made permanent by inverting them in 2:8 acetic acid: alcohol solution until the cover slips dropped off. After rinsing with the acetic acid-alcohol solution, the cover slips were replaced with a drop of diaphane. In the P. pectinatum-plumula complex, the sexual life cycle (as determined by the number of spores per sporangium) is present throughout except in P. dis- persum. In this common and widespread species, a pattern of apogamous reproduc- tion thus far unique among pteridophytes has been found. SEXUAL LIFE CYCLE The sexual life cycle of the higher ferns is well known. In comparing this with apogamous reproduction, it is only necessary to summarize the process of sporogenesis in a sexual species, as exemplified by P. ptilodon var. caespitosum (Fig. 12). In the developing sporangium, the archesporial cell divides mitotically four times to form 16 2X spore mother cells (Fig. 12, B). The spore mother cells are readily recognized by their size and form, and also by the large, darkly stain- ing nuclei. They undergo one meiotic division (Fig. 12, C, D) to form a tetrad of young spores (Fig. 12, E-G), resulting in 64 monolete spores per sporangium (Fig. 12, H). Upon spore germination and maturation of the bisexual gametophyte, fertilization may occur; the sporophyte plant develops from the fertilized egg, thus completing the cycle. OBLIGATE ApocamMous (Megiotic ApocamMous) LIFE CYCLE Although not so widely known as the sexual life cycle, this process is well documented, as in several papers by Dópp (c.f. 1939) and later by Manton (1950) and others. Using herbarium specimens, apogamy can usually be detected by making preparations of mature but unopened sporangia. Some of the sporangia, if the plant is apogamous, will have 64 aborted spores, whereas others will show 32 normal-appearing spores, 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 205 Apogamous reproduction is normally a process in which sporogenesis is modi- fied and sexual fusion is by-passed. It always involves plants with an unbalanced genotype that could not, in the usual sexual cycle, form viable spores. The proc- ess is known in many species of ferns and is considered to be quite widespread. Wagner (1963) estimates that approximately 7% of the 72 pteriodphytes of Giles Co, Virginia, U. S. A., reproduce apogamously. Mehra (1961) found 30 apogamous ferns among 350 cytologically known ferns from the Himalayan region, or about 8.6%. The highest frequency of obligate apogamy is among triploids, although apogamy is known at other ploidal levels, including the diploid (Mehra loc. cit.). In order to compare the apogamous situation in P. dispersum with the more usual apogamous sporogenesis, the following brief outline of the latter will pro- vide a comparison. In obligate apogamy the 2X archesporial cell in certain de- veloping sporangia divides mitotically three times forming 8 cells. There is then rther chromosomal division without cytokinesis, and a reorganization of the genetic material into single nuclei (“restitution nuclei”). This results in eight 4X spore mother cells from the initial 2X archesporial cell. Meiosis in these doubled cells is then normal, but produces only 32 viable 2X spores per sporangium. It should be added that these meiotic apogamous ferns usually also undergo spore formation in another way. In some sporangia, the spores develop without the formation of restitution nuclei. This is essentially the process of sporogenesis in sexual species. However, because of the hybrid-like behavior of the chromo- somes in apogamous ferns, in which the genomes do not pair normally except in the restitution nuclei, this process results in irregular and aborted spores. According to Manton (1950) these two processes can occur in different spo- rangia on the same apogamous plant, in the same or different sori, and in quite varying proportions, from only a few. 32-spored sporangia per sorus to many sporangia of this type per sorus. The spores produced from 32-spored sporangia develop into gametophytes which usually form sex organs. The archegonia are aborted, or may be absent; but the antheridia and sperms may be functional. The new sporophyte develops not from the sexual apparatus but directly from thallus tissue. AMEIOTIC ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS IN POLYPODIUM DISPERUM Obligate meiotic apogamy has been considered the only successful or func- tional apogamous life cycle in ferns, and Manton (1950) termed the process as “monotonously uniform.” However, in the P. pectinatum-plumula complex, P. dispersum displays a unique alternative in apogamous reproduction in ferns (Evans, A study of sporogenesis in P. dispersum (Fig. 13) shows four complete mitotic divisions of the archesporial cells to form 16 spore mother cells in all sporangia, without restitution nuclei. The 16 spore mother cells are readily visible, for they separate, enlarge, and stain more darkly than other cells in the sporangium (Fig. C). All sporangia observed contained only 32 spores. This involved the ob- servation of several hundred sporangia both in sporogenesis studies and on herb- arium specimens. In metaphase figures Polypodium dispersum has 111 unpaired [Vor. 55 206 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN chromosomes (Fig. 13, E). Squashes of metaphase figures in the eight-celled stage of the archesporium and in the 16 spore mother cells show that the chromosome configuration is essentially identical, both stages showing 111 unpaired chromo- somes (Fig. 13, A, D). The mode of cytokinesis of the 16 spore mother cells (Fig. 13, F, H) indicates that each mother cell produces only 2 spores. The spores are thus formed by one additional mitotic division of the spore mother cells, and meiosis, characteristic of all other known apogamous ferns, is rbsent (hence my distinction of the two types of apogamy as “meiotic” and ‘ameiotic”). This is an example of diplospory. Mehra (1961) reports that “di- plospory which is so widespread in apomictic angiosperms has so far not been observed as a functional mechanism in apomictic ferns, although there are stray records of its occurrence.” Reports of Trichomanes proliferum forma fj (Bell, j Mehra & Singh, 1957) and in Ophioglossum and Isoétes (Verma, 1956, 1960) sug- gest that this process may also occur in pteridophytes other than P. dispersum. However, none of the latter reports contain information pertaining to the gameto- phyte generation or whether or not these plants are capable of completing their life cycle. Braithwaite (1964) indicates a similar situation in Asplenium aethio- picum to that observed here. He describes the formation of 32 spores from 16 spore mother cells as being due to a partial meiotic division and a restitution nucleus. These would appear to be very similar processes in these two different genera. The irregularities in this process are few. There are occasional sporangia which contain a lower number than 32 spores and some spore fragments. Occa- sionally, mature spores are contracted medially or submedially as though the cell had begun to divide again. I do not yet know whether these “pinched” spores are viable. In the examination of several hundred divisions only one cell was found that may have doubled its chromosomes. As I obtained over 60% germina- tion of spores, I am quite sure that these few irregularities contribute little or nothing to this germination percentage, and that the viable spores are formed as outlined above. The morphology of the Polypodium dispersum spore is a further departure from the norm. All other species in this complex have the usual reniform, mono- lete, polypodioid spores, which are formed in tetrads. The P. dispersum spores, in contrast, are distinctly globose, and the scar is exceedingly variable, being either incomplete or suggesting a monolete or trilete pattern (Fig. 14). Occasionally the scar is absent. Spores of apogamous ferns normally resemble the spores of closely related species. In the surface tubercula- tion, spores of P. dispersum are like those of related species, but in the spore and scar shape they are readily distinguishable microscopically. In agar plates fortified with Knop’s Solution, and grown under constant light at 20°C, spores germinated in about 10 days, and development was rapid; young apogamous sporophytes forming in about two and a half months The first rhizoid appears with, or even before, the first prothallial cell (Fig. 2, A), and subsequent rhizoids develop with each additional cell, often more than 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 207 one rhizoid per cell. After one to three filamentous cells develop, an elliptical plate is formed, and rhizoid initiation is reduced. The cell plate of P. dispersum is not cordate, as are most polypodioid gameto- phytes. At the time of sporophyte proliferation the prothallus is either small and elliptical (Fig. 15, G), or it may be strap-shaped and several times branched (Fig. 2, D). The latter is typical of artificial cultures. In nature, both small elliptical thalli, not much larger than the bases of the sporophytic proliferations, as well as longer, branched thalli are found. Rhizoids are either marginal or near the margin. If the thallus is branched, rhizoids are usually more dense at the conflu- ence of the branches. They are never wholly basal and ventral, as is normal in other sexual species of Polypodium. 'The shape of the thallus and the position of the rhizoids suggest that P. dispersum has gametophytes like those of the Gram- mitidaceae. However, the early development of both the rhizoids and the cell plate are characteristically polypodioid. Also, the rhizoids of P. dispersum are a light brown, not dark brown and stiff, as is typical of the Grammitidaceae (Stokey & Atkinson, 1958). Two features of Polypodium dispersum gametophytes are unique: the absence of gametangia and the ability to produce stomata on a thallus one cell thick. Previously known apogamous ferns produce sex organs even though they are not functional in self-reproduction. No sex organs were observed in either wild or cultured collections of P. dispersum gametophytes. Stomates were observed on several of the gametophytes that had already proliferated sporophytes. As the thallus is everywhere only one cell thick, the stomatal apparatus merely consists of two typical guard cells over an opening between thallus cells (Fig. 2, B & Fig. 15, D, E). Its function, if any, is unknown. Stomates have previously been observed on apogamous gametophytes (Steil, 1919), but always at the base of the sporophyte and associated with cells already modified in morphology toward sporophytic epidermal cells (elongate and with undulate lateral walls). However, in P. dispersum, these stomates occur on lobes without sporophytes (although always on gametophytes containing proliferations) and in tissue with cells still strictly of gametophytic structure. The sporophytic proliferation in Polypodium dispersum is first noticeable as a small swelling on the dorsal surface, usually near the margin of the thallus (Fig. 2, 15). In the very small, elliptic gametophytes it arises from the center and quickly occupies all but a small fringe of gametophyte tissue around the base of the small sporophyte plant. This swelling very early produces both the simple and ctenoid, clavate hairs of the juvenile sporophyte (Fig. 15, D, F, G). The swelling may be only a few cells high or it may become 1 or 2 mm long before differentia- tion takes place at the apex. A fine strand of two or three partially over-lapping, spirally thickened tracheids appears in a central core of narrow cells in the swell- ing. One or two tiny strap-shaped leaves with a delicate midrib, marginal acicular hairs and simple and ctenoid laminar hairs arise, followed by a series of leaves like those of sexually produced and root proliferated sporophytes. The first leaf (and sometimes the second) appears before the roots. This is in contrast to the sexually [Vor. 55 208 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN produced sporophyte, in which the first root appears with or usually before the first leaf, As in any obligate apogamous fern, the ameiotic apogamous cycle of P. dispersum allows dispersion and colonization without the necessity of fertilization. It is unique, however, in that the cycle has entirely the character of sexual repro- duction with neither meiosis nor syngamy and the usual associated opportunities for genetic assortment and recombination. At the same time that meiosis and syngamy of the sexual cycle are missing, syndiploidy and meiosis of the meiotic apogamous cycle are also missing. The only way to inject changes into the genome of P. dispersum would be by random mutation and selection for or against this mutation. But any mutations selected would then be carried by all spores of the plant. Consequently, one might expect that this species would have a limited ecological and geographical potential. Yet this species is frequently collected and is widespread in the New World tropics (Fig. 9). Morphological variation from one individual to another is about as great as in most of its relatives. There is even one distinctive collection of numerous specimens (Wright 1051) with incised seg- ments from Cuba, where the typical form is common. In spite of its seemingly limited genetic potential, its somatic life cycle has evidently been quite successful in adapting this species to its environment. CYTOLOGY AND EVOLUTION One of the major efforts in recent systematic studies of the Filicineae has been to subdivide the classical all-encompassing and undoubtedly polyphyletic family Polypodiaceae. Serious attempts at a more natural arrangement have led to such revisions as those of Bower (1923), Christensen (1938), Ching (1940), Dickason (1946), Copeland (1947), Holttum (1947, 1949), Alston (1956) and Pichi-Sermolli (1959). Within the Polypodiaceae sensu stricto there has been, at the same time, a subdivision of the classical genus Polypodium into presumably more natural genera. Today there is a general agreement as to the extent of the genus Poly- podium, although Copeland (1947) segregated out Goniophlebium Presl, a step I do not think warranted on present evidence. The Polypodium pectinatum-plumula group is more similar in certain gross appearances to Ctenopteris in the Grammitidaceae than to the rest of the genus Polypodium as a whole—so close, indeed, that Copeland (1956) placed P. trun- corum.in Ctenopteris and suggested that P. pectinatum and P. plumula might also belong there. Copeland’s paper inspired critical studies of the sporangia (Wilson, 1959 a, b) and gametophytes (Stokey, 1959) of the latter two species. Table ! lists character differences between this complex and the Grammitidaceae. I believe that these families, based primarily on the differences in spores, sporangia, paleae, and gametophytes, should be maintained, although there still remain vexing problems as to their origin. There are, basically, two lines of thought—one that the Grammitidaceae arose from the Polypodiaceae (Pichi- Sermolli, 1959; Christensen, 1938), and the other that the Grammitidaceae arose independently from gleichenioid stock (Holttum, 1947, 1949; Stokey, 1951; Cope- land, 1947). There are also dual propositions as to the origin of the Polypodiaceae, 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 209 . Comparison of the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex with the Grammitidaceae. P. pectinatum-plumula complex Grammitidaceae SPOROPHYTE: izome Creeping, short-creeping, or erect Short, ascending Paleae non-clathrate (rarely sub-clathrate), Paleae clathrate or not, often conspicu- or partially and inconspicuously ously setose papillate or fimbriate Frond Stipe usually articulate Stipe rarely articulate Rachis always paleate (often inconspicu- Rachis never paleate ously) Short-spaced or approximate to fasciculate Mostly fasciculate Lamina usually with flexuous or stiff Lamina usually with long, stiff, unicellu- multicellular acicular hairs lar or multicellular setose hairs Venation forked (rarely simple), free, or if | Venation simple (sometimes forked), free, anastomosing, then with free included or rarely anastomosing without included veinlet eias Sporangial stalk with 2-3 columns of cells — Sporangial stalk with 1 column of cells Spores bilateral, monolete, golden (without Spores tetrahedral, trilete, green (with i hyll) chlorophyll) chlorophy GAMETOPHYTE: ordate, with ventral rhizoids (rarely Strap-shaped, with marginal rhizoids strap-shaped with marginal rhizoids) Rhizoids appearing with first prothallial Rhizoids appearing after 10-15 prothallial d cell, or later cells have appeare Plate early forming (after 1-2 months) Plate late forming (after 2 months- 1 year) Simple papillate hairs common Simple papillate hairs uncommon Branched hairs uncommon Branched hairs common d from personal observations and those of Copeland (1947, Pee SI um. ICON Stokey & Atkinson (1958), Wilson (1959 a, b),and de la Sota (1960 one that they arose from dipteroid stock (Holttum, 1947, 1949; Pichi-Sermolli, 1959), the other that the Polypodiaceae also arose from gleichenioid stock (Cope- land, 1947; Stokey, 1951). The origin of the Grammitidaceae from gleichenioid ancestors appears to have much support in actual resemblances, ie. the trilete spores, free forked or simple venation, and the rather stiff pectinate blades. It has been argued that the Polypodiaceae arose from dipteroid stock through forms like [Vor. 55 210 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Dipteris, Matonia, and Cheiropleuria, which have complicated stelar anatomy and anastomosing venation. However, one can also read the opposite sequence from gleichenioid stock to the free-veined polypodia, perhaps much like the present members of the P. pectinatum-plumula complex. One of several difficulties in tracing evolutionary patterns in Polypodium is that of the free vs. anastomosing venation. Christensen (1928) builds a case for the origin of free venation in the Table 2, Chromosome observations. Taxa, with collection & location Number P. alfredii Rosenst.—Mexico, Oaxaca, Zacatepec, Mickel 1613; Costa Rica, n=37 Guanacaste Prov, Evans 2890. P. bolivianum Rosenst.—Costa Rica, Alajuela Prov, Evans 2921, Puntarenas n=37 Prov, Evans 3155, 3057-1. P. camptophyllarium Fée var. camptophyllarium—Jamaica, Portland n=74 Parish, Evans 2404, 2405, 2406, 2407, 2408, 2409, 2410, 2413, St. Andrew Parish, Evans 2378 P. camptophyllarium Fée var. lachniferum (Heiron.) Evans—Jamaica, St. n=74 l Andrew Parish, Evans 2440, St. Thomas Parish, Evans 2637-13 P. dispersum Evans—Florida, Citrus Co, Evans 2007, 2008, Wagner 62061, | "2n"—111 Hillsborough Co, Evans 1189, 2019; Jamaica, Portland Parish, Evans 2400, 2402, 2403, ‘Proctor 22896. P. ferrugineum Mart. & Gal.—Mexico, Nayarit, Ceboruco volcano, Mickel n=37 1374. P. hygrometricum Splitg.—Costa Rica, Puntarenas Prov, Evans 2733. n=37 P. paradiseae Langsd. & Fisch.—Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul, Sao Leopoldo, n=37 Sehnen s.n. P. pectinatum L. s.s.—[amaica, Portland Parish, Evans 2534-1, Trelawny n=37 Parish, Evans 2588; Costa Rica, Alajuela Prov, Evans 2984-1. P. plumula Humb. & rox ex Willd.—Florida, Hernando Co, Wood, n=T4 s.n., Hillsborough Co, Evans 1186, Sumter Co, Evans 1190, 1192, 1 193; Jamaica, Portland Parish, Evans 2398. P. ptilodon Kunze var. caespitosum (Jenm.) Evans—Florida, Dade Co, n=74 Delchamps 6/14/60, Hernando Co, Evans 2015, a Co, Evans 1158, Hillsborough Co, Evans 2018, Sumter Co, Evans 2002, 2003; Jamaica, Portland Parish, Evans 2411, 2412, 2414; Mexico, San Luis Potosi, Xilitla, Mickel 602. P. lodon Kunze var. ptilodon—Peru, Prov Bagua, Dept Amazonas, n=37 jen 1470. P. recurvatum Kaulf.—Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul, Sáo Leopoldo, Sehnen n—37 s.n. siccum Lindm.—Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul, São Leopoldo, Sehnen s.n. n=37 NN 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 911 P. vulgare group from the goniophlebioid venation. In the group under present study there are several species with partial to almost complete reticulation, species which are also pubescent, as are most of the truly goniophlebioid species. These reticulate venation patterns could be considered as either generalized or specialized character states, but are here treated as examples of a condition derived from free venation. The interpretation of this character is involved with the interpretation of the origin of the family, either from free-veined gleichenioid stock or anastomos- ing dipteroid stock. The answer is not immediately self-evident. CYTOLOGY Fourteen taxa were available for chromosome counts (Table 2). These are too few to be of application in interpreting the whole picture of speciation in the complex; however, all counts are useful. It was initially assumed that Polypodium dispersum was a hybrid between P. plumula and P. ptilodon var. caespitosum, but chromosome counts indicate that this is not likely. In the case of P. ptilodon var. ptilodon and var. caespitosum, a difference in their chromosome counts helps in interpreting them as at least separate varieties. Polypodium ferrugineum is quite similar to P. cupreolepis, except that the former has larger spores. It might have been considered a tetraploid derivative of P. cupreolepis, were it not known to be a diploid. Table 3 indicates mean spore and guard cell lengths (based on 10 measure- ments per specimen and 3-10 specimens of each species or variety). Those cyto- logically known taxa have their ploidal level also indicated. On the assumption that spore and guard cell length are usually affected by polyploidy, this can give some indication of possible ploidal levels in certain of the species. Unfortunately, there are not enough cytologically known taxa to give real indications of suc levels, but certain suggestions can be made. The taxa are here arranged in descend- ing order of length of spores. In this table there is some indication that those taxa with guard cell lengths of ca 45u or greater, correlated with a spore length of 50u or greater, may be polyploids. Conversely, those taxa with guard cells less than 40 long, correlated with spore lengths of less than 47u could be expected to be diploids. On this basis it is predicted that those taxa marked with an (*) are probable polyploids, and those marked with an (o) are expected diploids. DIVERGENCE INDEX AND COMMON GROUND PLAN The aap ss of the P. pectinatum-plumula complex are diagrammed in Fig. 16. is is a method for expressing evolutionary relationships developed by M ame "e 1962), at the University of Michigan and used by such previous authors as Hardin (1957), Mickel (1962), and Scora (1964). A list of as many characters as possible that show contrasting character states within the complex is first compiled. The generalized and the specialized state of each character is indicated. This is ascertained by noting the frequency and distribution of a certain character state. The assumption is that the more common the character state the more likely it is to be the generalized state. It is necessary [Vor. 55 912 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Table 3. Comparison of spore and guard cell size and chromosome number. Taxon Spore Chromosome Guard cell length in u number length inu *P. absidatum 59 66 "P. as var. robustum 56 52 var. caespitosum 56 n-—'4 50 *P. camptophyllarium var. lachniferum 54 n=74 57 var. camptophyllarium 54 n—T4 52 P. pectinatiforme 52 39 «P. ji 50 65 P. filicula 50 41 °P. ferrugineum 50 n=37 40 ?P. alfredii 50 n=37 37 *P. plumula 50 n=74 34 P. sursumcurr 49 38 P. ptilodon var. P P 47 44 °P. hygrometricum 47 n=37 39 °P. pectinatum 45 n=37 47 P. truncorum 45 41 °P. siccum 45 n=37 37 P. iae var. glabrescens 44 44 DE m 44 43 P. curv 43 P. a ee var. macedoi 44 43 P. bermudianum 43 43 °P. bolivianum 43 n—31 43 °P, recurvatum 43 n=37 39 P. dispersum 43 *2n"—]111 38 P. camptophyllarium var. abbreviatum 43 43 "P. ee 42 n—31 43 P. choquetang 42 50 °P. ptilodon E i pitiadon 4] n=37 40 P. eurybasis var. eurybasis 40 50 P. consimile var. consimile 40 43 var. pastazense 40 40 °P. cupreolepis 36 31 ap. 34 35 P. singeri 32 45 to test this assumption by taking into account related taxa or groups of taxa outside the one in question. In the analysis of a genus one must thus examine other closely related genera. In the present case, members of the genus Polypodium out- side the compiex were considered. In this way, it is possible to evaluate with strong probability a character state which appears frequently in a given group, but which may actually be a derived character state when taking the overall group into consideration.? polished aspect of the rachis of the P. pectinatum-plumula complex is present throughout the group and might therefore be considered as generalized. However, this is 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 913 An initial list of characters, each showing paired character states, was selected. However, certain of these characters did not appear to have direct evolutionary significance; they had no obvious correlations. To simplify the diagram and reduce the information to the most definite characters and trends, these fluctuating char- acters were eliminated from the ground plan. Each of the remaining 23 characters was then evaluated as to whether it is a generalized or specialized character state, the generalized state being given the value (0), and the derived state (1). This is based on the principle that, as we do not really know any actual quantitative value for a specific character, it is best to give them all equal values. In two characters—pinnatifid vs. crenate or entire segments, and comose hairs obscuring the rhizome paleae vs. comose hairs few or absent—however, I have given a value of 1.5 to these isolated and exag- gerated expressions of an already specialized character state. Also, in evaluating the character of basal segments perpendicular to the rachis (0) or deflexed (1), I have added an intermediate level (0.5) for those cases which have a sporadic expression of the specialized state. Such situations could be avoided by establishing additional characters for these conditions, e.g. segments pinnatifid (1) versus seg- ments crenate (0). But considering that the “ultra” specialized character state 1.5 in each case occurred in species obviously related to other species exhibiting the specialized character state 1, this seemed to be the clearest path to take. The same is true of the intermediate 0.5 state. The total values of the character states for each entity are totaled, giving each a quantitative index showing its approximate divergence from the hypothetical ancestor, which had all the characters in the generalized state. This value then indicates at which level, ie. on which semicircle on the divergence figure, the species will be placed. The position depends on the correlation of as many derived character states as possible from one species to another. Where it is necessary to cause a line to fork and there is no extant plant which “fits” this position, a “hypothetical ancestor,” or “prototype” to those following it on the lines (indicated by open dots in Fig. 16) is inserted. This brings out an interesting point regarding the use of these “hypothetical ancestors” within a very closely related group of plants. Mickel (1962), in constructing a ground plan for the species of the genus Anemia, subgenus Coptophyllum, had to use 19 “hypothetical ancestors” in evaluating 41 taxa. Scora (1964) had to use 13 “hypothetical ancestors” in placing 22 taxa in the genus Monarda. Yet in the present study, in placing 35 species, only 8 were necessary. This may be due to the wider spread of morphological diversity that usually occurs in the species of a whole genus or subgenus, as compared to a single species complex within a genus. In the present study the species are not so pees in Polypodium and is therefore considered a derived character state. In the same way, the black polished rachis is considered a erived character state, as it occurs significance within the complex, though it might well have significance in an evaluation of the whole genus or family. [Vor. 55 914 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN recognized to be closely related, and therefore the divergence pattern reflects this closeness in that many species appear to be directly related in a linear or diverging series. The following are the evaluations of the characters used in formulating the common ground plan: A. Rhizome: Throughout most of the genus, as well as the family, the rhizome is long-creeping. In this complex several of the species of smaller stature, particu- larly those allied with P. plumula, have a more specialized, short-creeping, sub- erect or erect rhizome. B.-C. Rhizome Paleae: The generalized shape of the paleae is narrow- or linear-triangular. However, in several of the species, e.g. P. cupreolepis, P. alfredii, P. ferrugineum, P. sursumcurrens, and P. filicula, the paleae are ovate or cordate (B). One of the specialized features of practically the whole complex is the comose rhizome paleae (C) (Fig. 1). Inconspicuously comose paleae also occur in several species not closely allied to this complex as judged by other characters, which have been excluded from the present treatment. There are a few of the included taxa allied with P. plumula which characteristically lack this comose condition. Since palear comosity is probably specialized, those species which have not developed it are considered generalized in this respect. D. Rachis Color: The rachis is lustrous or polished, and though this is un- doubtedly a specialized condition, it is a null character as far as divergence within the complex is concerned. However, there are essentially two color phases: red- brown in the P. pectinatum allies and either red-brown or black in the P. plumula allies. As stated above, the black condition is considered specialized. E.-F. Rachis Firmness: Though most of the group have a stiff and erect rachis, as do most species of Polypodium in general, several members have specialized springy elastic rachises, readily recognizable on herbarium sheets (E). There are also two species, P. curvans and P. choquetangense, that show an additional specialization in the twisting or curling of the rachis under normal growth condi- tions (F). (This is not to be confused with the curling of the rachis and costa causing the frond to curl up under dry conditions.) G. Rachis Pubescense: Although the whole group is characterized by a variety of types of rachis trichomes, and the rachises vary from nearly glabrous to pilose, P. eurybasis var. villosum has a striking densely-villose rachis distinguishing it from all other species. H. Ctenoid Hairs of the Rachis: Although inconspicuous ctenoid hairs can probably be found on any species of Polypodium, at least on juvenile fronds, the species of the P. pectinatum group are noteworthy because of the numerous, large, conspicuous ctenoid hairs developed also on the mature rachis (Fig. 1, F). This is considered a specialized condition. I. Rachis Paleae (Fig. 5): Though the rachis paleae vary considerably through- out Polypodium, in this complex and in those polypods most similar to those of this complex, the inconspicuous, long, thin, filiform type of palea is most frequent and therefore considered primitive. However, a number of species allied with P. plumula exhibit numerous hastate-triangular or cordate, conspicuous paleae on the 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 215 rachis, which are probably specialized. They are either concolorous or have a dark margin and paler base (Fig. 1, H) and are thus different from the clathrate paleae with pale margins in the P. squamatum and P. vulgare groups. J. Frond Size: Though there is considerable size variation in Polypodium (Fig. 3), there are a few species which are significantly reduced in size. 'These are represented here by P. ferrugineum, P. filicula, and P. camptophyllarium var. abbreviatum, which have fronds generally less than 25 cm long. K. Length of the Stipe: Whereas the majority of the species of Polypodium have a well-defined stipe that is readily disguishable from the rachis, several species have the specialized condition of sessile or nearly sessile blades, as represented in the P. pectinatum-plumula group by P. consimile, P. filicula, and P. ptilodon var. pilosum. L. Blade Base: 'The most general blade outline in Polypodium is elliptic-ovate, or linear with a cuneate or subtruncate base. However, several species, here repre- sented by P. bolivianum and P. recurvatum, have a specialized, very abruptly truncate blade base (Fig. 3, G). M. Basal Segments: Most polypodioid ferns have segments that are all essen- tially perpendicular to the rachis, and this is considered a generalized character. Certain species, however, show a distinctly different orientation at the base of the blade, with the basal segments becoming increasingly deflexed (Fig. 3). This usually creates an asymmetry at the segment base in which the upper edge meets the rachis at a broadly confluent angle, whereas the lower edge meets the rachis at a much sharper angle (see character 0). Species with basal segments irregularly deflexed are given an intermediate value of 0.5. N. Segment Orientation: Pinnatifid polypodioid ferns commonly have either straight or slightly falcate segments which are essentially perpendicular to the rachis or slightly ascending (usually not more than 20° above the horizontal). The group of P. absidatum, P. curvans, and P. choquetangense have distinctly ascending segments exceeding ca 30° above the horizontal (Fig. 3, C). O. Segment Base Symmetry: The segments of pinnatifid polypodioid ferns usually have an essentially symmetrical base, expanded and confluent on the rachis. In several species of this complex the lower edge of the segment meets the rachis at a right angle or may even be partially incised on the lower side, creating a semi-pinnate condition. This character has only been considered as specialized, however, when the segments are at right angles to the rachis (Fig. 3, ). When the segments are either ascending or deflexed this is automatically re- flected in an asymmetry at the base. P. Segment Margin: Whereas the majority of these species have the generalized condition of segments with entire margins, the species allied to P. eurybasis and the P. curvans—P. choquetangense line have crenate margins, as do P. paradiseae and P. sursumcurrens (Fig. 3, Fig. 6). In P. choquetangense (Fig. 6, T) the seg- ments are deeply pinnatifid, and I have assigned this character state the “ultra” value of 1.5. Q.-R. Laminar Pubescense: This refers only to the relatively conspicuous acicular, non-appressed hairs, since all members of this group have inconspicuous [Vor. 55 216 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN clavate hairs. The presence of a conspicuous pubescence is considered derived from the essentially glabrous condition (Q), and the presence of definite patterns of distribution of these hairs, as in the P. ptilodon group (Fig. 1, E), is considered an additional derived character state (R). S. Lateral Veinlets: The great majority of polypodioid ferns have either anastomosing or free forked venation patterns. However, the specialized state of simple venation is present in this group in P. truncorum, P. siccum, and P. filicula (Fig. 6 T. Sorus Position: In the free veined species of Polypodium the sorus is always terminal on the first acropetal veinlet and is usually medial between the costa and the laminar margin (Fig. 6). However, in several instances, the fertile veinlet typically extends almost to the margin, thus reflecting the condition of comparable veinlets in a sterile segment. In these instances the sori are then marginal or sub- marginal, and this is considered a derived character state. U. Receptacular Paraphyses: In almost all taxa the receptacular paraphyses are composed of uniform cells and are similar to the clavate hairs of the lamina, though they are occasionally branched. They are universally present in this com- plex, and in most of the species examined in the rest of the genus and the family Polypodiaceae, and so it is believed that this simple paraphysis type is generalized. However, P. sursumcurrens exhibits an unusual paraphysis with an irregular sub- terminal multicellular clavate head (Fig. 4, P). As the head is composed of un- differentiated, though contorted, cells, it is considered to be derived not from re- duced sporangia (“sporangiasters” as in P. virginianum), but from coalesced cells of a strongly twisted simple type of paraphysis. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. macedoi exhibits another distinctive paraphysis type; this is regularly forked, but one fork is tipped by a clavate cell, the other by a sharply setose cell (Fig. 4, M). The small appressed hairs of the lamina of this species are similar to the paraphyses. V. Spore Length: While great length may be a simple morphological specializa- tion by itself or reflect polyploidy, in either case it represents a divergence from the ground plan and is thus considered specialized. W. Number of Spores Per Sporangium: In the higher ferns, 64 spores per sporanguim is a regular occurrence and has become a standard for indicating the normal sexual life cycle. Similarly, 32 spores per sporangium indicates an apoga- mous asexual reproduction, as is the case in P. dispersum. Apogamy is considered a specialized type of life cycle. Taxonomic REVISION OF THE POLYPODIUM PECTINATUM-PLUMULA COMPLEX? In treating this group of closely related species of Polypodium, there are no clear-cut limits in inclusion and exclusion. The species here included are circum- scribed by the characters of blades with pectinate segments, essentially free veins, approximate to fasciculate fronds, rigid or elastic, lustrous, red-brown or black stipe and rachis, triangular and comose or cordate and non-comose, non-clathrate * Until a broad and thorough examination of all the species-complexes in Polypodium are made, it seems wisest to withhold a formal subgeneric or sectional designation for this complex. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 217 rhizome scales, 2-3 rowed sporangial stalks, and reniform spores. The species of closest superficial resemblance in Grammitidaceae are excluded on the basis of the sporangial stalk, spores, and other characters (see Table 1 above). Certain species of Polypodium have been excluded that might, in a wider treatment of the whole genus, be included here in the future. Polypodium hartwegianum, P. chnoophorum, P. moritzianum, and others have inconspicuously comose rhizome scales but have been excluded on the basis of the lack of the lustrous rachis, the different texture of the lamina, or the more crisped silvery laminar trichomes. I have, on the contrary, included P. hygrometricum and P. recurvatum, which perhaps are more properly placed with these excluded species. However, the latter two have been particularly confused with the included species both as to taxonomy and nomen- clature. Future work should be directed at delimiting the different groups (possibly as subgenera) within Polypodium sensu stricto so that all the species can eventually be grouped and treated systematically. The measurements of rhizomes, fronds, blades, and segments include a mean size bracketed by an expected maximum and minimum limit. These were compiled by measuring ten random specimens of each recognized entity. “Ctenoid hairs” refer to small, appressed, multiple-branched hairs with all the branches arising from one side of the main axis (Fig. 1, F & Fig. 4, I). “Comose” rhizome paleae refer to those with tufts of unicellular hairs arising from the dorsal surface (Fig. 1). The costa is "decurrent on the rachis" when it joins the rachis in a downward arc to form a short wing along the rachis and a visible curvature of the costa. When the costa meets the rachis at a right angle, there is also a slight expansion on the rachis but no visible curvature of the costa. In defining plane shapes (e.g. fronds, segments, scales), I have attempted to follow the Systematics Association, Descriptive Terminology, Chart 1 (Taxon 11: 145-156, 1962), with the addition of the term “cordate,” as it so usefully applies to the overall shape of many paleae (Fig. 5). All observations have been made from mature fertile fronds, and all characters of rachis, costa and lamina, unless otherwise noted, refer to the abaxial surface only. The colors of the paleae, rachis, and costa are treated as black or one of the following three shades of red-brown. Because there is no satisfactory equivalent for the intermediate color, I have used the terms “light red-brown” (ferrugineous), “red-brown”, and “dark red-brown” (castaneous). As a result of the close morphological similarity of many of these species, it has been necessary to rely heavily on what may appear to be quite minute and technical characters. In evaluating the shape or comosity of paleae, or the size, shape, and distribution of hairs, it has often been necessary to use optical magnifi- cations beyond the hand lens and up to 20 to 30X or more. The laminar trichomes consist basically of two types. One is the appressed, clavate, simple, forked, or ctenoid hair. These are rarely over 250g long and would be generally overlooked in routine identifications, except when they are conspicuous on the stipe base in the larger members of the P. pectinatum group. The second are conspicuous, acicular, simple hairs from 0.25 mm to 2.0 mm long. These constitute the generally visible pubescence of the frond. However, in the descrip- [Vor. 55 218 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN tions both the conspicuous acicular hairs and the inconspicuous clavate hairs are referred to. Because the clavate hairs would often be overlooked, certain species may appear superficially glabrous, when in fact small clavate hairs are undoubtedly present. In these cases, the description may refer to the lamina as “essentially glabrous.” Where the soral size is important, it is indicated by the approximate portion of the width of the segment that two sori occupy, e.g. “occupying half the width of the segment.” Only the mature sori are referred to in this measurement. KEY TO THE SPECIES OF THE POLYPODIUM CTINATUM-PLUMULA COMPLEX l. Rachis paleae relatively conspicuous, persistent, other than filiform; rachis brown or izome paleae cordate with acute apex, non-comose; rachis red-bro or black with lateral brown stripes; rachis paleae narrow-elliptic or ies with acute apex, entire; sporangia with or without setae. 3. Rachis paleae narrow-elliptic, few and sometimes inconspicuous, flat; asal segments of the blade strongly reflexed; ee without setae; rachis red-brown or = with lateral brown stripes ........................ . P. alfredii Rachis paleae cordate, numerous and conspicuous, dU e or flat; all segments penas to the atn with symmetrical bases; sporangia with or without setae; rachis red-brow 4. Rhizome paleae light golden color; rachis red-brown but costa black or darker brown than the rachis; sporangia with 2 E setae e S 6. P. ferrugineum 4, Rhizome paleae red-brown; rachis and costa both red-brown; spor- angia nak 4. P. cupreolepis 2. Rhizome paleae narrow-triangular with acuminate apex, comose; rachis red-brown or black without lateral stripes; rachis paleae cordate, or nar- row-triangular with acuminate apex and hastate base, inconspicuously 5. Fronds 10 (6-17) cm long; rachis paleae cordate, dark brown with dark base, Meetic. toothed; veins unforked 10. P. filicula 5. Fronds 15-65 cm long; rachis paleae cordate or narrow-triangular and hastate, dark red-brown, lighter E the base, fimbriate; veins 1-2- dies Fronds narrow-ovate or linear; segments linear, the basal segment shorter, not deflexed, faced. to mere auricles; veins l-forked ....9. P. plumula Fronds narrow-ovate; segments narrow-ovate, the basal segments shorter, deflexed, sometimes reduced to auricles; nr 2-forked. achis and costa brown; Bermuda P. bermudianum 9 Bermuda. Rachis paleae subulate with hastate base; lower segments only slightly dne strongly deflexed; 64 reniform spores per sporangium; Centr e 12. P. atrum a 8 chis paleae narrow- linear-triangular base; lower segments sometimes reduced to auricles, A deflexed; 32 globose spores per sporangium; wi ne gin dispersum l. dona paleae absent, or if present then filiform and a enu ma is bro 9. "Basal segments one half as long as the longest segments or more. 10. Fronds mostly less than 40 cm long; veins l- forked .......... 26. P. hygrometricum 10. Fronds mod more than 40 cm long; veins 2- or 11. s agile acuminate, gray-green, puberulent with short silvery þairs 1e ie 25. P. aE 11. nsa. acute to obtuse, green, glabrous 16. P. bolivianum 1968] 9. EVANS—POLYPODIUM 219 Basal segments less FE half as long as the longest segments, often reduced to wings, lobes or auricle 12. Veins simple; fies aes glabrous. Segments ascending 15°-25° above the horizontal; ae 3.5 9-45) mm Sid rhizome paleae brown to dark brown ...1. P. truncorum 13. Segments perpendicular to the rachis or only Tisi ascending; 1-2 mm wide; rhizome paleae li E E brown ............ . Siccum 12. Veins 1-4-forked; rhizome paleae comose (except in P. ees urrens). 4, — strongly ascending 25°-50° above ane pube eps to pinnatifid. 15. Serent pinnatifid almost to the costa .................. 15. P. choquetangense 15, Segments merely crenulate or crenate. 16, Blades Pedes segments 2(1.5-3) mm wide; hairs of the chis lon ra mm long; apex of the blade usually circinate en at maturity 1... e LL sss . P. curvans 16 Blades coriaceous to herbaceous; segments 3.9(2-4.5) mm n boi of the rachis ca 0.5 mm lon ng; apex of the blade straight at maturity ..... 13. P. absidatum 14. NN UM pe edad to the rachis or only slightly ascending, entire to crenulate I7. Lamina pilose only in an oblong patch around Sa sorus, other- wise glabrous or with only scattered acicular hairs (then these much denser around the sorus); basal segments gradually re- duced to mere wings or lobes s s hl. 23. P. ptilodon i n even distribution of pubescence; -1 - fab) B n, m S S un Uu o 5 z = ct E se variou amina essentially inten bonn (acicular hairs absent or only sc. Pide inconspicuous clavate hairs present); veins free oak 9. Lower de of the segments perpendicular to the rachis, at least in the lower half of the blade; veins 1-forked. receptacular paraphyses twisted and with a sub- terminal clavate multicellular head; eastern Mexic mis Y e o "d £5 e R c" E D [g>] 5 ua i8 o 5 m wa [1] RI e E [ma o o "A 5 £5 <= o Pd 1] n B- 28-130 cm n long; blade 4-26 cm wide . = ae IT. P. uua da brown; Mexico and Central America ..... 5. P. alfredii 19. Upper and lower edge of the segments similar, equally expanded and adnate on the rachis: veins 2-forke 23. Rachis 13 (6-20) times as long as the stipe; segments uced at blade base to obtuse or rounded lobes, 4, [,, sted tele eth shia esta eg act) P. consimile 23. Rachis 2-5 times as long as the stipe; segments re- duced at the blade base but not to mere lo es, nar- h row-triangular, acute at the apex, crenulate or EFEDAIS aordi MEL O Les 17. P. eurybasis [Vor. 55 220 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN nearly marginal; veins 1-forked, zd zome pale ovate, red-brown with dark brown base ....... sursumcurrens 24. Lamina pilose with pale or g Ba ac cicular hairs; veins free throughout; basal ae strong de flexed; plants of Paraguay, Argentina, and southern razi 26. Fronds less than 65 cm long; veins 1(2)-forked; sori supramedial; segments entire or occasionall P. pectinatiforme 26. Fronds over 70 cm long; veins 2- or 3-forke sori submarginal; segments crenate ........ E exe paradiseae Costa curved downward and decurrent on rachis; veins free or partially anastomosing; Ne segments various; wide-ranging. 21. Fronds less than 30 cm long; veins 1-forked, fre out ....22d. P. camptophyllarium var. mr. 27. Fronds more than 30 cm ns veins 2(1)-forked, free or partially, anastom . Lamina chartac cae o. s, soft; vein rarely anastomosing; sporan gia without bm Peru an s ern ud T E d P. venturii veins N e No Qo tr fo B fa] D (b [eo] G un [i Q [] ze eb] 6 angia setose; wide-ran 29. Lamina puberulent with hairs usually inim shorter a 0.2 mm long; spor- 654 lo usually ay: redu E o 2 or 3 pairs » lobes at the blade base, "creme ir t is throughout, the basal lobes aided and symmetrical at the ASE ou... P. pectinatum . Lamina pubescent with hairs 0.35 to 0.5 mm long; sporangial setae more than 100u long; segments reduced to lobes, N © inat S metrical at the base or with the lower dge perpendicular to the r 22. 1. Polypodium truncorum Lindm., Hedwigia 43: 309, 1904. P. elasticum Rich. var. glaziovii Baker in Mart., Fl Bras. 1(2):517, t. 64, fig. 2 1870. (Syntypes: Brazil: Santa Catarina, Muller s.n. not seen; Rio de J aneiro, Glaziou 1723, 2461 ~ e Minas Gerais, Caldas, Regnell II 319* i P. are Lindm., Ark. Bot. 1: 240, ¢ g. 9, 1903, non Luer: 882. (Lectotype: Brazil, as, Pedra Branca, Regnell II 319*a S; ee S-PA) s Gerais, px "ed glaziovii sensu Copel., Phil. Jour. Sci. 84: 416, 1956, p.p., not as to type. C. truncorum (Lindm.) Copel., loc. cit. 450. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 221 Rhizomes very short-creeping or erect, 1.5 (1-2) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-triangular, brown to dark brown, lustrous, basifixed, non-comose, non- clathrate, the margins entire; fronds 25 (8-42) cm long, caespitose on the rhizome; rachis 9 (6-20) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, with scat- tered whitish or golden acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae incon- spicuous or absent, if present then linear to short-filiform, entire; blades narrow- to linear-ovate or -obovate, 23 (7-38) cm long, 3.5 (2.5-4.5) cm wide, subtruncate to cuneate at the base; segments 19 (13-23) mm long, 3.5 (2.5-4.5) mm wide, narrow-triangular, acute, expanded and symmetrical at the base, chartaceous to membranaceous, slightly toothed, ascending ca 65?-75? from the rachis, slightly reduced but not deflexed at the blade base, the basal pair usually reduced to auricles, or occasionally blades gradually reduced to a cuneate base; lamina essentially glabrous except for a few long, clavate hairs; costae perpendicular to or slightly ascending on the rachis, with few long acicular hairs; veins simple, free; guard cells ca 4lu long; sori medial to extramedial, round, with long simple clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae; spores globose-reniform, smooth, ca 45u long. Type: Based on P. bakeri Lindm., 1903, not Luerss., 1882. Regnell’s numbering system was complex; II 319a, II 319*, II 319*c and II 319*d have been examined and they represent other species, the two last named numbers being P. singeri. Habitat: epiphytic, mostly on tree-fern trunks, occasionally terrestrial, in wet forests, 500-1800 m alt Distribution: southern Brazil and northern Argentina.—Fig. 11. AZIL: MINAS GERAIS: Canjerana, e II 319* p.p. (MO, non US); Caldas, Regnell II 3199 (S-PA); Carangola, N of Serra da Grama, Mexia 4272 (GH); Vicosa, Fazenda de re Mexia 5105 (GH). nro DE ae Tijuca, Dusén 5022 (MO); nr Rio de Janeiro & Bahia, Webb s.n., in 1867-1868 (MICH). sao PAULO: Alto da Serra, Estação Biologica, Smith "1844 (MICH); Campos do Jordão, Leite 3562 (GH, MO); Serra da Bocaina, Brade 20799 (MO), 20801 (MO); Serra da a Eiten & de la Sota 2170 (US). PARANA: Serra do Mar, Te Dusén 3651 (GH, MO); Desiro Ypiranga, Dusén 6776 (MO). SANTA CATARINA: Ararangua, Serra da Pedra, j C271 (US); Azambuja, Brusque, Reitz 1795 (US), Smith & Reitz 6136 (GH, MO); Brusque, Mata Hoffmann, Reitz 3071 ior Ibirama, Horto Florestal, Smith & Klein 7554 (US); Itacorobi, Santa Catarina I, Ro ix Luis Alves, Itajai, Reitz 159 (US). RIO GRANDE po sur: São Leopoldo, Reitz "1314 (US). ARGENTINA: MISIONES: Yerbal Viejo, Burkart 1584 (GH); Cainguás, Qae Mayo, Montes 27.218 (US). I have not seen the type of P. glaziovii Bak. (Glaziou 9062, presumably at BM or P), which I believe to be a Ctenopteris. Copeland (1956) transferred P. glaziovii Bak. to Ctenopteris, using Baker’s original description and citing the type specimen, but in a way indicating that he had not seen it. He then stated, “I find the veins simple; the spores tetrahedral, the stipes glabrescent,” and cited eight collections. I have examined five of these collections. The spores of these are not tetrahedral. The veins are simple, as Copeland stated, but this alone is insufficient for separation of Ctenopteris and Polypodium in all cases. The stipes are glabrescent, but with polypodioid articulate hairs and not ctenopteroid unicellular setiform hairs. These five sheets are all P. truncorum. It is evident thus that Copeland had a confused concept of his Ctenopteris glaziovii (Baker) Copel; the type may be a true [Vor. 55 222 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Ctenopteris, but at least five of the collections cited by Copeland belong to Polypodium. This species is very similar to P. siccum, from which it can be distinguished by the very small rhizome with crowded stipes, the dark chestnut rhizome scales, membranous frond texture, and the narrow ascending segments with the basal pair reduced to mere auricles and the next pair only slightly reduced. That it is a true Polypodium and not a Ctenopteris was shown by de la Sota (1963). 2. Polypodium siccum sio Ark. Bot. 1: 234, t. 11, fig. 4, 1903. p. p c d Fée, Crypt. Bras. 1:93, t. 26, fig. 4, 1869, non Desv., 1811 (Type: zil, Rio de Taneiro, [e 2410 z^ C, P) nem: short-creeping to erect, 2 (1-3) mm in diam; rhizome paleae nar- row-triangular, light red-brown, basifixed, non-comose, non-clathrate, entire; fronds 21 (10-50) cm long, caespitose on the rhizome; rachis 8 (45-11) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, pilose with long acicular simple hairs, and also with long clavate hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae in- conspicuous or absent, if present then linear to filiform, light red-brown, entire; blades linear to narrow-ovate, 23 (8-36) cm long, 3 (2-5) cm wide, cuneate to narrow-cuneate, occasionally subtruncate at the base; segments 15 (9-22) mm long, 1.5 (1-2) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, reduced to a narrow wing at the blade base, linear-triangular, chartaceous to herbaceous, acute, slightly toothed, expanded and symmetrical at the base, or with the lower edge perpendicu- lar to the rachis in the lower part of the blade, the sinuses approximately equal to the width of the segment; lamina with numerous long golden clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered long acicular hairs; veins simple, free; guard cells ca 37u long; sori submarginal, round, with simple clavate para- physes, ca 0.3 mm long; sporangia without paraphyses; spores globose-reniform, smooth, ca 45u long; n=37. Lectotype: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Glaziou 3339 S; isolectotypes BR, C, S-PA. Syntypes: Brazil, Cafioas, Rio Grande do Sul, Regnell I A391 G, GH, NY, S, S-PA, US; Brazil, Hamberger Berg, Rio Grande do Sul, Regnell I A501 S, S- PA; Paraguay, Cordillera of Villa Rica, Balansa 667 B, BR, G, S-PA. Habitat: epiphytic, often on tree ferns, in forests, 450-1200 m alt. Distribution: southeastern Brazil, Paraguay and northern Argentina.—Fig. 10. BRAZIL DE JANEIRO: Novo Fr eee mag 9 (US), Leite 4104 (MO); Rio de Janeiro ^ o. Clarke s.n. (US); > Antonio Serro dos Orgãos, Brade 16317 S ? PAULO: Viens Rio Peronpaua, or 737 (US); Morro das Pedras, Brade pum in 1918 (US). Paraná: Lapa, Braga 1041 (US); Serra do Mar, Ypiranga, Dusén 14433 (GH Sd. Villa Velha. D 14813 (US); Volta Grande, Dusén 14141 (US). SANTA CA Mun. Curitibanos & Campos Novos, Smith & Klein 8287 (US); Joinville, Schmalz “59VIII (MO); Lages, Spannagel 67 (US); Mun. Pôrto Dru Smith & Reitz 8672 (US). RIO GRANDE i) oe Cafioas, Regnell IA391 (G, GH, NY, S, S-PA, US); Neu Wurstemberg, Bornmüller 120 (GH); São Leopoldo, Anchieta 2664 M I hacara Meyer, Reitz 161 eee Regnell Ae (S, S-PA). of E. Vilarica Mts, Balansa 667 (B, BR, G, S-PA). GENTINA: CORRIENTEs: General d Paraje Angostura, Ibarrola 3819 (MO); Mburu- cuyá, Santa Teresa, mls 1758 (MO, US). wisioNzs: Loreto, Burkart 1551 (GH); Posadas, Bonpland, Ekman 66 (MO). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 223 This species is best recognized by its long, linear, delicate blades, submarginal sori, and bright ferruginous rhizome paleae. Within its range, the only similar species is P. truncorum, which has, however, much wider segments and darker paleae. Polypodium siccum (like P. truncorum) strongly resembles the ctenopteroid ferns, but in the critical characters of spores, sporangial stalks, and paleae, it is properly placed in Polypodium. One specimen indicates that this species reproduces in part by root prolifera- tions, though apparently not so commonly as in P. dispersum or P. filicula. 3. Polypodium singeri de la Sota, Opera Lilloana 5: 181, 1960. P. pectinatum L. var. aurita Rosenst., Hedwigia 46: 138, 1906, non P. auritum Lowe, 1858. (Holotype: Brazil, Lages, Spannagel 116a S-PA P. pectinatiforme Lindm., loc. cit. 43: 309, 1904, p.p., not as to lectotype. Rhizomes short-creeping, 3 (2-4) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, non-comose, non-clathrate, entire; fronds 25 (19-30) cm long, caespitose; rachis 6 (3-8) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, with scattered golden, acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae inconspicuous, red-brown, linear, entire; blades narrow- ovate, 22 (15-27) cm long, 4.3 (3-6) cm wide, cuneate at the base; segments 22 (15-25) mm long, 3 (2.5-3.5) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, strongly de- flexed at the blade base or reduced to auricles, linear-ovate, obtuse at the apex, asymmetrical at the base with the upper edge widely adnate on the rachis and the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis or incised, occasionally auriculate, charta- ceous, entire, the sinuses equal to or narrower than the segments; lamina essentially glabrous except for scattered clavate, simple hairs; costa perpendicular to the rachis, with scattered, golden, acicular hairs; veins simple or once-forked, free; sori medial, round, with simple clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae or with one capsular seta ca 115 long; spores reniform, slightly tuberculate, ca 32u long. Holotype: Argentina, Misiones, San Ignacio, Loreto, 2 Febr 1958, Cristóbal, Ahumada, & de la Sota 53 LIL, not seen; isotypes BR, S, US. Habitat: epiphytic on very small tree stems and tree-fern trunks, occasionally terrestrial, in humid forest, 700-1200 m alt. canine southeastern Brazil to northern Argentina.—Fig. 8. MINAS GERAIS: Caldas, Regnell II 319* p.p. (US, non MO), II 319*c X "i sped (S): eii “quatro, "Brade 19006 (MO). sao PAULO: ee Heiner 504 (S) P A: Jaguariahyva, Dusén 14880 (GH, MO); Rio Negro, Annies (Rosenstock A OS); hers Nova, ac (Rosenstock JA (S, S-PA, o Vierdel 1* rae PA). CATARINA: São Chapeco, eitz 3769 (US). RIO GRANDE DO sUL: Silveira Martins, anta Maria, Pu 158 (U erra Leitão, Jürgens 105 ; Santa en Jürgens s.n (Rosenstock 113) (US), non 113a) (S-PA); Regnell 750 (S). ARGENTINA: s SIONES: Candelaria, La Pastora, Montes 2340 (MO); Loreto, Morea s.n., 27 July 1931 (GH); San Ignacio, Montes 2249 (GH); Posados, Boece Lilliesköld n. (S), Ekman 67 (S, S-PA), 81 (S). This species has a curious habit due to its vegetative reproduction by root proliferation. It is usually found growing on small upright twigs as a series of short interconnected rhizomes. The whole appears as a layer of roots surrounding small stems with a series of short rhizomes imbedded in the root mass. The species [Vor. 55 224 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN is well characterized by this curious serial arrangement of rhizome, the conspicu- ously asymmetrical and glabrous segments, the small size of the frond, and the non-comose rhizome scales. It is apparently closely related to P. alfredii of Central America, although well separated by the broader blade, more asymmetrical seg- ments, and the longer rachis paleae. Within this species there appear to be two variations. One form has the seg- ments with smooth entire margins and the sporangia generally without setae, while the other tends to have slightly undulate margins and one seta on most of the capsules. The plants are alike in all other respects, however, so that unless careful population studies in the future indicate otherwise, I believe them to be taxonomi- cally inconsequential. Rosenstock based his P. pectinatum var. aurita on a leaf form with narrow excurrent auricles on the lower edge of the segment. 4. Polypodium cupreolepis A. M. Evans, sp. nov.—Fig. 17. Rhizoma breviter repens, paleis ovatis vel cordatis, pallide vel fusco-brunneis, non comosis, integris, basi affixis, apice acutis, cellulis non clathratis; frondes ap- proximatae articulatae, ca 30 cm longae; stipites et rhachides rigidae nitentes brun- neae, pilose dissitos ferentes; paleae rhachidis numerosae consipcuae cordatae, aureae vel ferrugineae, integrae, apice acutae; lamina pectinata anguste ovata, ca 22 cm longa et 4 cm lata, basi abrupte cuneata vel subtruncata; segmenta linearia integra, rhachide perpendicularia vel interdum basalia paullo deflexa; lamina solum cum pilis inconspicuis clavatis; venae liberae, l-furcatae; sporangia sine setis; sporae late reniformes laeves, ca 36u longae. Rhizomes short-creeping 4.5 (3-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae ovate to cordate, pale to dark brown, non-lustrous, basifixed or basally cordate, acute, non- comose or rarely inconspicuously comose, entire; fronds 30 (10-60) cm long, ap- proximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (1.5-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis brown, with long, scattered, acicular hairs; rachis paleae numerous, conspicu- ous; broadly cordate, bullate, acute, basifixed, golden to light red-brown, non- lustrous, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 22 (9-47) cm long, 4 (2.5-6.5) cm wide, abruptly cuneate to subtruncate at the base; segments 20 (12-32) mm long, 2.5 (1.5-3) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, or occasionally slightly ascending in the upper part of the blade, strongly reduced and sometimes deflexed at the blade base, herbaceous, obtuse to acute at the apex, subsymmetrical at the base or the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis, entire; lamina essentially glabrous, but with inconspicuous clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered acicular hairs; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 31 long; sori medial, round, with numerous, long, clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae; spores broadly reniform, smooth, ca 36u long. Holotype: Mexico, Michoacan, hills of Patzcuaro, 8 Nov 1890, Pringle 3353 US; isotypes, B, GH, MICH, MO, US. Habitat: epiphytic or epipetric, occasionally terrestrial, in montane forests, 1100-2900 m alt. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 295 Distribution: western and southern Mexico to Costa Rica.—Fig. 10. MEXICO: SINALOA: ate Durango & Villa Unión, Ownbey 1939 (US); Ocurahui, Sierra Surutato, ‘Gentry 6337 (GH, MO). puranco: 22 mi E of Santa Lucia, rd from Villa Unión to Durango, Reeder 2487 (US). JALISCO: 15 mi SSE of Autlán, Wilbur 1927 (US); below Canoa de Leoncito, McVaugh 13486 (US); Santa Mónica, McVaugh 14042 (US); 7 mi SSW of Tecalitlan, McVaugh 16254 (US). HIDALGO: Trinidad, Pringle 13475 (US). PUEBLA: oe Eidos 1828 (GH, MO, US). wonzros: Valle del Tepeite, Lyonnet 779 (MO). STRITO FEDERAL: Eslava, Lyonnet 3315 (US), 3316 (US). wicHoAcÁN: Morelia, Campanario, Arsone 8464 (GH, MO, US); Cerro Azul, nr Morelia, Arséne, 3 May 1910 (GH); Tancitaro, (GH), Mt San Miguel, Leavenworth & Hoogstraal 1097 (MO); Zitacuaro, Zitacuaro- Cacique, Hinton 13178 (GH, MO, US). corma: Volcán Colima, Goldsmith 40 (GH); Revillagigedo Islands, Socorro I, Mason 1633 (GH). GUERRERO: Omilteme, Rowell 3049A (US); 2 mi W of Omilteme, Hamilton & Rowell 3245 (US). oaxaca: Totontepec, Nelson 796 Ed CHIAPAS: Pico de Loro, nr Escuintla, Matuda 4268 (GH). ALTA VERAPAZ: Coban, von Tuerckheim 645 (US). QUEZALTENANGO: Cerro Quem Kellerman 5940 (US). cHIMALTENANGO: Las Calderas, Standley 60040 (US). cleat olcán p dinde ae s.n. (GH). L SALVADOR: E of Cerro del Aguila, Tucker 1249 (US). SAN VICENTE: Volcán. de zie Vicente, Standley 2 51608 (US). NICARAGUA: JINOTEGA: Jinotega, Howard 79 (US). Cosra Rica: san José: Las Nubes, Scamman 7228 (GH). This species has generally been identified as “P. pulchrum,” the type of which has, however, a black rachis and costa, triangular, lustrous, red-brown rhizome scales, setose sporangia, and somewhat different rachis scales. I consider P. pulchrum a synonym of P. plumula Humb. & Bonpl. Polypodium ferrugineum Mart. & Gal., a smaller plant with two setae per sporangium, a black costa, a brown rachis, and much paler golden-tan rhizome scales, appears to be its nearest relative. The isotype at Berlin has been annotated by Hieronymus as “P. patzcuarense,” which seems to be an unpublished name. 5. Polypodium alfredii Rosenst., Repert. Sp. Nov. 22: 15, 1925. P. oe var. curtii Rosenst., loc. cit. (Holotype: Costa Rica, region of Rio Chris, nr Juan Vinas, 1200 m, Brade 695 S-PA; isotype US) P. uod Rosenst., loc. cit. 14. (Lectotype: Costa Rica, Tablazo, 1800 m, 4 Mar. 1908, rade & Brade 14 'S-PA. Syntypes: Costa Rica, Tablazo, 1900 m, 20 Ju ly 1909, Brade e Brade 696 NY; Costa Rica, Carpintera, 1500 m, 14 Dec 1909, Brade & Brade 149 , S-PA, P. évathicolg Copel., Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. | pis t. 43, 1941. (Holotype: Mexico, Vera- cruz, Cuantlancillo (Orizaba) alt 1600 n Cya thea in wet ravine, 1 Mar 1938 Copeland, Mex. Ferns 127 MICH; isotype e US) Rhizomes short-creeping, 4 (3-5) mm in diam; rhizome paleae brown, non- lustrous, ovate to cordate, acute to rounded, basifixed, entire or rarely irregularly fimbriate toward the apex; fronds 36 (20-55) cm long, fasciculate on the rhizome; rachis 7.5 (4-14) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, or black with lateral brown stripes, with scattered, long, acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs absent or few and inconspicuous; rachis paleae brown, non-lustrous, acute, basifixed, entire; bullate-cordate to narrow-ovate and conspicuous, or narrow-ovate to narrow- obovate, inconspicuous and scattered, blades 31 (20-50) cm long, 4.8 (3.3-7) cm wide, narrowly oblong, cuneate at the base or subtruncate with the lower segments strongly deflexed, sometimes parallel to the stipe; segments linear-triangular to [Vor. 55 226 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN linear, acute, 25 (15-35) mm long, 3 (2-3.5) mm wide, symmetrical at the base in the upper half of the frond, the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis or deflexed in the lower half of the frond, ciliate, entire; lamina chartaceous, with scattered, short, clavate hairs; costa brown, occasionally darker than the rachis, with scattered, long, acicular hairs, slightly decurrent on, or perpendicular to, the rachis; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 35u long; sori submarginal to extramedial, round, with numerous long, clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, smooth, ca 49u long; n = 37. Holotype: Costa Rica, Turrialba, 650 m, 5 Aug 1909, Brade & Brade 697 S-PA; isotype US. Habitat: epipetric or epiphytic on tree trunks, 1220-2500 m alt in ravines and mountain forests. Distribution: southeastern Mexico to Costa Rica.—Fig. 10. EXICO: HIDALGO: Chapulhuacán, ii PME (TENN, US); nr Jacala, Knobloch del rios, Lyonnet 779 (GH). OAXACA: Cuicatlán, Cuyamecalco, Conzatti & Gomer 3499 (US). cHraPas: Los Lagos, SE of Comitán, Carlson 1777 (US); Pico de Loro, Matuda 4268 (MO); San Felipe, nr Ciudad las ca Carlson 1615 (US); San Pablo, Miinch 121 (US); Ghiesbreght 262 (GH). GUATEMALA: ALTA VERAPAZ: Santa Cruz, Johnson 980 (US). CHIMALTENANGO: Tecpan, Skutch 572 (US). HoNDURAs: COMAYAGUA: El Achote, above Siguatepeque, Yuncker et al. 6191 (US); El Rincón, Yuncker et al. 6076 (GH, MO, US); Barranco El Socorro, Williams & Wil- liams nd (US). FRANCISCO MOROZÁN: Cerro de Uyuca, Morton 6914 (US), 6975 (US); w La Branza & Las Flores, Molina R. 1107 (US). 1298 (US); betw Pefia Blanca & Lo de Ponce, Williams & Mie R. 17128 (US). A RICA nr Tilarán, Standley & Valerio 44666, 44713, 44757 (US). Mus Alajuela, “Alfaro "6056 (GH, US). san José: Tablazo, Brade & Brade 696 (NY), 14a (S-PA). o: Cervantes & Padayas, Biolley 95 (US); El Pr. Stork 4708 (US); Juan Vifias, Rev ón Valley, Cook & Doyle 204 (US), 242 (US); Orosi, Scamman 6117 AE oe ‘hutch 4625 (GH, MO); Peralta, Rowlee & Rowlee 60 (US); Tuis, Tonduz 11309 (US); ialba, Scamman 6116 (GH), 6121 (GH, US), 7230 (GH, US), 7765 (GH); Rio des Smith 5091 (US). There are two extreme types. Typical northern material (represented by Cope- land's P. cyathicola) has either a long-cuneate frond base and a short stipe, or subtruncate and strongly deflexed segments at the blade base, a black rachis with lateral brown stripes, and inconspicuous narrow-ovate rachis scales. The typical southern material represented by P. tablazianum and P. alfredii has a brown rachis and conspicuous, cordate rachis scales. However, these characters are less consistent than the entire, dark brown rhizome scales, the linear-triangular chartaceous seg- ments, and the extra-medial sorus position. The rachis scales throughout the P. pectinatum-plumula complex show patterns of consistency in some and inconsist- ency in other species. Polypodium plumula (see Fig. 5) has a clinal variation of rachis scales. The rachis scales of P: dispersum and P. atrum are very similar (more similar than the range of variation in P. plumula) but because of other 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 227 over-riding characters, these species warrant recognition. In P. alfredii (as here construed) both the cordate and lanceolate scales can be found on any one frond except on those plants from Mexico where the broader scales are completely lost. 6. Polypodium ferrugineum Mart. & Gal., Mém. Acad. Bruxelles 15: 36, t. 6, fig. 2, 1842 Rhizomes short-creeping, 3.5 (2-5) mm in diam; rhizome paleae broad-ovate to cordate, golden-tan, basifixed, acute, non-clathrate, non-comose, the margins entire; fronds 20 (8-40) cm long, approximate to fasciculate on the rhizome; rachis light red-brown, thinly pilose with long, harsh, acicular hairs, and also with clavate hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae scattered, inconspicuous, linear-ovate to -obovate, light red-brown, obtuse to acute, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 17 (9-35) cm long, 4 (2-6.5) cm wide, cuneate to subtruncate at the base; segments 20 (10-32) mm long, 2.5 (1.5-3) mm wide, linear to narrow-ovate, perpendicular to the rachis except the strongly deflexed ones at the blade base, herbaceous, acute, the base expanded and symmetrical in the top half of the frond, subsymmetrical or with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis in the lower half of the blade, entire; lamina with scattered clavate hairs, and occasional acicular hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, dark red-brown or blackish, with scattered, long, acicular hairs, without paleae; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 40 long; sori medial, round, with simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia with 3 (2-4) capsular setae, 70- 120 long; spores globose reniform, smooth, ca 50u long; n = 37. Holotype: Mexico, Oaxaca, forests of Zacatepéque and Juquila, Galeotti 6354 BR not seen, fragment US. Habitat: epipetric, rarely epiphytic, from canyons, cliffs and river banks, 500- 2100 m alt. Distribution: western Mexico.—Fig. 8. EXICO: SINALOA: Colomas, Rose 3201 (US); Panuco, Pennell 20010 E Paraje del 5883 (G S). arjea, xt Santa Maria del Oro, Pennell 19868 (US); Cerro de San Juan, Mexia 690 (GH); E of Jalcocotan, rd to Tepic, McVaugh 13342 (US). jarmco: E of Mamantlán, S-SE of Autlán, Wilbur 1969 (US); Pihuamo, Jones 511 (MO, US). parco: Hidalgo, km 330, Herb. Copeland 16056 (MICH). MonELos: Cuernavaca, Kenoyer 40 (US), Rose & Painter 6870 (GH, US); Teposteco, Lyonnet 2583 (US); Ramanoa T'eatzalán, nr Tepoztlán, Seler 4516 (GH); Tepoztlzán, Herb. Copeland 125 (GH, MICH, US); Valle del Tepeite, Lyonnet 779 (US). mexico: Temascaltepec, Ypericones, Hinton 4161 (GH). corma: Revillagigedo I, Socorro I, Barkelew 236 p.p. (US). GuERRERO: Mina, Manchon, Hinton 9607 (MICH); Mazatlan, Correll 14391 (US). oaxaca: Cerro de San Felipe, Conzatti & González 334 (GH). curaPas: Ixtape, Münch 12 (US). This central and southern Mexican species is distinctive in its small size, light brown rachis and darker costa, long-setose sporangia, light brown rachis scales, and golden, ovate rhizome scales. Although this species has usually been identified as P. plumula, its nearest relatives are P. cupreolepis and P. alfredii, and it combines certain of the characters of each. It has normal appearing spores arid is a diploid, so it is probably not of hybrid origin. [Vor. 55 298 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 1. Polypodium sursumcurrens Copel., Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. 19: 291, t. 42, 1941. Rhizomes short-creeping, 4 (3-5) mm in diam; rhizome paleae ovate to broad- ovate, red-brown at the margins with dark brown center, lustrous, basifixed or cordate, acute to obtuse, occasionally inconspicuously comose, non-clathrate, entire; fronds 30 (12-65) cm long, fasciculate on the rhizome; rachis 4 (2.5-6) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, thinly pilose with blackish hairs up to 1 mm long, without ctenoid hairs; rachis paleae absent; blades narrow-ovate, 25 (10-56) cm long, 5.5 (3.5-8.5) cm wide, cuneate at the base; segments 28 (18- 44) mm long, 3 (2-4) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, reduced and slightly deflexed at the blade base with the lowest 2 or 3 pairs reduced to auricles, linear- triangular, acute, asymmetrical at the base with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis throughout the blade, herbaceous, entire to crenulate, the spaces between the segments 2 to 3 times the width of the segments; lamina with numerous blackish, simple, clavate hairs up to 175 long; costa perpendicular to, or slightly decurrent on, the rachis, with scattered, long, acicular hairs; veins once-forked, free, guard cells ca 38u long; sori marginal to submarginal, round, with numerous twisted paraphyses with a multicellular irregular clavate head, ca 3754 long; sporangia without setae; spores globose-reniform, smooth, thick-walled, ca 49u long. Holotype: Mexico, Veracruz, mountain tops at head of Orizaba Valley, 2400 m, epiphyte in mossy woods, Copeland, Mexican Ferns 128 MICH; isotypes GH, US. Habitat: epiphyte in montane forests, 2400-2600 m alt. Distribution (Fig. 9): ai Eo El Puerto, Sharp 44822 (US). PuxEBLA: Honey Sion, Pringle 13475 (MICH).— This species is a narrow Acum in eastern Mexico. I have seen only two collections in addition to the type. Copeland mentions the distinctive feature of the blackish hairs of the lamina. However, they are the usual golden color but are uniformly attacked by a pyrenomycete fungus, which gives them this character- istic blackish appearance. | The relationships of this species are not obvious, though it is clearly in the P. plumula group. It is probably closest to P. alfredii, P. ferrugineum, and P. cupreo- lepis, from which it differs in the larger size, more widely spaced segments, espe- cially in the larger fronds, the gray-green color, long rachis hairs, dark brown, ovate rhizome paleae, the lack of rachis paleae, and especially the unique paraphyses. 8. Polypodium bermudianum A. M. Evans, sp. nov.—Fig. 17. P. pectinatum var. squamosum Lindm., Ark. Bot. 1:238, 1903, p.p., as to Bermuda, Herb. Farlow (GH), not as to lectotype. (See P. dispersum). Rhizoma breviter repens, paleis anguste ovatis, castaneis, non comosis, incon- spicue dentatis, basi affixis, apice acuminatis; frondes approximatae articulatae, ca 35 cm longae; stipites et rhachides rigidae nitentes castaneae, sparse pilosae; paleae rhachidis numerosae parvae, anguste triangulares, castaneae, basi hastatae, apice acuminatae; lamina pectinata, anguste ovata, ca cm longa et 7 cm lata, basi abrupte cuneata; segmenta anguste ovata, ca 35 mm longa et 4-5 mm lata, rhachide perpendicularia, apice obtusa, basi symmetrica; lamina solum cum pilos brevibus 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 229 clavatis; venae liberae l-furcatae; sporangia cum saepe 2-capsularibus setis; sporae globoso-reniformes, paullo tuberculatae, ca 43u longae, 64 per sporangium. Rhizome short-creeping, 5 (4-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-ovate, red-brown, acuminate, non-comose, basifixed, non-clathrate, inconspicuously toothed; fronds 35 (15-55) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (2.5-4) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, pilose with long, simple, acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae conspicuous, red-brown, paler at the base, narrowly triangular, hastate at the base, acuminate, occasionally toothed; blades narrow-ovate, 25 (14-33) cm long, 6.8 (5.7-8.5) cm wide, abruptly cuneate at the base; segments 35 (28-44) mm long, 4-5 mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, slightly reduced or auriculate at the base of the blade, herbaceous, obtuse, symmetrical at the base, entire, the spaces between the segments equaling the width of the segments; lamina essentially glabrous, with short, clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, pilose with acicular hairs, with reduced paleae similar to those of the rachis; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 43u long; sori medial, round, with simple clavate paraphyses; sporangia mostly with 2 two-celled capsular setae, 130-1754 long; spores globose-reniform, slightly tuberculate, ca 43u long. Holotype: Bermuda, Tuckers Town, on rocks, 10 Febr-9 Mar 1908, Brown 464 US 848332; isotype GH. Habitat: on limestone rocks in lime-sink areas. Distribution: Bermupa: Goode s.n., Mar, 1877 (MO), Apr, 1877 (US); Goode 2 (US); Reinwardt s.n. (GH). HAMILTON ISLAND: Walsin ham, Harshberger s.n., June 1905 (GH, US); Walsingham Caves, Moore 3118a (GH), M 49-1163 (MI CH); es Vale, Farlow s.n., June 1881 (GH), Britton & Brown 267 (US). This species can be distinguished from P. plumula by the brown rachis and the broad segments, and from P. ptilodon var. caespitosum by the once-forked veins and the rachis scales. It is distinguished from P. dispersum by the number of spores per sporangium and the brown rachis. Of the sexual species, it is probably closest to P. atrum, from which it can be distinguished by its brown rachis, once- forked veins, basal segments not deflexed, and the costa being decurrent on the rachis. Its close similarity to P. atrum and P. dispersum indicates its affinities to these two species. The problem of specific and varietal rank in these three species is complicated by the unique life cycle of P. dispersum, which demands its separa- tion. I have, therefore, accorded specific rank to this narrowly confined endemic. 9. Polypodium plumula Humb. & Bonpl. ex Willd. in L., Sp. Pl., ed. 4, 5: 178, 1810 P. ow Raddi, Opusc. Sci. Bol. 3:287, 1819. (as "Schkuhri"). Pl. Bras. 1:19, t. 27, 1825. (Holotype: Brazil, Corcovado, Raddi FI not seen; isotype B) P. i. L. C. Rich. ex Desv., Mém. Soc. Linn. Paris 6:233, 1827, non E elasticum Bory ex Willd., 1810. (Type: P. elasticum L. C. Richard, 1792, nud., n an illegitimate renaming. The name P. elasticum was subsequently accepted by Baker in Hooker & Baker, Syn. Fil, ed. 2, 332, 1874, who cited P. plumula as a synonym but not P. elegans, ns effectively fixing P. plumula as lectotype. Thus, P. elasticum is to be considered a superfluous renaming of P. plumula Humb. & Bonpl.) [Vor. 55 230 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN P. d sae Mart. & Gal., Mém. Acad. Bruxelles 15: 41, 1842. (Holotype: Mexico, Veracruz, Jalapa, ad quercos, 4000", Galeotti 6332 P. cera var. schkuhrii (Ra nis ui in Hooker i: I Syn. Fil, 333, 1867. ulchrum Mart. & Gal. var. s Fou ex. Pl. 1: 76, 1872 (nomen merat Ctenopteris plumula (Humb. & "Bonpl. ex Willd.) T Smith, Pus Fil, 185, 1 Rhizome short- to long-creeping, 5 (3-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow- triangular, red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, non-comose or occasionally comose, non-clathrate, the margins regularly papillose; fronds 35 (20-60) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 4.5 (2-7.5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis black, with scattered, long, acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae broadly cordate with short-acuminate apex (in Central America), cordate- or hastate-acuminate (in Central America and the West Indies), or hastate and narrowly triangular (South America), basifixed or cordate, bullate or not, golden to red-brown, the margins toothed or papillate and occasionally fimbriate; blades narrow- to linear-elliptic, 28 (15-52) cm long, 4.7 (3-7.5) cm wide, cuneate or occasionally subtruncate at the base; segments 24 (16-40) mm long, 2.5 (2-3) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or slightly ascending, abruptly reduced to lobes at the blade base, linear, straight, obtuse, symmetrical and expanded at the base, herbaceous, entire, the spaces between the segments 1⁄ to 1 times the width of the segments; lamina with scattered acicular and clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, black, occasionally brownish near the rachis in Central America, with scattered, long, acicular hairs; costal paleae similar to those of the rachis but reduced; veins once (or twice)-forked, free; guard cells 34u long; sori medial, round, with long, simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia mostly with 3 or 4 two- celled capsular setae; spores reniform, slightly tuberculate, ca 50u long; n=74. Lectotype: Venezuela, Caracas, Bredemeyer Herb. Willd. no. 19655-1, photo- graph B, fragm. NY. Syntype: Venezuela, Caripe, Cumana, Humboldt & Bon- pland 429 Herb. Willd. no. 19655-2, photograph B. The choice of lectotype is discussed below. Habitat: epiphytic on tree trunks and branches, occasionally terrestrial or epipetric on wet swampy or montane forests, from sea level to 2600 m alt. Distribution: Florida, West Indies, eastern Mexico, south to southern Brazil.— Fig. 9. you BREVARD Co: Indian River, Whitney 1875 (GH). cirrus co: Pineola Noble s.n. (FLAS); Pineola m Evans H). pape co: Whiskey Creek, ccu a Pk, Craighead s.n., Jan 1960 (FLAS); SW of Royal Palm Pk, Cuthbert & Smal. , 14 May 1919 (F LAS). HERNANDO co: Brooksville, Jones 24 (US). mnirrs- BOROUGH CO: - Hillsbo rough River St Pk, R2 T27S, S vans mi NE of Tampa, Correll 5868 (GH, US). marion co: Ocala, Smith S-N., Apr 1879 (GH). MONROE co: Aiken, Key Largo, Pollard et al. 203 (US). Porx co: 12 mi E of Lake Marion, vic of Winter Haven, "McFarlin 4112 (MICH). semMINoLE co: Oviedo, Eaton 1023 (GH); St. seat Rapp s.n., Mar 1911 (FLAS). sr. jouw's co: 14 mi W of Au nde stine, Reynolds sn, in 1877 (US). suwTER co: Drake Point, Lake Astachula, Smith s.n, 29 Mar 1879 [- v ( 5r: Indian Field Ledges, Evans 1143 (MICH); Rutland Creek, St Toh ; 1934 ); Wonders Hammock, Smith s.n., 21 Mar 1883 (GH, MICH, US). vorusiA co: _ Enterprise, Faxon s.n., Apr 1873 (GH); Ormond Beach, Freeman MEA ` Mexico: TAMAULIPAS: NW of El Progreso, Stanford et al. 985 (GH, MO, US); Gómez Farías, Palmer 300 (GH, MICH, ur US); S of Huisachal, Stanford. et al: 2055 (US). sAN” LUis Potosi: Los Canos, Palmer 263 (GH, MO, US); 4 mi W of Pen dencia, Graber 233 (US); Taniasopo Canyon, Pennell 17983 (US), Pringle 3392 (GH; MO); Tamaz- 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 931 unchale, Eus 7104 (MICH), Copeland s.n., 27 Dec 1938 (MICH, US); E of doe Mickel 590 (TE and s E Xilitla, King 4354 (US); ipsi bor 9 mi, Kenoyer 3993 (G CHAM MICH). : E of Chavarillo, Weatherwax 181 (MO); Ce Sánchez S. 245 (US); El Mirador, pda 16642 (US); Jalapa, aa s.n., Oct 1906 (US); Orizaba, Seaton s.n., 29 Aug 1891 (GH); Orizaba, Ojo de Agua, Copeland s.n., 4 Febr 1938 (MICH, US); Potrero Viejo, Copeland 126 (GH, MICH); Teocello Falls, Rhoads s.n., Mar 1899 (US). mniparco: Jacala, Chase 7426 (MICH, MO), 7458 (MICH), Kenoyer, 15 Nov 1937 (MO), Lyonnet 1299 (US); 41 mi N of Jacala, Barkley 17MO16 (MICH); Molango, Moore 1970 (GH). oaxaca: Santiago de Jocotepec, Santos 3378 (MICH, US). curas: Munic. Pichucalco, Gilly & Hernandez X. 175 (MICH). CAMPECHE: Hacienda San Pablo, nr Champotón, Collins 50 (US). GUATEMALA: EL PETEN: San Clemente to Dos Arroyos, Bartlett 12820 (MICH, US); Tikal National Pk, Lundell 16748 (US); Uaxactum, Bartlett 12754 (MICH); Uaxactum to San Clemente, Bartlett E (MICH). QuEZALTENANGO: Colahuaché, Rojas 549 (US); San Felipe, Kellerman 5575 (US). sucurrÉPEQUEZ: Cuyotenango, Rojas 151 (US); Animas, Shannon 276 (US). i San Felipe, Kellerman 5584 (US). SANTA ROSA: Ojo de Agua, Heyde & Lux 4083 (US RITISH HONDUR p an ZAL: Honey Ca amp, Lundell 537 (GH, ai. MO, Is Meyer s.n., 22 July 1930 (US). BELIZE: Maskall, Gentle 1240 (US). EL caro: Coh Ridge, Lundell 6460 od o. Mountain Pine Ridge, San Agustin, Lundell 6748 (MICH): Valentin, ipod id pure UA: Agua Salada, By sells & Molina R. 11451 (GH); Siguatepe- que, Standley ? Cha cón b eder d TIDA: La dis vic of Tela, Ames 7 Ji ADOR: AN: Sierra neca, Finca Colima, Standley 20182 (US). SONSONATE: Izalco, Standley 22 2189 do m SALVADOR: Calderón (US). CUSCATLÁN: olina de Santa Te cla, Calderón 1786 (US). sAN vICENTE: Volcán de San Vicente, Standley 21609 (GH, U Costa "Rica: ALAJUELA: Alajuela, Scamman 6122 (GH), ne 6056 (US). san José: id oc La iid s I (US); Hitchcock s.n., 22-24 Oct ] (US); Pittier 1231 (US). As: Bahía Honda, Taylor 1390 (MICH, US). UBA: ORIENTE: s: Finca obses Ekman 4451 (US); Baracoa, Ae 3927 (US); Gran Piedra, Clément 7156 (US); Loma Mensura, Shafer 3822 (US); Monte Verde, Shafer 8696 (US); El Cobre, Pollard & Palmer 394 (US); Loma del Gato, Hioram & Clément 6486 (US), León, Clément & Roca 9960 (US), Clément 400 (US). DowiwicaN REPUBLIC: SANTIAGO: Vallecito, San José de las Matas, Valeur 465 (GH). Jamaica: Abbey Green, Maxon 10096 (GH, US), Arntully, Orcutt 3105 (MICH, MO); po Vale, Philipson 758 (US); Mt Horeb, Taylor s.n., 27 April 1956; oe Hill P. O., Proctor 5119 (MO); nr Kingston, Lehmann 972 (US); ' Lucea, Hitchcock s.n., 5 Jan 1891; Marshalls Pen, Proctor 22898 (MICH); Silver Hill Gap, Maxon & Killip 1234 (GH, US). Puerto Rico: Las Mesas, nr Mayagüez, Holm 253 (GH, US). GUADELOUPE: Camp Jacob, Duss 4093 (GH); St. Lelande (Grand-Val), Questel 1163 (US) Sun : Avanavero Falls, Stahel 4600 (MO); Augustus Falls, Tafelberg, Maguire 24754 ug Grass Falls, Saramacca River headwaters, Maguire 24945 (GH, MO, US), 24005 (GH, à AE TISH Ga : Kanuku dud alge ‘tial Smith 3289 (GH, MO, US). : DELTA AMAC inoco, Santa Catalina, Rus by & Squires 367 a MIRANDA: : Guatopo Nil Pk ene 90029 (US). CARABOBO: Maracal, Vogl s.n (GH CoL BIA: MAGDALENA: Santa Marta, Campo Alegre, n 1026 (GH); La Vuelta del Tigre, "Minca Rd, Bennett 36 (US). sawTANDER: Río Suratá valley, betw E Jaboncillo & Suratá, Killip & Smith 16404 (GH, US). ANTIOQUIA: Fronzino, West Andes of Antioquia, Lehmann 7408 (US). VALLE DEL cauco: Cauca Valley, E of Zarzal, Pennell et al. 8407 > US). mera: Los Llanos, Villavicencio, Cuatrecasas 4690 (US); nr Río Guatiquía, Pennell 1559 (US); Puerto López, Little 8358 (US); mouth of Río Atacuari, Schultes & Black 46-226 (GH). PERU: SAN MARTIN: Río Negro, pi rape 6198 (US); Tarapoto, lir cii 35134 (MO); Tingo María, “Allard 20470 (US). Lorero: Maynas, Lupuna Cocha, Tryon 5186 (US); Mishuyacu, nr Iquitos, Klug 1382 (US); Santa Rosa, Urubamba Valley, Cook & [Vor. 55 232 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Satie 1727 (US). mnváNuco: Chinchao to Puerte Durend, Coronado 90 (GH, US); anayacu, Bües 2000 (US). yunin: Colonia Perene, Killip & Smith 25047 (US), along ey Schunke Hacienda, above San Ramón, Schunke A158 (US); nr San Ramón, Coronado 261 (GH); Manto, nr Yaupi, e 6522 (US), 6393 (US), 6413 (US), 6479 (US); Yunguy, Woytkowski 6598 (US). cusco: Convención, Herrera 147 Bd Convención, Sahuayaco, Vargas C. 1825 (GH); Convención, Mission nr Quillabamba, Mexía MICH, MO, US), Coronado 112 (GH, US), Soukup 162 (GH); Potrero, Tryon Borivi4: LA Paz: Apolo, Williams 1120 (GH, MO, US); La Floride, South Yungas, Buchtien 483 (US); Mapiri, Williams 1118 (GH, US); Milluguaya, North Yungas, Buchtien 04 (US); Polo-Polo, nr Coroico, North Yungas, Buchtien 3507 (GH, MO, US), 3507a Yungas, Krukoff 10073a (MO); Tumupasa, Williams 1121 (US). santa cruz: Buena Vista, Prov Sara, Steinbach 5410 (GH); Espina, Rusby 136 (US); Motacucito, Sara, Steinbach 2506 (GH). BnAzrL.: AMAZONAS: Rosariulio, Kuhlmann 218 (MO). ceará: Sitio Uruguaniana, 4 km GERAIS; “hen, Fazenda da Tabunha, Mexia 4969-a (GH); Mariana, Vanthier 591 (GH). RIO DE JANEIRO: betw Alto da Serra & Meio da Serra, Smith 1553 (GH, US); Corcovado Mt, 0 ICH); Pet E Smith 6466 (GH, MO); Rio de Janeiro, ' Lindman A159 (US), Regnell 250 (US), Gaudichaud s.n., (GH). This species has historically been broadly interpreted and frequently mis- construed. I have segregated out those entities which are clearly distinct, ie. P. bermudianum, P. dispersum, P. cupreolepis, P. ferrugineum and P. alfredii, thus leaving a fairly uniform species but with some variation still to be more thoroughly explored. Figure 5 shows outline drawings of representative rachis paleae of specimens from different geographical areas. The broad cordate type from Central America appears to be the basic type and from that the narrower paleae of the West Indian plants and the extremely narrow paleae with large median marginal fimbriae of the South American plants have arisen as clinal modifications. The Central American plants with extremely cordate and golden rachis paleae also needs further study. These plants exhibit costae with brown bases and some brown streaking on the sides of the rachis. Although they are otherwise like the typical material, in these characters they show tendencies toward P. alfredii and P. cupreolepis. Their spores appear normal but no cytological information is known other than that P. plumula has been counted as a tetraploid in Florida and Jamaica. A further question concerns a few collections from Brazil with only 32 spores in each sporangium. These spores are identical to the spores of the West Indian P. dispersum; and I have, therefore, included the specimens in that species. However, their morphology is closer to that of P. plumula than that of the typical West Indian P. dispersum. As I believe that P. plumula is probably one of the original parents of P. dispersum, it may be that the Brazilian P. dispersum is of different origin—possibly a hybrid between the southern P. plumula and P. filicula. There is, however, little evidence on which to base such an hypothesis and none of this material is known cytologically. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 933 Polypodium elegans Poir. (1804), (non Cav. ex Swartz, 1806) has been referred to P. plumula (eg. by C. Chr., 1906; de la Sota, 1960). However, the type (St. Dominique, Nectoux s.n., Herb. Webbianum, ex Herb. Desfontaines (FI) can be referred to P. otites L. (P. tenuifolium Humb. & Bonpl. ex Willd.). I have included P. schkuhrii Raddi in synonymy. Though no type was designated, I have seen an illustration by Raddi (1825) and a Raddi collection (B) which fit his description (1819) and which I believe to represent an isotype. The type is probably at Firenze. The choice of lectotype for P. plumula may be explained as follows. In the original description in 1810 of P. plumula, Willdenow attributed the name to Humboldt & Bonpland and cited the localities Cumana and Caracas, both in Venezuela. I have seen photos of the two syntypes in the Willdenow Herbarium in Berlin: Sheet 19655-2, collected in Cumana, Caripe, Humboldt 429, and Sheet 19655-1, collected in Caracas by Bredemeyer of which there is also a type fragment in NY. These two specimens represent different species in my opinion. In 1816, Humboldt, Bonpland, & Kunth described P. plumula again and a second species that they called P. molle, which are both represented in Paris by authentic speci- mens in the Humboldt & Bonpland Herbarium. The specimen called P. plumula and which agrees with their description corresponds with the Bredemeyer specimen in Berlin and the one called P. molle agrees with the Humboldt 429 collection in Berlin. Thus, Humboldt & Bonpland did collect two species both of which are represented in Paris but only one in Berlin. Since the original P. plumula was based on a mixture, one element has to be selected as lectotype. It should be considered that Humboldt, Bonpland, & Kunth did this in 1816 by keeping one element under the epithet plumula and describing the other as a different species, P. molle. Thus the Humboldt 429 specimen in Berlin was removed as P. molle from the concept of P. plumula, and inferentially the latter was left based on the Bredemeyer specimen, which is thus the lectotype. This specimen is conspecific with the Humboldt & Bonpland specimen in Paris which very likely originally provided the name. However, the Paris specimen can hardly be taken as lectotype since it may never have been seen by Willdenow at the time he drew up the original description. This Bredemeyer specimen represents a widespread species that has commonly been identified as P. plumula. 'The specimen Humboldt 429 at Berlin, the isotype of P. molle H.B.K. (which is a later homonym thrice over), represents a species that has also not usually been separated from P. plumula but which is different, as noted elsewhere, and which I am calling P. dispersum. 10. Polypodium filicula Kaulf., Enum. Fil., 275, 1824. P. elasticum L. C. Rich. var. filicula (Kaulf.) Baker in Mart., Fl. Bras. 1(2): 517, 1870. Rhizome short-creeping, 1-2 mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-ovate to narrow-triangular, brown, non-lustrous, basifixed, acute, non-comose, non-clathrate, finely serrate; fronds 10 (6-17) cm long, fasciculate on the rhizome; rachis 5.4 (3.5-11) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, with scattered acicular hairs ca 0.3 mm long; rachis paleae numerous, conspicuous, cordate, bul- [Vor. 55 234 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN late, acute, dark brown, finely serrate; blades narrow-ovate to narrow-obovate, 9 (5.5-15.5) em long, 2.5 (1.5-3) cm wide, cuneate at the base; segments 15 (10- 20) mm long, 1.5 (1-2) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or slightly ascend- ing, not deflexed but reduced to lobes at the blade base, linear, herbaceous, obtuse or rounded, symmetrical and expanded at the base, entire or undulate, the spaces between the segments ca 1 to 1 times the width of the segment; lamina glabrous or with scattered, short, clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered acicular hairs ca 0.25 mm long, without paleae; veins simple, free; guard cells ca 4lu long; sorus supra-medial, round, with short, simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae; spores globose-reniform, smooth, ca 50u long. Type: Brazil, Chamisso s.n. not seen, B(?) or LE(?). Habitat: epiphytic, occasionally epipetric, in humid forests at 500-2200 m alt. Distribution: western and central South America from Colombia to southern Brazil and northern Argentina.— Fig. 9. COLOMBIA: NORTE DE SANTANDER: Culagá Valley, nr Tapatá, Killip & Smith 20162 (GH, US). ECUADOR: CARCHI: km no 78, Río Blanco, Ibana to San Lorenzo, Dodson & Thien 1563 (US). Peru: Amazonas: Bagua, Río Utcubamba, 40 km S of Bagua Grande, Hutchison 1472 eee SAN MARTÍN: Tarapoto, Woytkowski 35236 (MO). cusco: Bües 1589 (US); Cusco o Santa Ana, Herrera 874 (US); Convención, va 8 km of Quillabamba, Tryon 5373 (GH, US); Urubamba Machupicchu, Varg n. C. 3346 (US); Urubamba Valley, Herrera 3297a i nr Min River, Heller 2203 Boriv PAZ: Guanai to Tipuani, Briton ad Rusby oe (MICH); Tigre Pata, Williams 1125 G S). COCHABAMBA: Cafiamina, Rusby 82 (US). santa cruz: El Fuerte, Jamaipata, Steinbach 8272 F "Tres ume Herzog 1508 (GH, US). BRAZIL: MINAS GERAIS: Serra da Mutuca, nr Vargem de Ouro Podre, Williams & Vicente 6196 (GH, US); São Sebastio Paraiso, Brade 17968 (MO). corás: Jatai, Queixada, Rio Corrente, Macedo 21554 (MO, US). RIO DE JANEmO: Estrada Velha de rds Smith 6468 (US); Rio de Janeiro & Bahia, Webb s.n., in 1868 (US). PARANÁ: Jaguariaiva, Dusén 15925 (GH, MO, US). RIO GRANDE po SUL: Pareci Novo, nr Mon Ex Negro, "Belle 1753 (US); São Luis, Latto Pirabó, Jurgens & Stier (Rosenstock 256) (US assi Guarapi, Balansa 2874 (US); Cerros de Tobaty, Hise 6172 (GH). A: JUJUY: Ledesma, Dinelli 16726 (GH). misiones: Loreto, Moreau s.n., 26 rin 931, (GH); San Ignacio, Hunziker 764 (MO), Vattuone & Bianch i 169 (US j: Gobernador Roca, Schwarz 6297 (GH); San Ignacio, Cristóbal, Ahumada & de la Sota 51 (US); Ya re pepe 48162 (US). Although I have not seen the type, there can be little doubt about the ap- plication of filicula to this very distinctive species. It is easily recognized by its small size, cuneate blade base, dark cordate rachis scales, unforked veins, and its geo- graphical isolation from any other closely similar species except P. plumula. It probably arose initially from the stock of the latter species, but it is presently quite distinct from it in a number of characters. This species, like P. dispersum and P. plumula, reproduces readily by root proliferations. Several herbarium sheets show this character well, and a few sheets show dense mats of juvenile plants similar to the dense populations of small sterile plants of P. dispersum. It is presumed that this habit is correlated with dryness and exposure of the roots through a thin substrate. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 235 11. Polypodium dispersum A. M. Evans, Amer. Fern Jour. 58: 173, pl. 27, 1968. P. molle H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 8, 1816, non Schreb., B (Type: Venezuela, C ent P. pectinatum var. sire Lindm Bot. 1: 238, 1903. p Brazil, Mato Grosso, Fazenda Sao José, Regnell "on S. Syntypes: Jamaica, Herb. Alstroemer S-PA, and Herb. ruis em S-PA; Bermuda, Herb. Farlow GH; Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Mosen 113 B, S, S-PA P. microsorum Lindm., Ark. Bot. 1: 239, d p,p. as to Cuba, Wright e bas as to lectotype. (See P. pectinatiforme, which is P. microsorum Lindm., not Mett.) Rhizome short-creeping, 5 (4-8) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-triangu- lar, red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, slightly comose, non-clathrate, in- conspicuously toothed; fronds 43 (21-63) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (2.5-4) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis black, thinly pilose with acicular hairs, occasionally with ctenoid hairs; rachis paleae conspicuous, narrow- triangular, hastate, non-bullate, basifixed, dark red-brown with pale base, lustrous, acuminate, inconspicuously toothed, fimbriate at the base; blades narrow-triangu- lar, 32 (17-48) cm long, 6.8 (4.5-9) cm wide, subtruncate to abruptly cuneate at the base; segments 35 (23-47) mm long, 4 (3-6) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, occasionally deflexed at the blade base, reduced (sometimes to mere lobes) at the blade base, herbaceous, obtuse, symmetrical at the base, entire, the spaces between the segments approximately equal to the width of the segments; lamina with few, long, acicular and clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, thinly pilose with acicular hairs, with reduced paleae similar to those of the rachis; veins twice-forked, free; guard cells ca 38u long; sori medial, round or occasionally oblong, with a few, simple, clavate, paraphyses; sporangia mostly with 2 (1-4 two-celled capsular setae; spores globose to ovoid, slightly tuberculate, ca 43u long, with irregular, incomplete or interrupted variable scar, 32 per sporangium; n—]1ll (apogamous) ; gametophyte strap-shaped, branched, with marginal rhizoids, often with stomates, but without sex organs, proliferating 1-3 apogamous sporophyte proliferations. Holotype: Florida, Citrus Co, R20E, T21S, Sect 1, Pineola Grottoes, 21 Sept 1963, Evans 2008 MICH; isotypes TENN, US Habitat: epipetric (mainly limestone), occasionally terrestrial or epiphytic, on walls, in rocky hilisides, open woods, relatively dry areas, 100-2000 m alt. Distribution: Florida, West Indies, eastern Mexico, through western South m to Nein Brazil.—Fig. 9. U. FLORDIA: ALACHUA CO: Buzzard’s Roost, Gainesville, Weber & West s.n., 18 oe eet (FLAS), r s.n., 19 Mar 1928 (US); Devil’s Mill Hopper, Gainesville Wes FLAS 1899 Se O). , ll Apr 6 (FLAS). Brevarp co: Indian River, Palmer s.n., in un. co: ES p & bid s.n. 13 Nov 1932 (FLAS); pis St. John 325 (FLAS). HERNANDO co: Annutalaga Hammock, RI9E, T21S, Sect 20 & 29, Evans 2012 (MICH); on left bank of Wirhlacooche es 13 mi NE from Becokerills e, Smith s.n.. 22 Mar 1883 (US); Brooksville, Garret n Pu 1953 (FLAS); Istachatta, Underwood 287 (GH); nr Nobleton, Knoppen s.n., Maes 28 (US). d i o River St Pk, R21E, T27S, Sect 8, Evans T (MICH). mario nthon Sect I, T14S, R2IE, Ward 1871 (FLAS), Blake et al. s.n., 2 Apr 1950 (FLAS); Oca Smith S-n., Apr 1879 (GH), Shockley s.n., Mar 1878 (GH). MARTIN co: Sewell’s Point, Curtis 5861 (GH, FLAS, MO, US). monroz co: Key Largo, Small 7294 (US); Pumpkin Key, Small s.n., 9 Mar 1915 (FLAS), R40E, T59S, Sect i Evans 1165 (MICH). Pasco co: Blandton, [Vor. 55 236 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Underwood s.n. (GH). sumer co: Drake's Point, Lake Astachula, Sici s.n., 29 Mar 1879 (GH); Indian Field ree R2IE, T20S, Sect 34, Tae 1142 (M O: TAMAULIPAS: Gómez Farías, Palmer 562 (GH US). sAN LUIS potost: Tam Mexico SOpo, di 3999 (GH, US). margo: km 350, coll. unknow n, 28 Mar 1938 (M ICH). VERACRUZ: Rio Seco, nr 'Có rdoba, Woronow 3002 (US). oaxaca: Cerro Concordia, Con- zatti 3043 (US). GUATEMALA: ALTA VERAPAZ: Chilaseo, Salvin (GH); Coban, von Tuerckheim s.n., July 1885 (GH, US). RITISH Honpuras: EL caro: Camp Six-Vaca Road, Lundell 6545 (GH), Mt Pine Ridge, Río On, Lundell 6798 (MICH). Torrpo: Toledo, Peck 820 (GH HONDURAS: COMAYAGUA: Agua Salada, Williams & Molina R. 11451 (US); d. e, Yuncker et al 5729 (GH, MICH, MO, US). FRANCISCO MORAZÁN: Las Mesea, Standle 8656a (US), Williams & Molina R. 10096 d P o Cuyamel, Carleton 476 (US). EL PARAISO: 5 km from Yuscarán, Molina R. 10053 Cura: Wright 1051 (B, BR, G, GH, MO, L, E S-PA, US). PINAR DEL RIO: Árro del Sumidero, Shafer & León b (US); Bahía Honda to El Rosario, Shafer 12009 (US); El Guama, Palmer & Barr I (US); Tete Baker 3803 (U IS). LAS VILLAS: Cien- Las Vegas de Ten Buenos Aires, Jack 6524 MO); Mina cee SE of Cumanayagua, ierra de San Jian, Howard 5656 (GH); s Gavilán, above San Blas, Morton 2 (GH, GUAY: La Gloria, Shafer 102 (US). ommwrE: El Cobre, Pollard & Palmer 412 (US); Arroyo Jiménez, Pico Chale Sierra odi Ekman 14794 (US). Harm: Bayeus, Loomis s.n, May 1927 (US); Diquini, Miller s.n., Mar 5 (US); Furcy, Leonard 4757 (GH, US); nd. Massif des Cahos, M. Vaillecife, E 6121 (US), UST Massif du Nord, M. Pinquois, Ekman 6160. (US); oa Rabel, Leonard de la Selle, Momence B Ekman 151 US); Riviere A Bub. 2047 ( HS St. Michel de l'Atalaye, Mt la Cidre, Leonard 7610 (US), La Lomas, Leonard 20 (US). Dominican REPUBLIC: AZUA: Sierra de Ocoa, San José de Ocoa, Bejucal, Ekman 11887 (US). BARAHONA: ncc ous de Bahoruco, Jiménez (Me uo 3120) (US). LA VEGA: Cotuy, Abbott 761 (US); Gajo de Constanza, Jiménez 2111 (US). MONTE CRISTO: Arro Asiento Frío, Dist Monción, Valeur 214 (MO). santiaco: San José de las Matas, Jiménez 926 (US), 861 (US). sanro DOMINGO: Barrabas, Raunkiaer 72 (US); San Pedro de Macoris, Rose 4189 (US). Jamaica: Herb. Alstroemer (S-PA); Herb. oot ja PA). Castleton, Maxon 824 (US), 758 (US); DAE Port Royal Mts, Max (US); Greenwood, 5 mi ESE of Little River P. O., Proctor E (US); Kingston, a Mt, Wilson & Webster 436 doy Lydford P. O.; den arca, H oward & Proctor 13501 (GH); Mandeville, Maxon 2556 (US), Orcutt 5021 (MO); ME Bay, nr Salt Spring, Maxon & Killip 1658 (GH); i M ils St. Andrews, un Maxon Puerto Rico: 10 mi SW of Carolina, Wagner s.n., in 1944 (US); Maricao, Hess 243 (US). VENEZUELA: MONARAS: betw Caripe & San Agustin, Steyermark 61778 (US). DISTRITO ae Caracas, or 464 (US); Chacaíto Gorge, Pittier 9479 S); betw Caracas & La Guaira, Rose 21727 (US); betw Cotiza & Los Senado Allart s.n., Oct 1924 (US), Vogl E: n., ) poe MAGDALENA: Santa Marta, Smith 1026 (MO, US). mera: Puerto López, rg: 0 (U ORTE DE SANTANDER: Región del Sarare, La Cabuya, Cuatrecasas, Suis o Smith 12135 (GH, US). UADOR: MANABAI: hills S of Olmedo, [di 3492 (GH, US). GatApacos ÍSLANDs: ALBEMARLE ISLAND: Iguana Cove, Snodgrass E Heller oe Rr H O, oe! (GH, MO, US). INDEFATIGABLE ISLAND: Academy Bay, Stewart 9 US), Svenson 74 (US); SE side, ane 964 (GH, US); Fortuna, Howell 9278 (GH). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 237 Borivi4: Porango, Herzog 1496 (S). La paz: Guanai to Tipuani, Bang 1448 (GH, US). : CEARÁ: Sitio Urguaniana, 4 km W of Guaramiranga, Cutler 8318 (GH, MO). mīnas GERA: Ouro Preto, Macedo 3074 (MO, US). MATE GROSSE: Buriti, nr Santa Anna da Chapada, Malme (Regnell I 1716) (S), Regnell II 2482 (S). RIO DE JANEIRO: Mosén 113 p.p (S-PA, not S). This species was noted as distinct by Maxon, and numerous herbarium sheets at US from the West Indies and Florida are annotated with the epithet “dis- persum” in his handwriting. Although Maxon never published it, I have adopted his epithet. This species has a type of apogamous life cycle thus far unique among ferns, in which the spores number only 32 per sporangium and are formed by mitosis rather than meiosis (Evans, 1964). It reproduces commonly by root proliferations, often forming dense populations of sterile plants in this manner. A further dis- cussion of the life cycle and reproduction of this species may be found above. The similarity of this species to P. atrum is striking. They differ in that P. dispersum has broader rachis scales and the basal segments are only slightly or not at all deflexed. Of more fundamental importance, however, is that these two species reproduce very differently. Polypodium atrum has 64 spores per sporangium and therefore can be assumed to reproduce by the normal sexual process. Poly- podium dispersum reproduces apogamously and has no sex organs on the gameto- phyte. This means that there is no possibility for interaction between these two species. Polypodium dispersum is a triploid and, on morphological grounds, I suspect it arose as a hybrid between P. atrum and P. plumula. Polypodium plumula is a tetraploid, so I predict that P. atrum is a diploid. As P. atrum occurs only in Mexico and northern Central America, P. dispersum perhaps arose there and then migrated to the other parts of its range. The relationships between P. dispersum and P. bermudianum are discussed under the latter species. See also the discussion of P. plumula for comments on the typification of P. molle H.B.K. 12. Polypodium atrum A. M. Evans, sp. nov.—Fig. 18. Rhizoma breviter repens, paleis lineari-triangularibus, basi affixis, castaneis, comosis, integris; frondes approximatae articulatae, ca 40 cm longae; stipites et rhachides rigidae nitentes nigrae, pilos dissitos aciculares gerentes; paleae rhachidis numerosae parvae anguste triangulares vel lineari-triangulares, castaneae integrae, basi saepe hastatae; lamina pectinata, anguste oblonga, ca 33 cm longa et 8 cm lata, basi subtruncata vel interdum abrupte cuneata; segmenta anguste ovata, ca 40 mm longa et 4 mm lata, apice obtusa, basalia paullo reducta et valde deflexa; lamina pilos dissitos aciculares ferens; venae liberae 2-furcatae; sporangia saepe cum 2-4 capsularibus paraphysibus; sporae globoso-reniformes, tuberculatae, ca 34u longae, 64 per sporangium. P. disperso simile, segmentis basalibus deflexis, paleis rhachidis angustioribus, et numero sporae differt, Rhizome short-creeping, 4-6 mm in diam; rhizome paleae linear-triangular, expanded at the base, red-brown with lighter base, basifixed, lustrous, comose, entire; fronds 42 (30-65) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3.5 (2.5-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis black, with scattered, long, simple, [Vor. 55 938 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN acicular hairs; rachis paleae small, narrow- to linear-triangular, often hastate at the base, red-brown, entire; blades narrow-oblong, 33 (21-50) cm long, 8 (6- 11.5) cm wide, herbaceous, subtruncate or occasionally abruptly cuneate at the base; segments 42 (32-60) mm long, 4 (3-7) mm wide, obtuse, symmetrical at the base in the upper half of the frond, with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis in the lower half of the frond, entire, the basal segments slightly reduced and strongly deflexed, or occasionally abruptly reduced to auricles, the spaces be- tween the segments equaling or exceeding the width of the segments; lamina with scattered acicular hairs and short, simple or occasionally forked clavate hairs; costa perpendicular to the rachis, black throughout or dark red- brown at the base, with scattered, long, acicular hairs; veins twice-forked, all free; guard cells ca 35u long; sori medial, round, with long, simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia mostly with 3 or 4 two-celled capsular setae 35- -95u long; spores globose-reniform, tuberculate, ca 34u long. Holotype: British Honduras, El Cayo District, Mountain Pine Ridge, San Augustin, on boulders on bank of Río Frio, July-Aug 1936, Lundell 6639 US 1638286; isotypes GH, MICH. Habitat: terrestrial or epipetric, woods, cliffs, river banks, 60-900 m alt. Distribution: southeastern Mexico to British Honduras.—Fig. 9. CO: VERACRUZ: Átayác River, Copeland 16058 (MICH); Córdoba, La Luz, Kerber Mex 97 (US); "Córdoba, Metlac River, Copeland 124 (MICH, US); Córdoba, Mt Orizaba, Seaton 424 (GH, US); Córdoba, San Alejo Mts, Couch M26 (US); coru Monte de San Pablo, (US) T . Laguna Encantada, Dressler & Jones 77 (GH, MO, US); Zacualpán, Purpus 2165 (GH, O, AXACA: Tuxtepec, NERA Martinez-Calderón 693 (MICH, US); Mogofie, Orcutt 5211 (MO). TaBasco: Balancán, San Isidro, Matuda 3372 (MICH, US). CHIAPAS: San Fernando de Tuxtla, Collins & Doyle 167 (US). GUATEMALA: EL PETÉN: Chicbul Ti Libertad, Lundell 3378 (US), 3378-A (MICH), La Libertad, Lundell 2980 (MICH), 4707 (US); Tikal Ntl Pk, Dos Aguadas, Lundell 15588 (US), Remate rd S of Tikal, Lundell 15878 (US). IZABEL: Cacão, betw Panzós & Senahú, Barber 197 (US). Brirsa Honpuras: EL CAYO: Camp Six-Vaca Rd, Lundell 6545 (MICH, US); Cohune Ridge, eae 6494 (MICH, US); San Antonio, Bartlett. 13062 ae US). HONDURAS: SANTA BARBARA: San Pedro Sula, Thieme 5692 (GH, US). COMAYAGUA: Tiquitapa "River, Los Dragos, Seguatépequi area, a B 435 (GH, US); Jutiapa, Seguatépequi area, VE & e 414 (GH). vo River valley, Coyoles, Los Flores, Yuncker et al. 8150 (MO, MICH); Río Pelo, Co vdillera de Mico Quemada, Ames 25 (US). pre La Ceiba, nr Cangrajal River, Yuncker et al. 8792 (MO, MICH, US). The relationships of this species are discussed under P. dispersum and P. bermudianum. 13. Polypodium absidatum A. M. Evans, sp. nov.—Fig. 20. Rhizoma longe repens, paleis anguste triangularibus, basi dilatatis, atro rubro- brunneis basi pallidoribus, acuminatis, comosis, integris vel inconspicue fimbriatis; frondes approximatae, stipitibus et rhachibus atro rubro-brunneis pilos aureis acicularibus praeditis; paleae rhachis inconspicuae filiformes integrae; laminae anguste ovatae, basi anguste cuneatae; segmentis ascendentibus acutis integris vel crenulatis, basi asymmetricis, infimis ad auriculas reductis; laminae subtus pilis dissitis acicularibus et pilis numerosis longis clavatis praeditae; costae valde decur- 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 939 rentes; venae unifurcatae; sori mediales, paraphysibus simplicibus clavatis praediti; sporangia plerumque setifera. Rhizome long-creeping, 5 (3-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, expanded at the base, dark red-brown, lighter at the base, lustrous, basi- fixed, acuminate, comose, non-clathrate, entire or inconspicuously fimbriate; fronds 38 (15-57) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3.5 (2-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis dark red-brown, with golden, acicular hairs ca 0.5 mm long, ctenoid hairs present; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 30 (12-46) cm long, 6.5 (3.5-9) cm wide, narrow-cuneate at the base; segments 33 (20-50) mm long, 3.5 (2-4.5) mm wide, ascending ca 20°-30° from the horizontal, reduced to auricles at the blade base, linear-triangular, coriaceous to herbaceous, acute, asymmetrical at the base, entire to crenulate; lamina with scattered acicular hairs ca 0.3 mm long, and with numerous, long, clavate hairs; costa strongly decurrent, with scattered acicular hairs ca 0.5 mm long; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 66u long; sori medial, round, with simple, clavate paraphyses ca 0.25 mm long; sporangia mostly with 2 capsular setae up to 0.25 mm long; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 59u long. Holotype: Colombia, Santander, Páramo de Romeral, Killip & Smith 18518 US 1353919; isotype GH. Habitat: montane forest, epiphytic, occasionally epipetric or terrestrial, 2800- 4100 m alt. Distribution: greater Antilles and western South America south to Bolivia.— Fig. 11. BA: ORIENTE: Gran Piedra, a 7155 (US). Dominican REPUBLIC: AZUA: of La Pelona, Ekman 13643 (US). rA veca: Sabana Alta, ues 13794 (US). A: Hart 45 (US), 771 (MO). Tine MÉRIDA: Laguna Negra, Gines 1748 (US). COLOMBIA: MAGDALENA: Páramos, Sierra Nevada de Santa Need Seifriz 463 (US). SANTANDER: Paramo de Romeral, Killip & Smith 18518 (GH, US); Paramo de Santurban, Vetas, Killip & Smith 17925 (GH). Boyaca: Valle de las Playas, Crabb & Guymer P40 (US); Valle del Corallitos, Grubb & Guymer P103 (US). vaLLE: Páramo de Bavaya, Rio Bugalagrande, Corrales, Cuatrecasas 20551 (US) CUADOR: CARCHI: Tufino, SE slopes of Volcán de Chile, Wiggins 10605 (US). cusco: Quito, Holdridge 1579 (US). pincHincHaA: Mt Pichincha, Holmgren 289 (GH, US), Mille 15 (US), Mille s.n. (MO); Sodiro s.n., in 1905 (US). Napo-pastaza: Antisanilla, Anthony & Tate 318, 319 (US); Mt ae Mille s.n. (GH); Pifo, Mille s.n., in 1899 (US). PERU: LA BT Otuzco, Agallpampa, López M. 1024 (US). BOLIVIA: TARIJA: Padcaya, Fiebrig 2875 (GH). Although often identified as “P. curvans" or “P. curvatum” by various authors, the types of these taxa do not agree with this species. The affinities of P. absidatum are discussed below under P. curvans Mett. 14. Polypodium curvans Mett., Ann. Sci. Nat. (Paris) V, 2: 253, 1864. P. c PA To Mett., Abhandl. Senckenb. Naturf. Ges. Frankfort 2(1): 58, 1856, non Swar P. creat Sodiro, Crypt. Vasc. Quit. 333, 1893. (Type: Ecuador, Azuay, nr Cuenca, mbach 35 Q?) Rhizome short-creeping, 3 (2-5) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, dark red-brown with a lighter base, lustrous, basifixed, acute to acuminate, [Vor. 55 240 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN comose, non-clathrate, entire or inconspicuously fimbriate; fronds 43 (18-90) cm long, approximate to fasciculate on the rhizome; rachis 8 (3-14) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis dark red-brown, with scattered, golden acicular hairs up to 1 mm long, and with scattered, short, clavate hairs, ctenoid hairs inconspicu- ous or absent; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, dark red-brown, entire; blades linear, 38 (15-80) cm long, 4.5 (2.5-10) cm wide, linear-cuneate at the base, often circinate at the apex at maturity; segments linear, 30 (13-53) mm long, 2 (1.5-3) mm wide, strongly ascending ca 45° above the horizontal, herbaceous, acute, asymmetrical at the base, confluent, widely-spaced and gradually reduced to mere auricles at the blade base, crenulate to crenate; lamina with numerous, long, clavate hairs up to 200 long, without acicular hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered, acicular, golden hairs ca 0.75 mm long; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 43u long; sori medial, round, occupying most of the lamina, with simple, clavate paraphyses ca 200u long; sporangia with 1 or 2 capsular setae up to 200, long, the sporangial stalk with 2 columns of cells; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 44u long. Type: based on P. curvatum sensu Mett. Mettenius’ description was based on a Lechler specimen from Peru. The locality and number are given in Mett. Fil. Lechl. 1: 7, 1856, as Agapata, Peru, Lechler 2006, which is thus the holotype (B?; isotype L, Morton photo 1859). Habitat: in montane forests, epiphytic or epipetric, 1600-4000 m alt. Distribution: Ecuador to western Bolivia.—Fig. 11. Ecuapor: Quitensian Andes, Couthouy s.n. in 1855 (GH). PICHINCHA: Quito, Jameson s.n., in 1848 (GH). cHrmBorazo: W slope of E Cordillera of Ríobamba, Rimbach 27 (GH, US). napo-pasraza: Antisanilla, Anthony & Tate 322 (US); Cubillán, W slope, Rimbach pu Agapata, Hohenacker 2006 (GH); Chasqui, MacBride & Featherstone 27 July- 13 Aug, 1922 (US); Mayuyoc, Bües 1027 (US). JUNIN: Huancayo, Killip & Smith 22129 (GH, US), 23364 (US); Quebrado de Occopilla, Soukup 3642 (GH, US). apurrmac: Prov Abancay, Ampay, Stork et al. 10626 (MO); E de Ampay, Men 364 (GH, MO, US); ces LA PAz: Pelechuco, Williams 2583 (GH, US). Polypodium curvans is similar to P. absidatum, from which the former differs by having much smaller and more delicate fronds, strongly circinate at maturity, and longer hairs on the rachis and sporangia. The spore and guard cell sizes of P. curvans suggest that it may be a diploid, whereas the spores and guard cells of P. absidatum (see Table 3) are considerably larger and in the polyploid range. Polypodium curvans, P. absidatum, and P. choquetangense appear to be closely related species. In superficial appearance, P. curvans strongly suggests ctenopteroid affinities. However, this is not confirmed in any of the critical criteria of sporangial stalks or spore shape, and it is probably placed in the P. pectinatum complex. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 241 15. Polypodium choquetangense Rosenst., Meded. Rijks Herb. Leiden 19: 18, 1913. Rhizome long-creeping, 4-5 mm in diam; rhizome scales narrow-triangular, red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, comose, non-clathrate, entire; fronds 55 (36-90) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 7 (3-10) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis dark red-brown, with very long, scattered, simple acicular hairs, and with long, irregular, ctenoid, clavate hairs, without paleae; blades narrow-ovate, cuneate at the base; segments linear, strongly ascending ca 25?-50? above the horizontal, reduced to auricles at the blade base, herbaceous, acute, with constricted attachments to the rachis, pinnatifid to a narrow wing along the costa; lamina essentially glabrous, with scattered clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered, long, acicular hairs; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca Ou long; sori inframedial, round, with simple clavate paraphyses; sporangia with- out setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 42u long. Type: Bolivia, Hab. Choquetanga grande in silvis montanis ad arborum truncos, 3300 m alt, Oct 1911, Herzog 2387 L, S. abitat: wet rocks and tree trunks, montane forest, 2700-3500 m alt. Distribution: known only from the province of Cochabamba, Bolivia (Fig. 11). BOLIVIA: COCHABAMBA: Ayopaya, Sailapata, Cárdenas B (US), 3167 (US); Choro, Brooke 6090 (G, S); Jatun Pino to Carrasco, Cárdenas 5939 (US). This species is unique because of its deeply pinnate-pinnatifid blades. It is the only pinnate member of the pectinatum complex. The base of the frond matures and sheds spores while the apical portion is still juvenile and unfurling, showing an almost indeterminate growth unknown elsewhere in the group. The very sinuous, almost circinate rachis, the strongly ascending segments, and the very long hairs of the stipe and rachis are found only in this species and P. curvans, which is clearly its nearest relative. 16. Polypodium bolivianum Rosenst., Repert. Sp. Nov. 5: 236, 1908. P. gine Rosenst., E t. Sp. Nov. 22:16, e n Costa Rica, La Carpin- 850 m 10 Apr 1908, Brade & Brade 14, p PA) Uo Prec 8 (6-10) mm in pos rhizome paleae narrow- to linear-triangular, expanded at the base, dark red-brown with pale base, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, comose, with hairs obscuring most of the paleae, densely and conspicuously fimbriate; fronds 75 (35-135) cm long, spaced ca 1 cm apart to approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (2-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis dark red-brown, with numerous, conspicuous, ctenoid hairs, occasionally with short, acicular hairs; rachis paleae inconspicuous, small, filiform, with fimbriate margins; blades narrowly triangular, 55 (28-107) cm long, 15 (10-27) cm wide, truncate or rarely the lower segments slightly shortened; segments 80 (45-145) mm long, 6 (4-9) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or the lower segments occasion- ally deflexed, coriaceous, obtuse to acute, entire, symmetrical at the base, often slightly constricted near the base; lamina with few, short clavate hairs ca 125 long; costae perpendicular to the rachis, with a few clavate and ctenoid hairs be- low, without paleae; veins 2 or 3 forked, free or occasionally partially anastomosing, obscure; guard cells ca 43u long; sori supramedial, round, with a few clavate [Vor. 55 249 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN paraphyses ca 150g long, and with a cluster of setiform hairs around the receptacle, these obscured in the mature sorus; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 43u long; n = 37. Holotype: Bolivia, South Yungas, Sirupaya, nr Yanacachi, ca 16? lat, 2300 m, humid forests, 29 Nov 1906, Buchtien 481 S-PA; isotype US. Habitat: in montane forests, epiphytic on tree bases and trunks, occasionally terrestrial or epipetric on mossy rocks, (200) 1000-2700 m alt. Distribution: southern Mexico, through western South America to western Bolivia.—Fig. 8 ea CHIAPAS: Ghiesbreght 394 (GH). GUA A: ALTA VERAPAZ: Finca Sepacuité, Cook & Griggs 462, 555 (US); Pansamalá, von Tuerekheim 644 J: Honpuras: COMAYAGUA: Siguatepeque, Standley 56350 (US); Fl Achote, hills above Siguatepeque, Yuncker et al. 5973 (US); Barranco de Trincheras, nr Siguatepeque, Morton 7582 (US). Costa RICA: ALAJUELA: Palmira, Zarcero region, Smith 4332 (MO). HEREDIA: Vara Blanca, betw Poás & Barba volcanoes, Maxon 8329 (US). m José: Río del Convento, valle de Díquis, Pittier 12112 (US); San Ramón, Tonduz 17604 (US), Brenes 14221 (US). CARTAGO: Pejivalle, Standley & Valerio 47053 (US); Santa Clara de Cartago, Maxon 8208 (US). PANAMA: bo Casita Alta, Volcán de Chiriqui, Woodson et al. 887 (MO, US); Cerro de la Horqueta, Maxon 5405, 5409, 5423 (US); Cerro d2 Lino, above El Boquete, Maxon ea 52 16a (US); El Boquete, Cornman 839, 1276, 1327 (US), Min 5248, 5249 (US). IEN: Cana, Williams 847 (US). Venn UELA: ARAGUA: Colonia Tovar, Pittier 9358 (GH, US). CoLOMBIA: MAGDELENA: Santa Marta, Sierra de Onaco, Smith 1027 (GH, MO, US); Mt San Lorenzo, Santa Marta, Seifriz 36 (GH, US). SANTANDER: Cerro Armas, Haught 1958 (US); Las Vegas, Killip & Smith 21153 (US); Mt Pefia Blanca, Charta, Killip & Smith 19284 (GH); ney Surata valley, above Suratá, Killip & Smith 16569, 19284 (US). CUNDINAMARCA: Macizo de Bogotá, Quebrada Chica, Schultes i (US), Cuatrecasas 5242 (US), Black 46. 404 (GH); W of Salto de Tequendama, nr Ermitaño, Uribe 3352, 3354 (US). antioguia: Boquerón, betw ces & Palmitas, "Hodge 6600 (GH). carpas: Río Boquia, Salento, Killip & Hazen 8843 (GH, US); Río Santa Rita, Salento, Killip & Hazen 8995 (US). VALLE DEL cauca: Pavas, Killip 11660 (US); Rio Cali, Pichindé, Alto de las Brisas, Cuatrecasas 18280 (US). ECUADOR: IMBABURA: Río Chaluayaco, below Magnolia, bos! Intag Valley, Drew E-604 (US). LEóN: Hacienda Solento, nr Santa Rosa, Cantón, Pajii, Mexia 6684, 6684a (US). PICHINCHA: ur Pichincha, Mille 16 (MO, US). GALÁPAGOS ISLANDs: Albemarle I, xo NG Mu oe nchosmayo valley, Pula 118 (US); Huacapistana, Killip & m MMS (US) Coa 272 oe Oxapampa, Soukup 2347 (GH); E of Quimiri Bridge, La Merced, Killip & Smith 23958 (US); Vitoc, Soukup 4432 (US). cusco: San Migu Bi Urubamba ie pud & Gilbert 1752, 1762 (US). Borirvi4: Bang 2228 (US); Bang s.n. (MO). La Paz: Mapiri, Rusby 356 (US); Polo- Polo, Coroico, N Yungas, Buchtien y (GH, US); Hacienda Simaco at Tipuani, Buchtien 5269 (GH, US); Yunzas, Rusby 357 (US). sanra cruz: Yungas de San Mateo, Comarapa, Steinbach 8430 (GH). This very large fern with coriaceous, almost waxy, fronds, strongly truncate blade bases, and densely fimbriate rhizome scales is one of the most distinctive members of the P. pectinatum group. Its affinities are not clear, although the generally glabrous lamina and the obscure tuft of setose hairs around the sorus suggest a relationship to P. ptilodon. In northern South America the rhizome scales are less densely fimbriate, and it becomes more difficult to separate the species from 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 943 P. eurybasis, which generally has a more pubescent lamina, subtruncate blade with more acute and crenulate segments, and not so harsh a texture. I have included here two collections from the Galapagos Islands that are sub- truncate and have a few ctenoid hairs and a few long hairs on the brown rachis. These may represent an endemic species, but because the specimens are juvenile, I am tentatively placing them here where they fit most closely. IT. Polypodium eurybasis C. Chr., Svensk. Vet. Akad. Handl. III, 16(2): 71, t. 16, fig. 12, 13, 1937. Rhizome long-creeping, 5-9 mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-triangular, light to dark red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acute to acuminate, comose, non- clathrate, entire to inconspicuously fimbriate; fronds 28-130 cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (2-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red- brown to dark red-brown, subglabrous to densely villose with acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs also present; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform or linear, entire; blades narrow-triangular to narrow-ovate, 20-88 cm long, 4-26 cm wide, subtruncate to abruptly cuneate at the base; segments 22-135 mm long, 3-9 mm wide, linear- triangular, narrow-triangular at the blade base, perpendicular to the rachis, straight or slightly falcate, herbaceous to subcoriaceous, acute, symmetrical at the base or with the lower edge approaching a right angle with the rachis, crenulate to crenate; lamina essentially glabrous, with simple and forked clavate hairs up to 200u long, and occasionally with scattered acicular hairs; costa perpendicular to, or slightly decurrent on, the rachis, with a few reduced ctenoid hairs and with scattered acicular hairs up to 0.5 mm long; veins once- or twice-forked, free; guard cells 44-504 long; sori medial, round, with simple or branched, clavate paraphyses; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, 40-44 long. This is a widespread and variable species distinguished primarily by its subtruncate blades, sharply acute and crenate segments, prominent veins, and glabrous lamina. It is probably most closely related to P. bolivianum, from which some of the northern South American material is difficult to distinguish. It can be subdivided into three varieties. I. Rachis densely villose; rhizome paleae entire. .................... I7c. P. eurybasis var. villosum 1; Rachis subglabrous to thinly pilose; rhizome paleae entire to inconspicuously fim 2. Veins once (twice). -forked; segments straight, crenate or a rhizome p ed-brown, inconspicuously fimbriate ............ 7b. P. eurybasis var. glabrescens 2. Veins ae segments straight or drooping at ru apex, crenulate; rhizome paleae dark red-brown, entire to inconspicuously fimbri l7a. P. eurybasis var. eurybasis l7a. Polypodium eurybasis var. eurybasis. Rhizome paleae dark red-brown, attenuate, fronds 74 (30-114) cm long; stipe and rachis dark red-brown, with scattered acicular hairs 0.5 to 0.75 mm long, and also with conspicuous ctenoid hairs; blades narrow-ovate, 55 (21-87) cm long, 11 (4.5-18) cm wide; segments 58 (22-95) mm long, 6 (3-8) mm wide, straight or slightly drooping near the apex, herbaceous, symmetrical and expanded at the base, crenulate; veins twice-forked; guard cells ca 50u long; spores ca 40u long. [Vor. 55 244 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Holotype: Haiti, Massif de la Selle, Marigot, Jardins Bois-Pin, ca 1900 m, 9 June 1928, Ekman H10062 S; isotypes B, US. Habitat: terrestrial, epipetric or epiphytic on trunks or branches, in montane forests, 1000-2600 m alt. Distribution: Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela.—Fig. 11. CUBA: ORIENTE: Pico Turquino, Ekman 5455 (US), Loma Regino, Ekman 14605 (US). Harti: Massif de la Selle, Croix-des-Bouquets, Ekman 3088 (US); Mission, Fonds Varettes, Leonard 3990 (GH, . ENEZUELA: MONAGAS: Cerro de Turumiquire, Tate 120 (US); Cerro Negro, above La Sabana de Las Piedras, NW of Caripe, Steyermark 62080 (MO, US). DISTRITO FEDERAL: El pose Killip & Rohl 37168, 37190 (US). ARAGUA: Colonia Tovar, Fendler 221B (GH, IVAR: Ptari-tepuí, Steyermark 59595 (US); Mt Roraima, im Thurn 104 (US), SUE 58741 (US). See P. eurybasis var. glabrescens for discussion. 7b. Polypodium eurybasis var. glabrescens (Rosenst.) A. M. Evans, comb. nov. P. lachniferum var. glabrescens Rosenst., Repert. Sp. Nov. 11:57, 1912. (Holotype. Bolivia, N Yungas, Unduavi, 3400 m, Buchtien 2770 s. PA; pole P. nde var. glabrescens f. incurvatum Rosenst., M. us t (Holotype: a, N Yungas, Unduavi, 3400 m, Buchtien 2769 S PA; pe US) ae paleae usually not expanded at the base, a a basifixed, inconspicuously fimbriate; fronds 80 (28-120) em long, rachis 2.5 (2-3.5) times as ong as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, thinly pilose to subglabrous with short acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs present; blades narrow-triangular to narrow- ovate, 56 (20-88) cm long, 12 (4-26) cm wide, subtruncate; segments 65 (22-135) mm long, 6 (3-9) mm wide; lamina essentially glabrous, with scattered, simple, clavate hairs ca 0.25 mm long; costae perpendicular to the rachis, with scattered acicular hairs up to 0.35 mm long; veins once (twice)-forked, prominent; guard cells ca 44u long; sori large, covering one-third to one-fourth of the width of the lamina, with simple, clavate paraphyses; spores ca 44u long Habitat: pendent epiphyte in wet, shady, montane forests, 1500-3600 m alt. Distribution: Costa Rica to western Bolivia —Fig. 11. Cosra Rica: ALAJUELA: Zarcero, Smith H 127 (MO). Herepta: Cerros de duc NE of San Isidro, Standley & Valerio 50346 (US). san José: Laguna de la Chonta, NE of Santa María de Dota, Standley 42128 (US); Las ay Standley 38846 (US). ENEZUELA: ARAGUA: Colonia Tovar, Fendler 221 (US). ménipa: La Venta, Jahn 851 (GH, US). Monacas: Cer o de Turumiquire, Tate 48 (US). Cotomsia: Mutis 3036, 3237 (US). sANTANDER: California, Killip & Smith 16902 (GH, US); La Baja, Killip & Smith ne Pi US). CUNDINAMARCA: Bogota, Ariste-Joseph s.n. (US); Guadalupe, Bogota, Haught 5040 (US); Macizo de Bogota, Quebrada de las Delicias, Cuatrecasas 5463, 5608, 5675 (US); qub Río San Francisco Valley, Montserrate, Hawkes & Garcia-Barriga 94 (US), Ewan 16901 (US); Bogotá Plateau, San Cristóbal, Niemeyer 175 (US); Bogotá, old San Cristóbal to Ubaque rd, Schiefer 322 (GH); Sabana de Bogotá, Pring 133 (MO); Mun Chipaque, Gutierrez V. 50 (GH). carpas: Magana, Old Quindio ; Par Victoria, Ewan 16218 (US); Soledad, Buon 1651 0 (U a PICHINCHA: Mt Pichincha, Mille s.n. (GH). NAPO-PASTAZA: Pifo, Mille s.n., in Ed (US LIVIA: LA Paz: Unduavi, N Yungas, Buchtien 2771, 2772 (US); Sirupayo, nr 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 945 anacachi, S Yungas, Buchtien 485 (US). cocHaBAMBA: Prov Chapare, Incachaca-Chusi, S IA 9235 (GH, MO); Río Tocorani, Herzog 2275 (US); Prov Sacaba, Steinbach 5868 (MO). Of the three varieties of P. eurybasis, this one appears to be the most general- ized element. It is distinguished from var. eurybasis by a more glabrous lamina, lighter green foliage, paler and broader rhizome scales, usually more crenate seg- ments, and usually only once-forked veins. It is closer to var. villosum, as discussed below. I7c. Polypodium eurybasis var. villosum A. M. Evans, var. nov.—Fig. 19. P. eurybasi var. glabrescente simile, paleis rhizomatis semper integris et rhachidibus dense villosis differt. Similar to var. glabrescens except rhizome scales with entire margins; stipe and rachis densely villose with acicular hairs ca 0.5 mm long; range of dimensions not so great; fronds 75 (40-130) cm long; blades 56 (30-84) cm long, 12 (8.5-21) cm wide; segments 62 (45-104) mm long, 5.5 (4-7) mm wide. Holotype: Colombia, Cundinamarca, collected on rocky ridge in brush on foot- hills above Bogotá, just N of mouth of Quebrada El Obispo, 830 m alt, 10 Jan 1943, Fosberg 19688 US 2290492; isotype US. Habitat: epiphyte, occasionally epipetric or terrestrial in rich humus, in montane forest, 220-330 (830) m alt. Distribution: pode to western Bolivia.—Fig. 11. PANAMA: CHIRIQUI: Camp Aguacatal, Ab ail 5300 (US). VENEZUELA: DISTRITO FEDERAL: Avila aracas, Vareschi s.n., Feb 1963 (TENN). CoroMBi4: Mutis 3235 (US); pene Joseph s.n. (US). MAGDALENA: Santa Marta, Carriker 16 (US); Sierra de Perijá, Casacará Valley, 23 km E of Codazzi, Grant 10982 (US). cunprnamarca: Boca de Monte, W margin, Sabana de Bogotá, Cuatrecasas, Jaramillo M. & Huertas 25809 (US); Bogotá, Ariste-Joseph 1919, 1920 (GH, US); Word. above Bogotá, Ewan 16920 (US); Páramo de Cruz Verde, Apollinaire & Arthur 4 (US), Cuatrescasas 419 (US); Sibaté, Pennell 2494 (US). carpas: Pinares, above Salento, Pennell 9258a (US). cauca: Canaan, Mt Puracé, Pennell & Killip 6691 (GH, US). ECUADOR: PICHINCHA: Corazón Peak & Corazón Pass, Ewan 16421 (US); Mt debes Mille 16 (US). caNar: San Marcos, 5-8 km NE of Azogues, Camp E-2614 (US). azu N of Sevilla de Oro, Camb E-5209 (GH, MO, US). Loya: Zamora-Huaico, Espinosa 2» o Peru: HuáwNuco: Mito, MacBride & Featherstone 1621, 1731 (US); Muna, trail to Tambo de Vaca, MacBride 4280 (US). BoLivi4: LA Paz: Soratá, Williams 2575 (GH, US). cocHaBAMBA: Incachaca-San Antonio, Prov Chapare, Steinbach 8988 (GH, MO); Prov Sacabá, Cochabamba, Steinbach 9868 (GH, MO). This variety is differentiated from var. glabrescens primarily on the basis of the more densely villose rachis and the entire rhizome scales. As they both cover essentially the same range, these apparently are not clinal variations, and appear sufficiently distinct to warrant formal recognition. The peculiar distribution and relationships of this variety to the other two suggest that, if this is truly a distinct variety, there may be an ecological isolation not evident from the data available. VoL. 55 246 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 18. Polypodium pectinatum L., Sp. Pl. 1085, 1753.—Fig. 20. P. otites sensu Willd. in L., Sp. Pl. ed. 4, 5: 177, 1810, non L., 1753 (Based on Vahl s.n., Herb. Willd. no . 19653, *Habitat in America," B-photo) Goniophlebium anie (L) J. Smith, Lond. Jour. Bot. 4:57, 184 P. pectinatum L. var. majus Kuhn ex Krug, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 7 128, 1897, nomen nudum. (Bassi 6 ee cee Donineo. Eno 2595b, c, d B; Dominica, Eggers 12 B?; Martinique, Hahn 55 P) P. pectinatum L. var. wagneri sensu Jenm., Bull. Bot. Dept. Jamaica 4: 125, 1897. (Not as to o Polypodium wagneri Mett., a species of sect. Goniophlebium. Based on: Jamaica, Jenman s.n. NY) Rhizome long-creeping, 6.5 (5.9) mm in diam; rhizome paleae linear-triangu- lar, dark red-brown with pale base, basifixed, filiform at the apex, inconspicuously comose, non-clathrate, inconspicuously and sparsely fimbriate; fronds 60 (30-126) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 6 (3.5-9) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis light red-brown, thinly pilose with acicular hairs up to 0.5 mm long, usually much shorter, ctenoid hairs inconspicuous to very conspicuous; rachis paleae usually absent, when present inconspicuous, filiform and entire; blades linear-elliptic, 50 (24-113) cm long, 7.5 (4.5-10.5) cm wide, abruptly cuneate at the base; segments 37 (23-53) mm long, 4.5 (3-7) mm wide, perpendic- ular to the rachis, abruptly reduced to a few pairs of lobes at the blade base, straight or slightly falcate, obtuse, the base expanded on the rachis and symmetrical, herbaceous, entire; lamina puberulous with small fine acicular hairs up to 0.25 mm long, usually shorter, also with inconspicuous, clavate hairs up to 100 long; costa slightly decurrent on the rachis, the trichomes as on the lamina and with reduced ctenoid hairs; veins twice (once)-forked, partially to almost completely anastomosing except at the apex of the segments; guard cells ca 47u long; sori medial, round, small, with a few simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia ca 180g in diam, usually with one inconspicuous clavate capsular seta ca 65u long; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 45u long; n=37. Type: There is no specimen labeled P. pectinatum in the Linnaean Herbarium, nor any specimen agreeing with the diagnosis; therefore, the species was evidently based only on the references cited. "There were two of these: Polypodium lonchi- tidis folio, Pet. fil. 31. t7.f. 14 and Polypodium nigrum tenerius sectum. Plum. amer. 26. t. 37 (The “tenerius” is an error of Linnaeus for “tenuius.”) The Petiver figure is copied from Plumier, and therefore there is essentially only the Plumier citation left, automatically making the Plumier plate the lectotype. This ques- tion was put to Mr. J. E. Dandy of the British Museum (Natural History) and this is his conclusion also. The Plumier citation refers to his "Description des plantes de l'Amerique," 1693. The text indicates that his species came from “nos Antilles,” ie. from the French Antilles. In a later work, “Tractatus de filicibus Americanis," (p. 64, t. 83, 1705) Plumier repeated the same description and figure; he amplified the text by replacing “nos Antilles" by Martinique and by adding the locality Jamaica, on the basis of a publication by Sloane on Jamaica. Plumier's original description was thus based on one of his own collections from Martinique which is thus the type locality. In publishing P. pectinatum, Linnaeus picked up only the locality Jamaica in error. The only species of this group occurring in 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 9247 Martinique is the species as I have delimited it here, which also does occur in Jamaica. Linnaeus' description of the rhizome as "nudo" was evidently taken from Plumier’s illustration, in which the artist has omitted showing the rhizome scales, probably in order to show more clearly the leaf-scars (which are drawn in a very exaggerated way); no species of this alliance has or could be expected to have a naked (i.e. scaleless) rhizome. Habitat: on limestone rocks or epiphytic on tree trunks and horizontal branches, occasionally terrestrial, in lowland or montane humid forest, from sea level to 1100 m alt. Distribution: West Indies and Costa Rica to northwestern South America.— Fig. i A Rica: LIMÓN: Hamburg Finca, on the Río Reventazón, below Cairo, Standley & Valerio Par (MO, US). san José: El General, Skutch 2153 (MO, US). CARTAGO: Tuis, s Ris $). : San Pablo, Blake s.n., 8 July 1872 (GH). Bocas pet Toro: Chiriquí Lagoon, von Wed 2611 I (MO). cocté: El Valle, Allen 228 (US); Penonomé, Williams 495 (US). CANAL ZONE: Fr ijoles, ig 27571 (MO, US); Barro Colorado I, Standley 31410, 40973 e Gat ; . usa: PINAR DEL RÍO: source of Rio Taco-Taco, Sierra de Los Or rganos, Morton 4295, 4300, 4315, 4485 (US). ommNTE: El Yunque, nr Baracoa, Underwood & Earle 1292 (US), Pollard & Palmer 183 (US); Las Ninfas, Guantánamo, Hioram 1458 (US); W of Santiago, Graves 1482 (US); 20 km SW of Com pañía de Moa Mill, Sierra de Moa, Howard 5973 ; N spur of Sierra Maestra W of Rio Yao, Morton & Acuna 3352 (US); Sierra Nipe, Loma u Ln A mE Yateras, Josephina, N of Jagüey, Maxon 4103 (GH, US); Yateras, S of güey, 4219 (GH); Yateras, Monte Verde, Maxon 4325 (GH, US), Shafer 8701 (US). Wright 1017 (GH AITI: Marmelade, Leonard Roe (US); Pilbury Hill, Miller 188 (US). Bono disi NA: Fuertes 1013 (GH); Paradis, Abbott 1580a (US). DUARTE: San Fran o de Maco oris, "La Br Me dap 2033 (US). ra veca: Piedra Blanca, Allard 13814, 13990, "13974, 13988 (US). NÁ: Laguna, Abbott 367, 369 (US); Rojo Cabo, Paa 164, 1164 (US); Samaná, Abbot 490 o Sánchez, Abbott 112, 113 (US). ANTO DOMINGO: La Cumbra, Raunkiaer -s , 4 Aug 6 (US); Mt Isabel de la Torre, Eggers 25950, 2595d m SEIBO: Samaná P Miller E (US); 3-4 mi W of San Lorenzo Bay, Abbott 1273 (US Jamaica: Roper s.n., in 1895 (MO). Cinchona, Clute s.n., 21 Febr 1900 (GH); Hartford, Priestman’s River, Maxon Sie 2538 (US); Hollymount, Mt Diablo, Maxon 2319 (US); John Crow Mts, E of Seamen's Valley, Portland. Maxon & Killip 239 (GH, US); Port Antonio, Millspaugh, " Jens 6 "Feb 1899 (GH). 2048 (US); 8 mi W of olin. baat El m ue, Scamman 6560 agner s.n., 16 Apr 1944 (US); El Yunque, Río Piedras, Johnston 750 (U a Du Sierra Naguabo, Shafer 3393 (US); Mariaco, Kuhn 426 (US); Mayagüez, Heller 44 (GH, MO, US); Ponce to airs Underwood & Griggs 765 (US tas Rd, 7 mi from A ° B £p ok = D N e 3 N anne ag - xm he t H p e. o Bu £ a = E. © S e^ 3 rrj e uu" Q^ — Ri Lum me i?) T — ). Les SSER ANTILLES: ST. Nine nu Gut Box 267 (US); Phillies ER Proctor 19556 (GH). MONTSERRAT: Turner s.n. (US); Shafer 748 (US); Centre Hills, Salem, Proctor 18837 (GH, US). GUADELOUPE: Camp Jacob, Duss 4094 (US); Bains Jaunes, Questel 3165 (US); Matouba, Scamman 8168 (GH). pvomrnica: Roseau bb Hodge 56 (GH); Morne Brule, eu Hodge 57 (MO, US); coo Hodge 1151 (US); Morne Diablotin, Hodge 2703 (GH, US). MARTINIQUE: Fontaines Didier, Duss 1676 (GH, MO, US), Hahn 5 . ST. LUCIA: 25 mi SSE of Soulriére posed 17869 (GH, US). sr. vincent: Smith 249 (GH). GRENADA: St George Parish, en ville Vale, Hunnewell 19435 (GH), Sherring 42 (US); Grand Etang, Beard 1260 (MO, US); Mt Pleasant, Milton, 19 Mar 1924 (US). ST. EUSTATIUS: Fairchild s.n., 22 Jan 1932 (US). [Vor. 55 948 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN VENEZUELA: BOLÍVAR: Cerro Pijiguao, N end of Serranía Suapure, above Pijiguao, Wurdack & Monachino 41300 (US). OMBIA: SANTANDER: Río Suratá valley, above Suratá, Killip & Smith 16569 (GH). META: Sierra de la Macarena, Cafio, Entrada, Philipson & Idrobo 17. US). v Guaviare, San José del Guaviare, Cuatrecasas 7468 (US). cHoco: Negría, Rio Killip 35027 (GH, US), Primavera, Scolnik 1653 (US). cauca: Gorgona I, Taylor 1227 (US). nariNo: Río Oretopungo, nr Rio Putumayo, above Puerto Asis, Ewan 16764 (US). ECUADOR: MANABI; Salango, Haught 3372 (US); Quininde, Holdridge 1678 (US). PERU: SAN MARTIN: Tingo María, Allard 21442 (US); Boquerón Pass, Allard 21734 (US). LORETO: Pongo de Manseriche, Río Santiago, Mexia 6212 (GH, MICH, MO, US), 6368a (GH, US). Polypodium pectinatum, as interpreted here on the basis of the type illustration mentioned above, agrees with the usual concept of the species as it occurs in the West Indies. This interpretation goes back at least to Swartz, who correctly under- stood the Plumier description and illustration. I have seen three specimens from the Swartz Herbarium in Stockholm which are labeled pectinatum by Swartz and which agree with my concept of the species. A number of specimens from the West Indies and elsewhere have been wrongly identified as P. pectinatum; these are now referred to P. dispersum, P. ptilodon, and other species. This species is best characterized by the very short hairs of the lamina, the short sporangial setae, and the abrupt reduction in the segments to several pairs of mere lobes at the base of the blade. Morphologically, it is most similar to P. camptophyllarium var. camptophyllarium, which has much longer and more dense hairs and is a larger and coarser plant. Specimens of P. pectinatum from the Lesser Antilles tend to have somewhat longer, though sparse, hairs and have the basal segments more gradually reduced than is typical. However, these plants are clearly related to the other West Indian material of P. pectinatum and not to P. camptophyllarium var. camptophyllarium. 19. Polypodium venturii de la Sota, Opera Lilloana 5: 186, fig. 31, 1960. Rhizome long-creeping, 5 (4-6) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, dark red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acute, conspicuously comose, sub- clathrate with lighter non-clathrate base, entire; fronds 55 (45-60) cm long, ap- proximate on the rhizome; rachis 3 (2-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, pilose with acicular, golden hairs, ctenoid hairs conspicuous; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 40 (28-47) cm long, 8 (6.5-9) cm wide, cuneate to subtruncate at the base; segments 40 (33-45) mm long, 5 (4.5-5) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or slightly deflexed at the blade base, linear-triangular, straight, obtuse, subsymmetrical at the base, chartaceous-herbaceous, entire, spaces between the segments 3⁄4 to 1 times the width of the segments; lamina thinly pilose with clear, acicular hairs ca 0.35 mm long and with scattered clavate hairs ca 150 long; costa decurrent on the rachis, the trichomes as on the lamina; veins once- or twice-forked, free or occasionally partially anastomosing; guard cells ca 56u long; sori inframedial to medial, round, with simple clavate paraphyses ca 0.2 mm long; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 50u long. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 949 Holotype: Argentina, Tucumán, Tafí, Yerba Buena, 800 m, 17 Apr 1921, Venturi 1232 LIL. Not seen, but de la Sota has verified my material. Habitat: epiphytic or on fallen logs, in forests, 600-2700 m alt. "T uod CAJAMARCA: Colasay, Woytkowski 7013 (US). Loreto: Pampayacu, Kanehira ARGENTINA: TUCUMAN: Chichigasta, Las Pavas, Venturi 2974 (GH, US). This species is similar to P. camptophyllarium, from which it can be distin- guished by the usually completely free venation, smaller sori, non-setose sporangia, and the softer, more delicate foliage. Although the two collections from Peru are less pilose and the hairs longer, in other characters they agree well with the Argentinian plants. 20. Polypodium pectinatiforme Men Hedwigia 43: 309, 1904. P. microsorum Lindm., Ark. Bot. 1:239, t. 11, fig. 2, 1903, non Mett., 1855. (Lectotype: razil, Rio Grande do Sul, Porto i Regnell I A381 S. Syntypes: Brazil, Rio d Janeiro, Mosén 114 S, S-PA; Minas Gerais, Caldas, Mosén 2195 C, M, S, S-PA; Rio Grande do Sul, Ha mberger Berg & Colon, Silveira Martins, Regnell 1 A493 S, S-PA, US, v. S; Cuba, Wright 1051 B, dh G, L, NY, S-PA). P. pectinatum L. var. truncatum Ros 2 ue 43:228, 1904. (Holotype: Brazil, Santa Canke Joinville, Schmalz 87. S-P : P. pectinatiforme Lindm. var. hirsutum Ros Hedwigia 48: 139, 1906 (as “hirsuta”). Holotype: Brazil, Rio Grande "do Sul, jene Stier 255 S-PA) Rhizome long- to short-creeping, 5 (2-10) mm in diam; rhizome paleae linear- triangular, dark red-brown with pale base, lustrous, basifixed, acute, inconspicuously comose, non-clathrate, entire; fronds 40 (12-65) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 7 (5-11) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, thinly pilose with golden, acicular hairs up to 1 mm long, sometimes also villose with short acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs conspicuous; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 35 (10-60) cm long, 9 (3.5-14) em wide, cuneate at the base; segments linear to linear-triangular, straight, 40 (15-65) mm long, 3 (2-6) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, the basal segments strongly deflexed and shortened or reduced to auricles at the blade base, asymmetrical at the base, the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis, acute, herbaceous, entire to crenulate; lamina with numerous acicular hairs up to 0.3 mm long, also with occasional clavate hairs; costa perpendicular to the rachis, thinly pilose with long, acicular hairs up to 0.5 mm long, sometimes with ctenoid hairs; veins once (twice)-forked, free; guard cells ca 39u long; sori supramedial to sub-marginal, round, with very long, simple, clavate paraphyses overtopping the young sorus, these obscure in the mature sori; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, tubercu- late, ca 47u long. Type: based on P. microsorum Lindm., non Mett. The syntypes do not consti- tute a homogenous sample of the species, in that as presently construed Wright 1051 is P. dispersum, Mosén 2195 is P. singeri, and Mosén 114 in S is P. ptilodon var. robustum, but in S-PA is P. pectinatiforme. Habitat: epiphytic, occasionally epipetric or terrestrial, in forests, 1400-1700 m alt. [Vor. 55 250 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Distribution: southern Brazil, northern ou. and Paraguay.—Fig. 10. BRAZIL: MINAS GERAIS: Caldas, Regnell 319 (MO, US); Serra de Caldas, Mosén 2198 (C, S, S-PA); Serra de Mutuca, beyond Barreiro, Williams 6642 (GH, US), 6644 (GH), illi 7 (GH) i : on S- . S); Serra dos Orgãos, Lüetzelburg 6915 (MIC SAO PAULO: Campos do Jordão, Harsh- berger 930 (US), Leite 388 (GH). SANTA CATA m Reitz C1159 (US); Lages, Spannagel (Rosenstock 396) (US), mem Sn., 192 S). RIO GRANDE DO SUL: Hamburger Berg, Lindman I.A. 493 (S, S-PA, US); "Sáo Leopoldo, Rick s.n. (GH); Silveira Martins, ‘Lindman A. 4937, (S). A guazu, Hassler 9084 (GH). ARGENTINA: MISIONES: Yerbel Viejo, Burkart 1584 (GH). Superficially, P. pectinatiforme and P. paradiseae are very similar. The latter is considerably larger, however, with segments more gradually reduced at the base of the blade, and with characteristically more strongly crenate and falcate segments with marginal sori. The rhizome scales of P. pectinatiforme are larger and only inconspicuously comose. Rosenstock’s P. pectinatiforme var. hirsutum applies to specimens with a more villose rachis. This may be a distinct taxon, but I do not have sufficient material at hand to evaluate it satisfactorily. 21. Polypodium paradiseae Langsd. & Fisch., Icon. Fil. 11, t. 1/, 1810. P. pectinatum L. var. paradiseae (Langsd. & Fisch.) Baker in Mart., Fl. Bras. 1(2): 517, 1870. Rhizome long-creeping, 8 (6-10) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, comose, non-clathrate, entire or with a few inconspicuous fimbriae; fronds 120 (70-170) cm long, spaced ca 2 cm apart on the rhizome; rachis 7 (4.5-11.5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, pilose with long, golden, acicular hairs, ctenoid hairs conspicu- ous; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades 100 (60-150) cm long, 6 (10-20) cm wide, narrow-rhombic, narrow-cuneate at the base; segments 80 (55-105) mm long, 6.5 (49) mm wide, linear-triangular, falcate, gradually shortened and deflexed to mere auricles at the blade base, coriaceous, acute, unequal at the base with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis or incised, 24 (18-30) pairs of segments in the middle 1⁄4 of the frond, crenate; lamina thinly pilose with golden, acicular hairs, ca 0.3 mm long and with scattered clavate hairs ca 0.25 mm long; costa perpendicular to or curved downward from the rachis, pilose with long, golden, acicular hairs ca 0.4 mm long; veins 2-3-forked, free; guard cells ca 43u long; sori marginal to submarginal, round, with simple clavate paraphyses ca 0.25 mm long; sporangia without setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 43u long; n = Sf. Holotype: Brazil, Santa Catarina, Santa Catarina I, Langsdorff s.n. Herb. Fisch. LE; isotype Herb. Willd. B, photograph. abitat: terrestrial or occasionally epiphytic, in wet forests, up to 1600 m alt. Distribution: southeastern Brazil.—Fig. 10. ANEIRO: Matto, Macieiras, Mt Itatiaya, Smith 1764 (US); Monte Serrat, Mt Tatiay Smith 2296 (GH); "Serra do Itatiaio, Dusén 467 (US). sao PAULO: Alto da Serra, Wacket (US); Campos do Jordão, Bailey 889 (US); Guarujá, Dusin 14213 (US). PARANA: 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 251 Alexandra, Dusén 17128 (GH); Serra do Mar, Desiro Ypiranga, Dusén 14471 (GH); Tacarachy, Dusén 6602 (GH, MO, US), 14743 (MO), 14743a (GH, MO). sANTA CATARINA: Santa Catarina I, Itacorobí, Rohr 1040 (US); Itajai, Praia Braba, Smith & Reitz 6093 (US); Joinville, Müller (US); Mun. Pôrto União, Pinheiral by new airport E of Pórto União, Smith & Reitz 8845 (US); S ; E Leopoldo, Leite 1462 (211), 1716, 1855 (GH), Reitz C679?; S&o Francisco do Paula, Vila Oliva, Rambo 31204 (MO); Sao Salvador, Leite 1934 (212) (GH). This species appears to intergrade with P. ptilodon var. robustum. However, the marginal sori and the crenate, narrow segments, gradually reduced and deflexed at the base of the blade are characteristic of P. paradiseae. Also, if the total length of the blade is measured and then the numbers of pairs of segments counted in the middle fourth of the blade length, these two species are strikingly separated. In my test of this character Polypodium paradiseae had 24 (18-30) pairs of segments, whereas P. ptilodon (including all four varieties) had 16 (10-21) pairs. Applying a Mann Whitney-U test to samples of 10 fronds of each species, the two groups were found to be significantly different at the .002 level. 22. Polypodium camptophyllarium Fée, Mém. Foug. 8: 86, 1857. Rhizome short- to long-creeping, 5-10 mm in diam; rhizome paleae linear- triangular, dark red-brown, basifixed, filiform at the apex, comose, with linear non- clathrate cells, entire to slightly and inconspicuously fimbriate; fronds 1.6-16 dm long, closely spaced to approximate on the rhizome; rachis 1.5-7 times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis light to dark red-brown, pilose with acicular hairs 0.4-1 mm long, ctenoid hairs present; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow- to linear-ovate, 13-138 cm long, 4-17 cm wide, cuneate at the base; seg- ments 20-90 mm long, 3-8 mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, or slightly deflexed at the blade base, reduced to lobes or auricles at the blade base, slightly falcate to straight, herbaceous to coriaceous, obtuse to acute, the base expanded and symmetri- cal or the lower edge approaching a right angle with the rachis toward the base of the blade, or incised, entire; lamina pilose with pale acicular hairs up to 0.5 mm long, and with scattered, clavate, simple or forked hairs ca 0.2 mm long; costa decurrent on the rachis, with fine, pale, acicular hairs like those on the lamina or with coarser, longer and yellower hairs than those of the lamina; veins once- or twice-forked, free to completely anastamosing with a free included veinlet; guard cells 52-57 long; sori medial to supramedial, with long, simple or forked, clavate paraphyses; sporangia with 0-3 multicellular capsular setae up to 2504 long; spores reniform, smoothish to tuberculate, 43-60 long. Polypodium camptophyllarium is a widespread and variable species, distin- guished primarily by the long-pilose pubescence of the rachis and lamina. It is subdivided into four varieties showing varying degrees of similarity to P. pectinatum. l. Fronds less than 30 cm long; veins once-forked, free throughout 22d. P. camptophyllarium var. abbreviatum I. Fronds greater than 30 cm long; veins twice-forked, partially anastomosing. eins completely anastomosing except at the segment apex; receptacular paraphyses and laminar hairs forked with a clavate and a setose branch; rachis 2.5 (1.5-3) times as long as the stipe; basal segments only slightly reduced and perpendicular to the rachis; plants of Bolivia and southern razil 22b. P. camptophyllarium var. macedoi [Vor. 55 252 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 2. Veins only partially ELEC RA receptacular paraphyses and laminar hairs simple; rachis 4.5-(1.5-7) times as long as the stipe; basal segments reduced to auricles or strongly deflexed and ab partially reduced; plants wide-ranging 3. Ra chis m costa pilose with soft hairs up to 0.5 mm long, the lamina the same; sori occupying ha x the width of the segment or less P. pa rium var. le le Rachis and costa thinly pilose sid scattered, s acicular hairs 0.75 mm long, the lamina thinly ed with finer hairs ca 035 mm long; sori occupying most of t T e segmen 22c. P. an UR UA var. cuum p» 20a. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. camptophyllarium. P. cinerascens Lindm., Ark. Bot. 1: 238, t. 11, iN 6, 1903. (Lectotype: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Regnell I 474 S, isolectotypes BR, C, S, 'S-P A, US. Syntype: Regnell I A99 S, S-PA) P. Eon var. cinerascens (Lindm.) Hassl., Trab. Inst. Bot. Farm. Buenos Aires 45: 69, P. lachniferum Hieron., Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34:515, 1904, p.p., not as to lectotype. (for typification, see below under var. lachniferum) Fronds 70 (25-165) cm long, spaced ca 1 cm apart on the rhizome; rachis 4 (1.5-5.5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis light red-brown, pilose with pale, acicular hairs up to 0.75 mm long; blades 58 (23- 138) em long, 9 (3.5-17) cm wide; segments 45 (15-90) mm long, 5 (4-8) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, reduced to mere lobes at the blade base, slightly falcate to straight, herbaceous; lamina pilose with pale, acicular hairs, all ca 0.5 mm long; costa with trichomes like those on the lamina; veins twice (once)-forked, usually partially anastomosing; guard cells ca 524 long; sori occupying half the width of the seg- ment or less, with long simple clavate paraphyses; sporangia with 2 or 3 capsular setae ca 250u long; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 54 (47-60) long, mostly with 64 normal appearing spores per sporangium; n = 74. Holotype: Colombia, Norte de Santander, Environs of Ocafia, in 1850, Schlim 128, p.p. P; isotypes BR, G, K photograph, not L Habitat: terrestrial, occasionally epiphytie, in rocky soil or on rocks in forests, often in openings or at the edge of the forest, 350-2100 m alt. Distribution: Costa Rica, Cuba, Jamaica, northwestern South America to southern Brazil.—Fig. 10. CosrA Rica: LIMON: Guápiles, Standley 37291 (US). PANAMA: PANAMA: 5 mi N of Cerro Azu, rd to Cerro Jefe, Blum et al. 1692 (FSU). CUBA: ORIENTE: El Cristo, Ekman 1468 (US); Sierra Maestra, Termino del Cobre, Clément 1129 (US), Finca Reunion to Loma del Gato, Ekman 6925 (US); El Cobre, Pollard ? px 412 (GH, MO Dominican REPUBLIC: BARAHONA: s Monda Nueva, SE of Polo, Howard 8431 (GH). SAN DE Tuin nos Howard 9288 (GH, US); Hondo se o 8753 (GH, US). NTIAGO: Arroyo n Fino, Jicomé, Valeur 655 (G ). : Salto de Constanza, Jiménez 2215 (53); “Salto de Jiménoa, Jarabacoa, Jiménez 1533 US). Harm: Bombardo us ree 13457 (US); Dept l'Artibonite, Ennery, Leonard 9576 (US); Furcy, Leonard 4432 (GH, US); Massif du Nord, Hinche, Ekman 6166 (US); Marc Sal, Holdridge 1380 (US); Massif de la Selle, Petionville, Ekman 10024 (US); Mission, Fonds Varettes, Leonard 3958 (US); St. Louis du pris Leonard 14469 (GH, US); Dept du Nord, E Michel de FAtalaye, Leonard 7627 (GH, Jamaica: Abbey Green, Maxon 10060 (GH, US); oe Cedar Valley, Silver Hill Gap, Maxon 10272 (GH, US); Cinchona, Clute s.n., 21 Febr 1900 (US); Cinchona to Morce's 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 953 eas Killip (US); Port Royal Mts, Flamstead, Maxon 8683a (US); Mandeville, heed Febr 1895 (MO), Maxon 2581 (US); Mocho, Catadupa, Maxon & Killip E 1 (GH, US): a e, St. Ann, Hunnewell 15217 (GH); Mt Diabolo, Maxon & Kill lip 469 (GH, ; St. Helen's Mi St. Andrew, Maxon & Killip 631 (GH, US); Troy, Underwood 2930 e. 3296 ONGAs: Quebrada p Grande, SW of Caripe, Steyermark 61690a (US). DISTRITO FEDERAL: Quebrada an Lázaro, nr Caracas, Pittier 9760 (US). : Le Valley, above Tapatá, N of Toledo, Killip & Smith "00191 mat UB). E: nr Corrales, Lehmann 4424 (B); El Naranjo, Rio Dagua, Lehmann 5049 (B, US). Peru: Cedrobamba, Herrera 1580 (US ). Huánuco: Chinchao to Puerte Durand, Tobis d 91 (US). apurimac: Quebrada Nataza, Vargas C. 2299 (US). cusco: * Urubambe ver, Machu Picchu, Heller 2206 (US), Herrera 3479 (US). OLIVIA: LA PAZ: Apolo, Williams 1124 (US); N Yungas, Milluhuaya, Buchtien 4235 uM US); Sirupaya, Yanucachi, S Yungas, Buchtien 482 (US); Tres Cruces, Herzog 1616 m AZIL: MINAS GERAIS: Mun. Ouro Preto, Andorinhas, Macedo 2864 (MO); Mun Ituiutaba, Aroeira, Macedo 2383 (MO); Mun. Nova Lima, Serra do Curral, Williams 6505 (GH); Regnell I A 99 (S This is the central and widespread variety which ties the four together. The other three were not, however, necessarily derived from this variety, though var. macedoi very likely has been. The var. abbreviatum has considerably smaller spores, suggesting that it is a diploid and may have arisen by divergence. The var. lachniferum can, in most cases, be distinguished by the rather coarse golden scattered hairs on the rachis and costa, the slightly to strongly deflexed lower seg- ments often reduced and auriculate, and the sori, which occupy the major portion of the segment. However, the collections which I have range from the West Indies to Peru and show little variation between range limits and considerable intergrada- tion throughout its range with var. camptophyllarium. The range of this and related varieties is complicated by its extension over what I consider to be four geographical areas (see Figs. 8 & 10). At the overlapping of three of these distri- butional areas in northern South America, the representatives of the P. pectinatum- plumula complex in Colombia and Venezuela are often difficult to interpret. The material of var. camptophyllarium from the West Indies and from Colombia is somewhat different. In the West Indies the segments tend to be more obtuse and the plants somewhat smaller, the spores more irregular, and a few evidences of apogamy are suggested, as discussed below. The material from Colombia tends to be larger with straighter and more acute segments. The laminar trichomes are essentially identical throughout the range. In Brazil the plants again begin to exhibit segments which are more obtuse and falcate as in the West Indian material, except that the stipe is considerably longer, and the anastomosing of the venation is more complete, as in var. macedoi. Because few collections from this area have been examined and because there does appear to be sufficient difference between the long-stiped materials which I have called var. camptophyllarium and var. macedoi, I am maintaining the latter as a distinct variety. Throughout the range of this species the spores seem normal, though large and somewhat irregular. The spores are much like the large and somewhat irregu- [Vor. 55 254 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN lar spores of P. ptildon var. caespitosum. A few of the specimens from Cuba and Jamaica have quite irregular reniform spores. They appear viable but are attached in pairs by the terminal ends; sometimes only by one end, thus making a double spore in a horseshoe shape; sometimes by both ends, making a deformed, dough- nut-shaped, double spore. These may be apogamous hybrids. Further cytological and populational studies of P. camptophyllarium are in progress, but it is sug- gested that these few plants may be isolated cases of apogamous reproduction. I have included these specimens with var. camptophyllarium as they represent only a small fraction of the total material, and they cannot at present be dis- tinguished other than by a critical observation of the spores. 29b. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. macedoi (Brade) A. M. Evans, comb. nov. P. macedoi Brade, Arq. Jard. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 11: 30, t. 10, 11, fig. 3, 1951. (Holotype: Brazil, Estado de Minas Gerais, Ituiutaba, Macedo 1098 RB-63398 not seen, isotypes G, MO Similar to var. camptophyllarium, except: rachis only 2.5 (1.5-3) times as long as the stipe; veins completely anastomosing or free at the apex only; lamina with forked, clavate-setose hairs; receptacular paraphyses consisting of forked hairs with one clavate and one setose branch; spores reniform, smoothish, ca 44u long. Habitat: terrestrial in humid forests and along river banks. Distribution (Fig. Pu Borivi4: LA Paz; Polo-Polo, Corioco, N Yungas, Buchtien 3505 (US); Meade as, d GERAIS: Coen Vicente, Mun. Ituiutaba, Macedo 1894 (S, US), 2302 (MO, US), 2383 (US), 2864 (US). This variety is distinguished from var. camptophyllarium on the basis of the completely anastomosing venation, longer stipes, and the presence of forked hairs on the lamina, as well as receptacular paraphyses consisting of one clavate and one setose branch. Although in the original description Macedo considered this a goniophlebioid Polypodium because of its venation, in all other respects this variety is typical of the P. pectinatum-plumula complex. The extent of the anastomosing of the venation is only an extreme expression of what occurs to a lesser extent in var. camptophyllarium and in P. pectinatum s.s. 22c. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. lachniferum (Hieron.) A. M. Evans, inl nov. P. lachniferum Hieron., Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34: 515, 1904. (Lectotype: Ecuador, Mt Tun- p ragua, 1500- 2500 m Lehmann 458 B isolectotypes L LE, US. Syntypes: Colombia, Cauca, Central Cordillera, nr Corrales, 3000. 2800 m, Lehmann 4424 B; Colombia, El Valle, nr El Naranjó, on Río Dagua, 300-1000 m, Lehmann 5049 B, US) The Colom- bian collections are referable to var. camptophyllariu um. Rhizome as in var. camptophyllarium except the rhizome paleae with entire margins; fronds 46 (33-70) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 5 (1.7-7) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis light to dark red-brown, thinly pilose with coarse, golden, acicular hairs ca 1 mm long, ctenoid hairs conspicuous; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 35 (25-60) cm long, 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 955 7.5 (5-11.5) cm wide, broad-cuneate at the base; segments 40 (25-60) mm long, 4.5 (3.5-5) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, slightly deflexed and reduced to auricles at the blade base, slightly falcate, herbaceous to coriaceous, acute, the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis or incised, entire; lamina thinly pilose with acicular hairs up to 0.35 mm long and with scattered clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with scattered long hairs up to 0.75 mm long; veins twice- forked, free or occasionally partially anastomosing; guard cells ca 57u long; sori medial, round, occupying most of the width of the lamina, with long, simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia occasionally with one capsular seta ca 2004 long; spores reniform, smoothish, 54 (41-69) u long; n=74. Habitat: epipetric or terrestrial, montane, on and about rocks on wooded mountain sides, 600-2300 m alt Distribution: Cuba, Jamaica, northwestern South America.—Fig. 10. CUBA: ORIENTE: La US edd 8474 (US); Loma del Gato, Cobre Range of Sierra inris León et al. 10530 (U AICA: Arntully, Su 3105a (US); Blue Mt Peak, Hitchcock s.n., 13 Dec 1890 MB) Cheema, Underwood 1148 (US), Cinchona, Maxon 2596 (U S), Underwood US), Cinchona Plantation, Underwood 1127 (US); Farm Hill, Orcutt 3402 (US); Port Royal Mts, Flamstead, Maxon 8683 (GH, US); Blue Mt range, Helen’s Gap to Morce’s E as 2 Maxon 1207 (US); Cedar Valley, rd to Silver Hill Gap, Maxon 10306 (GH, US); Churchill s.n., 26 d 1897 (GH). VENEZUELA: MERIDA: Mucurubá, Gehriger 195 (US); Páramo de la Sal, Jahn 632 (US). COLOMBIA: MAGDALENA: betw Pueblo Viejo & San Miguel, Seifriz 378 (US), 384 (US). SANTANDER: California, Killip & = 18488 (GH, US); betw Piedecuesta & Las Vegas, Killip & Smith 15508 (GH, US). cuwpmNAMaRCA: Bogotá, Quebrada, Ewan 15593 (US); due Hill Sabana of E Schiefer 596 (US); Facatativa, Ariste-Joseph A190 (US); andi, Perez s.n. (Col 5. (US); mts W of Salto de Tequendama, Uribe Uribe 3382 (US). yes dd Bello, oe 161 (US): Boquerón, Dana 1634 (US); Copacabana, Henri- Stanislas 1606 (US). Ecuapor: Grubi, Mille 14 (US). Tuncuranua: Baños, Popenoe s.n., 6 Mar 1921 US). azuay: Cuenca, nr union of Rios Tarqui & Yanuncay, Prieto, (Camp E- 2658) (US); Rio Milchichic, 5 km N of Cuenca, Prieto (Camp E-2735) (US). Loya: San Lucas, Dodson & Thien 564 (US). Napo-pastaza: betw Río Blanco & Río Verde, rd from Baños to Puyo, Dodson & Thien 1970 (US). PERU: CAJAMARCA: Las Juntas, Rose 23221 (US). Junin: Huacapistana, Coronado 275 (GH); Manto to Yaupi, Woytkowski 6518 (US), Manto, km 20, Woytkowski 6521 (US); Prov Tarma, 5 km SW of Huacapistana, 25 km of Tarma, Tryon ( US); nr Yaupi, Woytkowski 6414 (US). avAcUcHO: Ccarrapa, betw Huanta & Río Ap uri- mac Killip & Smith 22473 (US). This variety is closely related to var. camptophyllarium, the best differentiating characters being that var. lachniferum is generally a shorter plant, with distinctly deflexed, reduced and auriculate basal segments; and that there are two distinctly different sizes of acicular hairs on the frond. There are scattered but long and harsh hairs on the costa and rachis and shorter, finer hairs (not as dense as in var. camptophyllarium) on the limina. 'The sori cover almost the entire width of the segment, whereas in var. camptophyllarium, the sori, in most cases, cover only a half or less of the width of the segment. [Vor. 55 256 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 22d. Polypodium camptophyllarium var. abbreviatum A. M. Evans, var. nov.— Fig. 18, A var. camptophyllario simile, frondibus ca 23 cm latis, approximatis, laminis ca 18 cm longis et 6 cm latis, basi late cuneatis, segmentis ca 30 mm longis et 3 mm latis, rhachide perpendicularibus basalibus paullo deflexis exceptis, venis I-furcatis, liberis, soris medialibus, laminam subtus fere tegentibus, sporangii cum setis 2-capsularibus differt. Rhizome as in var. camptophyllarium; fronds 23 (15-30) cm long, approximate on the rhizome; rachis 4.5 (3.5-5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, pilose with clear, acicular hairs ca 0.4 mm long, ctenoid hairs present; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 18 (13-25) cm long, 5.5 (4-7) cm wide, broadly cuneate at the base; segments 30 (20-40) mm long, 3 mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis except the lower few slightly deflexed, mostly expanded and symmetrical at the base except the lower few pairs of segments incised on the lower edge and gradually reduced to auricles, herbaceous, acute, entire, the laminar and costal trichomes as in var. camptophyllarium ex- cept shorter; costa decurrent; veins once-forked, free; sori medial, round, covering most of the width of the frond; sporangia with two capsular setae ca 0.14 mm long; spores reniform, slightly tuberculate, ca 43x long. Holotype: Peru, Cusco, Prov La Convención, Distr of Santa Ana, Hacienda Echarabi, 1300 m, Jan 1926, Herrera 872 US 1342112 Habitat: terrestrial on rocky hillsides, 1300-1800 m alt. Distribution (Fig. 10): Peru: cusco: 20 km N of Ollontaytombo, Hitchcock 22516 (US); Pampakjahua, Coronado 105 (US). This is a local endemic. It is smaller than either var. camptophyllarium or var. lachniferum. It is related to the former by the trichomes of the lamina and rachis and to the latter by the reduction and constriction of the basal segments. Except for the overall small size and the smaller, regular spores, it could easily be considered as a hybrid of the other two varieties. 23. Polypodium ptilodon Kunze, Linnaea 9: 42, 1834 (as "ptiloton," in error). Rhizome long-creeping, 8 (5-12) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-triangu- lar, dark red-brown, lustrous, basifixed, acuminate, comose, non-clathrate, en- tire; fronds 27-170 cm long, closely-spaced to fasciculate on the rhizome; stipes 1-36 cm long; rachis 5-42 times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, with scattered acicular hairs up to 2 mm long, ctenoid hairs conspicuous; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire to inconspicuously fimbriate; blades narrow- to linear-ovate, 25-130 cm long, 3.5-22 cm wide, narrow-cuneate at the base; seg- ments 2-11 cm long, 3-10 mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or slightly as- cending, gradually reduced to lobes or auricles at the blade base, straight to sub- falcate, acute to rounded, expanded at the base and symmetrical or with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis, herbaceous to coriaceous, entire (crenulate), the spaces between the segments 14 to 1 times the width of the segments; 10-21 pairs of segments in the middle 14 of the blade; lamina with scattered silvery 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 257 acicular hairs up to 0.35 mm long, more densely pilose in an oblong area around the sorus and with scattered clavate hairs; costa decurrent on, or perpendicular to, the rachis, with ctenoid hairs, and with scattered, golden, acicular hairs up to 2 mm long; veins 1-3(4)-forked, free; guard cells 44u long; sori medial, round or occasionally oblong, with simple and branched, clavate paraphyses up to 165g long; sporangia with 1-3 capsular setae 45-140u long; spores reniform, tuberculate, 41-52u long. This species is subdivided into four closely related varieties. Polypodium ptilodon var. ptilodon is known to be a diploid, with small spores. The var. caespitosum is a tetraploid, with larger spores; var. robustum, with similar spores is presumed to be a tetraploid. The var. pilosum has medium-sized spores, and is a smaller plant than the other varieties, with longer hairs on the rachis and costae. m BN 2 (l- 2 cm long; segments rounded to obtuse; hairs of the rachis and E 23d. P. ptilodon var. pilosum Stipe 3 (3- 36) cm 2 segments obtuse to acute; hairs of the rachis and costa M than 0.75 m 2. wer edge of he segments perpendicular to the rachis in the lower half of the blade; fronds 110 (50-170) cm long; spores ca = long; Bolivia Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and ice, Brazil ....23c. P. ptilodon var. robustum Upper and lower edges o e segments pn and pais expanded and adnate on the rachis; fronds 85 (30-115) cm à 3. Stipe 14 (12-17) c m long; fronds 95 (55- Noe m p spores ca dlg ong; Peru and Bol ivia P. ptilodon var. ptilodon 3. Stipe 9 (3-13) cm long; fronds 70 (30-105) cm ie spores ca 2, long; Florida, West Indies, Mexico d Honduras. 23.b. P. ptilodon var. caespitosum - m 23a. Polypodium ptilodon var. ptilodon. Fronds 97 (55-115) cm long, spaced ca 1 cm apart on the rhizome; rachis 6 (4-7) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis pilose with golden acicular hairs ca 0.75 mm long; rachis paleae entire; blades narrow-ovate, 80 (45-100) cm long, 15 (10-18) cm wide; segments 70 (55-90) mm long, 9 (8-10) mm wide, gradually reduced to mere wings at the blade base, obtuse, expanded at the base and symmetrical, the spaces between segments approximately equal to the width of the segments, 14 (13-15) pairs of segments in the middle one-fourth of the blade; costa perpendicular to the rachis, with scattered acicular hairs up to 0.3 mm long; veins 2-or 3-forked, 414 long; n=37. Type: Peru, Dept San Martin, in woods at Pampayacu, July 1829, Poeppig s.n. Since the original in the Kunze Herbarium in Leipzig is presumed to have been destroyed, the duplicate at B is designated lectotype. Habitat: dense forests, 1100-1700 m alt. Distribution (Fig. 11): PERU: ud Río Utcubamba, Cerro Tapur, 40 km S of Bagua Grande, Hutchison 1470 (MICH). Junin: Chanchosmayo Valley, Schunke d 126 (US); San Ramón, Schunke rcs Schuhe eee US). LIVIA: LA PAZ: Polo-Polo, Corioco, N Yungas, Buchtien 3508 (MO, US), 3510 (US); Mapiri, Rusby 356 (US); Simaco, Tipuani Valley, Huchtien "5269 9 (GH). This variety is a diploid with spores averaging ca llu shorter than either of the two other similar varieties. Inasmuch as var. caespitosum is known to be a tetraploid, one may presume that var. robustum, with the same spore size, is also [Vor. 55 958 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN a tetraploid. It would appear that var. ptilodon was the original parental stock in the species. The var. caespitosum is so similar to var. ptilodon that it could be an autotetraploid, although its smaller size indicates that it could also be of hybrid origin with any of several other Caribbean species. 23b. Polypodium ptilodon var. caespitosum (Jenman) A. M. Evans, Amer. Fern Jour. 58: 170, 1968. P. pectinatum auct., non L., 1753. P. pectinatum var. caespitosum Jenman, Bull. Bot. Dep pice 4: E 1897. Pile Tas4a255 CWA Chrann ANNO f lenman on ane nat K ahia aa xa Jaildicd, MIU Liipiau, "rUUV 16, JUiLIU 3.4. LN 1, IUL A WILI. h is consim va. consimile) As in var. ptilodon except: fronds 70 (30-105) cm long; rachis 9 (6-14) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown to blackish; blades 60 (27-90) cm long, 12 (6.5-18) cm wide; segments 65 (35-85) mm long, 7 (4-10) wide, obtuse to acute; guard cells 50u long; sporangia with 1 or 2 two-celled capsular setae ca 140 long; spores ca 56u long; n—74. Type: Based on P. pectinatium var. caespitosum Jenman. Habitat: terrestrial or on mossy tree bases or logs, occasionally epipetric, usually in damp woods, mountain slopes or ravines, from sea level to 1500 m alt. Distribution: Florida, Greater Antilles, eastern Mexico to Honduras.—Fig. 11. FLORIDA: BREVARD CO: i of Titusville, Turnbull 2nd Small & DeW inkler 10799 (US). crrrus co: Homosassa Springs, Correll 5798 (MO); 3 mi NE of Lake Lindsey, Cooley 5488 (FLAS, US); Pineola grottoes, Evans 2005 Ud. COLLIER CO: Fakahatchee, Eaton 1133 (GH); Deep Lake, Royal Palm Hammock, Scull s.n. (FLAS). pape co: Hattie t ville, RISE, T21S, Sect 20 & 29, Evans 2011 (MICH), Garrett s.n., 18 Sept 1953 (FLAS); Brooksville, Choochahattie Hammock, St. John et al. s.n., 13 Jan 1935 (FLAS); Istachatta, Cur- tiss ee Aug 1897 (US); Pineola, McFarlin 3618 (MICH); Brooksville, Spring Lake, Perkins MO). HIGHLANDs co: Avon Pk Wildlife Management Area, N end of Bill Bay, Evans 1158 (MICH); Sebring, Highlands Hammock, Correll & McFarlin 6247 (US); Parker 4 mi E of Childs, Ward et al. 2420 (FLAS), Correll 6174 (GH). HILLSBOROUGH co: Hillsborough River St Pk, R21E, T27S, Sect 8, Evans 2018 (MICH). Laxe co: Eustis, Nash s.n., 25-27 July 1895 (US); Seminole Springs, West s.n., 15 Oct 1929 (FLAS). MANA- TEE CO: Manatee, Garber 15 (FLAS, US). MARION co: Stevens s.n., May 1883 (MICH). RANGE CO: Rock Spring, Harper $n, 1] Febr 1915 (US). Pasco co: Blanton, Small et al. inter Haven, Faulkner Hammock, McFarli , MIC i W of Interlachen, West o n. 29 May S). INOLE CO: Sanford, Ora s.n., Mar 19 ). su co: Indian Field Ledges, R21E, T20S, Sect 34, Evans 2004 (MICH, Camp’s Grove, St. John s.n., 4 Dec (FLAS) NN); VOLUSIA co: Halifax R, Reynolds s.n., in 1877 (US); 5 mi SW of Port Orange, Freeman 59327 (US). Mexico: TAMULIPAs: Gómez Farias, Palmer 306 (US). san Luis Potosi: Hacienda de Tamasopo, "Pringle 3974 (GH, MO, US); 4.2 mi E of Xilitla, Mickel 602 (MICH). VERACRUZ: Átoyác River, Copela nds n., 3 Mar 1938 (US); Córd oba, Conzatti & González 575 (GH), Fink 74a (US), Woronow 3093 (US); Zacualpán, Purpus 15728 (MICH), 3818 (US). HoNpunAas: coRTÉs: Río Lindo, N of Lake Yojoa, Morton 7665 (US). Cusa: Loma San Juan, Hioram 7064 (US). ras vitas: Buenos Aires, Howard 5246 (GH, MO), Morton 4154 (US); Arroyo de Manaca, Herradura, Britton 4997 (US). ORIENTE: La Perla, León 3849 (US); Loma del Gato, Clément 1172 2 (GH), Hioram & Clément 6490 (US); Santa Ana, 6 mi N of Jaguey, Yateras, Maxon 4212 (GH, US). PINAR DEL RIO: source of Rio Taco-Taco, Merion 4304 (US). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 959 Hartt: Plaisance, Leonard 5 (US); St. Louis du Nord, Leonard 14314 (US). Jamaica: Cinchona, Clute 321 (MO); Morce’s Gap, Hatch 30 (US); Mount James, Maxon 8550 (US), 8608 Api Senes Hill Gap, Maxon 1143 (US), Maxon 1145 (US); above Tweedside, Maxon 933 (US). The affinities of the variety are discussed above under var. ptilodon. 23c. Polypodium ptilodon var. robustum (Fée) A. M. Evans, comb. nov. P. robustum Fée, Crypt. Vasc. Braz. 1: 92, 1869. (Type: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Angra dos i C US P. robustum var. cinerascens f, majus Hassl., Trab. Inst. Bot. Farm. Buenos Aires 45: 10, 1928. (as major"). Serge [Oo ipi "de Amambay, Hassler 11327 G) P. robustum var. cinerascens f. min assl., t. (As "minor"). (Lectotype: Paraguay, Hassler 624 G. Syntype: pe nr z Tobaty, Hassler 6281 G) As in var. ptilodon except: fronds 110 (50-170) cm long; blades 90 (45-130) cm long, 14 (9-22) cm wide; segments 70 (40-110) mm long, 8 (5-11) mm wide, gradually reduced to auricles at the blade base, expanded and symmetrical at the base in the upper part of the blade, with the lower edge perpendicular to the rachis in the lower half of the blade, 16 (10-21) pairs of segments in the middle one-fourth of the blade; costa decurrent on the rachis, thinly pilose with golden, acicular hairs ca 0.5 mm long; spores ca 52u long. Habitat: terrestrial, occasionally epiphytic or epipetric, in moist woods and along streams, up to 1400 m alt. Distribution: Bolivia and eastern Brazil to northern Argentina.—Fig. 11. Botivia: LA Paz: Tipuani, Hacienda Simaco, Buchtien 5249 (US). Brazit: CcEARA: Sitio Pe de Ladeira, 3 km E of Guaramiranga, Cutler 8324 (GH). MINAS GERAIS: Fazenda de ne uada, Viçosa, Mexia 5180 (GH, MO, US). RIO DE JANEIRO: Meio de Serra, Smith & Brade 2290 (GH); Monte Serrat, Mt Itatiaya, Smith 2296 (GH); Nova-Friburgo, Leite 4816 (MO); Petrópolis, Drogo 324 (US); Rio de Janeiro, Wilkes Exped. in 1838-1842 (US); Tijuca, Ball s.n., 22-23 July 1882 (GH); Glaziou 1725 (BR, C); Mosén 114 p.p (S, non S- . SAO PAULO: Igaupe, Brade 7735 (US); Mun. Moji- Guacu, Fazenda Campininha, 6 km NNW of Padua Sales, Eiten & de la Sota 2123 (US), ARANA: Tibagy, Reiss 6 H). RIO GRANDE DO sUL: Mun. Rio Pardo, Jürgens s.n. (Rosen- stock ee (US); Sao Leopoldo, Reitz 168 (US). UGUAY: Tn no data (MO). ARAGUAY: betw a & Río Aquidaban, San Luis, Fiebrig 4417 (GH); Sierra de Maracajü, lail, Hassler “S511 (GH); Villarica, Jorgensen 4605 (MO). GENTINA: MISIONES: Iguazu, Puento Iguazú, de la Sota & Cuezzo 1556 (US); Posadas, Ekman s.n., in 1907-1908 (MO). See under P. paradiseae and P. ptilodon var. ptilodon for comments regarding the affinities with var. robustum 23d. Polypodium ptilodon var. pilosum A. M. Evans, var. nov.—Fig. 20. A var. ptilodonte simile, frondibus approximatis vel fasciculatis, stipitibus brevibus pilis numerosis longis acicularibus (interdum pilis brevioribus) praeditis, rhachibus cum pilis eis stipitium similibus et paleis inconspicue fimbriatis praeditis, lamina lineari-elliptica, segmentis apice rotundatis, basi symmetricis, infimis numerosis reductis triangularibus, costis horizintalibus, pilis dissitis longis acicular- ibus praeditis, venis l-vel 2-furcatis, sporangiis cum 2 vel 3 inconspiuis setis praeditis, sporis 47 longis differt. As in var. ptilodon except: rhizome long-creeping to suberect; fronds 49 (21-13) [Vor. 55 260 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN cm long, approximate to fasciculate on the rhizome; stipe 2 (1-5) cm long; stipe and rachis with numerous long acicular hairs 1.5-2 mm long, occasionally with shorter, acicular hairs; rachis paleae with inconspicuously fimbriate margins; blades linear-elliptic, 47 (26-70) cm long, 6.5 (3.5-9) cm wide; segments 32 (18- 48) mm long, 5.5 (3-9) mm wide, reduced to numerous pairs of triangular lobes at the blade base, rounded at the apex, symmetrical at the base, the spaces between segments less than one-half the width of the segment; costa perpendicular to the rachis, with scattered long acicular hairs 1.5-2 mm long; veins once- or twice- forked; sporangia with 2 or 3 short, inconspicuous, capsular setae up to 454 long; spores ca 47u long. Holotype: British Guiana, Demerara, Essequibo River, Jenman s.n. NY. Habitat: epiphytic or occasionally epipetric in humid forests, 400-1000 m alt. Distribution: Tamvipap: Blanchisseuse E Hombersley 306 (US); Maracas, Hombersley 30 (US), 88 (US), Morne Bleu, pie RITISH Gumana: Essequibo River, nr mouth ‘of Onoro Creek, Smith 2781 (GH); Shodikar Creek (Essequibo nera Smith 3010 (GH). oo NEUVA ESP. opey, Gines 3799 (US). miranpa: Guinand Estate as), Siquire Valley, Pittier 5949 (US). amazonas: Cerro Duida, Cano Negro, Steyermar 57993 (US). SAN MAR Tingo Maria, Allard 21541 (US). HuaNnuco: Tingo Maria, Río Huallaga. Tryon 5334 (GH, US). Jun: Santa Rosa, Pichis Trail, Killip & Smith 26201 (US). LIVIA: LA PAZ: San Carlos, Mapiri region, Buchtien 208 (US), 1072 ma nee Antahuacana, Buchtien 2167 n Puerto Polonia, Río Coni, 14 km E of San Antonio "Cárdenas & Cutler 8324 (GH, M CzARA: Sitio Pe da Ladeira, 3 km E of Guaramirango, Cutler 8324 (GH, MO). RIO DE JANEIRO: Ilha Grande, Rose 20350 (US). This is the most distinct of the varieties of P. ptilodon because of the rounded segments, the conspicuously longer hairs of the rachis and costa, and the very short stipe. It is like the other varieties in the curious distribution of acicular hairs only around the sorus (a character found only in this species) and in the gradual reduction of the basal segments. Superficially it resembles P. consimile, but the harsher texture, the trichomes of the lamina and costa, and the rhizome scales are different. 24. Polypodium consimile Mett., Ann. Sci. Nat. (Paris) V, 2: 253, 1864. Rhizome short- to long-creeping, 5 (3-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae linear- triangular to triangular, dark red-brown to blackish, lustrous, basifixed, attenuate to acute, non-clathrate to sub-clathrate, slightly comose to comose with hairs completely obscuring the paleae throughout the rhizome, entire; fronds 25-65 cm long, close-spaced to approximate on the rhizome; stipe short to almost lacking; rachis 6-20 times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis light to dark red-brown, with few acicular hairs up to 0.75 mm long and with inconspicuous ctenoid and clavate hairs; rachis paleae inconspicuous, linear, entire; blades narrow-ovate, 23- 60 cm long, 4-15 cm wide, narrow-cuneate at the base; segments 20-75 cm long, 5-11 mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis, reduced to numerous short lobes at the blade base, straight, herbaceous, obtuse to rounded, the base symmetrical, expanded and confluent throughout, entire, the spaces between segments narrower 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 961 than the segments; lamina essentially glabrous, with occasional long, acicular hairs and small scattered, clavate hairs; costa decurrent on the rachis, with trichomes like those of the lamina; veins twice-forked, free; guard cells ca 43u long; sori inframedial, round, small, with simple and branched, clavate paraphyses up to 160u long; sporangia golden or brownish, with or without capsular setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 40u long. As here construed, this species consists of the two varieties discussed below. l. Sporangia v Peu erie narrow-triangular, not kes by dorsal 24 hairs; blade 6.5 (4- vU. EE a. nsimile var. consimile n Sporangia ithout setae; p bu paleae broad-triangular, Gare obscured by dorsal hairs; blade 12 (10-15) em wide. ................. 24b. P. consimile var. pastazense 24a. cid consimile var. consimile. P. consimile Mett. ex D. C. Eaton, Mem. Amer. Acad., n.s, 8: 198, 1860, nomen nudum. (Based on: ONES propre colonia Tovar. Fendler 220 B, GH, MO, US P. e Mett, var. minus Hieron, Bot. a on 34; 519, 1904 (as oe 200 a without assigning formal names. The v of “Forma 1” is chosen lectotype) P. pityrolepis Rosenst., Repert. Sp. Nov. 22: 1925. (Holotype: Costa Rica, Rio Chris, Juan Vinas, 1200 m, 30 Mar 1910, Brade a Brade 694 S-PA; isotypes NY, Y,US) Rhizome paleae linear- to narrow-triangular, comose hairs not obscuring the paleae; fronds 40 (25-60) cm long; rachis 12 (6- l7) times as long as the stipe; blades 36 (23-50) cm long, 6.5 (4-11) cm wide; segments 34 (20-55) mm long, 9 (4-9) mm wide; sporangia mostly with 2 capsular setae up to 80u lon Holotype: Colombia, Ocafia, Norte de Santander, 6000-7000 fe Schlim 633 B; isotypes BR, G, L. Habitat: mountain lee montane forest and ravines, terrestrial or on mossy tree bases, 300-2300 m Distribution: HUE Jamaica, Guatemala south to Colombia and Vene- zuela. "s 8. MALA: EL QUICHE: oo Johnson 206 (US). ALTA VERAPAZ: Cubilquitz, von Tüerck ae s.n., Nov 1903 (US Cosra Rica: Cabeceras del Bkis, Pittier 10572 (US); Cooper 6057 (MO ), Cooper Nov 1886 (GH). ALAJUELA: Zarcero, Smith 48/32, 48/137, 48/195, 48/242, 48/247 (US), F72 (MO). saw José: La Hondura, Standley 37801 (US); La diea. rd to La dique Scamman 7763 (GH); Las Nubes, Scamman 7229 (GH). carraco: Cartago, Coo Apr 1888 (GH, MO, US); Cerro de la Carpintera, Standley 34310, 35537 (US); Nae 23 (US). ANAMA: CHIRIQUI: Bajo Mona, mouth of Quebrada Chiquero, Woodson et al. 1028 (US); El Boquete, Cornman 893, 1177, 1198 (US); eres n Holcombs Trail, 10 mi above El Boquete, Killip 5228, 5253 (US); above El Boque o Panduro, Killip 5419 (US), Robailo Trail, Rio Piarnasta iid iis Pe oe Killip E^ US). Dominican REPUBLIC: MONTE : Las Rosas, Ekman s.n., 6 June 1926 (US). Hart: Furcy, Leonard 4611, 4708, 476 (US): "Massif de ud Selle, Co Bouquets, Ekman s.n., 2 Apr 1925 (US); Mission, Fonds Varettes, Leonard 4022 (US). JAMAICA : Clyde River, posl inchona, Underwood 435 ENEZ MONAGAS: o de Turumiquire, Tate 103, 104 (US). DISTRITO pem Cordillera del Avila, above Carac as, betw Los Venados & Papelón, E 95070 (GH, MO, : Colonia Tovar, Fendler 220 (B, GH, MO, US), 2 H, US). B (G : SANTANDER: Rio Suratá, above Suratá, Killip & Sn 16647 (GH, US). CUNDINAMARCA: " Bogotá, Ariste-Joseph (GH, US). [Vor. 55 262 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Although superficially similar to P. ptilodon var. pilosum, this species differs in the shorter rachis hairs, the lack of the stiff hairs around the sori, and the segments with symmetrical bases. There may be valid varieties in this species other than the var. pastazense discussed below. The plants from Central America, represented by P. pityrolepis Rosenst., tend to have a lighter brown, glabrous or subglabrous, narrower blade, shorter stipes, and darker brown sporangia than the material from elsewhere in the range. Venezuelan plants tend to have shorter, more clathrate, and less comose rhizome scales, almost golden sporangia, and darker brown rachises and longer stipes. 24b. Polypodium consimile var. gap ipi A. M. Evans, comb. nov. P. pastazense Hieron, Hedwigia 48:257, t. 13, fig. 1909. (Holotype: Ecuador, betw Bafios & Jivaría de Píntuc in Pastaza Valley, ubel 1011 B) Rhizome paleae short, triangular, dark red-brown, acute, non-clathrate, comose with hairs completely obscuring the scales throughout the rhizome; fronds 54 (42- 65) cm long, spaced ca 1 cm apart on the rhizome; rachis 15 (12-20) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, glabrescent with short, acicular hairs; blades 50 (40-60) cm long, 12 (10-15) cm wide; segments 60 (45-75) mm long, 9 (6-11) mm wide, obtuse at the apex; sporangia without setae. Habitat: epiphyte in montane forests, 325-2300 m alt. Distribution: Colombia and Ecuador.—Fig. COLOMBIA: ee: betw Río Miraflores & Rio San Martin, Volcán de Cumbal region, ut d (US UADOR: NAPO-PASTAZA: Andes, Spruce 5260 (US); betw Puyo & Canelos, Mexía 6832 (U $; "Hac Edd Ta Mascota, Canton Mera, Mexia 7016 (US). zAMORA-CHINCHEPE: Cordil- lera Cider Camp E-1393 (US). In the original description, Hieronymus noted the similarity between his species and P. consimile. I believe that it is sufficiently distinct to maintain varietally, because of the more robust aspect, the more nearly glabrous lamina, non-setose sporangia, and particularly the complete obscuring of the rhizome scales by the dorsal hairs. The spore and guard cell sizes do not suggest hybridity or polyploidy, and it is probable that this is a local endemic variety just south of the broader range of var. consimile and undergoing allopatric speciation. 25. Polypodium recurvatum Kaulf., Enum. Fil. 106, 1824. P. extensum Fée, Crypt. Vasc. Bras, 1: 85, t. 28, fig. 3, 1869, non Forst., 1786. (Holotype: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Glaziou 2 P. paradisiastrum Fée, Crypt. Vasc. Bras. 1: 90, t. 29, fig. 2, 1869. (Lectotype: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Corcovado, Glaziou 974 P, isolectotype BR. Syntypes: Brazil; Rio de Janeiro, Corcovado, Glaziou 396 P, at BR is P. pectinatiforme, Brazil, Therezopolis, Glaziou 1725 P. Glaziou 1725 at BR and C Lcd P. ptilodon var. robustum) P. paraguayense Baker, Jour. Bot. 310, 1878. (Type: Paraguay, e a base of Cerro Telado, nr Villa Rica, Balansa 388 G) P. pectinatum L. var. recurvatum (Kaulf.) Sodiro, Crypt. Vasc. Quit. 335, 1893 P. panadis iesu f. crenulatum Rosenst., Hedwigia 46: 140, 1906 (as ‘ S RUN (Holo- type: Brazil, Santa Catarina, Lages, clined gd P. paradisiastrum forma pectinatum Rosenst. t (s (c rb. (Holotype: Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul, Serra João, Rodriguez, "fürgens 159 S-PA) 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 263 P. recurvatum var. minus Rosenst. ex Hassl., Trab. Inst. Bot. Farm. Buenos Aires 45: 69, 1928. (Holotype: Paraguay, Hassler 3990 G; isotype B) P. recurvatum var. paraguayense (Baker) Hassl., loc. cit. P. recurvatum var. subbipinnatifidum Rosenst: ex Hassl, loc. cit. (Holotype: Paraguay, Hassler 122415 G) Rhizome long-creeping, 6 (5-7) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, light red-brown, non-lustrous, basifixed or basally cordate, acute, incon- spicuously comose, non-clathrate, the margins inconspicuously papillate; fronds 93 (22-90) cm long, spaced ca 1 cm or less apart on the rhizome; rachis 2 (1.5-3.5) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown, with scattered, short acicular silvery hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades triangular to narrow-triangular, 36 (16-65) cm long, 14 (10-24) cm wide, truncate at the base; segments 72 (30-120) mm long, 4.5 (3-6) mm wide, perpen- dicular to the rachis, occasionally slightly ascending, sometimes slightly shortened at the blade base, straight or occasionally slightly falcate, often slightly constricted toward the rachis, herbaceous or coriaceous, acuminate, expanded and symmetrical at the base, entire (rarely crenate), the spaces between segments 1-3 times as wide as the segments; lamina glabrous; costa perpendicular to the rachis, with scattered, short, acicular hairs; veins twice-forked, free; guard cells ca 39u long; sori medial, round, with simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia with 2 (1-5) short capsular setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 43u long; n = 37. Type: Brazil, Santa Catarina, Santa Catarina L, Chamisso s.n. B, LE. Habitat: epiphytic, occasionally epipetric or terrestrial, in forest, 50-1000 m alt. Distribution: southeastern Brazil and Paraguay.—Fig. 8. L: Campo da Lanca, Annies s.n. (Rosenstock 113b) (US). samta: Toca de Onca, Rose 20101 (US). RIO DE JANEIRO : Itatiaya, Rose 20591 (US); Meio da Serra, Smit 239 20 onroe s.n., in -70 (GH). sao evens Campos do Jordáo, Leite 3570 (GH), Leite 3498 ( eau Porto 3089 (MO). paraná: Desvio MET Dusén GH, MO, SAN un. Blumenau, Smith & Reitz 6287 (US), H ausa, Liidenvaldt 1.860 (US); ages, Spannagel 5, "69, 118 (US); Marata, Pôrto União, "Reitz 4709 (US); São Sene Dutsch s.n. (Rosenstock 113a) (US); Sierra da 2 Ararangua, Reitz C279 (US). RIO GRANDE DO SUL: Sáo uon Leite 2639 (209) (GH Paraguay: Villarrica, Jörgensen 4385, 4605 (MO), Hassler 8781 (B, G); Colonia Presidente González, Regnell I, A. 1813 (US). This is a distinctive species because of its gray-green foliage, long-acuminate segments, strongly truncate blade, and bright, inconspicuously comose, rust-colored rhizome paleae. Its only really close relative is P. hygrometricum, which is smaller in all respects and has only once-forked veins and more obtuse segments. Many of the specimens from Paraguay have a more herbaceous texture and wider and often deeply lobed segments. They are clearly P. recurvatum, although several specific, varietal, and formal names for these have been created. Even though the range of the Paraguayan materials might suggest it, these do not represent intermediates between P. recurvatum and P. hygrometricum, so far as I can determine. [Vor. 55 964 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 26. Polypodium hygrometricum ae Tijdschr. Nat. Gesch. 7: 409, 1840. P. pectinatum L. caliense Hieron. Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34:517, 1904. (Holotype: Colombia, El Valle, “Cordillera ern de Cali, nr Las Juntas del Dagua, Lehmann 668 B; isotypes LE, P. truncatulum Rosenst., ‘Repe . Sp. Nov. 9:343, 1911. (Holotype: Bolivia, Antahuacana, valley of Rio Espiritu Santo, ee 2168 S-PA; isotype US) d long-creeping, 4 (3-5) mm in diam; rhizome paleae narrow-tri- angular, sometimes expanded and cordate at the base, light red-brown, basifixed, acuminate, inconspicuously comose, non-clathrate, the margins inconspicuously papillate; fronds 21 (10-50) cm long, close-spaced to approximate on the rhizome; rachis 7 (3-15) times as long as the stipe; stipe and rachis red-brown to dark red-brown, pilose with short to long, simple, acicular, silvery hairs, ctenoid hairs absent; rachis paleae inconspicuous, filiform, entire; blades 23 (8-40) cm long, 5 (2-9) cm wide, narrow-ovate to narrow-triangular, subtruncate to truncate at the base; segments 25 (10-45) mm long, 4 (2-5) mm wide, perpendicular to the rachis or slightly ascending throughout, narrow-ovate to linear-triangular, herbaceous, obtuse to acute at the apex, expanded and symmetrical at the base, entire; lamina pilose with simple, silvery, acicular hairs, clavate hairs absent; costa decurrent on the rachis, brown or occasionally stramineous or blackish, pilose as on the lamina; veins once-forked, free; guard cells ca 43u long; sori medial, round, with short, simple, clavate paraphyses; sporangia with 2 (1-5) acicular capsular setae; spores reniform, tuberculate, ca 48u long; n = 37. Holotype: Surinam, Para, Splitgerber 1069 L. Habitat: epiphytic, occasionally epipetric or terrestrial, in humid forests, 30- 1800 m alt. Distribution: southern Mexico to western Bolivia.—Fig. 8. Mexico: curapas: Escuintla, Col. Cintalapa, Matuda 18392 (US), Esperanza, Matuda 18116 (US): Huixtla, deed 7226 GUATEMALA: RETALH : Río Xibana, Finca San José Nil, Hatch & Wilson 403 (US); Pueblo Nuevo, Rojas 548 (US HONDURAS: COLÓN: Claura, S ot 38 (US). NICARAGUA: MANAGUA: Sie e Managua, Chaves 7 (US). s Rica: Río Poás, Pittier 2426 (US). LIMÓN: La Columbiana Farm, Standley 36896 (GH, US). HEREDIA: La Selva, Rio Puerto Viejo, Scamman & ers 8098 (GH), Scamman 7518 (GH). san José: El General, Skutch 2667 (MICH, MO, US); San Isidro del General, Chrysler & Roever 5318 (MICH, US). carraco: Jesus María, Lankester 617 A: Aquarubia, Killip 2800 (US); de Killip 2703 (US). CANAL ZONE: B Color xs L "Bailey 525 (US), Barbour Lathrop Trail, Wetmore & Woodworth 150 (GH betw Frijoles & Monte Lirio, Killip 12134 (GH, Us), N of Frijoles, Standley 27449 TER Río Indio de Gatán, Maxon 4815, 4849 (US). Darien: Cana, Williams 931 (US). PANAMA: Juan Diaz, Killip 2755, 2765 p.p. KU S); Charavé River, Chepo, Pittier 4721 (US); Pearl Archipelago, Canyo n Rd, Erlanson 414, 420 (US); Río Merino, Erlanson 541 (US); below (US). H). VENEZUELA: NUEVA ESPARTA: El Ls. Margarita I, Miller & EN 163 (GH, MO, US). EENE Parque Nacional de Guatopo, Steyermark 90178 (VEN). sBotivar: El Mor- rocoy, Guayapo, Bajo Caura, Williams 11807 (US); La Union, Medio Caura, Williams OLOMBIA: MAGDALENA: Codazzi, Ped 3760 (GH, US); Quebrada Soraria, 6 km E of La juu Haught 3615 (GH, US); Santa Marta, Rio Piedras, Smith 1028 (GH, MICH, MO, US). SANTANDER: Barranca Bermeja, Magdalena Valley, betw Sogamoso & Colorado 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 265 misi ded 1424 (MICH, US). cunpinamarca: Sasaima, González & Daniel 1885 (US). of Güejar & Zanza Rivers, Smith & Idrobo 1499, 1506 (US). cHocé: Schott 1216 (MO); Lloró, 50 km S of Quibdó, jct of Río Atrato & Río Andágueda, Archer 2066 ERU: LORETO: Río San ntiago, above Pongo de Manseriche, Mexia 6216 (MICH); betw More & Balsapuerto (lower Río Huallaga basin), Killip & Smith 28164 (US). UNÍN: Río Pinedo, N of La Merced, Killip & Smith 23608 (US). sh COCHABAMBA: ye ca 160 km NE of Cochabamba, Buchtien 2168 This species is easily recognized by its bright- or gray-green foliage, bright- ferruginous rhizome scales, truncate blades, and silvery pilose pubescence. It varies somewhat from north to south. Material from Central America is smaller, pale- or lime-green, sometimes with a stramineous rachis or costa and more blunt segments. The southern form is larger, more gray-green, and with more acute segments. The hairs of the blade vary in length throughout the range but are always characteristically silvery. Except for pubescence, which is most strongly expressed in the middle of the range (i.e. northern South America), the variation is evidently a cline ranging from smaller, more obtusely lobed plants in Central America to taller, acutely lobed ones in Peru. The allied species Polypodium recurvatum from Paraguay and Brazil differs in being more glabrous and more robust and in having very long, almost acuminate segments, but it is otherwise quite similar. It is isolated geographically from the range of P. hygrometricum, and the differences between the two probably result from allopatric speciation. SPECIES DuBIAE ET EXCLUDENDAE Polypodium bolivianum Rosenst. var. brevipes Rosenst., Repert. Sp. Nov. 12: 473, 1913 (Type: Bolivia, North Yungas, Polo-Polo, nr Corioco, 900 m alt, Buchtien 3497 S-PA?). This is probably a small specimen of P. bolivianum Rosenst. P. inversum Vell., Fl. Flum. 11: 11, t. 72, 1827, nomen nudum; Arch. Mus. Nac. Rio 5:448, 1881. No Velloso types exist; the name must be based on the description and illustration of a plant from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is usually considered a synonym of P. plumula (Morton, pers. comm.), but other similar species in that region include P. dispersum, P. siccum and P. filicula. P. lomariiforme Kunze, Linnaea 9: 42, 1834 (as “lomariaeforme”) (Type: “in flor. Peruv. montibus aridioribus as Cassapi 1829, Lect. Diar. | 152, Herb. Poepp., Kze., etc.”). I have seen a specimen at K labeled as having been sent to Kunze from Poeppig. It is dated 1830, but Mr. Morton (pers. comm.) indicates that Poeppig's Peruvian collections are often misdated. Kunze's herbarium at Leipzig is destroyed. The Kew specimen may be an isotype although Dr. Jar- rett questions this (pers. comm.). There may be authentic material at Berlin. The specimen agrees with the protologue except that the frond is pinnatisect rather than pinnate, and it agrees with my P. camptophyllarium Fée var. lachniferum (Hier.) Evans. If a satisfactory determination of type material supports this, P. lomariiforme would take precedence. [Vor. 55 266 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN A v "S v Y an) "S Y maenurum Link, Hort. Reg. Bot. Berol. Descr. 2: 96, 1833 (Type: none cited, probably at B). The protologue compares it to P. paradiseae Langsd. & Fisch., and it has been considered a synonym of P. recurvatum. otites L., Sp. Pl. 1085, 1753 (Type: none in LINN; based on the illustration in Petiver, Pteridographia 32, t. 1, fig. 16). Although this name has been as- sociated with P. pectinatum L., it is not a member of this complex, and is more nearly allied with P. tenuifolium Humb. & Bonpl. ex Willd. [in L., Sp. Pl, ed. 4, 5: 185, 1810 (Type: Venezuela, Cumanacoa, Humboldt 437 B-photo) ]. pectinatiforme var. brevipes Rosenst. in Buchtien, Contrib. Fl. Bolivia 1: 38, 1910, nomen nudum. pectinatiforme f. parvum Sehnen, Pesquisas, Bot. 10: 33, 1960. No type is cited and the name is, therefore, invalidly published. . pectinatum var. acuminatum Baker, Jour. Bot. Brit. For. 25: 25, 1887 (Type: Costa Rica, Cooper K). The specimen is incomplete and cannot be determined with confidence. It appears not to belong to this complex. pectinatum L. var. baezanum Mille, Revista Col. Nac. Vic. Rocofuerte 9: 202, 1927 (Type: none cited; authentic material may be at B or in Ecuador). It is not possible to place this name with confidence; it may be P. consimile Mett. . pectinatum L. var. bourgaeanum Fourn., Mex. Pl. 76, 1872. (Syntypes: “In valle Cordobensi, dec. sp. Bourgeau 1431, 1436; Guadalupa, Nova-Grenada Lindig 45; Brasilia.^). No syntype has been seen, but the protologue indicates that the plant has ellipsoid sori and anastomosing veins, neither of which would place it in P. pectinatum L., and would tend to exclude it from the group altogether. . pectinatum L. var. brachypus Sodiro, Crypt. Vasc. Quit. 334, 1893 (Type: "Crece en los bosques de Gualea colectado por el Sr. D. Rodolfo Riofrio."). No type has been seen; the description is inconclusive. pectinatum L. var. hispidum Christ in Pittier, Prim. Fl. Cost. 3: 15, 1901 (as "hispida") (Type: “El Paramó, 3000 m, versant E du massif de Buena Vista, Jan 1897, Pittier 10474 P? or BR?). —Ctenopteris semihirsuta (Klotzch) Copeland, Phil. Jour. Sci. 84: 450, 1955). . pectinatum L. var. jürgensii Rosenst., Hedwigia 43: 229, 1904 (Syntypes: Brazil, Santa Cruz, auf Berg Joao Rodriquez, 200 m, Jürgens & Stier 82 S-PA?; Join- ville, Santa Catharina, Schmalz 56 S-PA?). Schmalz 56 at MO is not a mem- ber of this complex, and other material has not been seen. . pectinatum. L. var. paradisiae Sodiro, Crypt. Vasc. Quit. 334. 1893, non Baker, 1870 (Type: "Crece en la region tropical y subtropical, en lugares secos y pedregosos; en la orilla del rio Pilatón."). This is presumed to be a new variety rather than a transfer as P. paradiseae Langsd. & Fisch. is cited only with a query, and does not occur in Ecuador. From the description, P. bolivianum suggests itself. . venustum Desv., Gesell. Naturf. Freund. Berlin Mag. 5:315, 1811 (Type: *Habitat in America calidiore Antillisque", Herb. Desv. P-photo). Although Christensen (1906) referred this name to P. taxifolium L., the photo of the 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 267 type indicates that it is a eupolypodium. It would appear to be P. camptophyl- larium Fée, over which it would take precedence, but I would have to see the the specimen to be sure that it was not P. eurybasis or P. consimile. LITERATURE CITED ALsTON, A. H. G. 1956. The subdivision of the Polypodiaceae. Taxon 5: 23-25. Brrr, P. R. 1959. The experimental investigation of the pteridophyte life cycle. Jour. Linn. Soc. London (Bot.) 56: 188-203. 1960. The morphology and cytology of sporogenesis of Trichomanes proliferum l. New Phytol. 59: 53- Bower, F. O. 1923. The jue HE Vol I. Analytical examination of the criteria of comparison. Cambri ——. 192 e Ferns (Filicales) Vol. IIL The Leptosporangiate ferns. Cambridge, England. BRAITHWAITE, A. F. 1964. A new type of apogamy in ferns. New Phytol. 63: 293-305. Brown, E. W. 1920. The value of nutrient solutions as culture media for fern prothallia. Torreya 20: 76-83. CuiaRuGr, A. 1960. Tavole cromosomiche delle Pteridophyta. Caryologia 13: 27-150. CHIN NG C. 1940. On natural classification of the family Polypodiaceae. Sunyatsenia -268. Cae C. 1906. Index filicum. Copenhag 9 n the systematic position of Polyp odium vulgare. Dansk Bot. Ark. 5: 1-10 ( ———, . 1938. Filicineae (Chapter 20) In o diim Fr. (ed.), Manual of Pteridology. The Hague. CorzLawp, E. B. 1947. Genera Filicum. Ronald Press, New York. —. 6. a in America. Phil. Jour. Sci. 84: 381-475. Dicxason, F. G. . A phylogenetic study of the ferns of Burma. Ohio Jour. Sci. 46: 73- Dörr, W. 1939. Cytologische u. genetische Untersuchungen innerhalb der Gattung Dryop- teris. Planta 29: 481-533. 1943. An introduction to pollen analysis. Chronica Botanica, Waltham Evans, A. M. 1964. Ameiotic alternation of generations: A new life cycle in the ferns. Science 143: 261-263. Fasgr, F. 1963. Primo supplemento alle “Tavole Cromosomiche delle Pteridophyta” di Alberto Chiarugi. PE 16: 237-3 Foster, A. A. 1934. The use of tannic acid and iron chloride for staining cell walls in meristematic tissue. n ea Hass J. W. 1957. A revision e Am i ippocastanaceae. Brittonia 9: 145-195. Horrruw, R. E. 1947. A dem Ee deae of leptosporangiate ferns. Jour. Linn. Soc. 58. . The a of ferns. Biol. Rev. 24: wder to Plant Chromosome Numbers. M. S. Cave, Li i i 1, Hi eitráge zur Kenntnis der tropischamerikan'schen Farnflora. -296. COND California Botanical 12 "1950. Dees of cytology and evolution in the Pteridophyta. Cambridge rus I v. Press, Cambri Mixto N. P. 1954. The relation of the cytoplasmic inclusions to the establishment of tetrahedral symmetry in the spore quartet of Osmunda regalis. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 81: 501-508. ‘ 9. The cytokinetic Res of the monolete spores of Polypodium virginianum. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 86: 2 3. 196 he cytokinetic basis of tetrahedral ^ in the spore quartet of Adian- tum hispidulum. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 89: 42-48. Martens. P. & N. Prrarp. 1943. Les organes glandululeux de Polypodium virginianum L. II. Structure, origine et signification. Cellule 49: 385-406. Mzuna, P. N. 1961. Cytological ev OUO of ferns with particular reference to Himalayan forms. Proc. 48th Indian Sci. Cong. 2: 1-24. [Vor. 55 268 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN & G. SincH. 1957. Cytology of Hymenophyllaceae. Jour. Genet. 55: 379- Micke, J. T. 1962. A cap oe: study of the fern genus Anemia, subgenus CE lum. Iowa State Jour. Sci. 36: 349-482. Newcomer, E. H. 1953. A new MEM l and cour fixing fluid. Science 118: 161. PicHI- ee R. E. G. 1959. Pieridophuta p. 421-493, In W. B. TurruL (ed), Vistas in tu Pergamon Press, Lon PLUMIER, "C. 1693. Descriptions des Dus de e Par's. . . Traité des fougéres de l'Amerique. Par Rapp, J. 1825. od [eum nova Een et species novae vel minus cognitae. Pars I. Filices. Floren Scora, R. 1964. MOMS dey ohare in the genus Monarda (Labiatae). Doctoral Dissertation. Univ. of Michigan, Ann Sora LA, E. R. 1960. Polypodiaceae y gu re Argentinas. Opera Lilloana ——À 1963. Sob de rini sistematica de “Polypodium truncorum” Lindman (Polypodineee). Bol. Soc. Argent. Bot. 10: 117-119. Ster, W. N. 1919. Apo poy in Pteris sulcata L. Bot. Gaz. 67 : 469-482. Sroxey, A. G. contribution by the gametophtye to classification of the homo- sporous ferns. Piso ur 1: 39-58. 1959. Po nr de peers and P, plumula—Polypodiaceae or Grammitidaceae? Amer. Fern p R. ATKINSON. 1958. The gametophyte of the Grammitidaceae. Phytomorphol- ogy 8: 391- Swartz, O. 1791. Observationes botanicae. Erlangae. . 1806. Synopsis filicum. Kili — S. C. 1956. Cytology of Ophioglos ssum. Current a 25: 398-399. 1960. Enucleate spores in Isoëtes coromandelina L. Caryologia 13: 274-284. Wag W. H., Jis 1961. Problems in the classification. of ferns. Recent Advances in Botany 841- 844 962. The synthesis and expression of phylogenetic data, pp. 273, 276, me In L. Son Plant Taxonomy. Methods and Principles. Ronald Press, New Yor . 1963. Pteridophytes of the Mountain Lake Area, Giles County, Virgina, n notes from Whitetop Mountain. ber si 113-150. uu. Paraphyses: Filicineae. Tax -64. Sharp. 1963. A susc Bree vascular plant in the United States. coe 142: 1483, 1484. Wuson, K. A. 1959a. The sporangia of three problematic species of Polypodium. Amer. Fern Jour. 49: 147-151. 59b. Sporangia of the fern genera allied with Polypodium and Vittaria. Contr. Gray Herb. 185: 97-127. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 269 of P. disp 3353 (GH), X18. (J) Rhizome palea of P. plumula, Copeland 16059 (MICH), X18. (K) Palea from the rhizome apex of P. i cu. we 1007896), X18. (L) Palea from the side of the rhizome of P. bolivianum, (US 67578 81), X 18. Fig. 2. Gametophyte development and sporophyte iie "us (A) Stages of development of the young gametophyte of P. dispersum, Evans 2008 (MICH). (B) Sto- mates on the gametophyte of P. dispersum, Evans d ee (C) oo of develop- ment of the young gametophyte of P. ptilodon var. caespito n. Evans 2002 (MICH). g. 3. Representative frond shapes. (A) P. ptilodon var. robustum, je s.n. (MICH). (B) » PE Sehnen 2 (MICH). (C) P. curvans, Stork, et al., 10626 (MO). (D) P. truncorum, Pabst s.n. (MICH). (E) P. dispersum, Evans 2008 (MICH) (F) P. plumula, Evans 1187 (MICH). (G) P. recurvatum, Sehnen 4 (MICH). Fig. 4. Epidermal cells, hairs and paraphyses of the lamina. Fig. A-G, Epidermal cells. (A) P. dispersum (US 1287974). (B) P. filicula (US 1280298). (C) P. siccum, (US 1516124). (D) P. truncorum, Mexia 9105 (GH). (E P. a ap he Chrysler : P. (US 104 Variation in the ctenoid hairs of P. ptilodon var. caespit - Farlin E Nov. 4, 1930 ( H): l. Rachis; 2. Costa; 3. Lamina; 4. Receptacular para- physes. Fig. J-P, Laminar hairs and paraphyses. (J) P. dispersum: 1. Capsular and re- p epacular ae Wagner 62061 (MICH); 2. Clavate hairs of the costa and lamina (US 1287974); 3. Acicular hairs of the abaxial surface of the costa (US 1287974). (K) licula: 1. Receptacular p Ahmuda & de la Sota 51 (EVANS); 2. Clavate 29 i aes of the abaxial surface of he costa; ) P. camptophyllarium var. macedoi (US 2081770): 1. Clavate, short and long acicular and setose-clavate forked hairs of the lamina; 2. Acicular hairs of th nt margin; 3. Acicular hairs of the abaxial surface of the uri ime receptacular eit hs sursumcurrens, Copeland 128 (MICH): 1. Clavate laminar hairs; 2. Receptacular araphyses, ons the range from the ae hair to those with a aledlialeg Ed expa Fig. 5. Representative types of rachis paleae. (A) P. plumula from: . Jamaica, Maa. et al. 1234 (GH); 2. Mexico B cle 16055 (MICH); 3. Mexico (US 1145606); 4. Panama, Taylor 1390 (MICH); 5. Colombia (US 1692356); 6. Peru (US 2356738); T. Brazil (US 762365). (B) P. dispersum, Evans 2007 (MICH). (C) P. atrum, Lundell 6639 (US). (D) P. bermudianum, Brown 464 (GH). (E) P. singeri, Ahmuda & de la rugi I . (G) P. c Pringle 3353 (GH). (H) P. ptilodon var. caespitosum (FLAS-P1718). (I) P. filicula, Ahmuda & de la Sota 51 (E esr es P. pu pid i i n 5 [Vor. 55 270 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 6. Venation patterns and segment shapes. Most of the segments lack the ex- panded basal portion, M and N lack medial portions, and O and S, lack terminal portions P. truncorum, Mexia 3105 (GH). (B) P. siccum 1516124). (C) P. filicula (US CTN a P. cupreolepis, Pringle 3353 (GH). (E) P. sursumcurrens, Copeland 128 (GH). (F) P. bermudianum (sterile segment with portion of a fertile segment) (US 848332). (G) P. dispersum, Evans 2007 (MICH). (H) P. i raid Chrysler & Roever 5318 (MICH). (I) P. plumula, Maguire 25005 (GH). (J) P. atrum, Stoutamire var. . " (P) P. venturii, Miis 2974 (GH). (Q) P. camptophyllarium var. maceodi (US 1081770). R,) P. pectinatum, from Guadeloupe (US 1712313). (R,) P. pectinatum, from Surinam. TES camptophuliarum var. camptophyllarium, from Haiti, with typical venation pat- tern (us 178 (S,) P. camptophyllarium var. camp tophyllarium, from Bolivia, with extreme a pattern (US 1191631). (T) P. choquetangense, Cárdenas 3161 (MICH). Fig. 7. Habitat studies. (A) P. dispersum, on mossy sandy soil, s 1189 (MICH), Xl. By P. plumula, on Quercus iu dpa trunk, Evans 1187 (MICH), X14». (C) P. dispersum, SU proliferations from an exposed root mass, Evans 1189 (MICH), X$% (D) P. singeri, short rhizomes pro KU originating as root proliferations along a smal) twig, arrows mark the individual rhizomes, Gerdez 54 (S-PA), X16. (E) P. ptilodon var. caespitosum, growing on a rotten log, Evans 2004 (MICH), X14». (F) P. dispersum, Y dispersum, colony made up entirely of small non-soriferous plants, presumed to have orig- inated entirely aa root proliferations, Evans 2016 (MICH), X164. Fig. 8. Geographic distribution of species in the diae pectinatum-plumula complex, (as represented by herbarium specimens). (A) Geographic distribution of P. ferrugineum, P. bie iu P. recurvatum. (B) Overall distributi ion of the species of the complex; major and marginal areas are distinguished according to the key on is map. (C) Geographic distribution of P. bolivianum, P. consimile var. consimile & v pastazense, P. singeri. e five areas of oe of the individual species of i complex as BUM by the key accompanying the Geographic Rura of species in the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula cottplex, (as represented 7 m specimens). (A) P. plumula, P. sursumcurrens. (B) P. atrum, P. dispersum, P “lieu Fig. 10. Geographic distribution of species in the ae a ale weit -plumula mplex, (as represented by herbarium specimens). (A) alfredii, P. paradiseae, P. s Pic ns inatum, P. venturii. (B) P. uS var. abbreviatum, var. camptophyllarium, var. lachniferum & var. macedoi, P. cupreolepis, P. siccum. Il. Geographic distribution of species in the x dee pectinatum-plumula co: ipler, (as represented by herbarium specimens). (A) P. ptilodon var. caespitosum, var. pilosum, var. ptilodon, E robustum P. absidatum, P. choquetangense, P. curvans, P. eurybasis var. eurybasis, var. glabrescens & var. villosum, P. trunco Fig. 12. Stages of sporogenesis in Polypodium ptilodon var. caespitosum, Evans 1157 (MICH). (A) Cytokinesis in the 8 pre-mother cells, X160. (B) 16 spore mother cells, X160. m meiotic metaphase in a spore mother cell, X760. (E) Young spore tetrads with four nuclei, before Latina X160. (F) Young tetrads during cytokinesis, X240. Young tetra- spores, X240. (H) Mature spores, showing long-reniform shape and tuberculate surface, X 760. 13. Stages in sporogenesis in Polypodium dispersum, Wagner 62061 (MICH). (A) Mitosis in the eight pre-mother cells, X160. (B) Cytokinesis in the eight pre-mother cells, X160. (C) 16 spore ascia cells, X160. (D) Mitosis in the 16 spore mother cells, X160. (E) 111 univalent chromosomes at metaphase in the spore mother cells, X760. (F) Cytokinesis in the 16 diads of young diplospores, X160. (G) Mature spores, one without a scar, the other with a monolete scar, X 760. (H) 32 young diplospores, X160. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 271 Variation in the scar a of spores of Polypodium dispersum, n. i (MICH), Proctor 22806 (MICH). Fig. 15. Gametophyte of Polypodium dispersum, Evans 2008 (MICH). (A) Ger- minating spore, X120. (B) Formation of the cell plate and branching of the thallus, X120 (C) Young apogamous sporophytes proliferating from gametophytes on agar plates, several D) T sporophytes are indicated by arrows, X ( wo-and-one-half-month-old gameto- phytes showing a portion of gamous sporophyte and the ition of stomates on the gametophyte (marked with an arrow), X24. Seis stomates from gametophyte in D, X120. (F) Young apogamous sporophyte showing simple and branched clavate hairs, X50. (G) Young apogamous sporophyte from small elliptical gametophyte, X20. Fig. 16. Specialization in the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex. (A) Rhizome long-creeping (0) to short-creeping or erect (1); i e A narrowly triangular (0) to cordate (1); (C) Rhizome paleae non-comose (0) to ps (1) mose hairs completely obscuring the paleae (2.5); (D) Rachis pus (0) to black (1); (E) Rachis stiff (0) to elastic (1); (F) Rachis straight (0) to spiralled or circinate (1); (G) Rachis gla- brous or thinly pilose (0) to densely villose (1); (H) Ctenoid hairs absent (0) to present (1); (I) d paleae filiform (0) to non-filiform (1) onds generally 25 cm to 1 cm (0) to less than 25 (1); (K) Frond stipitate (0) to se ; ase of the blade subtruncate or cuneate (0) to definitely trunca l ssgments per- pendicular to the rachis (0) to occasionally de (0.5) to regularly deflexed (1); (N) Segments perpendicular to the rachis (0) to pos ); pendicular segment base symmetrical (0) to asymmetrical aes egm Pep ec to the rachis (1); (P) Segment margin entire (0) to crenate (1) to pinnatifid (LS (Q) Lamina glabrous to pubescent (1); (R) Pubescence inh distributed (0) to localized (1); (S) Lateral veinlets forked (0) to simple (1); (T) Sori medial (0) to marginal (1); (U) Receptacular ed cells (0 t paraphyses simple (occasionally forked) and with uniform ) to: U, paraphyse with a subterminal irregular multicellular expansion or: U, paraphyses regularly branched—one branch pond d a clavate cell and the other tipped with a setose call (1); (V) Spores up to 50 m s to over 50 mu long (1); (W) Spores 64 per spo- rangium (0) to 32 per oce e Solid dots represent extant taxa; hollow dots represent hypothetical ancestral inter- mediates. The character letter is given the first time the specialized condition appears in an evolutionary line. Small letters represent intermediate character states (0.5); capital letters follow y an apostrophe (’) represent an extreme character state (1.5). The dotted lines leading to P. dispersum indicate its hybrid ae and probable parental types. 17. Type specimens of new taxa. Left. P. cupreolepis A. M. Evans, Pringle 3353 (US 00. Right. P. bermudianum A. M. Evans, Brown 464 (US 84332), X14. Fig. 18. Type specimens of n Left. um A. M. Evans, Lundell 6639 (US 1638286). Right. P. si IUS var. RE A. M. Evans, Herrera 872 (US 1342112), X14. . 19. Type specimens of new taxa. Left. P. eurybasis var. villosum A. M. Evans, mu 19688 (US 2290492). Right. P. ptilodon var. pilosum A. M. Evans, Jenman s.n., in 1897 (NY), X14. g. 20. Type and representative specimens. Left. Type of P. absidatum A. M. Eva Kip. p" Smith 18518 (US 1353919). Right. Representative specimen of P. unu L. s.s., Evans 2587 (TENN), X14. 272 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 1. Morphology of the sporophyte (legend p. 269). [Vor. 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 273 "00 Je Z 1.0 cm. Fig. 2. Gametophyte development and sporophyte juvenile leaves (legend p. 269). [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 274 Fig. 3. Representative frond shapes (legend p. 269). EVANS—POLYPODIUM 275 P — | K à Fig. 4. Epidermal cells, hairs and paraphyses of the lamina (legend p. 269). 276 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 2 ay DPA. Vs S) rae M Fig. 5. Representative types of rachis paleae (legend p. 269). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 277 ENNS | DTE LLL, SIRES Fig. 6. Venation patterns and segment shapes (legend p. 270). [Vor. 55 278 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 7. Habitat studies (legend p. 270). " a as, e 1 D 1 5 i By CRS bar s | rum í S D x : Y v 4 [| RE [va L puss 2 a VERE N vt Y | — 2m = P. j I G SNOIISETIOD Aad Ad QGLNZESHIXH EY i T i SETIS ano KINO wo | NOLINGIWLEIG dO $YSEY TVEIR TERA Fig. 8. Geographic distributions (legend p. 270). [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 280 Lad Fig. 9. Geographic distributions (legend p. 270). 281 EVANS—POLYPODIUM ra EAR E ) ng | Eo ' t eG * 9 "E fi 1968] Fig. 10. Geographic distributions (legend p. 270). [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 282 Sd < > t i 2 ~ J E y - M À Q [r2 JA. í DE a J| é Ej , n |» owt LH : 1 ri t 5 , : íi Li & LI ' i 2 " a H > a 2 * i - : n ; 5 H py - ay -pr + A 7 fy os z " n OA. X nb YN. . P ! D -— M Los e. ” * . hj" : eM j `; i f b : Y eg "og x » x "UL Ss \ 5 \ N, ure TRVA I m co ne is ( M | OES RATI L RES NE — =-= —— —— o — Me —Á— — — — Ma w— -——— Mam iaa El z Fig. 11. Geographic distributions (legend p. 270). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 283 Fig. 12. Sporogenesis (legend p. 270}. [Vor. 55 284 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 13. Sporogenesis (legend p. 270). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM eee Fig. 14. Spores (legend p. 271). 285 [Vor. 55 286 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 15. Gametophyte (legend p. 271). 9 G y £ 2 | : | E / N E. | wmzoounz: 19 ." 9lITNISUOO tua 9SUSZO)Swd Is, M TIper CN etrmImuoo eTTwTSUOO Ec Ydeqoe1dno a a d UOPOTI2d erua wneuysnrirej K 4 SQwuT 300d Woportad a WüüwTpnEIÓQ f - uL 4 X D ld f wngojrdsowo “Iva uoportad WnjviAeIqQu «ren n wnLIwDLÉudoidwwo Wh35nqor *Qiwa WOPOTT yd a %%, Muestuyoey ^ra. «4 WOLIWDLÉudO dme Om, A Pd diim 20379. 8UT 3 00d Ae WRSOTITA "Iua * nia ad e$ Un29prsqu Stevqimme mnsisdgip Orea enbor dod ERICA vos} pared WII Fig. 16. Legend p. 271. 288 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig. 17. Type specimens (legend p. 271). s ù ees, PLANTA MEXICATUE [ VoL. 55 * g * & ~ r4 e z * of * b ` a t ty 4 t Ka E ta » a ; " Ww. vy MEE E v E av 4 G ug v Å‘ - z% ` a : y = bo U. y“ J « "n ot 1 i V 2 > = I d 7 z $ É * : i ‘ l $ E 2 : í j 4 ğ R $ | > . . tes canh Am Fig. 18. Type specimens (legend p. 271). * ue ER Wr wx 7 RE aE tin exo. P S m pr P nig 2i ony 7 > wa [Vor. 55 290 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN dien, e Ean NER an aah e d E AN REE Gethin Ae Goer rene, Fig. 19. Type specimens (legend p. 271). 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 291 LG) PP DANAI "1 se p pel c baii an ae Te eats EPUKA Den Ae Cte dd $e tries Fig. 20. Type and representative specimens (legend p. 271) [Vor. 55 292 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN INDEX OF LATIN NAMES New taxa are in boldface type, all other taxa are in roman type; numbers in boldface type refer to descriptions, numbers in roman type refer to synonyms, numbers with dagger (t) refer to names incidently mentioned. Adenophorus 195t Alsophila 2027 Amphoradenium 1951 Anemia subg. Coptophyllum 213t Asplenium 1951; aethiopicum 2061 Cheiropleuria Ctenopteris 2087, 221t*, 222; glaziovii 220, 221; plumula 230; semihirsuta 266; truncorum 220 Cyathea 2257 Dipteris 210t Same 2081; pectinatum 246 Hemitelia Isoétes oper Matonia 2107 Monarda 213+ Nephrolepis 1967 Ophioglossum 2067 Platycerium 1957 Polypodium absidatum 1997, 2127, 2157, 219t, 238-239, 2407; alfredii 1967, 198%, 199t, 200f, 210t, 2127, 214t, 2187, 2191, 2247, 225- 227, 227t, var. curtii 225; 228%, 232f, atru 1951, 1967, 1981, 1997, 2127, 2187, 2261, 2297, d 237-238; auritum 223; bakeri 220, 221; bermudianum 1987, 199%, ‘202% 2121, 2187, 228-229, 2321, 237%, 2381; boliviandm 1957, 196, 1987, 210%, 2121, 215 2184, 241- 243, 243t, 265, 266, var. brevipes 265; camptophyllarium 1967, 1987, 2207, 2497, 251-256, 265, 267, var. ab- breviatum 2127, 2157, Mer 2511, 253t, var. cam ophyllarium 2007, 2011, 210%, 2127, Ai 2521, 252- 254, 2547, 2551, 256t, r. lachnife- rum 2001, 2107, 2127, 252. 2531, 254- 255, 2567, 265, var. macedo oi 2007, 2017, 2121, 216r, 2517, 253t, 254; carpinterae 241; chnoophorum 2I choquetangense 1967, 1977, 1997, 2027, 212%, 214%, 2157, 2197, 2407, 241; cinerascens 252; circinatum 239; consimile 1967, 200*, 2157, 2197, 2607, 260-262, 266, 267, var. consi- mile 2021, 2121, x 261-262, 2621, var. minus 261, var. pastazense 1957, 2121, 261t, og, 262; cupreolepis 1957, 1967, 1977, 1987, 1997, 2027, 2211, persum 195+, 1967, 1977, 1987, "199%, 2007, 2011, 202%, 2037, 203-2087, 2107, 2llt, 2127, 2167, 2181, 2231, 2261, 2281, 2291, 2321, 2331, 2341, 235- 237, 2381, 248%, 2497, 265; elasticum , 2 198, 199t, 2157, 2191, 2431, 243-245, 267, var. eurybasis 219%, 243%, 243. 244, 2451, var. glabrescens 2121, 2437, 2444, 244-245, 2451, var. vil- losum 2121, 2147, 2431, 2457, 245; extensum 262; ferrugineum 1951, 198*, 200t, 201t, 2027, 203t, 210f, 2111, 2121, 2147, 215f, 218T, 2257, 227, 2281, 2321; filic ula 1957, t, 1971, 1987, 1997, 2007, 2037, 2121, 2147, 2197, 2161, 2187, 2231, 232], 233. 234, 265; glaziovii 221; hartwegianum 217+; heteroclitum 222; hygrometri- cum 197ł, 201t, 202ł, 210ł, 212t, 2]7t, 2187, 263+, 264-265; inversum NC T — co brescens 244, curvatum 244: "lomisnilorme 265; lonchitidis folio 246; macedoi 254; naenurum 266; microsorium 235, 249, 2491; molle 2337, 235, 2377; morit- zianum 217+; nigrum tenerius sectum 246; otites 2337, 246, 266; paradiseae 199%, 200f, 2104, 2121, 2151, 220%, 2507, 250-251, 2597, 266; paradisi- astrum 262, f. crenulatum 262, pectinatum 262; paraguayense 262; pastazense 262; patzcuarense 2251; pectinatiforme 195t, 1997, 2007, 2127, 2201, 223, 235, 249-250, 262, var. brevipes 266, var. hirsutum 249, 2507, . parvum 266; pectinatum 1957 1987, 200%, 2011, 2021, 2037, 2087, 246- 248, 5511, 2541, 258, 266, var. acuminatum 266, var. aurita 223, 1968] EVANS—POLYPODIUM 293 2241, var. Pops 266, var. bour- minus 230; recurvatum 1941, 196f, gaeanum , var. brachypus 266, 1977, 2027, 210%, 212t, 215t, 2ITf, var. oru 207, var. caliense 2 262-263, 2651, 266, var. minus 264 hispidum 266, v jur- var. paraguayense 263, sub- gensii 266, var. majus 246, var. para- NC 263; robustum 299, diseae 250, 266, var. paradisiae 266, var. cinerascens 252, 259, var. cin- var. recurvatum 262, var. schkuhrii erascens f. majus 259. var. cinerascens 230, var. squamosum 228, 235, var. f. minus 259; schkuhrii 229, 233+; truncatum 249, var. wagneri 246; siccum 1957, 1967, 2007, 202t, 203f, pityrolepis 261, 621; plumula 195, 2107, 2127, 216%, 219t, 2221, 222. 1967, 197t, 198, 1991, 2 201%, 223, 265; singeri 195+, 202+, 203%, ott; 1981, 2001 t, 2027, ptilodon 194f, 1961, , 2511, 256- 216t, 219%, 2495. 248t 260, var. caespitosum 1961, 2007, 2017, 2027, 203%, 204t, 210t, 211t, 212t, 229%, 2541, 2511, 258, var. pilosum 2121, 2151, 2571, 259. 260, 2621, var. ptilodon 1977, 2101, 211f, 2]2t, 257t, 257-258, 2591, var. robustum. 2127, 2497, 2511, OST f, 259, 262; pulchrum 225, 230, var. 22lł, 223-224, 2491; ot, 2157; sursumcurrens 1987, 200f, 2011, 2027, 2121, 214t, 2157, 2161, 219%, 2207, 228; tabla- ianum 225. 2065. taxitolium 266; 2127, 219%, 266; virginianum 2017, 216t; vulgare 1954, I5t; wagneri 246 Trichomanes proiferum forma B 2067 PALYNOTAXONOMIC STUDY OF THE PHYTOLACCACEAE? BY Joan W. NOWICKE? Department of Botany, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri ABSTRACT The Phytolaccaceae, a largely tropical and subtropical plant family, are revised utilizing pollen morphology in addition to floral and vegetative morphology. Seventy-one species, including ae novelty Ercilla syncarpellata Nowicke, are treated with descriptions o and gs las ogy; keys are provided to all major taxa and species. The 17 genera recogn someria, Ercilla, Phyto saree Dig rie Seguieria, Rivinia, ue stigma, Sch indleria, Hiller ria, Petiveria, Ledenber Monococcus, Agdestis, Microte Lophiocarpus, Stegnosperma, an arbeuia) are ui in six subfamilies ERU udue : : E : ihres the family has advanced types (those other than 3c Elbe) well represente a INTRODUCTION The Phytolaccaceae comprise a weedy family of largely tropical and subtropical plants which have been placed, almost without exception, in the order Centro- spermae (Chenopodiales of Hutchinson, 1959; Caryophyllales of Bessey, 1915). It is a relatively natural order, best characterized by its uniform placentation, ovule structure, perisperm storage tissue and the unique presence of betacynanins. Heimer] (1889), in his survey of the Phytolaccaceae for the Pflanzenfamilien, recognized six tribes: Rivineae [Gallesia Casar., Seguieria Loefl., Monococcus F. Muell., Phaulothamnus A. Gray, Ledenbergia Klotzsch, Rivina L., Petiveria L., Microtea Swartz, Hilleria Vell. (as Mohlana Mart.), Adenogramma Reichb.], Limeae (Polpoda Presl, Limeum L., Barbeuia Thouars), Stegnospermeae (Stegno- sperma Benth., Psammotropha Eckl. & Zey.), Phytolacceae (Phytolacca L., Aniso- meria D. Don, Giesekia L.), Gyrostemoneae (Didymotheca Hook. f., Gyrostemon Desf., Tersonia Moq.), Agdestideae (Agdestis Moc. & Sesse). He did not recognize Trichostigma A. Rich., Ercilla Juss. (Ercilia), or Schindleria H. Walter as distinct genera, and Lophiocarpus 'lurcz. was not treated but rather included in the henopodiaceae. Walters (1909) monograph was the first comprehensive treatment of the family and he recognized two subfamilies, Phytolaccoideae containing 17 genera * Based on a dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Assisted y Natio olo Science Foundation Grant No. -5042 cile vest tigator, Walter H. Lewis). Lewis is gratefully acknowledged for supervision of thi * Currently Postdoctoral seer Missouri eie bacis and Department of Botany, Washington University, St. Louis, ANN, Missouni Bor. Garp. 55(3): xu 1969. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 295 (Anisomeria, Ercilla, Phytolacca, Barbeuia, Didymotheca, Tersonia, Gyrostemon, Codonocarpus A. Cunn., Hilleria, Seguieria, Gallesia, Rivina, Trichostigma, Leden- bergia, Schindleria, Petiveria, Monococcus), Stegnospermoideae with only Stegno- sperma, Agdestis which is not placed in a subfamily or tribe, as well as three other anomalous genera (Achatocarpus Triana, formerly placed in the Amaranthaceae by Bentham & Hooker, 1883; Microtea, Phaulothamnus) with affinities to the Chenopodiaceae for a total of 22 genera. He removed six genera (Limeum, Giesekia, Adenogramma, Psammotropha, Polpoda, Semonvillea Gay, the last genus Heimerl had treated as a subgenus of Limeum) to the subfamily Ficoideae of the Aizoaceae. In addition to this major change, he recognized Ercilla as distinct from Phytolacca, Trichostigma as distinct from Rivina, and included his recently established genus, Schindleria (Walter, 1906). In the second edition of Pflanzenfamilien, Heimerl (1934) divided the Phyto- laccaceae into five tribes: Rivineae, Phytolacceae, Agdestideae, Stegnospermeae, and Barbeuieae, the last three being monogeneric; in addition he cited two genera, Microtea and Lophiocarpus, as connecting links to the Chenopodiaceae. He re- duced the total number of genera to 17 by removing six previously included by Walter (1909) and adding Lophiocarpus, a genus formerly placed in the Cheno- podiaceae (Bentham & Hooker, 1883), and placed by N. E. Brown (1909) in the Phytolaccaceae as congeneric with Microtea. Four of the genera which Heimerl separated from the Phytolaccaceae comprised the Gyrostemonaceae (Gyrostemon, Codonocarpus, Didymotheca, Tersonia) all of which have unisexual flowers and a high carpel frequency (rarely two or one). The Achatocarpaceae was constructed for two dioecious genera, Achatocarpus and Phaulothamnus, found in the American tropics and subtropics. Hutchinson (1959) included the Phytolaccaceae in the Chenopodiales; the latter consists of 10 families of which four resulted from a further division of the Phytolaccaceae. The family was consequently reduced to three genera: Phytolacca, Anisomeria, and Ercilla. Agdestis and Barbeuia were placed in monotypic families and the remaining genera, with the exception of Stegnosperma which he placed as a monogeneric family in the Pittosporales, comprise the Petiveriaceae (Gallesia, Hilleria, Ledenbergia, Lophiocarpus, Monococcus, Microtea, Petiveria, Rivina, Schindleria, Seguieria, Trichostigma). Eckardt (1964) made some changes in the larger taxa, recognizing three sub- families, the Phytolaccoideae with four tribes, and the Stegnospermatoideae and the Microteoideae each with a single tribe. He does not cite all genera, but his treatment appears to follow closely that of Heimerl (1934). The present work is the first major treatment and revision of the Phytolaccaceae in the generic concepts of Heimerl (1934). Although Walter's (1909) monograph is a competent treatment of the family, several serious flaws exist: the familial limits, i.e. inclusion of genera whch have since, justifiably, been removed; and the fact that in many instances, generic as well as specific, the exsiccatae listed could not possibly have permitted an adequate consideration of the wide variation which characterizes the family, with the result that many of the taxa established are [Vor. 55 296 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN invalid. This study, although incomplete in parts, attempts to coordinate morpho- logical descriptions, including pollen, floral and vegetative, in order to revise the generic and specific limits. SYNOPSIS OF THE PHYTOLACCACEAE Phytolaccaceae Lindl., Nat. Syst. ed. 2, 210, 1836. Petiveriaceae Link, Handb. 1: 392, 1829*. Herbs, shrubs, or trees. Leaves simple, alternate, petiolate to + sessile, entire, generally estipulate (stipules thorny in Seguieria). Inflorescences racemes, spikes, or irregular panicles rarely cymules. Flowers small, perfect or rarely unisexual (plants then dioecious), + actinomorphic (weakly zygomorphic in Hilleria and Anisomeria); calyx composed of 4-5 free or slightly connate segments, dry and inconspicuous or occasionally corolla-like; corolla absent (staminodia petaloid in Stegnosperma); stamens 3-0 (number variable within a species or even an inflorescence), frequently arranged in one or two whorls, sometimes deposited on a hypogynous disc but placed irregularly in relation to sepals or rarely alternate, the filaments linear, or awl-shaped, the anthers mostly linear, tetrasporangiate, introrse (extrorse in Hilleria), dehiscing longitudinally; ovary superior (semi- inferior in Agdestis), composed of 1-16 free or united carpels, each carpel with one basal, campylotropous ovule, the styles usually equal to the carpel number or absent, the stigmas capitate or + penicellate or not apparent. Fruit a berry, capsule, drupe, utricle, achene or samara; seed one per carpel; embryo curved around a mealy perisperm. A family of 17 genera and ca 70-80 species mostly in the New World tropics and subtropics, but also found in Africa, Australia and Hawaii. Economically the family is of little importance, but some species contain partially toxic substances which are used medicinally. The roots and fruits of some contain Saponin, which can be utilized as a soap. Phytolacca dioica L. is frequently planted as a shade tree in the tropics because it is fast growing. The berries of some Phytolacca spp. have been utilized as an adulterant of red wine, and the young sprouts and leaves can be made into a “poke salad”. Pollen Pollen grains single, prolate, subprolate or prolate spheroidal, ca 16-35 (E) X ca 18-39u (P), 3-colpate, 3-colporoidate, 12-colpate in a 4-4-4 pattern, 15-colpate in a 5-5-5 pattern, or pantoporate, exine ca 1.5-3u in thickness, sometimes thickened at the poles to 5u, sexine + equal to or slightly thicker than nexine and sparsely small spinulose to + smooth (see Appendix). *'The name Phytolaccaceae is conserved over Petiveriaceae. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 297 Cytology Relatively few chromosome counts are available for the family, but all evidence points to a base of x = 9 (18). Hilleria latifolia 2n = 36 (Mangenot & Mangenot, 1958). H Petiveria alliacea L. 2n = 72 (Sugiura, 1937). Phytolacca acinosa 2n = 36 (Sugiura 1936b). Roxb. P. americana L. 2n = 36 (Bostick, 1965, N. C.; Lewis et al., 1962, Texas). P. australis Phil. n = 18 (Heiser, 1963). P. dioica L. 2n = 36 (Schnack & Covas, 1947). P. octandra L. 2n = 96 (Sugiura, 1936a). Rivina humilis L. 2n = 108 (Nowicke, 1967; Sugiura, 1936a). Anatomy The entire order Centrospermae is characterized by its distinctive stem struc- ture (essentially anomalous secondary thickening) and according to Metcalfe & Chalk (1950) certain genera in the Phytolaccaceae (Agdestis, Anisomeria, Barbeuia, Gallesia, Petiveria, Phytolacca, Seguieria) have successive rings of vascular bundles in the inner parenchymatous portion of the pericycle. Concentric rings of xylem and phloem occur in sufficiently thick stems of Ercilla, Gallesia, Phytolacca, Rivina and Seguieria. Another distinctive feature of the Phytolaccaceae, as well as the entire order, is found in the character of its pigments. It is one of the “beta-cyanin families” (Dreiding, 1961), which are closely related and characterized by their inability to produce anthocyanins which is replaced by the ability to synthesize betacyanins (and betaxanthins). TAXONOMY In this treatment I recognize six subfamilies, all monotribic with the exception of Rivinoideae which is divided into two tribes based primarily on the striking differences in fruits and types of inflorescences. I. Phytolaccoideae H. Walter—ovary of 3-16 carpels, free or united; fruit a drupe, achene or berry. 3 genera: Anisomeria, Ercilla, Phytolacca. II. Rivinoideae Nowicke—ovary of one carpel and one seed; fruit an achene, drupe, utricle or samara. 9 genera: Gallesia, Seguieria, Rivina, Trichostigma, Schindleria, Hilleria, Petiveria, Ledenbergia, Monococcus. III. Microteoideae Eckardt ex Nowicke—ovary of one carpel with 2-4 stigmas and one seed; fruit an achene. 2 genera: Microtea, Lophiocarpus. IV. Agdestioideae Nowicke—ovary of 3-4 carpels, 3-4 stigmas, semi-inferior, and one seed. One genus: Agdestis. V. Stegnospermoideae H. Walter—ovary of 3-5 united carpels, 3-5 seeds, petaloid staminoidia; fruit a capsule. One genus: Stegnosperma. VI. Barbeuioideae Nowicke—ovary of 2 united carpels, 2 seeds; fruit a capsule. One genus: Barbeuia. Ct [Vor. 5 298 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN KEY TO THE SUBFAMILIES a. p a capsule, 2 or 3-5 locular b. sule 2-locular; inflorescences axillary ME or fascicles; staminodia ipod plants drying black; e the Malagasy Republic bb. Capsule 3-5 locular; en racemes, ee es cymules; staminodia petaloid; plants drying green; Central a aad the West Indies £V Sd ee (p. 356) aa. Fruit(s) a berry, drupe, samara, achene, or a subf. VI Barbeuioideae (p. 358) c. Ovary of 3-16 carpels, free or unit Ovary semi-inferior, with 3-4 ud carpels and ke i stigmas; seed o vines; [oen cordate IV Agdesroidene (p. 355) ; Ovary superior, 3-16 free or united carpels mue one stigma per carpel; seeds as many as the carpels; herbs, shrubs or trees; s variable. o on £e. e but n f. I Phytolaccoideae (p. 298) cordate cc. Ovary of one carpel, with one seed. Ovary with one stigma; fruit a samara, drupe or utricle, or if a achene then n NAM and beue d 4-6 hooked or covered w recurved spin subf. II Rire (p. 320) Ovary with Q- )3-4 stigmas; fruit an achene, globose with per wrinkled, glochidiate, UD or ridged ..........-.--+-- subf. III Misraeculane (p. 346) e e PHYTOLACCOIDEAE I. Subf. Phyiolaccoideae H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 29, 1909. (Type Phytolacca L.) Tribe Phytolacceae Reichb., Fl. Exc. 586, 1832. (Type Phytolacca L.) a. Carpels distinctly free; sepals unequal and + fleshy; leaves succulent- ae inflorescences mostly termina Anisomeria aa. Carpels free or united; sepals equal or only weakly unequal and thin; leaves “J l. in b. Carpels usually free, rarely united; oo dense, short, axillary 2 spikes, rarely raceme-like; shrubs of Ercilla bb. Carpels free or united, end united; inflorescences racemes or + long s mostly herbs; 3. Phytolacca 1. ANISOMERIA Anisomeria D. Don, Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 13: 238, 1832. (Type A. coriacea D. on Pircunia Bertero, Mercurio e 144, 1829; Amer. Jour. Sci. 23: 264, 1833, non Moq. (in DC., Prodr. 13(2) :29, 1849). Herbs or shrubs, sometimes succulent, calcium oxalate crystals present. Leaves alternate or in fascicles of ca 3, ovate, ovate-elliptic, or + spatulate, mucronate, retuse or rounded, entire or slightly undulate, the bases rounded to attenuated, glabrous, + leathery; sessile to petiolate, petioles sometimes thickened at the base in fascicular arrangement and appearing stipular. Inflorescences spikes or spike-like racemes, mostly terminal. Flowers perfect, + zygomorphic; sessile or pedicellate; bract single or absent; bracteoles 2 and fleshy, or absent; sepals 5, unequal, + united at the base, orbicular, fleshy; stamens 10-20, appearing in two whorls, the filaments + thickened; ovary 5-8 carpellate, free, the styles as many as the carpels, the stigmas inconspicuous to slightly thickened. Fruit a loose collection of drupelets (?), red to brown; seed one (Fig. 1). This genus of three species has been described as restricted to Chile; however, 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 299 some locations cited on herbarium specimens are from the Chilean-Argentinean order. Pollen grains single, prolate, ca 264 (E) X ca 34-394 (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 23-32u long, the exine ca 2-3 in thickness, sexine + equal to or slightly thicker than nexine and finely reticulated (Fig. 4). The publication of Bertero (1829) does predate that of Don, but the descrip- tions of the former author are seminude and until I see collections of Bertero which have definitely been determined by him as Pircunia drastica, and thus leave no doubt as to the plant described in the Mercurio Chileno publication, I think the generic name Anisomeria should remain. Two names have deliberately been omitted from the following synonomy, namely, Anisomeria coriacea var. petalifera H. Walter (Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 32, 1909) which may well be a variety of A. fruticosa Phil. judging from the thickened filaments of the latter; however, since I have not seen petaloid specimens, I withhold judgment. The other name, A. densiflora H. Walter (loc. cit.), does not apply in my opinion to a distinct species, but could, because of the immaturity of the inflorescence, be placed in synonomy under either A. coriacea D. Don or A. fruticosa. I tend to favor the former reduction because the leaves of the type (Lechler s.n. photo F, from BT) resemble those of A. coriacea, which agrees with Walters (1909) description. l. Inflorescences of Anisomeria D. Don. A, A. ps S & vi Moq. o. p, A. coriacea G, Don (X15); C, A. fruticosa Phil. ma d immature inflores- cences. A after Grandjot s.n. (MO); B after Grandjot s.n. (MO)! “C after naa 785 (MO). [Vor. 55 300 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN The genus is clearly related to Phytolacca and is distinguished by its rather weak zygomorphic condition, fruit type and, to a greater or lesser extent, its general habit a. Flowers sessile 1, A. coriacea aa. Flowers seine Inflorescences < 8 cm long, pedicels mostly 4 mm or longer ............ 2. A. littoralis bb. pu a > 10 cm long, pedicels mostly 2-2.5 mm at maturity ...3. A. fruticosa 1. Anisomeria coriacea D. Don, Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 13: 238, 1832. (Type Cuming s.n. G?) Pircunia drastica Bertero, Mercurio Chileno 744, 1829; Amer. Pi Sci. 23: 264, 1833. Phytolacca drastica (Bertero) Poeppig & Endl., Nov. Gen n. TU 1: 26, pl. 43, 44, 1835. Anisomeria drastica (Bertero) Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13 (2) : 25. En Shrubs, weak, or succulent herbs with woody an Leaves mostly alternate, ovate, rarely lanceolate or spatulate, mucronate, undulate, the bases attenuate, up to 6 cm long and 3 cm wide, succulent to leathery; petiole indistinct. Inflorescences spikes, up to 25 cm long, terminal. Flowers sessile; bract single, ca 2-2.5 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles absent (?); sepals 5(-6), + unequal, rounded, ca 3 mm long and 3-4 mm wide; stamens ca 20, in two irregular whorls, the filaments linear, ca 2.5-2.9 mm long, the anthers ca 1.7-1.9 mm long; ovary 5-6 carpellate, free, the styles as many as the carpels and ca 1.5-2 mm long, the stigma on the upper surface. Drupelets 5-6, red-brown, ca 8 mm long, style + persistent (Fig. 1B). CHILE*: COQUIMBO: s. loc dd s.n., (G, NY). saNTIAGO: nr Juncal, t 631 (K); vic of Santiago, Grandjot. Sn., in 1932 (MO). WITHOUT PROVINCE: Reed s.n. (K); Bridges 526 (K). Pollen grains ca 39u (P), colpi ca 32u long, exine ca 3u in thickness, sexine somewhat thicker than nexine. Pollen examined: Grandjot s.n. (MO). 2. Anisomeria littoralis (Poepp. & Endl.) Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 25, 1849. Phytolacca chilensis Miers, Trav. 2: 532, 1826, nom. nud. P. littoralis Poepp. & Endl, Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 27, pl. 45, 1835. (The plate is taken as ee chilensis Miers ex H. Walter, E IV, 83(Heft 39):33, 1909, non Phy- tolacca chilensis (Miers ex Moq.) H. Walter [Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 45, 1909]. Shrubs. Leaves mostly fasciculate, ee obtuse, mucronate or retuse, lamellate, the bases obtuse or rarely attenuate, up to 5 cm long and 2 cm wide, succulent to leathery; petioles to 1.5 cm long, becoming swollen and woody at the base. Inflorescences racemes (appearing as a spike in bud), mostly terminal, up to 7 cm long. Flowers with pedicels up to 6 mm long at maturity; bract ab- sent; bracteoles two, ca 0.6-0.7 mm long, located ca midway on pedicel; sepals 5, unequal, somewhat united at the base, ca 2 mm long, and ca 0.6-2 mm wide, *The geographical citation procedure is: large countries of S. America, the province or state, the location, then alphabetically by collector; Mexico sep? the ia States, the state, then alphabetically by collector; large countries of Africa, Austr and Asia, the location or province, then alphabetically by collector; all ns ie by col- ector 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 301 + orbicular; stamens 10-20, the filaments ca 2 mm long, stout, the anthers ca 1.2 mm long; ovary 5-8 carpellate, free, the styles as many as the carpels, thick, short, strongly recurved, the stigma on the upper surface. Drupelets 3-5, green- brown, ca 8-9 mm long (Fig 1A). CHILE: coQuImBO: vic of lower Choros River, Reed sn. (K); estate of Frai Jorge, Munoz B161 (GH), B218 (GH); Skottsberg & Skottsberg 763 (F, NY). sanriaco: vic of Santiago, Grandjot s.n., in 1935 (MO). VALPARAISO: Algarrobo, Kausel 4339 (F); Quillota, Bertero 1233 (MO). Pollen grains ca 34u (P), colpi ca 23u long, exine ca 2-254 in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine. Pollen examined: Grandjot s.n. (MO); Skottsberg & Skottsberg 763 (NY) (Fig. 4). It is unfortunate that Walter (1909) applied the nude name Phytolacca chilensis Miers to two different taxa, a species of Anisomeria and one of Phytolacca. Since it is impossible as yet to determine to which entity Miers referred, even though I have seen Miers collections of Anisomeria, I have applied it to a bona fide species of Phytolacca. 3. Anisomeria fruticosa Phil., Linnaea 29: 38, 1857-1858, (Type Philippi 873 photo F, from Bf) Shrubs. Leaves mostly alternate, ovate, rounded to retuse, entire, the bases rounded to obtuse, up to 6 cm long and 4 cm wide, + leathery; petioles to 12 mm long, the bases + thickened and woody. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 20 cm long, mostly terminal. Flowers with pedicels ca 2-2.5 mm long at maturity; bract absent; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long; sepals 5, slightly united at the base, unequal, + orbicular, ca 2.5-3 mm long and 0.6-2.2 mm wide; stamens 10-20, the filaments ca 2 mm long and ca 0.8 mm wide, fleshy, the anthers ca | mm long; ovary 6-7 carpellate, free, the styles as many as the carpels, short, thick and recurved, the stigmas on the upper surface. Drupelets 6-7, up to 1 cm long (Fig. 1C). CHILE: ANTOFAGASTA: vic of Taltal, Johnston 5195 (GH), 5611 (GH); Werdermann 785 (F, K, MO, NY). Pollen grains ca 34u (P), colpi ca 24-25 long, exine ca 2-2.5u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine. Pollen examined: Werdermann 785 (MO). 2. ERCILLA Ercilla A. Juss., Ann. Sci. Nat. 25: 11, 1832; Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 14: 261, 1833. [Type E. spicata (Bert.) Moq.] Suriana Domb. & Cav. ex D. Don, loc. cit. 13: 238, 1832. Bridgesia Hooker & Arnott in Hooker, Bot Misc. 3: 168, pl. 102, 1833, pro parte, non B. incisifolia Bertero, (Bertero 1361 photo NY, from G). Ercilia Endl., Gen. Sp. Pl. 977, 1840. Apodostachys Turcz., Bull. Soc. Nat. Hist, Moscou 21(1): 577, 1848. Shrubs. Leaves ovate to ovate-orbicular to ovate-elliptic, acute to retuse- mucronate, entire to very finely undulate, the bases slightly cordate to obtuse, + [Vor. 55 302 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN papery to coriaceous, glabrous; petiolate. Inflorescences spikes or spike-like racemes, mostly axillary, rarely terminal, densely flowered. Flowers sessile to shortly pedicel- late; bract single; bracteoles 2, closely appressed to sepals; sepals 5, + equal free, ovate to + elliptic, turning black on dessication; stamens 8-12, free, inserted on a hypogynous disc; ovary 4-8 carpellate, free or united, the styles as many as the carpels and free, slender, the stigmas not apparent. Fruit a loose collection of drupelets (?) or berry (?); seeds 1-7. Chile. Pollen grains single, prolate, ca 19-204 (E) X ca 27u (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 20-224 long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sometimes thickened at the poles to ca 2.5-3u, sexine + equal to nexine and sparsely small spinulose. Heimerl (1934) stated that Ercilla spicata (Bertero) Moq. is the sole species of the genus, for E. volubilis Juss. scarcely differs from it. Walter (1909) recognized both and separated the two by leaf texture, viz. coriaceous in E. spicata and papery in E. volubilis, and by the sunken condition of the midvein in the former. Both leaf texture as well as shape vary widely in the genus, although there are, ad- mittedly, some very leathery-leaved specimens. Walter's description of E. volubilis is based on a single collection, Dombey 944, which he cites as being from Peru, and which Harms in a footnote (Heimerl, 1934) states as being a doubtful loca- tion for the genus, a conclusion with which I agree, especially since the NY speci- men of this collection is marked Chile. This particular sheet of Dombey 944 is unusual in that it may represent a mixed collection since the inflorescences of the two specimens are somewhat different, the one on the right having spike- like racemes, the left one having shorter spikes. For the present I am recognizing two species based on carpel condition, i.e. free or united, and am treating all free carpellate specimens as E. spicata. a. Carpels free I. E. spicat aa. Carpels united, the styles free 2. E. syncarpellata l. Ercilla spicata (Bertero) Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2):35, 1849. (Type Dombey 944 G, NY lvezia spicata Bertero, psp. Chileno 642, 1 n. Sci Ga Ercilla volubilis A. Juss., A ci. Nat. 25: 11, a * fig. 1, 1832. Suriana volubilis (A. Juss.) ‘Domb. & Cav. ex D. Don, Edinb. New Phil. Jour. 13: 238, n. BM; Cuming 349 K; Mathews 244, not s Bridgesia indi Hooker pi Arnott in Hooker, Bot iud ha 169, pl. 102, 1833. (Syntypes: Bridges TUN ee UU Ture, Bull. Soc, Nat. Mose "2AQ): 577, 1848. (Type Bridges S.n. Phytolacca volubilis (A. Juss.) Heimerl, Pflanzenfam. 3(1b): 11, 1889. Shrubs. Leaves up to 8 cm long and 5.5 cm wide; petioles to 1.5 cm long. Inflorescences mostly spikes, rarely spike-like racemes, up to 10 cm long. Flowers mostly sessile, rarely with pedicels to 1 mm long; bract single, ca 2.2-28 mm long, + elliptic; bracteoles two, ca 1.7-2.4 mm long; sepals ovate, ca 3.5-5 mm long; stamens 8-10(-12), the filaments 5-6 mm long, the anthers ca 1.6 mm long; ovary 4-8 carpellate, free, the styles ca 1.2-1.6 mm long, recurved. Drupelets 4-8, reniform, ca 4-5 mm long; seed ca 3.5-4 mm long, testa shiny black. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 303 HILE: CONCEPCIÓN: vic of Concepién, Macrae s.n. (K). MAULE: Cauquenes, Joseph 1822 ai S). o'HIccIns: Donihue, Bertero 289 (GH). vatprvia: Chinguil, Hollermayer 1922 Ok US); Coral, Buchtien s.n. (US); Panguipulli Lake, Joseph 2405 (US); s. loc., alse (US). VALPARAISO: s. loc., Cuming 349 (K); Bertero 289 (GH). WITHOUT PROVI Cay 362 (NY, US), s.n. (K, NY, US); Dombey 944 (NY); Joseph 4398 (US). Pollen grains ca 20u (E), colpi ca 20u long, exine thickened at the poles to ca 2.5-3y in thickness. Pollen examined: Gay 362 (NY). 2. Ercilla syncarpellata Nowicke, sp. nov. Inflorescentiae spicato-racemosae; flores pedicellis ca 1.5 mm longis; antherae ca 1.5-1.6 mm longae; ovarium brevi gynophoro, 5-7 carpellatum, carpellisque connatis. Shrubs. Leaves ovate-elliptic, acute-mucronate, entire, the base obtuse to slightly cordate or oblique, up to 7 cm long and 3 cm wide, + coriaceous, petioles up to 6 mm long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 8.5 cm long, mostly axillary. Flowers with pedicels ca 1.5 mm long; bract single, ca 2-2.8 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 1-1.3 mm long; sepals 3-4 mm long; stamens ca 10, the filaments ca 5-6 mm long, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary on short gyno- phore, ca 0.5 mm long, 5-7 carpellate, united, the styles separate or closely ap- pressed at the bases, recurved, the stigmas on the upper surface. Fruit unknown. Holotype: Chile. Valdivia: La Aguade, Gunckel 1837 (MO), 15 Nov 1930; isotype GH. CHILE: VALDIVIA: Coral, Gunckel 62 (BM); Krause s.n. (US). Pollen grains ca 194 (E), colpi ca 22u long, exine not noticeably thickened at the poles. Pollen examined: Krause s.n. (US). 3. PHYTOLACCA Phytolacca L., Sp. Pl. 441, 1753. (Type P. americana L.) Phytholacca Brot., Fl. Lusit. 2: p 1804. Sarcoca Raf., Fl. Tellur. 3: 55, 1 Pircunia Moa. in D.C., Prodr. M 29, 1849, non Bertero (Mercurio chileno 744, 1829). Trees, shrubs or herbs; calcium oxalate crystals + conspicuous. Leaves lanceo- late to ovate or rarely + deltoid, acute, acuminate, mucronate, retuse-mucronate, entire, rarely finely undulate, the bases rounded, obtuse, or attenuate, rarely + oblique, + glabrous; subsessile or petiolate. Inflorescences racemes or spikes, rarely racemes with thyrsiform bases, axillary or terminal, + scurfy to pubescent. Flowers perfect, or unisexual and plants dioecious, mostly actinomorphic; sessile or pedicellate; bract single, rarely absent, narrowly-lanceolate to awl-shaped; bracteoles two, rarely absent, lanceolate to awl-shaped; sepals 5, rarely 4 (-9), narrow-oblong, oblong, elliptic, oblanceolate or ovate, white to red; stamens func- tional or rudimentary, 8-25, deposited irregularly in one or two whorls, generally on a hypogynous disc, the filaments sometimes widened at the bases; ovary ab- sent, rudimentary or functional, sometimes on a short gynophore, 5-16 carpellate, free or united, the styles as many as the carpels, the stigmas on the upper surface. [Vor. 55 304 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fruit a berry, ribbed, or a loose collection of drupelets (or achenes ?); seeds 5-16 for berry, one for drupelet, reniform, testa shiny black. Cosmopolitan in distribution but principally in the warmer regions. Pollen grains single, prolate spheroidal, subprolate, or prolate, ca 17-29% (E) X ca 25-36, (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 17-264 long, exine ca 2-25 in thickness, sometimes slightly thickened at the poles, sexine + equal to nexine, rarely 2X as thick, and finely reticulated to sparsely small spinulose (Fig. 7). Without exception, Phytolacca is the most difficult genus in the Phytolac- caceae in which species can be accurately defined or classified. The problem lies principally with the fact that many taxa hybridize readily (Fassett & Sauer, 1950; Sauer, 1951), thus obscuring the characters by which they are recognized. In ad- dition infraspecific variability and even extensive variation in the same specimen, e.g. inflorescences in which the flowers may have either one or two staminal whorls, contribute to the difficulty. An illustration of the type of problem encountered in species differentiation is the occurence of inflorescences which are thyrsiform at the base—a character supposedly best delimiting two South American species, P. thyrsiflora Fenzl. and P. sanguinea H. Walter. However this same character can be observed to a disturbing extent in P. americana L., to a lesser degree in P. heterotepala H. Walter and even in specimens collected in Asia. The best characters to delimit taxa in this problematical genus should of course be qualitative, but it appears that many of these parameters are under weak genetic control. Heimerl (1934) noted that the approximately 35 species described are in part very closely related and are difficult to distinguish. In my opinion there are far less than 35 distinct species of Phytolacca; many names have un- doubtedly been assigned to specimens of hybrid origin. A discussion of all species which have been described is not feasible here, and I am, for the most part, revising and amending the species in the sense of Walter's (1909) treatment. i Walter (1909) placed 26 species of Phytolacca into three subgenera based on the degree of connation of the carpels: free, connate at the base with the apices free, or completely united carpels. Subgenus 1 Pircunia (Moq.) H. Walter con- tains P. heptandra Retz, P. esculenta van Houtte, P. acinosa Roxb., P. latbenia (Buch.-Ham.) H. Walter, and P. cyclopetala H. Walter in the sect. 1 Pircuni- astrum Moq., characterized by hermaphroditic flowers, and P. dodecandra L'Herit, P. goudotii Briq., and P. nutans H. Walter in the sect. 2 Pircunioides H. Walter, characterized by dioecious plants. Subgenus 2 Pircuniopsis H. Walter, characterized by carpels connate at the base with the apices free, contains a Bpan group, the sect. 1 Pircuniophorum H. Walter, with three species, P. chilensis (Miers ex Moq.) H. Walter, P. sanguinea H. Walter, and P. rugosa A. Br. & Bouche, as well as the sect. 2 Pseudolacca Moq., with two dioecious species P. dioica L. and P. weberbaueri H. Walter. Subgenus 3 Euphytolacca Moq., the largest group and characterized by carpels completely united contains a very large hermaphroditic sect. 1 Phytolaccastrum H. Walter with P. thyrsiflora Fenzl, P. heterotepala H. Walter, P. brachystachys Moq., P. americana L., P. polyandra Batalin, P. rivinoides Kunth & Bouche, P, meziana (J. D. Smith) H, Walter, P 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 305 micrantha H. Walter, P. australis Phil., P. octandra L., P. purpurascens A. Br. & Bouche, and P. icosandra L., and a monotypic dioecious sect. 2 Phytolaccoides H. Walter containing P. pruinosa Fenzl. The degree of carpel connation upon which Walter (1909) based the three subgenera functions well for recognition of the subg. Pircunia, with its completely separate carpels, a condition which is unmistakable in fruit, but for distinguish- ing the subg. Pircuniopsis, with carpels connate at the base, from subg. Euphyto- lacca, with carpels completely united, it is a difficult character. However, in view of the fact that I am not monographing the genus and do not wish to add further to the taxonomic and nomenclatural confusion by making an unmeaningful change, I think it best at this time to maintain the subgenera as outlined by Walter. The dioecious species are a unique problem, not only in subgeneric classifica- tion of male specimens, but also because some species have female flowers with normal appearing stamens. These may be mistaken for functionally perfect flow- ered species. A useful, if not essential, criterion for classifying material of Phytolacca is geographic location. It is unfortunate, however, that so many binomials seem to be based primarily on this feature; in some instances location is the key to rapid and accurate identification, e.g. Cyprus and P. pruinosa. A knowledge of the species commonly found in a particular region can also aid in recognition of hy- brids. Specimens from the northern regions of South America are the most per- plexing, due to the large number of species found there and to the almost con- tinuous variability of their characteristics. In this treatment I am recognizing 20 species, but in some instances do so with misgivings. Most of the latter involve specimens where geographic location is apparently the only feature which distinguishes them as species. Examples are P. brachystachys from the Hawaiian Islands, which is very similar to P. rugosa of Central and South America, and P. purpurascens from Haiti, which may very likely be a hybrid of P. icosandra and P. americana or P. rivinoides. Following Walters (1909) infrageneric classification in his subg. I sect. 1, I recognize P. heptandra, but have reduced P. esculenta to P. acinosa. To my knowledge, I have not seen P. latbenia or P. cyclopetala, but this does not deny their existence; they are unfortunately omitted. In his dioecious sect. 2 I recognize P. dodecandra, yet doubt the validity of P. goudotii and P. nutans. In his subg. 2 sect. l, I recognize P. sanguinea, P. rugosa, and P. chilensis. In the dioecious sect. 2, I recognize both species cited by Walter, P. dioica and P. weberbaueri, even though I have not included a description of the latter because I have seen only a male specimen. I am also including here P. tetramera Hauman- Merck, which Walter neglected. In the subg. 3 sect. 1, I follow Walters treatment rather closely, with the following exceptions: P. polyandra I have not seen and omit; P. heterotepala and P. meziana I include, but with reservations that they may be of hybrid origin; and P. micrantha and P. australis are reduced to P. bogotensis H.B.K. In the monotypic dioecious sect. 2, I recognize P. pruinosa. [Vor. 55 306 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN In accordance with the Code, I have changed the subg. 3 Euphytolacca sect. 1 Phytolaccastrum, which contains the type species, to the subg. Phytolacca, sect. Phytolacca. a. Carpels completely free subg. 1 Pircunia F s perfect sect. 1 Pircunia Slender herbs; inflorescences few-flowered spikes, rarely n rica. 1. P. heptandra cc. Robust herbs; inflorescences dense racemes; Asia 2 x acinosa bb. Flowers functionally pistillate or staminate, but with Mp stam Or carpels Loose etree eee t. 2 A ous ie P. dodecandra aa. Carpels + united. d. Carpels with es -- free, styles not connivent ibg. 2 Pircuniopsis owers perte sect "1 Pircuniophorum nflor s dense racemes, thyrsiform at the base .............- . sanguinea ff. Inforeences open racemes, not thyrsiform at the es or elongate spi g. Inforecences racemes; Central America & northern South 5. P. rugosa Tu inem T Chile 6. P. chilensis ee, Flowers M eeg or staminate t. 2 Pircuniopsis Leaves spatulate, iat a sharply defined Lene sepals z * P. tetramera hh. Leaves + ovate, the petiole well-defined; i. Inflorescences ca 10 cm long or less; pm 3.5 mm long 8. 2 dioica ii. pops ca 25 cm long or more; filaments ca 6-65 m very robust 9. P. m E dd. und meet united, the styles + connivent subg. 3 Phytolacca perfec sect. 1 Phytolacca k. doc spikes; flowers sessile to pedicels ca 1 mm long. Inflorescences longer than leaf lengths; usually two staminal whorls. 10. P. icosandra ll. Inflorescences equal to or less than leaf lengths; one staminal whorl. ll. P. octandra kk. Inflorescences racemes, sometimes thyrsiform, the flowers pedicellate. m es ext tended, thyrsiform at least at the base; chiefly 12 Brazil. aie mm. Racemes not thyrsiform at the base, or if so then from North merica. n. Flowers mostly with two staminal whorls. o. Sepals eri one noticeably more narrow; west North Am 13. P. TE oo. Without ey lorc combination. Sepals Vus 4 mm long; Guatemala ...14. P. meziana pp. Sepals + ae < 4 mm lon q. Racemes very long, ca 40- 50 cm; rss 1-13 mm; carpels 10-16. P. UE qq. Racemes less than 30 cm long; x mm long; carpels ca 9-10. ................. 16. P. purpurascens nn. Flowers mostly with one staminal whorl. ts of Hawaii; carpels mostly 5-6 ........ 17. P. brachystachys rr. Plants of North or South America; carpels mostly 7-10. s. Inflorescences dense racemes; plants of oo I th ri merica 18. P. bogotensis ss. Inflorescences + open racemes; plants - Nort h meri jj. Flowers pistillate or staminate sect 3 Pnu laaie 0. P. pruinosa 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 307 Suse. 1 Pircunia (Moq.) H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 38, 1909. (Type P. acinosa Roxb.) Pircunia Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 29, 1849, non Bertero (Mercurio chileno 744, 1829). Sect. 1 PIRcUNIA sect. Pircuniastrum Mog. in D.C., Prodr. 13(2): 29, 1849. l. Phytolacca heptandra Retz., Obs. 6: - 1791. P. stricta Hoffm., Comm. Götting. 12: 2 P. es uid Mog. i n DC. Prodr. o za 1849, nom. nud. pro syn. Pircunia stricta P. resedifolia Moq.. p cit, nom. nud. pro syn. dius stricta var. residiformis. Pi ircunia stricta Moq., loc. cit. (Type Ecklon & Zeyher aP P. stricta var. latifolia Moq., loc. cit. (Type Drège s.n. G, not seen, in IDC Micro-Edition, Candolle Prodromi Herbarium) Herbs, slender, to ca 1 m. Leaves lanceolate-elliptic, rounded-mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 10 cm long and 2.5 cm wide; + sessile to petioles l cm long. Inflorescences spikes or spike-like racemes, up to 13 cm long, sparsely flowered. Flowers + sessile or with pedicels to ca 3-4 mm long; bract single, ca 1.4-1.6 mm long, linear-lanceolate, bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, somewhat united at the bases, rounded, ca 2.5-3 mm long and 1.3-1.5 mm wide; stamens 6-7, in one whorl, the filaments ca 1.5-2 mm long, widened at the bases, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; ovary 5-7 carpellate, free, the styles ca 0.8 mm long, + straight. Fruit a collection of 5-7 drupelets, 2-3 mm long. SourH Arrica: Albert Dist, Cooper 1358 (K); 8 mi from Greytown, Wylie 28018 MO); Somerset East, MacOwen 1453 (F, NY); s. es Cooper 366 (K, NY), Ecklon & Zeyher s.n. (MO). Pollen grains prolate spheroidal, ca 26u (E) X ca 27u (P), colpi ca 17u long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and sparsely small spinulose. Pollen examined: MacOwan 1453 (NY). 2. Phytolacca acinosa Roxb., Hort. Bengal. 35, 1814. P. esculenta Van Houtte, Fl. Serres 4: 398 B, 1848. Pircuinia esculenta (Van Houtte) Moq., loc. cit. 9: 236, 1853- rs ri css kaempferi A. Gray, Mem. Amer. Acad. n.s. 6: 404, 1 (Type Small s.n. GH) P. pekinensis Hance, Jour. Bot. 7: 166, 1869. (Type Williams po location unknown) Herbs, stout, ca 2-3 m. Leaves ovate, ovate-elliptic, or rarely ovate-lanceolate, acute to + mucronate, entire, the bases attenuate to slightly rounded, up to 35 cm long and 16 cm wide, + glabrous; petioles to 6 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, up to 30 cm long, mostly axillary, rarely terminal, the peduncle + smooth to scurfy. Flowers with pedicels 5-13 mm long, slightly winged at the base in some; bract single, (1-)2-4 mm long, lanceolate to awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 1.5 mm long; sepals 5, + unequal, 3-4 mm long and 1.8-2.3 mm wide, ovate to rounded; stamens 7-15, sometimes in + two whorls, the filaments ca 1.8-2 mm long, widened at the bases, the anthers ca 0.8-1 mm long; ovary sessile or on short gynophore, ca 0.5 mm long, 6-9 carpellate, somewhat united at the base in flower, [Vor. 55 308 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN mostly free in fruit, the styles ca 0.6-1 mm long, mostly straight, slightly recurved at the tip. Fruit an assemblage of drupelets, each up to 4 mm long. Asia. Cuna: CHANGYANG: Wilson 873a (K). cumu: Wang 20194 (NY). HUPEH: Chow 5. (NY); Henry 4351 (MO). xansu: Potanin s.n. (K). KIANGSU: Mods -: ii p Seay KW. eiim TUNG: Tso 20891 (NY). ruwccHow: Morse 576 (NY). SHAN 2609 (F). SZECHAN: Henry 5511A (K). YUNNAN: Forrest 5989 (K); Henry 10705. Be Moi (MO). ITHOUT PROVINCE: Henry 2045 (K); Licent 1467 (K APAN: Albrecht s.n. (GH, NY); Arimoto s.n. (MO); Dickens s.n. (K, NY) s.n. (NY); Higg s.n. (NY); O Oldham 671 (GH, K); Wright s.n. (NY). S. E 6 Je IND p ard 3 (K). HIMACHAL PRADESH: Gammie 18587 (K). KASHMIR: Stewart "7873 didi Jain & Bharadwaja s.n. (NY). sikxiw: Watt 5709 (K). ITHOUT moves E 4360 (K). PAKISTAN: Stewart s.n. (NY). dn grains subprolate, ca 23u (E) X ca 28u (P), colpi ca 23u long, exine ca 2.54 in thickness, sexine ca 2X as thick as nexine or + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Henry 10705 (MO). This Asian group of very robust herbs with conspicuously free-carpelled ovaries, is treated as an “aggregate species". Walter (1909) distinguished P. acinosa from P. esculenta primarily by the condition of the peduncle and inflorescence axis, scabrous in the former and glabrous in the latter, coloration of floral parts, and shape of sepals, all of which are not necessarily correlated in the manner described in his key. The individual characters, particularly coloration, are unsound bases for specific recognition. Secr. 2 Pircuntowes H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 42, 1909. 3. Phytolacca dodecandra L'Her., Stirp. Nov. 143, pl. 69, 1789. (Type Bruce s.n. K) P. abyssinica Hoffm., Comm. Gótting. 12: 27, 1796. P. elongata Salisb., Prodr. 345, 1796. P. lutea Marsigl. ex Steud., Nom. ed. 1, 618, 1821. Pircunia a EIUS (Hoffm.) Mod in DC. 13: 30, 1849. Phytolacca scandens Hilsenb. & Boj. ex Moq., loc. cit, nom. nud. pro syn. Pircunia abyssinica Shrubs or herbs, dioecious, + scandent. Leaves ovate or rarely ovate-lanceolate or + deltoid, acute-mucronate to retuse-mucronate, entire, the bases rounded, oblique-rounded, or + obtuse, up to 14 cm long and 8.5 cm wide; petioles up to 3.5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, pistillate or staminate, up to 30 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Staminate flowers with pedicels ca 4-6 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.2 mm long, very narrow; two bracteoles, ca 0.6 mm long, very narrow; sepals 5, + equal, narrow-oblong, ca 2-2.3 mm long and 0.7-0.9 mm wide; stamens 13-15, in two whorls, the filaments ca 2.5 mm long, widened at the base, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary rudimentary, 3-5 carpellate. Pistillate flowers with pedicels 5-7 mm long at maturity; bract single, ca 1 mm long, awl-shaped; two bracteoles, ca 0.6-0.8 mm long, + awl-shaped; sepals 5, + equal, oblong-ovate, ca 2.5 mm long and 1.5 mm wide; stamens rudimentary, ca 8-12, deposited in two 1968] NOWICKE—-PHY TOLACCACEAE 309 (rarely one) whorls, the filaments ca 2 mm long, widened at the bases, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; ovary 5 carpellate, + free, the styles widened at the bases, the stigmas weakly penicellate. Fruit a collection of 5 or fewer drupelets, ca 3.5-4.5 mm long; seed 1, reniform, ca 3.5-4 mm long, testa shiny black. Central and southern Africa and reported from Madagascar (Walter, 1909). Nicer: Oban, Talbot 1381 (MO). REPUBLIC OF Conco: Lake Kivu, Linder 2032 (A); betw Sileko & Basoko, Louis 11404 iur. dining. Louis 264 (MO), 8638 (MO), 13890 (M ve HIOPIA: S. loc., Loccardo s.n. (GH); Schimper 131 (GH ace Biumba Terr, Pun 11819 (M Tanzania: Bezirk Bagamogo, Schlieben 4136 (MO); N of Lake Nyasa, Stolz 2265 (A). UcaNna: s. loc., Dummer 5 RHODESIA: Headlands Dist, Greenlow 88 (MO); Inyanga, Whellan 672 (MO). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 23u (E) X ca 28-29u (P), colpi ca 17-18 long; exine ca 2u in thickness, slightly thickened at the poles, sexine sparsely small spinulose. Pollen examined: Troupin 11819 (MO). SuBG. 2 Pircuniopsts H. Walter Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 45, 1909. (Type P. dioica L.) Sect. 1 PrrcuntopHoruM H. Walter, loc. cit. 4. Phytolacca sanguinea H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39):46, 1909. (Lecto- type selected: Lehmann 4479 US, isolectotypes F, K. Syntypes: Humboldt & Bonpland 822; Karsten s.n.; Linden 852; all not seen) Herbs, somewhat succulent, to 2 m. Leaves lanceolate-elliptic to elliptic to rarely + ovate, acute, entire to very finely undulate, the bases obtuse to attenuate, up to 18 cm long and 6 cm wide, glabrous; subpetiolate to petioles ca 2.5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, thyrsiform at the base, up to 15 cm long, the peduncle 1% to L5 this length, axillary or terminal, flowers crowded at maturity, scurfy. Flowers with pedicels to 1 cm long; bract single, ca 7-9 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, sometimes appearing to be absent, ca 0.8-1 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, + equal, oblong-elliptic, ca 4-5 mm long and 2-3 mm wide, + red; stamens 8-11 (-15), deposited irregularly in one whorl, rarely two whorls, the filaments ca 2-2.5 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8-0.9 mm long; ovary ca 9 carpellate, almost completely united, the styles ca 1.5-2 mm long, recurved near the tip. Fruit a berry, ca 9 ribbed, black, ca 6 mm in diam. Mostly northern South se cus), Costa Rica: d 1358 (US CoroMsia: cauca: El Tambo, a Sneidern 1146 (F, NY, US); Popayan, Lehmann 4479 (F, K, US); Mt Puracé, Pennell & Killip 6510 (US); Quebrada del Rio San Marcos, pecu 14776 (F, US). purumayo: Mts above Laguna de La Cocha, Fosberg 20439 (NY, US); Valle a Sibundoy, Cuatrecasas 11597 (F, US). saNTANDER: mts E of Las Vegas, Killip & Smith 15783 (NY); Páramo Rico, Killip & Smith 17703 (NY). Tota: betw edad & summ d e y da Killip & Varela (U VENEZUELA: MÉRIDA: Páramo de las Lajas, Hamburg- Tracy 141 (K). Hei grains uus scd ca 25-26, (E) X ca 28u (P), colpi ca 22-23 long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Killip & Smith 15783 (NY). [Vor. 55 310 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 5. Phytolacca rugosa Br. & Bouche, Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol. 13, 1851. (Type Warszewicz s.n., location unknown) Herbs, woody at the bases, branches erect, angled, to 2 m. Leaves elliptic to elliptic-lanceolate, acute to long acuminate, entire, the bases attenuated or obtuse, up to 19 cm long and 6.5 cm wide; petioles to 5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, to 15 cm long, mostly axillary. Flowers with pedicels, 3-7 mm long; bract single, ca 3-4 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, < 1 mm long; sepals 5, + equal, elliptic, 2-3 mm long, reflexed in fruit, white to pink; stamens 6-12, deposited on a hypogynous disc, the filaments ca 2 mm long, the anthers < 1 mm; carpels 4-9, united at the bases, styles not connivent and straight. Fruit a berry, sharply ridged, green-black, ca 6 mm in diam. Mexico south to Colombia. Mexico: GUERRERO: Hinton 11082 (MO). jatisco: Mexia 1661 (MO). MICHOACÁN: Hinton 11896 (MO). Cosra Rica: Dodge & Thomas 4351 (MO), 5320 (MO). Panama: Allen 311 (MO), 1511 (MO); Blum et al. 2403 (MO); Dwyer et al. 469 (MO); Maurice 742 (MO); Siebert 302 (MO); Woodson & Schery 660 (MO); Woodson et al. 84 MO), 975 (MO). MBIA: SANTA MARTA: Smith 1160 (MO). Pollen grains prolate, ca 24-26u (E) X ca 34u (P), colpi ca 24u long, exine slightly thickened at the poles, sexine finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Hinton 11896 (MO). 6. Phytolacca chilensis (Miers ex Moq.) H. Walter, Pflanzeur. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 45, 1909, non H. Walter, loc. cit. 33. P. chilensis Miers, Trav. 2: 532, r nom. nud Pircunia chilensis Miers ex Mog. in DC, Prodr. 13(2): 29, 1849. (Type Bridges s.n: K) Herbs, with woody ch Leaves ovate-elliptic, mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 13 cm long and 5 cm wide; petioles to 3.5 cm long. Inflorescences spikes, to 20 cm long, axillary or terminal. Flowers sessile or with pedicels ca 1 mm long; bract single, ca 4-5 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 2 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, = equal, ovate, rounded, ca 3-4 mm long and ca 2.5 mm wide; stamens 9-12, in 2 whorls, the filaments ca 2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.7 mm long; carpels 5-8, united only at the bases, the styles not connivent and straight. Fruit a weak berry, 5-8 ridged, ca 6-7 mm in diameter. Curr: s. loc. Bridges s.n. (K). No pollen examined due to paucity of flowering material. ‘Known only from the type collection, it nonetheless separates very easily from P. sanguinea and P. rugosa by its long spike. The possibility of hybrid origin from P. icosandra L. x P. rugosa (which could give the general characters of P. chilensis) are remote because of the geographical location. See also the discussion of Anisomeria littoralis. Sect. 2 PIRCUNIOPSIS sect, Pseudolacca Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13 (2): 30, 1849. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 311 T. Phytolacca tetramera Hau. Mer. Apuntes Hist. Nat. 1: 108, 1909. (Type Hauman-Merck s.n., photo US, from Bf) Herbs, dioecious, to ca 0.5 m. Leaves spatulate to elongate lanceolate, mucro- nate, entire and finely undulate, the bases attenuate, up to 19 cm long and 5 cm wide, midrib prominent, up to 2 mm wide; subpetiolate to petioles 1-3 cm long. Inflorescences spikes, rarely spike-like racemes, staminate ca 4-5 cm long, the pistil- late up to 10 cm long, mostly axillary. Staminate flowers sessile or with pedicels ca 2-3 mm long; bract single, present or absent, ca 2 mm long, closely appressed to sepals; bracteoles absent; sepals 4, unequal, ovate-elliptic, ca 2-2.5 mm long and 1.8-2.3 mm wide; stamens 12-15, irregularly deposited, the filaments ca 2.5-3.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1-1.5 mm long; ovary absent or of 2-3 carpels, thin and abortive. Pistillate flowers sessile or rarely with pedicels to 1 mm long; bract single, ca 2-25 mm long, sepal-like and keeled at the base, closely appressed to calyx; bracteoles absent; sepals 4, unequal, ovate, ca 2-2.5 mm long and 1.6-2.2 mm wide; stamens absent; ovary 6-9 carpellate, + united, the styles somewhat connivent. Berry 6-9 ribbed, ca 4-6 mm in diam. ARGENTINA: BUENOS AIRES: rd to Ignacio Correas, Cabrera 5725 (NY); rd betw La Plata & Magdalena, Cabrera 1641 (NY); Magdalena, Parodi 6018 (GH); Monte Veloj, Cabrera 626 (NY). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 23u (E) X ca 28-294 (P), colpi ca 17-18 long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Cabrera 626 (NY). An easily identified species, not only because of the unique sepal number, but also because of the distinct leaf shape. 8. Phytolacca dioica L., Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 632, 1762. (Type Alstroemer 129 LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition 607.5) P. populifolia Salisb., Prodr. 345, 1796. Pircunia dioica Moq. in DC., Prodr. 18 (2): 30, 1849. Phytolacca arborea Moq., loc. cit., 31, nom. nud. pro syn Pircunia dioica. Trees, dioecious, to 25 m. Leaves ovate, acute, entire to finely undulate, the bases rounded and sometimes decurrent, up to 12 cm long and 6 cm wide; petioles up to 7 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, up to 15 cm long, axillary or terminal. Staminate flowers with pedicels to 4 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long; sepals 5, ca 3 mm long; stamens 20-25, in two whorls, the filaments ca 4-5 mm long, the anthers ca 15-2 mm long; ovary occasionally present, 2-4 abortive carpels. Pistillate flowers with pedicels ca 3 mm long, + stout; bract single, ca 0.5 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long; sepals 5, + equal, elliptic, ca 2-3 mm long, persistent in fruit; stamens ca 10, rudimentary; ovary 8-12 carpellate, incompletely united, the styles not connivent. Fruit a weak berry, ca 6-8 mm in diam. South America. Ecuapor: S Naranjapata, Schimpff 534 (MO). RAZIL: PARANA: Desvio Ypiranga, Dusen 16147 (MO, NY). sANTA CATARINA: Joinville, Reitz & Klein 5701 NY); Vidal Ramos, Klein 2229 (NY). Urucuay: Montevideo, Herter 220 (MO). [Vor. 55 312 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN ARGENTINA: CHACO: s. loc, Jorgensen 1995 (MO); Venturi 9825 (MO). CORRIENTES: Santa Maria, Pedersen 455 (MO, NY). mustones: Santo Pipo, Schwarz 4844 (MO). rucu- MAN: ur Lillo, Descole-Borsini 35934 UAY; GUAIRA: Villarrico, Jorgensen 3903 (MO). wITHOUT PROVINCE: Hassler 447a (MO, NY), 3379 (NY), 3380 (NY). Pollen grains prolate, ca 17u (E) X ca 25u (P), colpi ca l7u long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Venturi 9825 (MO). 9. Phytolacca weberbaueri H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 49, 1909. (Type Weberbauer 4817, photo F from Bf). PERU: CAJAMARCA: vic of Casa Hacienda, Hutchison & von Bismarck 6349 (F, MO, ja Pollen grains prolate spheroidal, ca 21-224 (E) X ca 24u (P), colpi ca 17u long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Hutchison & von Bismarck 6349 (MO). The description is omitted because of a lack of female specimens. Suzc. 3 PHYTOLACCA. Subg. Euphytolacca Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 31, 1849. Secr. 1 PHYTOLACCA. Sect. Phytolaccastrum H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83, (Heft 39): 50, 1909. 10. Phytolacca icosandra L., Sp. Pl. 631, 1753. (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition 607.4) malabarica e Inst. 2: 484, 1769. mexicana Gaertn., Fruct. 1: 377, pl. " t. 8, 1788, non Crantz (Inst. 2: 484, 1769) sl sie Moench Meth. Suppl. 107, a Sweet, Hort. Brit. ed. 1: E 1827, non Crantz (Inst. 2: 484, 1769) sessiliflora Kunth & Bouche, Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol. acuminata Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13 (2): 33, 1849, nom. nud. pro syn. P. icosandra. longespica Moq., loc. cit. (Type Bates s.n. P icosandra L. var. fraseri Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 34, 1849. (Type Fraser s.n. G, not seen, i n IDC Micro-Edition, Candolle Prodromi Herbarium Sur eur Millsp., Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist, Bot. Ser. 2: 41, 1900. (Type Mill- Spau, icosandra var. angustitepala H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 61, 1909. (Type Kerber 16a, ICT diia . icosandra var. sessiliflora (Kunth & Bouche) H. Walter, loc. cit. Herbs, sometimes woody at the bases, stems angled or grooved, to ca 2 m. Leaves variable, elliptic, to obovate or rarely lanceolate, acute, entire, the bases obtuse to attenuate, up to 16 cm long and 8 cm wide, + glabrous, subsessile to petioles ca 4 cm long. Inflorescences spikes or spike-like racemes, up to 30 cm long, mostly axillary. Flowers mostly sessile or rarely with pedicels to 4 mm long; bract single, lanceolate, ca 4 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long; sepals 5, + equal, broadly elliptic to + lanceolate, ca 3 mm long and ca 2 mm wide, persistent in fruit, pink tinged; stamens ca 8-20, usually in two whorls, on a hypogynous disc, 7S s wee 1968] NOWICKE——PHYTOLACCACEAE 313 the filaments ca 2-2.5 mm long, widened at the bases, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary 6-9 carpellate, united, the styles connivent in flower and recurved. Fruit a berry, dark green to brown, rarely purple, ca 5-7 mm in diam. Mexico, Central America, the West Indies and northern South America. XICO: DURANGO: Palmer 157 (MO). GUERRERO: Hinton 9240 (MO). jarzco: Pringle 9525 (MO). mexico: Ortenburger 16M650 (MO). wicHoAcÁN: Bro. Arséne 8703 (MO); Hinton 12200 (MO), 12852 (MO); Schery 124 (MO). NAYARIT: Jones 23278 (MO). PUEBLA: Pringle 6293 (MO). smaroa: Gentry 5911 (MO). sonora: Gentry 1423 (MO). RA (MO). Costa Rica: Godfrey 66075 (MO). Panama: Lewis et al. 321 (MO). OLOMBIA: CAUCA: El T ambo, Hultén 9 (GH). VENEZUELA: MIRANDA: Los Mariches, Pittier 11965 (MO). Pollen grains prolate, ca 26u (E) X ca 36u (P), colpi ca 26u long, exine ca 2u in thickness, thickened at poles to ca 2.5u, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Gentry 1423 (MO). This is one of the more distinct species of Phytolacca perhaps best recognized by a combination of long inflorescences, almost sessile flowers and two staminal whorls, although any one of these three features alone is not sufficient. l1. Phytolacca octandra L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 631, 1763. (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition 607.1) P. mexicana Crantz, Inst. 2: 484, 1796, non Gaertn. (Fruct. 1: 377, pl. 77, t. 8, 1788) nec Sweet (Hort. Brit. ed. 1, 337, 1827 P. decandra Descourt., Fl. Antill. 5: 32, pl. 312, 1827, non L. (Sp. Pl. ed. 2: 631, 1763) P. octandra var. grandifolia Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 32, 1849. (Type Galeotti 372 P) P. acinosa Pope, Wayside Pl. Hawaii 61, pl. 2. , 1929, non Roxb. (Hort. Bengal. 35, 1814). Herbs, + succulent, to 2 m. Leaves lanceolate, lanceolate-ovate, acute to acute-acuminate, sometimes mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse to attenuate, up to 22 cm long and 7.5 cm wide; subpetiolate to petioles ca 2.5 cm long. Inflorescences spikes or rarely spike-like racemes, up to 14 cm long, axillary or terminal, + scurfy. Flowers sessile or with pedicels to 1 mm long; bract single, ca 2.2-2.5 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long, narrow-lanceolate; sepals 5, subequal, oblong to ovate, ca 2-3 mm long and 1.2-2 mm wide; stamens 8-10, in one whorl, the filaments ca 1.5-1.8 mm long, the anthers < 1 mm long; ovary 7-10 carpellate, united, the styles + connivent. Fruit a berry, 7-10 ribbed, green-black, ca 4.5-6 mm in diam. A + cosmopolitan species. MEXICO: FEDERAL DISTRICT: Lyonnet 220 (K, MO). morros: Clark 7293 (MO). Nuevo LEÓN: Kenoyer s.n. (MO); Meyer & Rogers 2738 (MO); Taylor 195 (MO). san Luis POTOSÍ: umer 674a (MO). WITHOUT STATE: Bourgeau 199 (K). enman & Greenman 5698 (MO). OLOMBIA: NORTE DE SANTANDER: Mutiscua, Killip & Smith 19651 (NY). ENEZUELA: MERIDA: COLONIA TOVAR, Fendler 1085 . (MO, NY). Quebrada de Saisay, Gehriger 26 (MO). MIRANDA: upper Pico de Naiguata, Pittier 6272 (NY). Bouivia: COCHABAMBA: Pocona, Steinbach 8682 (K, MO, NY). Inpa: Kodaikanal, Matthew 1539 (K). [Vor. 55 314 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN aes PREANGER: Schiffner 1932 (A). : 18 mi S of Eldort, Bogdan 1813 (K); Kakamega Forest, Lucas 100 (K); Ngong Hills, _ Kolar 312 (K); vic of Norfolk Hotel, Kiwika 249 (K). SIA! ds View, Noel 2341 ( ies Arrica: Utrecht Natal, Pole- Evans 3894 (K). AUSTRALIA: NEW SOUTH WALES: Constable de (MO). New ZEALAND: Rangitoto I, Walker 4288 Hawar: oAHU: Degener 8892 (MO), 8893 Y Kauai: Forbes 507 (K, MO). Pollen grains prolate, ca 264 (E) X ca 36u (P), colpi ca 21-22y long, exine ca 2.5p in thickness and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Gaumer 674a. (MO). There are suggestions of characteristics of this species in many specimens; bona fide collections of P. octandra may be rather easily identified by the + sessile flowers, inflorescences which are not conspicuously long (as in P. icosandra L.), and which have a relatively short peduncle and a single whorl of stamens. 12. Phytolacca thyrsiflora Fenzl ex J. A. Schmidt in Mart., Fl. Brazil. 14(2): 343, pl. 80, 1872 Herbs to 3 m. Leaves ovate-elliptic to elliptic, + acute, entire or very finely undulate, the bases obtuse to attenuate, up to 14 cm long and 7 cm wide, glabrous; subpetiolate to petioles ca 3 cm long. Inflorescences raceme-like, thyrsiform near the base or often + completely to tip, up to 30 cm long, axillary or terminal, the flowers not crowded at maturity, + scurfy. Flowers with pedicels to 1.4 cm long; bract single, ca 2.5-4 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, sometimes obsolete, ca 1.5-1.8 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, + equal, oblong-ovate, ca 2-3 mm long and 1.5-2 mm wide; stamens 9-12, in one whorl, rarely a partial second whorl, the filaments ca 1.8-2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; ovary 7-9 carpellate and united. Fruit a berry, 7-9 ribbed, green to black, ca 5-7 mm in diam. Brazil, French Guiana ane Paraguay. Bnazi ber Irwin et d 10883 (MO); W of ea Irwin a a 12793 (o. MARANHAO: Maracas sume River, Froes 1997a (K). MINA wir betw Itamuri & Realeza, Duarte & Castellanos 33176 (F); 4 km SE of Vicosa, Irwin 2171 (U S). PERNAMBUCO: Nue Tavares 985 (US). RIO DE JANEIRO: vic of Mangaratiba, Monteiro 3107 (US); vic o de Janeiro, Glaziou 15354 (K). SANTA CATARINA: piss bind Klein 435 (US); din Smith 5800 (US); Caruru de Cacho, Reitz 1889 (NY FRENCH GUIANA: ap 637 (US). PARAGUAY: AMAMBAY: Sierra de Amambay, Hassler 9909 (K, NY). Pollen grains a ca 25u (E) X ca 30u (P), colpi ca 22-23 long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Reitz 1889 (NY). 13. Phytolacca heterotepala H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 51, 1909. (Syntypes: Bourgeau 199 pro parte; Ehrenberg s.n.; Hahn s.n.; Schiede s.n.; Schumann 1185 pro parte; all not seen). Herbs to ca 2 m. Leaves + lanceolate to ovate, acute to acute-mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 13 cm long and 6 cm wide; petioles up to 5 cm long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 25 cm long, mostly axillary, slightly scurfy. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 315 Flowers with pedicels 1-4 mm long; bract single, ca 2.5-3 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 0.8-1 mm long, + awl-shaped; sepals 5(-6-8), unequal, + oblong, ca 3-4 mm long and 1.5-2.2 mm wide, stamens 15-22, in two whorls, the filaments ca 1.8 mm long, the anthers ca 0.9-1 mm long; ovary 8-9 carpellate and united. Fruit a berry, ca 8-9 ribbed, purple-black, ca 6-7 mm in diam. Western United States and Mexico. UNITED STATES: CALIFORNIA: Howell 34602 (US), 34604 (US), 35095 (US), 35121 (US). Mexico: TAMAULIPAs: Viereck 333 (US). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 28u (E) X ca 35u (P), colpi ca 24u long, exine slightly thickend at the poles, sexine finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Howell 34602 (US). The only collection listed in Walter’s (1909) original description which I have seen is Schumann 1185 (US), and I believe this to be P. octandra L. Never- theless, the specimens from California possess the distinctive characters which Walter (1909) cited, i.e. unequal sepal size and two staminal whorls. Specimens collected by Howell in the vicinity of San Francisco, exhibit hybrid characters such as 8-9 sepals, sterility, and thyrsiform inflorescences, particularly Howell 35122 (US), which because of the above anomalies, I do not cite (see Howell, 1960). 14. Phytolacca meziana H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 57, 1909. (based on P. icosandra var. octogyna) P. icosandra L. var. octogyna J. D. Smith, Bot. Gaz. 18: 210, 1893, (Type Heyde & Lux 3031 lectotype selected US). Herbs, somewhat suffrutescent at the base. Leaves lanceolate-elliptic, acute, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 14 cm long and 4.5 cm wide, glabrous; petioles up to 5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, up to 28 cm long, mostly axillary, + scurfy. Flowers with pedicels to 1 cm long; bract single, ca 7-9 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 2 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, + equal, oblanceolate to oblong, ca 4 mm long and 2 mm wide: stamens 15-20, in two whorls, the filaments ca 2-2.2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.9-1 mm long; ovary 7-8(-9) carpellate, united, the styles ca 1.5 mm long, slightly recurved at the tip, the stigma on the upper surface. Fruit a berry, 7-8 ribbed, black, ca 5-6 mm in diam. Central America. GuarEMALA: Heyde & Lux 3031 (US). Cosra Rica: Standley 42697 (US). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 24u (E) X ca 30-3lu (P), colpi ca 19-214 long, exine slightly thickened at the poles, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticu- lated. Pollen examined: Heyde & Lux 3031 (US). 15. Phytolacca rivinoides Kunth & Bouché, Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol. 15, 1848. (Type Moritz s.n., location unknown) P. icosandra Wright, Mem. 268, 1828, non L. (Sp. Pl. 631, 1753). P. bogotensis Miq., Ser. Exot. pl. 6.3, 1842, non H.B.K. (Nov. Gen. Sp. PI. 2: 183, 1817). P. macrostachya Willd. ex Moq. in DC. Prodr. 13(2): 33, 1849, nom. nud. pro syn P. icosandra. P. polystigma Benth. ex Moq., loc. cit. P. polystyla Schomb. ex Moq., loc. cit., 460. [Vor. 55 316 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Herbs, succulent, robust, erect to 5 m. Leaves ovate-elliptic, rarely lanceolate, acute, acuminate, or rarely mucronate entire, the bases obtuse or rarely oblique, up to 21 cm long and 9 cm wide; petioles to 7 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, ca 40-50(-70) cm long, axillary or terminal, robust, the peduncle red-purple. Flow- ers with pedicels 7-13 mm long, filiform in some; bract single, ca 2 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.5-0.7 mm long; sepals 5, + equal, ovate, ca 2 mm long and 1.5 mm wide, white to pink, absent in fruit; stamens 10-17, in two whorls on a hypogynous disc, the filaments ca 1.5-2 mm long, the anthers + globose, < 1 mm long; ovary 10-16 carpellate, united, the styles connivent at the base, free and recurved above. Fruit a berry, juicy, ribbed when dry, purple- black, 2-3 mm in diam and delicate appearing to 5-6 mm in diam and robust. Mexico, south to Bolivia and Brazil, and the West Indies. MEXICO: NUEVO LEON: Frye & Frye 2548 (MO). British Honpuras: Schipp 125 ( : Honpuras: Yuncker et al. 6166 (MO), 8459 (MO). GUATEMALA: Turckheim 11536 (MO). Costa Rica: Dodge & Thomas 4367 (MO), 6406 (MO); Godfrey 67290 (MO); Rojas 205 (MO); Skutch 2919 (MO), 3389 (MO). ANAMA: Blum 1259 (MO); Duke 4351 (MO), 8104 (MO); Ebinger 49 (MO); Hunter & Allen 313 (MO); Lewis et al. 874 (MO); Tyson 2186 (MO), 3364 (MO); Tyson et al. 2922 (MO); von Wedel 833 (MO), 2078 (MO), 2079 (MO), 2631 (MO); Woodson et al. 1392 (MO). Dominican RePusric: Valeur 11 (MO). GuapeLoupe: Duss 2400 (MO). Jamaica: Hespenheide 709 (MO). Purrro Rico: Otero 645 (MO); Stimson 1684 (MO). TRINIDAD: Broadway 6778 (MO). oLoMBIA: PUTUMAYO: Rio San Miguel, Schultes 3646 (MO). SANTA MARTA: s. loc. Smith 1161 (MO), 2664 (MO). VALLE: Jamundi, von Sneidern 4558 (MO). ENEZUELA: MERIDA: Colonia Tovar, Fendler 1084 (MO). Brazil: Acre: NW of Cruzeiro do Sul, Prance 2796 (MO.) amara: vic of Mt Bruyers, Irwin et al. 47328 (MO). OLIVIA: BENE: Werdermann 2165 (MO). ra Paz: S Yungas, Krukoff 10300 (MO). NORDYUNGAS: nr Coroico, Buchtien 4117 (MO). santa cruz: Río Víbora, Steinbach 7574 Peru: cuzco: Quincemil, Vargas 7779 (MO). LORETO: vic of Pongo de Manseriche, Mexia 6231 (MO); Boqueron Padre Abad, Woytkowski 34358 (MO). puno: trail betw Santo Domingo & Machu, Metcalf 30655 (MO). san MARTÍN: vic of Moyobamba, Klug 3494 (MO). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 274 (E) X ca 35u (P), colpi ca 22-234 long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated (Fig. 7). Pollen examined: Frye & Frye 2548 (MO). An easily recognized species because of the very robust racemes, long pedicels and high carpel number. 16. Phytolacca purpurascens A. Br. & Bouche, Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol, app. 13, 1851. (Type Warszewicz s.n., location unknown) Herbs. Leaves elliptic, lanceolate-elliptic, or rarely + ovate, acute or mucro- nate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 22 cm long and 8 cm wide; petioles to 7 cm 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 317 long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 28 cm long, mostly axillary, lightly pubescent. Flowers with pedicels 3-6 mm long; bract single, ca 2.3-2.8 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1.5-1.8 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, subequal, + ovate, ca 2.5 mm long and 1.8-2 mm wide; stamens 13-17(-20), in two whorls, the filaments ca 1.5-1.7 mm long, the anthers ca 0.7-0.8 mm long; ovary (7-8-) 9-10 carpellate, + completely united, the styles + connivent. Fruit a berry, 7-10 ribbed, ca 6-7 mm in diam. Sparsely distributed in the West Indies and reported from Central America (Walter, 1909). Harri: Leonard & Leonard 11631 (MO, US), 13394 (US), 13912 (US), 15454 (US). Granp Banana I.: Lewis 7166 (MO). Pollen grains prolate spheroidal, ca 2íu (E) X ca 30u (P), colpi ca 23u long, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Leonard & Leonard 13912 (US). Phytolacca purpurascens is closely related to P. icosandra but can usually be distinguished from the latter by its longer pedicel, a somewhat unreliable character because of continuous graduation. This taxon may well be of hybrid origin from P. icosandra X P. rivinoides or P. americana. IT. Phytolacca brachystachys Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 31, 1849. (Type Beechey s.n. K) P. abyssinica Hook. & Arn., Bot. Beech. Voy. 94, 1832, non Hoffm. (Comm. Gótting. 12: 27, 1796 P. bogotensis Mann, Proc. Amer. Acad. 7: 198, 1867, non H.B.K. (Nov. Gen. Sp. PI. 2: 183, 1817). Herbs. Leaves + elliptic, acute or mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to l7 cm long and 9 cm wide; petioles to 3.5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, up to 16 cm long, mostly axillary, + scurfy. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 2-2.5 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1-1.5 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, + equal, oblong, ca 3-4 mm long and ca 1.8-2 mm wide; stamens 7-9, in one whorl, the filaments ca 1.5 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; ovary 5-7(-8) carpellate, united the styles connivent or sometimes free. Fruit a berry, 5-7 ribbed, ca 4-6 mm in diam. Hawau: Degener 8891 (MO), 8896 (MO), 8897 (MO); Degener & Wieblse 3302 (MO); Forbes 184 (MO), 208 (MO), 1036 (F, MO); Forbes & Rock s.n. (MO); Fosberg 10946 (F); Heller 2772 (F, MO); Mann & Brigham 426 (F, MO). Pollen grains subprolate, ca 29u (E) X ca 32u (P), colpi ca 22-23u long, exine ca 2.54 in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Heller 2772 (MO). 18. Phytolacca bogotensis H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 2: 183, 1817. P. australis Phil, Anal. Univ. Chil. 43: 536, 1873. (Type Philippi s.n. photo NY, from P. micrantha H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 57, 1909. (Type Loretz & Hieronymus 47 BT) T P. parviflora Hau.-Mer., Apuntes Hist. Nat. 1: 107, 1909. (Type Hauman-Merck s.n., location unknown) [Vor. 55 318 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Herbs, + succulent, to 2 m. Leaves lanceolate to elliptic, acute to + acum- inate, entire, the bases obtuse to attenuate, up to 18 cm long and 7 cm wide; sub- sessile to petioles ca 3.5 cm long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 20 cm long, axillary or terminal, scurfy. Flowers with pedicels ca 2-4 mm long; bract single, 2-3 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1-1.2 mm long, narrow-lanceo- late; sepals 5, subequal, oblong to + ovate, ca 2-3 mm long and 1.2-2 mm wide; stamens 7-10, in one whorl, rarely a partial second whorl, the filaments ca 2mm long, the anthers ca 0.8-0.9 mm long; ovary 7-10 carpellate, united, the styles thin. Fruit a berry, 7-10 ribbed, green-brown, ca 5-6 mm in diam. South America. COLOMBIA: CAUCA: Popayan, n 616 (GH) EcuApon: E of Loja, Espinosa 485 (NY); eastern Río Bamba, Schimpff 791 (MO). CHILE: VALDIVIA: S of José de La Mariquina, Hollermayer OLIVIA: LA PAZ; vic of Sorata, Mandon 1030 (NY); Williams 828 (K, NY). WITHOUT PROVINCE: Misi Mts, Scolnik E 502 (NY). ARGENTINA: CATAM s. loc, Jorgensen 1490 (MO). Jujur: 25 km NW of Jujuy, Eyerdam & Beetle 20007. (MO); a Yala nr Yala, West 6256 (MO). TUCUMÁN: Quebrada de Hules, Venturi 9130 (MO). Pollen grains prolate ca 254 (E) X ca 34u (P), colpi ca 23-24u long, exine ca 2-2.5 in thickness and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Eyerdam & Beetle 22227 (MO). Phytolacca bogotensis is very difficult to separate from P. octandra; the pedicel length, + sessile in the latter species, appears to be the only consistent character. 19. Phytolacca americana L., Sp. Pl. 441, 1753. P. decandra L., Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 631, 1763, non Descourt. (Flor. Med. Antilles 5: pl. 312, 1827). (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition 607.3) vulgaris Crantz, Instit. 2: 484, A rigida Small, Bull. N.Y. Bot. Gard. 3: 422, 1904. (Type Small & Wilson 1893 NY) Herbs, + succulent, to ca 3 m. Leaves lanceolate-elliptic, elliptic or rarely + ovate, acute or sometimes mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 30 cm long and 12 cm wide (occasionally much larger) ; petioles to ca 6 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, sometimes thyrsiform at the bases, up to 30 cm long, mostly axillary, glabrous to lightly scurfy. Flowers with pedicels to 12 mm long; bract single, ca 2-3 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1-1.5 mm long, lanceolate; sepals 5, -- equal ovate and rounded, ca 2.2 mm long and 2 mm wide; stamens ca 10, in one whorl, the filaments ca 2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; ovary ca 10 carpellate, united or sometimes the apices free, the styles mostly connivent in flower. Fruit a berry, ca 10 ribbed, ca 6-8 (-10) mm in diam. Widely distributed in eastern North America and introduced into Europe, Africa and Asia; selected exsiccatae listed. iE ONTARIO: Pul ie-Victorin et al. 56838 (MO); Soper & Shields 377 (MO). NITED STATES: FLORIDA: Hitchcock 301 (NY); Moldenke 250 (MO); O'Neill s.n. MO. Small & Small 4120 (NY), 4682 (NY), 5439 (NY); Small & Wilson 2010 (NY); Tracy 7531 (NY). noana: De 8 (MO). toutsiana: Ball 542 (MO). MASSACHUSETTS: Churchill s.n. (MO); Seymour 265 (MO). mussisstpp1: Pollard 1156 (MO). MissouRI: Eggert s.n. (MO); dpi sn. (MO); Kellogg 1713 (MO). oxtaHoma: Houghton 3936 (MO). TENNESSEE: Ruth 191 (MO). WEST VIRGINIA: Berkley 840 (MO). WISCONSIN: Fasil 27388 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 319 Pollen grains ca 254 (E) X ca 34u (P), colpi ca 23-24u long, exine ca 2u in thickness, slightly thickened at the poles to ca 2n, sexine equal to or greater than nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Soper & Shields 377 (MO). Although P. rigida Small has been considered conspecific with P. americana by many authors, including Sauer (1952), there does seem to be a higher frequency of certain characteristics in specimens from Florida, the type locality for P. rigida. These features include a shorter raceme, hence the specific epithet which refers to the erectness of the inflorescence, and pedicels which are, on the average, a little shorter and stouter than for most individuals of P. americana. Hardin (1964) in a study of the two taxa cited the above observation plus minor differences in leaves, bracteole width, number of fruits, etc., all of which, as his Table 1 (p. 163) indicates, have overlapping measurements. The most striking discovery was the difference in the xylem of the peduncle, in which P. rigida averages a 70% thicker cylinder. In spite of Hardin's results, and he makes no definite designation of the status of the Florida collections, I tend to favor a reduction of P. rigida to P. americana in view of the widespread morphological variation in the entire genus. Hardin's tentative conclusions and ideas are worthy of mention because of their applicability to the problem of speciation in Phytolacca in general (Hardin, 1964, . 162): “P. rigida may represent an ecological variant of P. americana which is not yet distinct; ie, an early stage in sympatric speciation. On the other hand, two distinct species may have existed at one time and with forced migration and sympatry during Pleistocene or before, the old barriers and discontinuities have been eliminated. A third possibility is that P. americana has been “contaminated” by introgression from a tropical or subtropical species such as P. octandra which has an erect raceme, by way of Mexico or the Caribbean." SECT. 2 PuvroLAccomzs H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39):61, 1909. 20. Phytolacca pruinosa Fenzl., Del. Sem. Hort. Vindob 8, 1855. (Type Kotschy s.n. W, not seen) Herbs, dioecious, stems = succulent, mostly unbranched, to 1 m. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, acute, rarely mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse-attenuate, up to 10 cm long and 4 cm wide; petioles indistinct. Inflorescences racemes, the staminate up to 12 cm long, the pistillate up to 7 cm long and densely flowered. Staminate flowers with pedicels up to 6 mm long; bract single, ca 2.5-3 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long, located ca midway on pedicel; sepals 5, -- equal, ovate ca 3.5-4 mm long and ca. 2.5 mm wide, green to pink; stamens 19-20, in two whorls, the filaments ca 2-2.5 mm long, widened at the base, the anthers ca 1-1.2 mm long; ovary rudimentary, 5-7 carpellate. Pistillate flowers with pedicels up to 3.5 mm long; single bract, ca 2.2-3 mm long; two bracteoles, ca 1.8-2 mm long; sepals 5, + equal, ovate-triangular, ca 3-3.5 mm long and 2.5-5 mm wide, green to pink; stamens rudimentary and much reduced, 12-15, appear- [Vor. 55 320 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN ing to be deposited in two whorls; ovary 6-9 carpellate, united, the styles recurved. Fruit a berry, 6-9 ribbed, ca 5-6 mm in diam; seeds reniform, ca 3.5 mm long. Endemic to Cyprus. Cyprus: Haradjian 487 (MO); Oswald 147 (K); Young 7808 (K). Pollen grains ca 27u (E) X ca 34u (P), colpi 20-234 long, exine slightly thickened at the poles, sexine medium finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Young 7808 (K). EXCLUDED SPECIMENS: Horticultural specimens from Kew, the type collections of P. clavigera W. W. Smith (Bot. Mag. 149: pl. 8978, 1923). At first glance this specimen appears to be the robust Asian species, P. acinosa; however, the carpels are definitely united. Since it is of horticultural origin, I hesitate to treat it as a distinct species until I have seen more collections. Pittier 6272 (US). This is the type collection of P. venezuelensis O. C. Schmidt (Notizbl. Ber. 8: 312, 1923), which in my opinion is a stunted specimen of P. octandra. The carpel connation is not characteristic of subg. Pircuniopsis, to which Schmidt assigned it. RIVINOIDEAE Il. Subf, Rivinoideae Nowicke, subf. nov. Ovarium unicarpellatum et uniovula- tum; achenium, drupa, samara, vel utriculus. (Type Rivina L.) A. Tribe Seguierieae Nowicke, trib. nov. Inflorescentiae paniculiformes; samara. (Type Seguieria Loefl.) a. Calyx of 4 sepals, becoming woody and remaining erect in fruit ...................---- 4, Gallesia aa. Calyx of 5 sepals, herbaceous and becoming reflexed in fruit 5. Seguieria 4, GALLESIA Gallesia Casar., Stirp. Bras. Dec. 5: 43, 1843. Monotypic. 1. Gallesia integrifolia (Spreng.) Harms in Engler & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 2(16): 144, 1934. (Neotype selected: Ducke 24211 US, isoneotypes G, S) Thouinia dui dae Spreng, Neue Entdeck. 2: 155, 1821. Crataeva gorarema Vell., Fl. Flum. 1: 191; 5: ue 1805 Gallesia Rid un Casar. , Nov . Stirp. B as. Dec. 1843. G. gorazema (Vell.) Moq. in DC, Pro dr. 1302): 8, a ae Vauthier 146 G, P) Trees to 30 m. Leaves ovate to ovate-elliptic, acute to acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse or slightly cordate, up to 12 cm long and 6.5 cm wide, glabrous, + leathery; petioles ca 2-3 cm long. Inflorescences irregular panicles, ca 10-20 cm long, axillary or terminal, softly pubescent. Flowers perfect, + actinomorphic, + sessile; bract single, ca 1.2 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 1.2 mm long; sepals 4, somewhat unequal, ovate, ca 4 mm long and 1.4-2.5 mm wide, green-brown, leathery, pubescent, thickened at the base, erect in fruit and becoming enlarged and the margins split; stamens numerous, irregularly deposited, the filaments ca 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 321 1.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long; ovary 1-carpellate, compressed laterally, the style flattened, the stigma papillose on one edge. Fruit a samara, ca 2.5-3 cm long, brown, the non-stigmatic edge gradually curved or + constricted at the base; seed one, ovoid to elliptic, compressed laterally. Central South America: Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador and Peru. Pollen grains single, subprolate, ca 21-224 (E) X ca 24-25 (P), 3-colporoi- date, colpi ca 9-10 long, os irregular, ca 4u wide and + as long as colpi, exine ca 1.74 in thickness, ca 2u at the poles, sexine + equal to nexine and + smoot Although clearly related to the large genus Seguieria Loefl. by its almost identi- cal flower plan and samara fruit, Gallesia is nevertheless easily identifiable by its 4-merous calyx, which has a woody texture and remains erect in fruit. Gallesia ovata O.C. Schmidt is here reduced to a variety of G. integrifolia (Spreng.) Harms for the following reasons: while there appears to be some variation in the shape of the samara wing, the condition is somewhat indeterminate, and the wider leaves cited for G. ovata do not constitute a distinguishing character. a. Samara wing with gradual taper la. G. integrifolia var. integrifolia aa. Samara wing with a constricted basal portion Ib. G. integrifolia var. ovata la. Gallesia integrifolia (Spreng.) Harms var. integrifolia. Botivia: LA paz: San Bartolomé, Krukoff 10118 (G, S, US). BraziL: ACRE: upper Rio Jurupary, Krukoff a (G, S, US); Seringal, Ducke 24212 S). E II 1014 (S, US). PARANÁ: Patrimonio, Dusen 16786 (S). RIO DE JANEIRO: Copacabana, Glaziou 4753 (S). ECUADOR: EL ae vic of Piedras, Little 6621 (US). PERU: JU atipo, Vasquez Pollen ah Ducke 24211 (US). lb. Gallesia integrifolia (Spreng.) Harms var. ovata (O.C. Schmidt) Nowicke, stat. nov. G. ovata O. C. Schmidt, Repert. Sp. Nov. 32: 97, 1933. (Type Raimondi 11606 BT) BrazIL: ACRE: nr mouth of Rio Macauhan, Krukoff 5405 (G, S, US). The Krukoff collection is cited by Macbride in the Flora of Peru (1936) as Gallesia integrifolia even though he recognizes both "species." It differs, however, from all other collections of Gallesia in the constriction of the samara wing near the base. 5. SEGUIERIA nds Loefl., Iter Hispan. c E (Type S. americana L.) Seguiera Adans., Fam. Pl. 2: 443, 1 Mie ae O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. P A 550, 1891. Trees, shrubs, or lianas. Leaves lanceolate, lanceolate-elliptic to ovate, acute to mucronulate, entire, the bases obtuse to slightly rounded, papery to + leathery, mostly glabrous; petiolate or subpetiolate; stipular thorns present or absent on flowering branches, sometimes conspicuous on older branches. Inflorescences ir- regular panicles, rarely + racemes, axillary or terminal, mostly pubescent. Flowers perfect, + actinomorphic, pedicellate; bract single, awl-shaped, sometimes keeled [Vor. 55 322 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN at the base; bracteoles two, or rarely absent, mostly awl-shaped; sepals 5, + equal, oblong to oblanceolate, somewhat veined, reflexed in fruit; stamens co, generally in 2-3 irregular whorls, the filaments + filiform, the anthers linear; ovary l-carpel- late, compressed laterally, the styles flattened, the stigma lightly papillose on one edge. Fruit a samara, the base or ovary with or without a tubercle and ridges or winglets, green to black on drying, the stigmatic edge convex, straight, or concave; seed one, ovoid (Fig. 2). South America. Pollen grains single, prolate, ca 15-224 (E) X ca 25-30u (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 18-25 long, exine ca 1.5-2q in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and almost smooth. In 1909 Walter described the genus Seguieria with 23 species in two sections. The sect. 1 Euseguieria H. Walter, is characterized by a small tubercle and ridges at the base of the samara and includes 13 species. The sect. 2 Seguieriella H. Walter has samaras lacking the above characters and includes the remaining species, Specific alignments within the sections are very difficult and the flowers, and in most instances the fruits, do not yield good distinctive characters. My treat- ment of the genus is admittedly based on insufficient material, even though all Fig. 2. Seguieria L. samara types. A, S. coriacea Benth.; B, S. foliosa Benth.; C, S. vauthieri Moq; D, S. floribunda Benth.; E, S. parvifolia Benth. A after Regnell III 1013 (US); B after Schomburgk 661 (K); C after Vauthier 29 (K); D after Gardner 722 (US); E after Schwarz 4256 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 323 loans from the world’s major herbaria included a request for specimens. In view of Walter’s high number of species, I think two conclusions are possible; firstly, that the group has not been well collected and distributed, or secondly, that as so many species are based on only one collection, they may represent extreme forms of polymorphic species. Undoubtedly both factors plus the lack of fruiting material have contributed to great difficulty with the genus. It is badly in need of mono- graphic revision. The original treatment of sect. 1 was severely limited by lack of material for many of the species which Walter authored. However, after an examination of type material at Kew and subsequent borrowing of many of these collections, I have recognized and described nine of the 13 species and transferred one, S. brevithyrsa H. Walter, to sect. 2. To my knowledge, I have not seen specimens of S. inermis H. Walter and S. wangerinii H. Walter and omit their treatment; and based on a photo of the type, S. pachycarpa H. Walter has been reduced to S. foliosa Benth. Even though most descriptions are from type material, I wish to emphasize that the entire treatment of the section is highly provisional due to lack of additional collections to reinforce the validity of species, The sect. 2 Seguieriella, which included 10 species according to Walter (1909), is here reduced to six or possibly seven species, not including the transfer of S. brevithyrsa. Seguieria paraguayensis Morong, S. macrophylla Benth. and S. glaziovii Briq. are all rather distinct species. Seguieria affinis Heimerl (including S. rigida H. Walter) is very close to S. glaziovii and may prove to be conspecific; the former has very long stipules on the older stems, a character not specifically listed for S. glaziovii, which may be lacking on the latter specimens due simply to poor collect- ing techniques. Two wide ranging and very variable species, S. parvifolia Benth [including S. votschii H. Walter and S. guaranitica Speg.; the latter reduction agrees with Heimerl (1934)] and S. americana are very difficult to define, and the determiner must almost resort to utilizing these two complexes as “catch-alls” for specimens which are not readily identifiable as one of the more distinct species. Even so, I think in most instances the specimens would be correctly classified. Seguieria mammifera H. Walter is not treated due to lack of material. The photo of the type (Riedel s.n.) does very little to elucidate the species characteristics. Following the Code, the sect. Seguieriella, which contains the type S. ameri- cana, must become sect. Seguieria, and sect. Euseguieria I have renamed sect. Walteria. a. Samaras with ridges or winglets and/or a tubercle at the base ..... Sect. 1. Walteria b. Leaves leathery. Leaves + lanceolate, or if lanceolate-elliptic then at least some 10 cm d jose crowded, the largest < 10 cm long; inflorescences mostly axillary and < 10 cm long .......... desto. S. langsdorffii dd. Leaves not crowded, at least some > 10 cm long; inflorescences mostly > 10 cm long and axillary or terminal -a . S. longifolia cc. Leaves + ovate, elliptic-ovate, or if rarely elliptic-lanceolate then < 10 The piense edge of the samara wing convex, or if not distinctly so, then with the non-stigmatic edge arising from the base of the ovary. [Vor. 55 324 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN f. PE edge of samara wing constricted near the top o nt the ovary, and wings < 15 mm at its widest point ........ 3. S. ee ff. ns stigmatic edge of samara wing arising conspicuously from the ovary, at least some wings 16-20 mm at widest 4. S. vauthieri ee. The sigma edge + straight or concave, the non-stigmatic edge ticeably miri from the base of the ovary ..............—...... 5. S. coriacea bb. Leaves no distinctly leathe ast some leaves with, ding h. Stipules small, ings straight; leaves ovate to ovate- rounded, the bases rou xis 6. S. alberti hh. Stipules 2-3 mm long, recurved; leaves ovate-elliptic to ovate, the use 7, S. emarginata gg. pis without retus Leaves e de to ovate-lanceolate, at least some 10-11 cm jus owering branches without stipules; inflorescences mostl 8 terminal s. UR ii. Leaves ovate, the largest < 10 cm long; flowering branches with recurved stipules; inflorescences mostly axillary 9. S. foliosa aa. Samaras without protuberances at the base Sect M Picadas e Bracteoles absent; leaves ovate to + rounded, pale green on dry 10. S. pon M ee. Without the above combination of characters f. Leaves + lanceolate-elliptic, iden ously mucronate. g. Samaras black on drying, the stigmatic ae + straight, a small d 11 protuberance near the distal en S. glaziovii gg. Samaras brown on drying, the stigmatic edge convex and per tapering at the distal portion 12. S. affinis ff. Leaves not lanceolate and not conspicuously mucro h. Climbers; leaves ovate to + elliptic, the stipules thick and recurved; samaras black or dark brown on drying, distal protuberance on wing absent. i. Leaves large, ovate, the bases + rounded; samaras brown o drying 5. R ii. E sk + elliptic, the bases + obtuse; samaras blac 14. S. brevithyrsa n dry hh. Without e above combination of charact amara wing with protuberance; Telus generally elliptic or ovate-elliptic, the stipules + straight; widespread. ....... 15. S. parvifolia jj. Samara wing without protuberance; leaves more ovate, or ovate- rounded, the stipules recurved; mostly from Colombia ....16. S. americana Sect. 1 Walteria Nowicke, nom. nov. (Type selected: S. floribunda Benth.) sect. Euseguieria H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV 83 (Heft 39): 87, 1909. I. Seguieria langsdorffii Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 6, 1849. (Type Langsdorff s.n. Albertokuntzea langsdorffii (Moq.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl, 2: 550, 1891. Trees to ca 15 m. Leaves crowded, lanceolate or lanceolate-elliptic, acute to mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse or attenuate, up to 10 cm long and 4 cm wide, + leathery; petioles to ca 1 cm long; stipules to 5 mm long, erect, slender. In- florescences + racemes or weak panicles, up to 10 cm long, mostly axillary, sparsely pubescent. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.5 mm long, awl-shaped and keeled at the base; bracteoles two or none, ca 0.5 mm long; sepals 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 325 oblong, ca 2.5-3 mm long and 1.8-2.3 mm wide: filaments ca 2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-1.8 mm long. Samara unknown. BRAZIL: BRASILIA: s. loc., Riedel s.n. (GH). MINAS GERAES: s. loc., Langsdorff s.n. (K). RIO DE JANIERO: vic of Rio de Janeiro, Glaziou 8259, (K); s. loc., Filho 98 (F, MO). wirH- OUT sTATE: Gardner s.n. (BM). Pollen grains ca 15u (E) X ca 25u (P), colpi ca 18-194 long. Pollen examined: Riedel s.n. (GH). 2. Seguieria longifolia Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc. London 18: 235, 1839. (Type Pohl s.n. K Albertokuntzea longifolia (Benth.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 290, 1891. Trees or shrubs? Leaves lanceolate to lanceolate-elliptic, acute, entire, the bases obtuse to slightly rounded, up to 13 cm long and 4 cm wide, + leathery; petioles ca 4-7 mm long, stipules small, ca 1-2 mm on flowering branches and re- curved. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, up to 17 cm long, axillary or terminal, sparsely to densely villous. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 0.5-0.7 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblong, ca 3-4 mm long and 1.5-2.5 mm wide; filaments ca 2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-1.8 mm long; ovary with winged and/or ridged base. Samara unknown. Brazil: BRAsILIA: Mathea barboso, Pohl s.n. (K). wirHour srate: Pohl 3747 (F); Sello s.n. (K). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. The specimens cited have minor variation in their leaf shape, ie. the tip and the base. While I include the Sello collection with some reservation, I believe this to be the best decision until further collections are observed. 3. Seguieria floribunda Benth., Trans, Linn. Soc. London 18: 235, 1839. (Type Gardner 722 BM, F, K, P, US) Albertokuntzea floribunda (Benth.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen, Pl. 2:550, 1891. Shrubs or woody vines. Leaves elliptic-ovate to elliptic-lanceolate, acute, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 10 cm long and 6 cm wide; petioles ca 2-4 mm long; stipules 0.5-4 mm long, recurved. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, ca 18-22 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Flowers with pedicels to 6 mm long; bract single, « 1 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, < 1 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblong, ca 4.5-6 mm long and 2-3 mm wide; filaments ca 1.5-1.8 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-1.8 mm long. Samara ca 3.5-4 cm long, brown, the base with prominent winglets, the stigmatic edge convex (Fig. 2D). Brazil and Peru. BRAZIL: MINAS GERAES: s. loc., Regnell III 1013 (US, in 1845). WITHOUT STATE: Gardner 722 (BM, F, K, P, US). PERU: MADRE DE pios: Río Acre, Ule 9487 (K, US). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. The Ule specimens with the numbers 9487 and 9486 on the same sheet (K) are cited by Macbride in the Flora of Peru (1936) as S. foliosa Benth. I have seen the types of both species, and while the Ule collections are not identical to either, they are much closer to S. floribunda than to S. foliosa. [Vor. 55 326 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 4. Seguieria vauthieri Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 7, 1849. (Type Vauthier 29 K) Albertokuntzea vauthieri (Moq.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 550, 1891. Trees or shrubs? Leaves ovate, obtuse, entire and slightly inrolled, the bases obtuse, up to 3 cm long and 4 cm wide, somewhat leathery; petioles ca 3-4 mm long, the stipules very small, ca 1 mm long or absent. Inflorescences panicles, weakly so, ca 13 cm long, terminal, + glabrous. Flowers with pedicels to ca 7 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.8-1 mm long; sepals and stamens unknown. Samara ca 3.5-4 cm long and 1.6-2 cm wide, brown, the stigmatic edge + convex, the non-stigmatic edge arising from the base of the ovary (Fig. 2C). Known only from a single fruiting collection. Bnazir: Brasilia, Vauthier 29 (K). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. Walters (1909) concept of this species is erroneous. His description is based solely on one of the confusing Regnell III 1013 collections (1864) of which there appear to be three, all collected on different dates, 1845, 1855 and 1864. The 1864 collection bears Walter's determination as well as the location of Caldas. This specimen differs markedly in samaral characters from that of Vauthier 29 (K), the type collection of S. vauthieri. I have included Regnell III 1013 (1864 & 1855), as well as an unnumbered Regnell collection from 1866, under S. coriacea Benth. because of their similarity in leaf shape, stipule size and direction, and inflorescence size and position, to that of the type for this species, Blanchet 2908. 5. Seguieria coriacea Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc. London 18:235, 1839. (Type Blanchet 2908 BM; photo F, from G) Albertokuntzea coriacea (Benth.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2:550, 1891. Shrubs or small trees. Leaves elliptic-lanceolate, acute to slightly mucronulate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 8 cm long and 3.5 cm wide, + leathery; petioles ca 3.5 mm long; stipules up to 13 mm long, + straight to slightly recurved. In- florescences panicles, irregular, up to 40 cm long, axillary or terminal, lightly pubescent, + woody. Flowers with pedicels to 6 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblanceolate, up to 4 mm long and 2-2.6 mm wide; filaments ca 1.8-2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long. Samara ca 3.5-4 cm long and ca 1.7 cm wide, brown-green, the base with prominent winglets, the stigmatic edge concave (Fig. 2A). BRAZIL: BAHIA: Acurua, Blanchet 2908 (BM; photo F, from G). MINAS GERAES: S. loc., Regnell III 1013 (K, in 1855; US, in 1864), s.n. (US, in 1866). Pollen grains ca 184 (E) X ca 27u (P), colpi ca 19u long. Pollen examined: Regnell 1013 (K). The specific epithet which Bentham (1839) applied to this species is perplex- ing with regard to the BM collection of Gardner 2908. Of the six species which he described, this specimen has perhaps the least coriaceous leaves. A photo (F from G) of a more mature portion of the type does appear to have the coriaceous leaves characteristic of the Regnell collections. For the present I am assuming, based on 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 327 Bentham’s description of the leaves (Bentham, 1839, p. 235) “foliis subsessilibus oblongis obtusissimis coriaceis" and choice of names in light of the remaining collections on which he based five other species, that he saw extensive material of Gardner 2908 and that the BM specimen represents an immature leaf stage. See also the discussion of S. vauthieri. 6. Seguieria alberti H. Walter, Repert. Sp. Nov. 8: 79, 1910. (based on S. elliptica) S. elliptica H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 89, 1909, non Fries (Ark. Bot. Stockh. 8:20, 1909). (Type Glaziou 8260 K) Trees or shrubs? Leaves ovate to ovate-orbicular, entire, obtuse and + retuse, the bases rounded or slightly obtuse in immature leaves, up to 6 cm long and 3.5 cm wide; petioles ca 3-6 mm long, stipules on flowering branches ca 2 mm long, horizontal to + ascending. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, axillary or terminal, up to 10 cm long, + villous. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblong, ca 4-5 mm long and 2-2.5 mm wide; filaments 2.5-3 mm long, the anthers ca 1-1.2 mm long; ovary with ridges in mature flowers. Samara unknown. BRAZIL: RIO DE JANEIRO, vic of Rio de Janeiro, Glaziou 8260 (K, 2 e F, from B & G). No e examined due to paucity of flowering materi T. Seguieria emarginata H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 89, 1909. (Type Glaziou 5730 K) Trees or shrubs? Leaves ovate-elliptic to ovate, entire, blunt-acute and retuse, the bases obtuse, up to 8 cm long and 5 em wide; petioles 5-7 mm long, stipules on flowering branches ca 2-3 mm long and recurved. Inflorescences panicles, ir- regular, axillary or terminal, up to 8 cm long; + glabrous. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long, awl shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblong, ca 4-5 mm long; filaments ca 3-4 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long; ovary with ridges in mature flowers. Samara unknown. BRAZIL: RIO DE JANEIRO: s. loc, Glaziou 5730 (K; photo F, from B). No pollen examined due to paucity of flowering material When the type specimens of S. emarginata (Glaziou 5730) and S. alberti (Glaziou 8260), both from Kew, are compared, they are markedly different in leaf shape, S. emarginata being conspicuously more elongate. However, a photo (F) of the Berlin specimen of Glaziou 5730 has very broad leaves, and at first glance is almost more similar to Glaziou 8260 than it is to the Kew specimen of Glaziou 3730. Nevertheless I have treated the two as separate taxa based on leaf shape, and the stipule size and direction, but I admit that the distinction is somewhat obscure. 8. Seguieria laurifolia H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 92, 1909. (Type Glaziou 2488 K; photo F, from C) Trees or shrubs? Leaves lanceolate-elliptic to = ovate-lanceolate, acute, entire, the margins + inrolled, the bases obtuse, up to 11 cm long and 4 cm wide; petioles up to 5 mm long, stipules absent on flowering branches. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, rarely + racemes, up to 15 cm long, axillary or terminal, [Vor. 55 328 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN lightly villous. Flowers with pedicels to 6 mm long; bract single, < 1 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, < 1 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals oblong, ca 4 mm long and 2.2-2.5 mm wide; filaments ca 3 mm long, the anthers ca 1.8 mm long; ovary appearing to have prominent winglets. Samara unknown. Known only from the type collection. BRAZIL: RIO DE JANEIRO: Juiz de Fora, Glaziou 2488 (K; photo F, from C). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. 9. Seguieria foliosa Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc. London 18: 236, 1839. (Type Schom- burgk 661 BM, F, K) S. pachycarpa H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 93, 1909. (Type Riedel s.n., photo m Bf) Trees or shrubs to ca 3 m. Leaves ovate-elliptic, entire, acute to slightly mucronulate, the bases obtuse to somewhat rounded, up to 12 cm long and 5 cm wide, mostly 6-8 cm long and ca 4 cm wide; petioles ca 3-5 mm long; stipules to 10 mm long, recurved. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, or + racemes, up to 12 cm long, mostly axillary, lightly pubescent. Flowers with pedicels to 1 cm long; bract single, ca 1-1.5 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.6-0.8 mm long, awl- shaped; sepals oblanceolate, ca 3-4 mm long and 1.5-2 mm wide; filaments ca 2 mm long, somewhat thickened at the base, the anthers ca 1 mm long. Samara up to 3.5 cm long, brown, the base ridged, the stigmatic edge + straight to slightly convex, the non-stigmatic edge + straight (Fig. 2B). Brazil and Guyana. BRAZIL: CEARA: Maracanau, Ducke 2576 (NY) Guyana: Rupununi Dist, Irwin 797 (US); s. loc, Schomburgk 661 (BM, F, K). Pollen grains ca 25u (E) X ca 30-3lu (P), colpi ca 22-23u long. Pollen examined: Ducke 2576 (NY). SECT. 2 SEGUIERIA. sect. Seguieriella H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 94, 1909. 10. Seguieria paraguayensis Morong, Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 7:210, 1893. (Type Morong 690 MO) Trees or shrubs. Leaves ovate, mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse to slightly rounded, up to 8.5 cm long and 6.5 cm wide, glabrous, += leathery; petioles up to 1.5 cm long; stipules up to 3 mm long, + straight to erect, mostly on older branches. Inflorescences panicles, ca 6 cm long, mostly axillary, few-flowered, lightly pubescent. Flowers with pedicel length variable, up to 7 mm long; bract single, ca 2.5-2.8 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles absent; sepals + equal, oblong. ca 4 mm long and ca 2 mm wide; filaments ca 2.5-3 mm long, the anthers ca 2 mm ia Samara up to 3 cm long, yellow-brown, » stigmatic edge convex. : San Bernardino, Hassler 3712 (F, NY), 3887 (F, NY); vic of Ypacaray, ee 7. 19400 (M MO, NY); s. loc, Fiebrig 869 (A, F, Us Hasler 1764 (NY), s.n. (F), Morong 690 (MO). Pollen grains ca l7u (E) X ca 26u (P), colpi ca 19u long. Pollen examined: Hassler 12400 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE——PHYTOLACCACEAE 329 lI. Seguieria glaziovii Briq., Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve 4: 214, 1900. (Type Glaziou 13126 G, K) Trees to 30 m. Leaves elliptic-lanceolate, mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 11 cm long and 4.5 cm wide, + leathery; petioles ca 0.5-1 cm long; stipules ca 0.5 cm long, slender. Inflorescences irregular panicles, up to 18 cm long, mostly axillary, rarely terminal, rachis pubescent. Flowers with pedicels up to 8 mm long; bract single, up to 1.5 mm long, awl-shaped, keeled at the base; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals subequal, ca 4-5 mm long and 2-2.5 mm wide, veined, prominently so in fruit; filaments ca 3 mm long, the anthers ca 2.2 mm long. Samara ca 2.5-3 cm long, black on drying, the stigmatic edge + straight. BRAZIL: SANTA CATARINA: Brusque, Klein 288 (NY), 290 (NY); Reitz 3464 (US); Ibirama, Reitz & Klein 1563 (NY); Itajai, Klein 1183 (NY), Reitz & Klein 2257 (NY, US), 2409 (NY, US). Pollen grains ca 18-194 (E) X ca 29-30u (P), colpi ca 25g long. Pollen examined: Reitz & Klein 2409 (NY). 12. Seguieria affinis Heimerl in von Wettstein, Ergebn. Exped. Sudbrasil 1901 1: 6, 1908. (Lectotype selected: Novaes 1027 US; syntype Novaes 1026 WU, not seen). S. rigida H. Walter, Pflanzenr. ae (Heft 39): 98, 1909. (Syntypes de Moura 985 LE, Bf; Riedel s.n. LE, Bt, all not seen) Trees, to 18 m. Leaves c ede mucronulate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 11 cm long and 5 cm wide, glabrous to slightly pubescent, + leathery; petioles to 6-7 mm long; stipules to 4.5-5 cm long on older stems, slender. In- florescences panicles or racemose, to 20-25 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Flowers with pedicels ca 6-7 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.5 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.6 mm long, + triangular; sepals subequal, oblong and nar- rowed at the base, ca 4.5 mm long and 3-3.5 mm wide, veined; filaments ca 3.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1.7 mm long. Samara ca 3.5 cm long, brown, the base darkened, the stigmatic edge convex. Brazil. at GERAES: rd to Barroso, Mexia 4444 (BM, F, MO); rd to Sáo Miguel, Mexia 4358 (BM, F, K, MO). sao PAULO: Campinas, Novaes 1027 (US). Pollen grains ca 18-194 (E) X ca 28-29% (P), colpi ca 21-22u long. Pollen examined: Mexia 4358 (F). 13. Seguieria macrophylla Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc. London 18: 235, 1839. (Type Schomburgk 348 K) Albertokuntzea macrophylla (Benth.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2:550, 1891. Lianas? Leaves ovate-elliptic, acute, entire, the bases rounded-obtuse, up to 17 cm long and 9 cm wide, leathery; petioles ca 0.5-1 cm long; stipules up to 6 mm long, recurved, stout. Inflorescences panicles, up to 40 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Flowers with pedicels ca 6 mm long; bract single, ca 1.2 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, awl-shaped; sepals subequal, ca 4 mm long and 1.6-2.4 mm wide; filaments ca 2.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1.7 mm long. [Vor. 55 330 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Samara up to 3.1 cm long, brown-black on drying, the stigmatic edge + straight. Brazil, Guyana, Peru and Venezuela. BRAZIL: AMAZONAS: nr mouth of Rio Embira, Krukoff 5206 (A). MARANHAO: Marac sume River Basin, Krukoff 1924 (A, BM, MO). para: Belem, Archer 7936 (F, MO); Bouche de lac de Faro, Ducke 8657 (US). GUYANA: Essequibo River, Schomburgk 348 (K); Kanuku Mts, Smith 3650 (A). Peru: LORETO: Yurimaguas, Poeppig 2176 ZUELA: DELTA: Cano del Corisal, Bond et al. 208 (GH). WITHOUT PROVINCE: Sacupana, Rusby & Squires 57 (F, MO). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. 14. Seguieria brevithyrsa H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV 83 (Heft 39): 87, 1909. (Type Rusby 1353 BM, GH, NY) S. inerensis Britton, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 48:331, 1921. (Type Britton, Freeman & Nowell 2527, probably NY) Shrubs, decumbent, or woody vines. Leaves elliptic-lanceolate, acute-acum- inate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 11 cm long an cm wide, glabrous, + leathery; petioles up to 1 cm long; stipules ca 4-6 mm long, recurved. Inflores- cences racemes or weak panicles, up to 10 cm long, axillary, glabrous, black on drying. Flowers with pedicels up to 6 mm long; bract single, 3-4 mm long, lanceo- late; bracteoles absent; sepals subequal, oblong, ca 5 mm long and 3.5 mm wide; filaments ca 3 mm long, the anthers ca 2 mm long. Samara up to 4.5 cm long, black on drying, + slightly ridged at the base, the stigmatic edge straight or con- cave. Reported only from Trinidad and Bolivia. Trinipan: Smith 2706 (US BOLIVIA: s. YUNGAS: San Berolini Krukoff 10166 (F, MO, US). WITHOUT PROVINCE: Guanai, Rusby 1353 (GH, NY). No pollen examined due to lack of suitable flowering material. Walter (1909) included this species in his sect. 1, Euseguieria, characterized by the extra tubercle at the base of the fruit, a condition difficult to detect in flow- ers, and certainly not visible in the single collection from which he described the species. The collection of Krukoff 10166, in fruit only, which agrees with Rusby 1353 in leaf shape, stipule size and direction, inflorescence characters, and blackening on dessication, as well as in geographic location, has two slight ridges on the flattened sides of the ovary but no evidence of the tubercle. For this reason I have transferred this species to the sect. Seguieria. 15. Seguieria parvifolia Benth., Trans. Linn. Soc. London 18: 235, 1839. (Type Tweedie s.n. K) Seguieria guaranitica Speg., Anal. Soc. Cient. Argent 16: 88, 1883. Albertokuntzea parvifolia (Benth. ) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 550, 1891. m iir R. E. Fries, Ark. Bot Stockh. 8:20, 1909, non H. Walter [Pflanzenr. 3 (Heft 39):89, 1909] (Type Fries 313 US). o + scandent. Leaves ovate-elliptic to ovate, mucronulate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 11 cm long and 5 cm wide, + leathery; petioles to 8-9 mm long; stipules to 1 cm long, + straight, mostly on older branches. Inflorescences 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 331 panicles or rarely racemose, up to 20 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Flowers with pedicels up to 6 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.2 mm long, awl-shaped, membranaceous; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, awl-shaped, membranaceous; sepals subequal, ca 45 mm long and up to 3 mm wide, veined, conspicuously so at the base in fruit; filaments ca 3.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1.7 mm long. Samara up to 4 cm long, green-brown, the stigmatic edge convex, rarely + straight, a small protuberance near the tip (Fig. 2E). A variable species widely distributed in South America. BRAZIL: PARANA: Iguacu Ntl Pk, Pereira 5314 (F). RIO GRANDE Do sur: Vila Elsa, Rambo 41919 (F, MO). ARGENTINA: MISIONES: Acaragua, Bertoni 3172 (F); Campo Grande, Schwarz 4419 (MO); Duranona, Schwarz 4256 (MO); Puerto Iguazu, Meyer 5354 (F); Puerto Rico, Schwindt 578 (MO); Santo Pipo, Schwarz 4267 (MO); Santa Rita Schwarz 4204 (F). sarta: Bosque al Sud, Lillo 11266 (F); La Callera, Pierotti 203 (F); betw El Piquete & Palmero, Ragonese 88 (F). PARAGUAY: CENTRAL DEPT: Villa Elisa, Pedersen 3152 (MO, US). cama: Villarrico Hassler 3758 (F, MO); s. loc., Hassler 1849e (NY), 3786 (F, NY), 7055 (MO, NY), Morong 645 (MO). Pollen grains ca 21u (E) X ca 28-29, (P), colpi ca l7u long, exine ca lu in thickness. Pollen examined: Hassler 7055 (MO). 16. Seguieria americana L., Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1074, 1759. (Neotype selected: Smith 342 MO, isoneotypes F, US) S. aculeata Jacq., Select. Stirp. Amer. 170, 1763. Albertokuntzea americana (L.) O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 550, 1891. Shrubs, scandent or climbers. Leaves ovate or ovate-elliptic, acute to slightly accuminate and emarginate, the bases obtuse, up to 10 cm long and 7 cm wide, glabrous, papery to slightly leathery; + sessile to petioles 3 mm long; stipules up to 1 cm long, recurved. Inflorescences panicles, up to 15 cm long, axillary or terminal, pubescent. Flowers with pedicels 6-7 mm long, slender; bract single, ca 0.5 mm long, membranaceous; bracteoles two, ca 0.4 mm long, membranaceous; sepals + unequal, oblong, ca 3.5-4 mm long and 1.2-2.5 mm wide; filaments ca 2-2.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1.2 mm long. Samara ca 3.5 cm long, green-brown, the stigmatic edge + straight. South America. COLOMBIA: ATLANTICO: Barranquilla, Dugand 106 (F), 474 (F), 1112 (F); betw Galapa & Baranca, Dugand 272 (F, US); Puerto Colombia, Bro. Elias 1020 (F, US); betw Pon- adera & Santa Rita, Dugand 683 (F); Soledad, Dugand 1128 (F). MAGDALENA: La Paz, Haught 2330 (F). saNTA MARTA: s. loc., Smith 342 (F, MO, US). VENEZUELA: ARAGUA: Tuy Valley, Pittier 12201 (US). Botivia: s. loc., Williams 249 (BM, . PARAGUAY: WITHOUT PROVINCE: Fiebrig 776 (F), Hassler 8393 (F), 11502 (F). Pollen grains ca 21-22u (E) X ca 30u (P), colpi ca 20-21 long. Pollen examined: Dugand 683 (F). Excluded collection: Broadway s.n. (K). This is the type collection for S. cordata Britton (Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 48: 331, 1921), which has neither flowers nor fruit and is impossible to describe or identify. [Vor. 55 332 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN B. Trier RirviNEAE Agardh, Aphor. 218, 1825. Inflorescences spikes or racemes; fruits not a samara. (Type Rivina L.) a. Flowers unisexual; fruits covered with hooked spines; Australia ................ 12, Monococcus aa. Flowers perfect, rarely unisexual; fruits not covered with hooked spines; South and Central America b. Fruit a 4-6 hooked achene; inflorescences elongate spikes; calyx of 4 narrow- lanceolate, erect Sepals ......... ss ll. Petiveria bb. Fruit an utricle or drupe sa hooked; inflorescences racemes; calyx not of 4 narrow- wp erect se low ale or connate at the base in late flower and 9. Hilleria r " d. Leaves + deltoid; stamens 4; fruit a red, iid or purple drupe ....6. Rivina dd. Without the above combination of characte e. Racemes from woody stems, not ae fruit a purple or black drupe 7. Trichostigma ee. Racemes not from woody stems or if so, then pendulous; fruit an utricle. Racemes pendulous; flowers perfect or functionally unisexual, the visit with 4-6 rudimentary stamens, the sepals net- Pio. Ledenbergia vein ff. Racer mes + ; flowers perfect, the stamens 12-25, the sepals with ca 3 Een veins 8. Schindleria 6. RIVINA Rivina L., Sp. Pl. 121, 1753. (Type R. humilis L.) Rivinia L., Gen. PI. ed. 5, 57, 1754. Piercea Mill., Gard. Dict. ed. 7, 1759. e Moench, Me 307, 1194. Tithonia L. ex. O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 552, 1891. imm l. Rivinia humilis L., Sp. Pl. 122, 1753. (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro- Edition 163. p R. laevis L., Mant. R. purpurascens shee pm P]. Illustr. 17, pl. 5, 1808. R. portulaccoides Nutt., Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. IL, 5: 167, 1837. (Type Nuttall s.n. p» For a complete synonomy list, see: Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 48: 76, 1961, By K. Raeder Herbs or subshrubs, woody at the base, to 70 cm. Leaves deltoid to ovate, acuminate, entire, the bases truncate to rounded, rarely oblique, up to 12 cm long and 6 cm wide, glabrous to finely pubescent; petioles up to 6 cm long. In- florescences racemes, up to 15 cm long at maturity, terminal or axillary. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic, with pedicels to 8 mm long in fruit; bract single, ca 1.3-2 mm long, awl-shaped, + deciduous; bracteoles two, ca 0.2-0.3 mm long, closely appressed to the sepals; sepals 4, subequal, oblong, ca 2-3 mm long, white or pink; stamens 4, alternate, the filaments ca 1.2-2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8-1 mm long; ovary globose to elliptic, compressed laterally, I-carpellate, the style short but distinct, ca 0.3-0.5 mm long, the stigma capitate. Fruit a drupe, up to 45 mm in diam, + globose, orange, red, or purple; seed one, lens shaped, ca 2.5-3.5 mm in diam, the testa pubescent. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 333 Southwestern United States to Florida, south through Central and South America to Argentina; also introduced into Africa and reported from Asia and Australia (Heimerl, 1934). ITED STATES: ARIZONA: Gilman 53 (MO); Jones sn. (MO). rromma: Blanton 6426 MO); Cuts 2340 (MO), 5383 (MO); Hitchcock 302 (MO); Hood s.n. (MO); Janish : MO), (MO); Small & Small Es ar Md] 6429 (MO), 9349 (MO); Webber 376 (MO). LOUISIANA: Riddell s.n. (MO); s.n. (MO). oxtaHoma: Houghton 4049 (MO). (MO), s.n. (MO); Mackenzie 48 (MO); Moore & Steyermark 3014 (MO); Mueller 8094 (MO), s.n. (MO); Orcutt 5886 (MO); Palmer 1170 (MO), 9835 (MO), 10170 (MO), 10194 (MO), 10357 (MO), 14351 (MO), 26782 n 30521 (MO); Parks 1359 (MO); Reverchon 812 (MO), 1588 (MO); Ruth 229 (MO), s.n. (MO); Tracy 9351 (M O), 9421 Me Miro 1086 (MO); Trelease s.n. (MO); Ward. s.n. (MO); Wilkinson 155 (MO); Young s.n. (MO). ICO: MO CALIFORNIA: Gentry 4148 (MO); Jones 24020 (MO). CHIHUAHUA: o "1846 MO); Palmer 254 (MO). coanurma: Palmer 729 (MO); Stewart s.n. (MO); 29 (MO). . EVO LEÓN: : 6105 (MO). sonora: Gentry 1078A (MO), 1606 (MO); Wiggins & Rollins 340 (MO); ree 1729 Saeed TAMAULIPAS: Clark 6622 (MO); Meyer & Rogers 2484 (MO); Palmer MO), 136 (MO). yucatan: Gaumer 322 (MO), 1599 (MO); Gaumer et al. 23419 PO. 23561 (MO); Lundell 858 (MO), 942 (MO). WITHOUT STATE: Parry 776 (MO). Bnurrisu Honpuras: Lundell 380 (MO); Schipp 469 (MO) Honpuras: Williams & Molina 10510 (MO). GUATEMALA: p 47631 (MO). ‘A Rica: Gree n & Greenman 5423 (MO); Rojas 412 (MO); Smith A667 (MO); Thomas 6183 (MO). Panama: Allen 336 (MO), 889 (MO); Carleton 52 (MO); Cooper 77 (MO); Duk 5365 (MO); Hunter js Allen 579 (MO); von Wedel 609 (MO), 256 (MO), 2882 (MO); White & White 88 (MO); Woodson & Schery 1028 (MO); Woodson et al. 1807 (MO). Bananas: Wilson 7981 (MO), 8016 (MO), 8138 (MO). Cusa: Combs 153 (MO), 186 (M ros Curtiss 720 (MO); Pollard 3 (MO); Pollard et al. 190 (MO); Van Hermann 335 (Mi Dominican Repustic: Valeur 486 M GRENADA: Broadway s.n. (MO). nc Grisebach s.n. (MO). : Crosby et al. 90 (MO); Hitchcock s.n. (Kingston) (MO), s.n. (Constant Springs) MO); Lloyd 1012 (MO); Nichols 189 (MO); Yuncker 17074 (MO). NIQUE: Sieber 48 (M o RICO: Heller 4523 (MO), 6165 (MO); Otero 385 (MO); Sintenis 306 (MO), 1655 MO; 5527 (MO). ROIX: Eggers s.n. (MO); bins ud 134 (MO). C NR MAGDALENA: Rincon Hondo, Allen 236 a 375 (MO); Santa Marta, Smith 1163 (MO). varre: N of Palmira, Garcia 6394 (M ENEZUELA: AMACURO: Low rinoco, Rusby & ee res 80 (MO). mértpa: Colonia Tovar, Fendler 1088 (MO). wancanrra 1, Miller & Johnston 263 (MO). BRAZIL: CEARA: Baturite, Schery 429 (MO). RIO DE JANEIRO: vic of Rio de Janeiro, Dusen 105 (NY). Unucuar: Herter 10078 (MO). GENTINA: BUENOS AIRES: ne Fal losa 3020 (MO). cHaco: Campo Bonazzola, den 2528 (NY), 2679 s » Jorgensen 1998 (MO). cónposma: Río Grande, Job 469 (NY). 2 s nos js Huidobro 3641 (MO). Formosa: Espinilloa, Morel 7196 (MO A cung Morel 8380 a Siete Palmas, Morel 8448 (MO). ( [Vor. 55 334 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Cabrera 3135 mu ); Coronel Moldes, Meyer 3748 (NY). SANTIAGO DEL ESTERO: Yutuyacu, Legname 43 UAY: pU Jorgensen 3904 (MO, NY). Ypacaray, Hassler 12198 (MO); s. loc., e 263 E Bor. A: LA PAZ: Coripata, Bang 2083 (MO), Buchtien 8257 (NY); Coroico, Buchtien s.n. (MO). SANTA CRUZ: Yorochito, Steinbach 8146 (MO). wrruHour PROVINCE: Bang 574 (MO). Re ear (Galapagos I) Stewart 1434 (MO). Siam: Zimmerm Hn OAHU: Fosberg 9388a (MO). Pollen grains single, prolate, spheroidal, ca 354 (E) X ca 35u (P), 15 colpate, 5 at each pole and 5 perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca llu long, exine ca 2-2,5u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and very finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Orcutt 5886 (MO); Pringle 7428 (MO); Ruth 229 (MO). Rivina humilis is one of the most variable species in the Phytolaccaceae. Walter (1909) recognized three species, R. humilis, R. portulaccoides Nutt., an R. purpurascens Schrad., based on sepal color and size, erectness of the inflores- cence, and relationship of leaf length to inflorescence length, all of which are overlapping characters. I have reduced all to synonomy under R. humilis. Some of the variability may result from the diverse weedy habitats in which Rivina is frequently found—some specimens are almost “stunted” in appearance, wiry, small leaves, short internodes, etc., and present a marked contrast to the more robust collections. However, to give each of these variants species rank is unsound. 7. TRICHOSTIGMA Trichostigma A. Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, Part 2, Hist. Nat. 10: 306, 1845. [Type T. octandrum (L.) H. Walter] Rivinia Mill., Gard. Dict. Abridg. ed. 4, 3, 1754. Villamilla Ruiz & Pavon ex Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 10, 1849. Shrubs or trailing vines. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acute to long acuminate, entire, the bases cordate to obtuse, punctate, + glabrous to sparsely hairy on veins beneath; petiolate. Inflorescences racemes, axillary or terminal. Flowers perfect, + actinomorphic, pedicellate; bract single, awl-shaped to lanceolate; bracteoles two, minute; sepals 4, + equal, oblong, green to white; stamens 8-25, separate, irregularly deposited in two whorls, + sessile or filaments filiform, the anthers linear; ovary l-carpellate, cylindrical to + globose, the style short or absent, the stigma generally penicellate. Fruit a drupe, + globose, black to red-purple; seed 1, lens shaped, the testa red-brown. Northern South America, Central America and the West Indies; a genus of three species. Pollen grains subprolate or prolate spheroidal, ca 27-37 (E) X ca 27-35p (P), 3-colpate with colpi 22-234 long, or 15 colpate, 5 at each pole and 5 per- pendicular to the equator with colpi ca 4.5-6u long, exine ca 2-23y in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine or slightly thicker than nexine, and + smooth. The results of pollen analysis, 3-colpate grains in Trichostigma octandrum L., and 15-colpate in a 5-5-5 pattern for T. polyandrum (Loes.) H. Walter and T. peruvianum (Mog.) H. Walter, are perplexing in view of the very similar floral 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 335 and vegetative morphology, especially of T. octandrum and T. polyandrum. Al- though the two pollen types are very different in terms of aperture structure, I make no recommendation for division of the genus based solely on this feature. a. Leaf bases cordate, petioles o I. T. peruvianum aa. Leaf Dod obtuse, petioles g la b. Stame s 20-25; VC ade p and more than 10 cm long, the pedicels cem bb. Min 8-10; o many and up to 10 cm long; the pedicels u o 10 mm lon T. EAE l. P d peruvianum (Moq.) H. Walter, PHanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 111, 1909 Rivina peruviana Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 10, 1849. Nod dd eh ~ G, K) Villamilla tinctoria Ruiz & Pavon (Fl. Peru Chile, pl. t q., loc Ledenbergia roseo-aenea Lem., Illustr. Hort. 16: pl. 591,1 Villamilla peruviana Hook. Li in Benth. & Ho vd f., Gen. PI. 3: 81, 1880. Rivina roseoaenea (Lem.) O. Ktze., m Gen. P]. 2: 551 , 1891 Villamilla roseo-oenia (Lem. ) Rusby, Mem. Torrey, Bot. Club 6: 110, 1896. Shrubs to 2 m. Leaves Mn acuminate, entire, the bases cordate, up to 27 cm long and 11 cm wide, sparsely hairy on veins beneath; petioles 2-3 cm long, conspicuously pubescent. Inflorescences mostly terminal, 25-30 cm long, rachis pubescent. Flowers with pedicels up to 8 mm long; bract single, 1.5 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.3-0.4 mm long, triangular; sepals ca 4 mm long; stamens 10-12, usually in two whorls, the filaments ca 1.5-2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-1.8 mm long; style short and thick or absent. Drupe ca 4-6 mm in diam, black. Peru and rarely Ecuador. ECUADOR: S. d Mexia 7221 (US). PERU: LORET Se pue Killip & Smith 28690 (F); Klug 2976 (F, MO); Soledad, Killip & Smith 20696 (F); betw Yuramaguas & Balsapuerto, Killip & Smith 28344 (F). SAN MARTÍN: San Roque, Williams 6935 (F). Pollen grains prolate spheroidal, ca 30-324 (E) X ca 30-324 (P), 15-colpate, 9 at each pole and 5 perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca 4.5-5.5u long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and + smooth. Pollen examined: Klug 2976 (MO); Williams 6935 (F). 2. i ee polyandrum (Loes.) H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 112, Rivina icm Loes., Bot. Jahrb. 23: 123, 1896. (Type P 114 BT) Villamilla polyandra (Loes.) H. Walter, loc. cit. 37 (Beibl. 85): 24, 1906. Shrubs, + erect or trailing vines. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acute to long acuminate, the bases obtuse, up to 16 cm long and 8 cm wide, + glabrous; petioles 2-3 cm long. Inflorescences mostly terminal, occasionally axillary, up to 25 cm long. Flowers with pedicels to 15 mm long; bract single, ca 1.5-2 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long; sepals 4-5 mm long, enlarging in fruit to ca 8-0 mm long; stamens 20-25, deciduous, sessile to filaments 0.6 mm long, the anthers ca 2 mm long; the style short, the stigma sparsely penicellate. Drupe ca 4.5-5.5 mm in diam, red-purple. [Vor. 55 336 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Central America. bis Rica: Ph He (MO); Standley & Valedio 44442 (US), 46272 (US). A: von Wedel 714 (M; (MO), 926 (MO), 940 (MO), 1439 (MO), 1547 (MO). 571 MO); M et al. 2 (MO). Pollen grains prolate Min ca 27-294 (E) X ca 27-29u (P), 15 colpate, 5 at each pole and 5 perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca 5-64 long, exine ca 2.34 in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine or slightly thicker than nexine, and + smooth. Pollen examined: Standley & Valerio 44442 (US), 46275 (US). 3. Trichostigma octandrum (L.) H. aol Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 109, 1909. Rivina humilis var. d dn L Sp. PI. 122, 1753. . octandra L., Cent. Pl. 2: 9, 1756. s LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition a dodecandra Jacq. Obs. Bot. 1: 6, 1764. scandens Mill, Gard. Dict. ed. 8, Rivinia no. 2, 1768. mutisii Willd. ex. Schultes, Mant. 3: 305, 1827. . americana Raf., Fl. Tellur. 3: 56, 1837. Trichostigma rivinoides A. Rich. in "Sagra, Hist. Cuba 10: Rivina octandra L. var. obtusifolia Moq. in DC., Prodr. io it om Re LIE . moritziana Klotzsch ex Moq., loc. cit., nom, nud. pro syn. R. octandra. Villamilla octandra Hook. £. in Benth. & Hook. n Gen. Pl. 3: 81, 1880. Shrubs, decumbent or woody vines. Leaves elliptic, acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 13 cm long and 6 cm wide, glabrous or pubescent; petioles ca 2-3 cm long. Inflorescences ca 10 cm long, mostly axillary. Flowers crowded, with pedicels ca 6-7(-10) mm long at maturity; bract single, ca 2-3 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.4-0.5 mm long; sepals 2.5-4 mm long and 1.5-2.5 mm wide, white to green; stamens 8-10, the filaments ca 2-3 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-2 mm long; style absent, the stigma penicellate. Drupe ca 4-5 mm in diam, black. Widely distributed in Central America, the West Indies and South America. UNITED STATES: FLORIDA: Small & Matthaus 9904 (MO). Mexico: GUERRERO: Hinton 14154 (MO). Moretos: Pringle 1 (MO). SINALOA: Lamb 418 es TAMAULIPAS: o 349 (MO). WITHOUT STATE: eee 14677 (US). RITISH HONDURAS: cn 28 (MO). Costa Rica: Smith 2 (MO). Pour Allen 944 Io 17279 (MO); Terry & Terry 1396 (MO). Cuna: Curtiss s nur Pringle 90 (MO); Wright 471 (MO). GUADELOUPE: Duss 2399 (M ys Bertero s.n. (MO Harri: Leonard 9873 MV onard & Leonard 13623 (MO). Jamaica: Harris 11966 (MO); Yuncker 18185 (MO), 18345 (MO). Puerto Rico: Sintenis ee (MO), 1016b (MO). Sr. Cnomx: Ricksecker 343 (MO); ur 325 (MO). 6 ). COLOMBIA: quie Santa Marta, Smith 1718 (MO, NY). VENEZUELA: MÉRIDA: Colonia Tovar, Fendler 1087 (MO, NY). monacas: W of San Barbara, Steyermark "61768 (MO). WITHOUT STATE: Punta Predra J, Rusby & Squires 419 (MO). BRAZIL: AMAZONAs: mouth of Rio SUN Krukoff 4872 (MO); Sáo Paulo de Olivenca, Ducke 404 (MO); Rio Solimoes, Krukoff 45 ARGENTINA: SALTA: nr Tariga River, cnin & Beetle 22800 (MO). wistoNEs: Posadas, Ekman 1884 (GH). 1968] NOWICKE— PHYTOLACCACEAE 337 Borivi4: PANDO: jct of Beni & Madre de Dios Rivers, Rusby 741 (MO). SANTA CRUZ: Missiones wakes Su 2648 J: PERU: SAN M uan Jui, Klug 4185 (MO), 4364 (MO) Pollen Aa P ca 28-29u (E) X ca 34- -35u (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 22-234 long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and + smooth. Pollen examined: Allen 944 (MO), 17279 (MO). Excluded collection: Pollard & Palmer 340 (MO, NY). This is a fruiting speci- men in which the robustness of the inflorescence, i.e. length of pedicel, size of sepals and overall inflorescence length, is characteristic of T. polyandrum, whereas the geographical location and intermediate stamen number, ca 13-14, are typical of T. octandrum. 8. SCHINDLERIA Schindleria H. Walter, Bot. Jahrb. 37(Beibl. 85): 24, 1906. [Lectotype selected: S. racemosa (Britton) H. Walter] Shrubs, rarely herb-like with woody bases, drying black or yellow-green. Leaves elliptic or elliptic to ovate-elliptic, acuminate or acute-acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, slightly cordate, or rarely + oblique, glabrous, or sparsely to densely pubes- cent; petiolate. Inflorescences racemes, in some appearing as a delicate spike in bud, mostly axillary, or axillary and terminal. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic, pedicel- late; bract single, lanceolate and keeled at the base or awl-shaped; bracteoles two, minute, closely appressed to sepals; sepals 4, + equal, oblong and + rounded, veins barely discernible or + prominent; stamens 12-25, irregularly deposited, the fila- ments filiform, the anthers linear; ovary l-carpellate, + cylindrical to ovoid, + compressed laterally, style absent, stigma penicellate. Fruit an utricle, compressed laterally, green-brown; seed 1, lens shaped, testa shiny black. Two species in Peru and Bolivia. Pollen grains single, subspheroidal, ca 17-214 (E) X ca 17-2lu (P), 12-17 pantoporate, ora ca 3-3.5u in diam, exine ca 2-2.5u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. I have reduced the six species listed by Heimerl (1934) to two, which are best separated by the striking color differences in the dried specimens. Schindleria racemosa (Britton) H. Walter has inflorescences and leaves drying black or brown- black and includes S. glabra H. Walter and S. mollis H. Walter, both of which were based on single collections. Schindleria densiflora (O. Ktze) Monachino, retaining its green color or be- coming yellow on drying, comprises a variable group of specimens in terms of leaf base and texture. In flower structure, however, the group is much more uniform and no character or set of characters serves to separate this complex into distinctive alliances. Monachino (1952) first proposed this treatment, although admittedly on insufficient material, and elucidated the nomenclatural problems involved with it. With the exception of Bang 2607, the type of S. rivinoides H. Walter and about which I maintain some reservations concerning conspecificity with S. densiflora, members of the group are coarse, weedy semi-shrubs found in southern Peru and northern Bolivia. a. Plants turning black or brown-black upon dessication l. S. racemosa aa. Plants remaining green or turning yellow upon dessication .................... 2. S. densiflora [Vor. 55 338 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN l. Schindleria racemosa (Britton) H. Walter, Bot. Jahrb. 37(Beibl. 85): 24, 1906. (Lectotype selected: Bang 414 MO; isolectotypes F, NY, US; syntypes Rusby 743 K, MO, NY Villamilla racemosa Britton in Rusby, Mem. Torrey Bot. Club 4:251, 1895. (Syntypes g 414 NY; Rusby 743 Schindleria ue H. Walter, Bot. Jahrb. 37(Beibl. 85): 24, 1906. (Type Weberbauer 1168 Bf, not seen) S. mollis H. " Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 116, 1909. (Type Lobb 691, photo F, fron W) Shrubs, or herbs with woody bases, black on drying. Leaves elliptic, acute- acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 15 cm long and 6 cm wide, slightly to very pubescent, especially on the veins beneath; petioles ca 1.5-4 cm long. In- florescences racemes, up to 28 cm long, axillary or terminal. Flowers with pedicels ca 6-8 mm long; bract single, ca 1.2-1.5 mm long, lanceolate and keeled at the base; bracteoles two, minute, ca 0.1-0.2 mm long, triangular and closely appressed to sepals; sepals ca 2-3.5 mm long and 1.5-1.7 mm wide, veins barely discernible; stamens ca 12-15, the filaments ca 1.2-2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.2-1.5 mm long; ovary slightly elongate. Utricle ca 2 mm in diam. ne LA PAz: Colaya, Mexia 4302 (GH); Coroico, Buchtien 3772 (NY, US); Yungas, 4 (F, MO, NY, US); Rusby 743 (K, MO, NY, US). santa CRUZ: Bella Vista, riled pe 6291 (US). Pollen grains ca S (E) X ca 21g (P), 12-15 pantoporate, ora ca 3p in diam, exine ca 2.54 in thicknes Pollen examined: Rusby 743 (MO). 2. Schindleria densiflora (O. — pene o 4: 39-41, 1952. Rivina densiflora O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 3(3): 2 (Type Kuntze s.n. NY, not seen) Schindleria rosea H. Wa Iter , Bot. inm Ed (bt is e 1906. (Type "o 1292 MO) S. rivinoides H. Walter, loc. cit. (Type 607 S. weberbaueri O. C. Schmidt, Notizbl. Berlin Bot. Gart. 8:313, 1923. (Type Weberbauer 6758 F, GH, MO, NY) Shrubs, or herbs with woody bases, to 3 m, green to yellow on drying. Leaves elliptic to ovate-elliptic, acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, slightly cordate or rarely += oblique, size variable, up to 20 cm long and 7 cm wide, mostly glabrous, some sparsely pubescent on veins beneath; petioles to 8.5 cm long. Inflorescences racemes (appearing as delicate spikes in bud), up to 35 cm long (in fruit), mostly axillary, rarely terminal. Flowers with pedicels ca 7-9 mm long at maturity; bract single, ca 1 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long, closely appressed to sepals; sepals 2-3 mm long, some prominently veined; stamens ca 15-25, the filaments ca 1.5 mm long, the anthers ca 1 mm long. Utricle ovoid, compressed laterally and ridged on the edges, ca 1.8-1.9 mm in diam, testa wrinkled, yellow- brown. Bolivia and Peru. Bor ien COCHABAMBA: Chimore, e 5482 (US); s. loc, Steinbach 9361 (GH, NY). : Mapiri, Buchtien 1694 (GH, US). santa CRUZ: Samaipat a, Steinbach 8201 (GH). Pen PROVINCE: N Yungas, Buchtien 4327 (US); s. loc, Bang 2607 (F, GH, PERU: AYACUCHO: betw Huanta & Rio Apurimac, Killip & Smith 23092 (NY, US). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 339 cuzco: Lares Valley, hanes 7924 (F, GH, MO, NY); Manto-Lares, eae 2164 (F); Hacia Pilcopata, Ma eM 2 (US); Quincemil, Vargas 7746 (MO); betw Santo Isabel & Mistiana, Scolnik 9 T. HUANUCO: Divisoria, Woytkowski e (MO); Tal des Mayro, Weberbauer 6758 (F); Tingo María, Asplund. 12488 (US). MADRE DE DIOS: s. loc., Vardas 16931 (US). Puno: vic of Santo Domingo, McCarroll 54 (NY). Pollen grains ca 2lu (E) X ca 21g (P), 12-17 pantoporate, ora ca 3-3.5u in iam Pollen examined: Woytkowski 34509 (MO). 9. HILLERIA Hilleria Vell, Fl. Flumin. 47, 1: pl. 122, 1825. [Type H. latifolia (Lam.) H. Walter] Mohlana Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 171, pl. 290, 1829. Herbs, robust, some species suffrutescent at the base, to 1.5 m. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acute, acuminate, or long acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, + glabrous above to sparsely hairy on the veins beneath; petiolate. Inflorescences racemes, axillary or terminal, + black on drying. Flowers perfect, + zygomorphic, pedicel- late; bract single, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, minute, visible only in bud; sepals 4, unequal, the lowermost enlarging conspicuously in fruit and somewhat uniting at the base with the 2 laterals; stamens 4 or 8-13, alternate or deposited irregularly, the filaments filiform, the anthers 2X longer than broad; ovary spherical or slightly compressed laterally, l-carpellate, the styles present or absent, the stigma feathery or capitate. Fruit an utricle, lens-shaped, ridged on the edges, pericarp wrinkled; seed one, testa shiny black. Northern South America and introduced into Africa; a genus of 3 species. Pollen grains single, subspheroidal, ca 23-29. (E) X ca 23-294 (P), 12- colpate, 4 at each pole and 4 perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca 6-94 long, sometimes + indistinct, exine ca 2-2, in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely to very finely reticulated (Fig. 5). Young specimens of Hilleria, i.e. those not in late flowering or fruit, can be confused with Schindleria H. Walter, especially that section of the latter genus which turns black upon dessication. However, the pollen of the two genera, 12- colpate in Hilleria, and polyporate in Schindleria, provides a means for unmistak- able identification. 8. Stamens 8- 13; li eene Æ sessile l. H. longifolia aa. Stamens + igmas capita . Style alise ent, stigma nee 2. H. adi bb. Style short, ca 0.2-0.3 mm long, stigma not sessile 3. H. secunda l. Hilleria longifolia (H. Walter) Heimerl, Oesterr. Bot. Zeitschr. 61: 10, 1911. H. cic (Lam.) H. Walter var. longifolia H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 82, . (Type Poeppig 1541 W) PAR erect, to 1-2.5 m. Leaves elliptic, + long acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 23 cm long and 6 cm wide, glabrous above, coarsely hairy on veins beneath; petioles up to 6 cm long. Inflorescences up to 40 cm long, terminal or axillary. Flowers with pedicels to 6 mm long; bract single, up to 4 mm long; [Vor. 55 340 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long; sepals at maturity ca 3.5 mm long for lowermost, ca 3 mm long for remaining 3; stamens 8-13, irregularly deposited, the filaments ca 0.8-0.9 mm long, the anthers ca 1 mm; style absent, the stigma feathery. Utricle ca 2.5 mm in diam. A rare species reported only from Peru and Bolivia. BOLIVIA: SUR ees Mer dr E e (MO). ERU: CUZC mil, Marín 1536 (US). saw martın: Margarita, Ferreyra 1017 (US); vic of Tingo Maria, "Allard 22267 (US) - Pollen grains ca 23u (E) X ca 23u (P), colpi ca 8-9u long, sexine medium finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Allard 22267 (US). 2. Hilleria latifolia (Lam.) H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 81, 1909. Rivina latifolia Lam., Encycl. Méth. Bot. 1: 324, 1791. NS Martin s.n. P) R. affinis Nees & Mart., Nov. Acta Acad. Nat. Cur. 11: 30, 1823. Hilleria elastica Vell., Fl. Flumin. UL 1: pl. 122, 1825 . 84, 1827. Mohlana nemoralis Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 171, pl. 290 9. M. n Mog. i n DC, Prodr. 130): 15, 1849. CT vie Schumann s.n., location un- M. latifolia (Lam.) Moq., loc. cit. 16. (Type Martin s.n. P) M. apetala (Schum. & Thonn.) Engler, Dae ele Ost-Afr. 5: 175, 1895. Herbs, slightly suffrutescent at the base, to ca 1 m. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acuminate to long acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 20 cm long and 6 cm wide, + glabrous above, and coarsely hairy on the veins beneath; petioles to 8 cm long. Inflorescences up to 30 cm long, mostly axillary, rarely terminal. Flowers with pedicels up to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 2 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long; sepals at maturity ca 4 mm long for lowermost, ca 3 mm long for re- maining 3; stamens 4, alternate with the sepals, the filaments ca 0.8 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8 mm long; the style absent, the stigma capitate. Utricle ca 2 mm in diam. South America and introduced into Africa. COLOMBIA: CUNDINAMARCA: Quebrada Cabana, Killip et al. 38373 y ae UADOR: GUAYAS: one Barcelona Trail, Gilmartin 555 (US betw Victoria & Echarate, Vargas 7555 (MO, US). Huanuco: Pozuzo, Maciide 4525 (US); Tingo María, Asplund 12039 (US). Junín: La Merced, Soukup 3373 (US). o: lower Río Huallaga, Killip & Smith 28904 (US), 29079 (US). san MARTÍN: Rioja, Woyikowski 6127 (US); Zepelacio nr Moyobamba, Klug 3438 (MO, Borrvi: BEN{: vic of Rurrenabaque, Cárdenas 1771 (US). sara: Río Palowedline Steinbach hub (MO). PanacuAv: Hassler 8287 (MO). e. SALTA: Río Blanco, Venturi 7634 (US); vic of Tartagal, West 8417 (MO). Ivory Coast: penne ee 4142 (MO); Roberty 12376 (MO). Guana: Darko 631 (MO); Oldeman 757 (MO). Dien Ross 153 (MO). CAMEROONS: pee 673 (MO); Staudt 922 (US); Zenker 316 (MO, US), 4628 (MO); Zenker & ‘Staudt 1 5 (US). REPusLIC oF Conco: Corbisier i (MO); Germain 229 (MO); Louis 924 (MO), 7318 (MO, US), 11081 (MO), 11095 (MO) Ucanpa: Dummer 327 (US), 459 (MO, US). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 341 Pollen aie ca 29u (E) X ca 29u (P), colpi 6-Tu long, sexine very finely reticulated (Fig. Pollen iam Bates 673 (MO); Dummer 459 (US); Louis 924 (MO); Woytkowski 6127 (US). Hilleria latifolia and H. secunda (Ruiz & Pavon) H. Walter are very difficult to distinguish. Frequently the styles are broken and what appears at first glance to be H. latifolia may be classifiable as H. secunda when a sufficient number of flowers is examined. Also, some specimens are almost undeterminable because of the inter- mediate character of the style length, which is difficult at best to observe because of its small size, 3. Hilleria secunda (Ruiz & Pavon) H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 82, 1909 Rivina secunda Ruiz & Pavon, Fl. Peru Chile 1: 65, pl. 102, 1794. (Type Ruiz & Pavon sn. K R. acuminata H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 2: 184, 1817. Mohlana secunda Quis. & PE Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 3: 172, 1829. Ze., . : Mohlana meziana H. Walter, Bot. Jahrb. 37 (Beibl. 85): 25, 1906. (Type Ule 6500 Bf, K) Hilleria meziana H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 83, 1909. (Type Ule 6500 Bf, K) Herbs, slightly suffrutescent at the base, erect, to ca 1 m. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acute to acuminate, entire, the bases obuse, up to 15 cm long and 6 cm wide, coarsely hairy on the veins beneath; petioles to 6 cm long. Inflorescences up 0 cm long, mostly axillary. Flowers with pedicels ca 5 mm long; bract single, ca 1.5 mm long, much overtopping the flowers in bud; bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long; sepals at maturity ca 3.5 mm long for lowermost, ca 2.25 mm long for re- maining 3; stamens 4-7, alternate with the sepals, or + deposited irregularly, the filaments ca 0.8-1 mm long, the anthers ca 1 mm long; style ca 0.2-0.3 mm long, the stigma capitate. Utricle ca 2 mm in diam. Northern South America. COLOMBIA: CUNDINAMARCA: Icononzo, Pennell 2762 (MO, ree La Mesa, Fernandez & Mora 1386 (US). Torma: vic of Totare eae Haught 2395 (A, b du WITHOUT STATE: Quebra ey nd pm (MO, US). Ecu GUAYAS: Manglar Alto, Anthony & Tate 14 (US). MANABÍ: Er Recreo, Eggers 15513 US); N of La Tuna, Haught 3364 (US PERU: CAJAMARCA: Monte Seco: Soukup 3 866 (US). HuUANUCO: Tingo María, Asplund 12129 (US). JUNIN: La Merced, Sandeman 5037 (US). Loreto: Tarapoto, Ule 6500 (K). SAN MARTÍN: Alto Río Huallaga, Williams 5757 (US), 6884 Pa Río Mayo, lg 7813 ); RE BENI: San Buenaventura, Williams 343 (US). ra cruz: s. loc, Kuntze s.n. (US). Pollen grains ca 254 (E) X ca 25u (P), colpi ca 8-94 long, exine ca 2u in thickness, sexine finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Ferreyra 7813 (US); Haught 2395 (US); Williams 7611 (US). [Vor. 55 342 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 10. LEDENBERGIA Ledenbergia Klotzsch ex Mog. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 14, 1849. (Type L. seguieri- oides Klotzsch ex Moq.) Ladenbergia O. Ktze., jd cem P]. 2: 550, 1891. Flueckigera O. Ktze., loc c. Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, elliptic to + ovate, acuminate to acute, entire, the bases obtuse, glabrous to slightly pubescent; petiolate. Inflorescences racemes, mostly axillary, pendulous. Flowers perfect, or unisexual and plants dioecious, = actinomorphic, pedicellate; bract single, awl-shaped, absent at anthesis; bracteoles two, minute, closely appressed to sepals; sepals 4, + oblanceo- late, constricted at the base, prominently veined, papery, green to brown; stamens 10-15, or 4-6 and rudimentary, deposited irregularly, or 4 alternate and 2 opposite; ovary present or absent, subglobose, compressed laterally, 1-carpellate, style absent, stigma penicellate. Fruit an utricle, subglobose, compressed laterally, ridged at the edges, pericarp wrinkled, papery brown; seed one, black. Central America and Venezuela; a small genus of two species. Pollen grains single, prolate spheroidal, ca 23-244 (E) X ca 23-24u (P), 12- colpate, 4 at each pole and 4 perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca 8-l0yu long, exine ca 1.5-2.0u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and smooth to very finely reticulated. Schmidt (1923) described a new species, Ledenbergia peruviana, based on Weberbauer 6413. I have seen a specimen of the type collection (GH), and hesitate to include it in Ledenbergia for the following reasons: its + erect, paniculate in- florescences are in contrast to the pendulous racemes of L. macrantha Standley and L. seguierioides Klotszch, and the pollen is 3-colpate, in contrast to 12-colpate for the above mentioned species. Another collection, Hutchison & Wright 3471 (MO), also from Peru, appears almost identical to Weberbauer 6413 in floral and pollen morphology. For the present time, however, I am uncertain as to their inclusion in Ledenbergia, to which they are undoubtedly related. a. Flowers per l. L. seguierioides : erfec aa. iss cd pistillate flowers appearing as perfect with 4-6 rudimentary 2. L. macrantha l. Ledenbergia seguierioides Klotzsch ex Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 14, 1849. (Syntypes: Klotzsch 350 G; Plie 20 P; Vargas 296 G, P) Rivina seguierioides Klotzsch ex Moq., 1 Flueckigera seguierodes (Klotzsch ex ae ©. Ktze., Rev. Gen. PI. 2: 551, 1891. Shrubs or small trees, to 3.5 m. Leaves elliptic, acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse to slightly cordate, up to 16 cm long and 7 cm wide, glabrous or slightly pubescent on veins beneath; petioles 2-4(-8) cm long. Inflorescences racemes, up to 35 cm long, mostly axillary, softly pubescent, pendulous. Flowers perfect, with pedicels to 4 mm long; bract single, 1.2 mm long, awl-shaped; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long; sepals ca 4(-6) mm long and 1.5-2 mm wide, green to yellow; stamens 12-14, irregularly deposited in one-two whorls, the filaments ca 2 mm long, 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 343 the anthers ca 1.2 mm long; ovary present, stigma profusely penicellate. Utricle ca 2 mm in diam. aden only from Venezuela. re BOLivaR: nr Las Trincheras, Pittier 8884 (G, GH, US). FEDERAL: rd betw Car uaira, Aristequieta 2814 (US); diede 1490 (US). méripa: Colonia Tovar, Fen di. ps (Gi), 2 9 (GH). sucre: vic of quebrada tributary of Rio Manzanares, Steyermark 62767 (F ge WITHOUT PROVINCE: Curran & Hamman 1238 (GH, MO). Pollen grains ca 24u (E) X ca 24u (P), colpi ca 9-10 long. Pollen examined: Aristequieta 2814 (US); Fendler 2389 (GH); Tamayo 1490 (US). 2. Ledenbergia macrantha Standley, Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 13: 350, 1925. (Holo- type Calderon 680 US) Trees, dioecious, to 12 m. Leaves ovate to elliptic, acuminate, entire, the bases obtuse to slightly oblique, up to 13 cm long and 6 cm wide, softly pubescent on veins beneath; petioles elongated, 7-10 cm long. Inflorescences racemes, the stami- nate ca 10 cm long, the pistillate 15-25 cm long and pendulous, mostly axillary, the peduncle softly pubescent. Staminate flowers with pedicels ca 5 mm long; bract single, ca 1 mm long, triangular, brown, papery; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long; sepals 4, + equal, ca 3-4 mm long and 1.5-3 mm wide; stamens 15-20, the fila- ments ca 0.8-1 mm long, the anthers ca 0.8-0.9 mm long; ovary absent. Pistillate flowers with pedicels ca 8 mm long; bract single, ca 2 mm long, brown, papery, deciduous; bracteoles two, ca 1.2 mm long, papery; sepals 4, + equal, 8-10 mm long and 4-5 mm wide, conspicuously net veined, green to yellow; stamens 4-6, rudimentary, alternate with the sepals or 4 alternate and 2 opposite, the filaments very short, the anthers ca 0.5 mm long; ovary subglobose, compressed laterally, style absent, stigma papillose. Utricle ca 2.5-2.8 mm in diam. ntral America. Mexico: jaLisco: Rzedowski 21872 (F), 21873 (F). see EMALA: Steyermark 52148 (F). L SALVADOR: Allen Ü Armour 6802 (MO); La Libertad, Puerta de la Laguna, Calderon 680 (NT US); Standley 23656 (F, MO, US); Padilla 195 (MO). Pollen grains ca 234 (E) X ca 23u (P), colpi ca 8-94 long. [Very rarely 15-colpate, grains then ca 30u (E) X ca 30u (P), colpi ca 7-8 long.] Pollen examined: Rzedowski 21873 (F). Originally described with perfect flowers, the specimens collected by Rzedowski definitely are otherwise. Upon close examination of other specimens the occa- sional flowers appearing as perfect can be seen to have only much reduced and rudimentary stamens. However, it is unusual that so few specimens of the male plant have been collected (Rzedowski 21873 F is the only one I have seen); it must be very rare. 1]. PETIVERIA Petiveria L., Sp. Pl. 342, 1753. (Type P. alliacea L.) Mapa Vell., Fl. Flumin. 59, 1825. Monotypic. [Vor. 55 344 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 1. Petiveria alliacea L., Sp. Pl. 342, 1753. (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro- Edition 472.1) P. octandra L., Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 486, 1762. (Type LINN, not seen; from IDC Micro-Edition P. foetida Salisb., Prodr. 214, 1796. apa. graveolens Vell, Fl. Flumin. 59, pl. 153, 1825. Petiveria alliacea var. pd Moa. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 9, 1849. (Type Michaux s.n. G, not seen, in IDC Micro-Edition, Candolle Prodromi Herbarium m) P. alliacea var. hine (L.) Moq., loc. cit. 1849. (Syntypes: Ledru s.n. G; Sagra 399 G, both een, in IDC Micro-Edition, Candolle Prodromi Herbarium P. ochroleuca Moq., loc. cit. 1849. pe Mociño & Sessé s.n., location unknown) P. paraguayensis Parodi, Anal. Soc. Cient. E RU 5: 160, 187 P. ka a an AI . Mexic. ed. F P. corrientina 1. Geogr. Bot. 28: : 163, 1918. P. pus ARTS Stelifeld Trib. Farm. Bras. 12: 114, 1944. Herbs, slightly woody at the base, sparsely branched, to 2 m. Leaves elliptic to ovate, mucronate to acute, entire, the bases narrowed to obtuse, up to 20 cm long and 6 cm wide, — glabrous; petioles to 1 cm long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 40 cm long, peduncle sparsely pubescent to — glabrous, somewhat lax. Flowers + sessile or with pedicels 2-3 mm long; bract single, ca 1.5 mm long, triangular; bracteoles two, < 1 mm long; sepals 4, + equal, oblong, ca 4 mm long, 3 veined, persistent in fruit; stamens 4, 6 or 8, alternate or deposited irregularly, the filaments ca 2-3 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5-2 mm long; ovary l-carpellate, flattened, 4-6 uncinate, style absent, stigma papillose and on one flattened side of ovary only. Fruit an achene, flattened, elongated, 4-6 hooked, green, up to 8 mm long; seed one, linear. Widely distributed in the warmer regions of the New World. Pollen grains subspheroidal, ca 23-284 (E) X ca 23-28u (P), 12 colpate or sometimes 15 colpate, with 4(-5) at each pole and 4(-5) perpendicular to the equator, colpi ca 5-7, long, exine ca 1.7-1.9u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Some samples of pollen, mostly from Petiveria alliacea L. var. tetrandra Gomez) Nowicke, had pollen which appeared acolpate, indicating possible partial sterility of this group, notwithstanding the setting of fruit. a. Fruits 4-hooked la. P. alliacea var. alliacea aa. Fruits 5- or 6-hooked lb. P. alliacea var. tetrandra la. — cage £i var. alliacea. UNr Chapman s.n. (MO); Curtiss 2339 (MO), 5520 (MO); Gar ber 2 TMO: Mil s s.n. - (MO) "Moldenke 723 (MO), 727a (MO). XICO: CHIAPAS: Mat 9 (MO). cuznRERO: Hinton 10850 (MO). MICHOACÁN: Hinton. 12300 (M O). SINALOA: Gentry 4965 (MO); Mexia 305 (MO). vera cruz: Purpus 2272 (MO). yucatán: Gaumer et al. 23418 (MO); Steere 1074 (MO). WITHOUT STATE: Orcutt 5338 (MO). Britis} HONDURAS: eas 4953 (MO); Schipp 426 (MO). Honpuras: Molina 17 (MO); Yuncker et al. 8194 (MO). i 0 (MO). Nicaracua: Baker 159 (MO); Greenman & Greenman 5718 (MO); Wright s.n. (MO). Pan : M ; 3976 (MO), 4146 (MO), 5086 (MO); Doe 1770 (MO); Ebinger 555 (MO); Hunter & Allen 694 (MO), 731 (MO); MacBride 2791 (MO); Tyson 1425 (MO), 1477 (MO); von Wedel 636 (MO), 1323 (MO); White 308 (MO); Woodson & Schery 841 (MO), 900 (MO); Woodson et al. 1470 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 345 COLOMBIA: CUNDINAMARCA: betw Fusagasuga & Pandi, Pennell 2720 (MO); La Mesa, Garcia das Be O). MaGDALENA: Santa Marta, Smith 440 (MO). VE AM edernales, Curran & Haman 1315 (MO). canRABoBOo: betw Maracay É "alendis, “Williams 11031 (MO). sucre: Margarita I, Millier P Johnston 13 BRAZIL: AMAZONAS; Tres Casas, Krukoff 6500 (MO) ARGE jue FORMOSA: Laguna Vera, Wes 4975 (M O); s. loc, Jorgensen 3074 (M : Lagun MISSIONEs: Puerto Viejo, Aree 2294 (MO); San Javier, Sod 7011 (MO); ce 3756 MO). SALTA: rn Quijano, Venturi rout O). UAY: WITHOUT PROVINCE: vic of Pilcomayo River Morong 948 (MO); Ypacaray, E 12112 (MO). s. jo Hassler 3586 (MO); Mos 530 ¢ Borivi4: sara: Buena Vista, Steinbach 5124 (MO). WITHOUT PROVINCE: Yungas, Bang 506 ed Vids 743 (MO). Peru: HU o: Tingo María, Woytkowski 5384 (MO). san martin: Juan Jui, Klug 3833 Mies ECUADOR: MANABÍ; betw Chone & Santo Domingo, Dodson & Thien 1758 (MO). Cusa: Britton et al. 14922 (MO); Combs 182 (MO); Curtiss 611 (MO); Pollard & Palmer 322 (MO); Rugel 66 (MO); Van Hermann 232 (MO). Dominican Repusttc: Allard 13920 (MO). Harti: Eyerdam 123 (MO); Leonard 8950 (MO); Leonard & Leonard 11626 (MO). O). JAMAICA: Crosby et al. 98 (M O); Harris OS (MO); Hitchcock s.n. (MO). Lu Kohaut 98 (MO); Sieber 98 (M ERTO Pod Heller 4487 (MO), 6179 (MO); Holm 261 (MO); Otero 318 (MO); Silent 3079 (M St. CROIX: p 27 (MO); Ricksecker 132 (MO). Tosaco: Broadway 4690 (MO TrinwaD: Broadway 5168 (MO); Sieber 115 (MO). Pollen examined: Blum & Tyson 1001 (MO); Crosby et al. 98 (MO); Mac- Bride 2791 (MO). lb. Petiveria alliacea L. var. tetrandra (Gomez) Nowicke, stat. nov. S tetrandra Gomez, Obs. Med. Bot. Pl. Bras. 13, 1803 iiu n Fisch. & Meyer, Ind. Sem. Hort. Petrop. 35, 1835; Linnaea 10(Litt. Ber.) : 99, D canoas: s. loc, Luis 8 (F). Paraná: s. loc, Dusen 16339 (NY); Fiebrig 5867 (F). WITHOUT PROVINCE: d 3908 (F). Pollen grains in both samples appeared acolpate. Pollen examined: Fiebrig 5867 (F); Luis 8 (F). 12. MONOCOCCUS Monococcus F. Muell, Fragm. 1: 46, 1858. (Type M. echinophorus F. Muell.) Monotypic. l. Monococcus echinophorus F. Muell., Fragm. 1: 46, 1858. (Type Hill & Mueller s.n. location unknown, but Mueller s.n. K) Shrubs, dioecious or monoecious, subscandent to climbing. Leaves lanceolate- ovate, acute, uneven to finely undulate, the bases obtuse, up to 8 cm long and 3 cm wide, + pubescent, more so on the veins beneath; petioles to ca 1 cm long. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, up to 15 cm long, mostly terminal, pistil- late or staminate, or rarely both and the staminate flowers terminal. Staminate flowers with pedicels to ca 2 mm long; bract single, ca 2-2.5 mm long, awl-shaped, [Vor. 55 346 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN keeled; bracteoles two, ca 1-1.2 mm long; sepals 4, + equal, ca 2-2.5 mm long, rounded; stamens 12-20, the filaments ca 2.5-3 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long; ovary absent. Pistillate flowers sessile or with pedicels to 1.5 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.5 mm long, lanceolate, keeled; bracteoles two, ca 1 mm long, closely appressed to sepals; sepals 4, + equal, somewhat united at the base, lanceolate, ca 12-L5 mm long; stamens absent; ovary obovoid, l-carpellate, spinulose, the style from one side, short, curved, the stigma profusely papillose. Fruit an utricle or achene (?), flattened, spinulose, spines recurved at the tip, up to 3 mm long; seed one. aie New Caledonia, and New Hebrides. LIA! NEW SOUTH WALES: Cunningham 191 NS MO). QUEENSLAND: Bailey 214 on s.n.. (US); Dietrich s.n. (US); Mueller s.n. (BM, K, MO); White 6580 (K). EW CALEDONIA: Vieillard 3075 (BM). New Hesrives: Baker 16 Pollen grains single, subspheroidal, ca 234 (E) X ca 23u (P), 7-11 panto- porate, the ora ca 3-3.5 in diam, exine ca 1-1.5g in thickness, the sexine + equal to nexine and + smooth. Pollen examined: Dietrich s.n. (US). MICROTEOIDEAE III. Subf. Microteoideae Eckardt ex Nowicke, subf. nov. Ovarium unicarpellatum (?) stigmatitus 2-4, uniseminate; achenium. (Type Microtea Swartz) a. Herbs; leaves not succulent, without calcium oxalate crystals; inflorescences spikes or racemes; flowers attached singly; stamens 5 or more, anthers globose; 13 pollen a : Microtea aa. ue ; leaves + succulent, with calcium oxalate crystals; inflorescences ikes; ees attached in groups of ca three; stamens 4; anthers longer than "ned pollen 3-colpate; Africa 14. Lophiocarpus 13. MICROTEA Microtea Swartz, Prodr. 4: 53, 1788. (Type M. debilis Swartz) Schollera Rohr & Vahl, Skrivt, Naturh. Selsk, Kjoebenhavn 2: 210, 1792. Ancistrocarpus H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 2 : 186, pl. 122, 1817. Potamophila Schrank, Pl. Rar. Horti. Monac. Ceratococa Willd. ex Roem. & Schult. in L., a Veg. ed 15, 6: 800, 1820. Aphananthe Link, Enum. 1: 383, 1821. Herbs, slender, some species becoming suffrutescent at the base, erect or with branches descending or trailing, up to 60 cm, annuals. Leaves alternate or fascicu- late, narrow-lanceolate, elliptic or deltoid, entire, the bases attenuate, obtuse or truncate; sessile or petiolate. Inflorescences spikes or spike-like racemes, terminal or axillary. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic, sessile or with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single; bracteoles two, rarely absent; sepals 5, + equal, one vein, dry and/or membranaceous, green to white; stamens 5-9, rarely 4, alternate with the sepals or irregularly placed, in some species appearing to be united into a ring at the base, the filaments of varying lengths, the anthers globose; ovary + spherical, l-carpellate (?), the styles absent or very abbreviated, the stigmas 2-4, filiform. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 347 Fruit an achene, thin walled, muricate to spiny; seed one, spherical-lenticular, testa shiny black. A genus of about 9 species well represented in the American tropics, partic- ularly in South America. Microtea scabrida Urban has perhaps the most southerly distribution, being found in the northern provinces of Argentina. Pollen grains single, subspheroidal, ca 17-23u (E) X ca 17-23u (P), panto- porate, (15-)20-25 apertures, ora ca 2-3p in diam, exine ca 1.3-2u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Microtea, as well as Lophiocarpus Turcz., with its minute, simplified flowers, scarious bracts and pollen type, represents a connecting link to the halophytic Chenopodiaceae and Amaranthaceae. The recognition of Lophiocarpus as distinct from Microtea, into which it had been incorporated by Brown (1909), is valid, based not only on a marked contrast in the pollen morphology, but on significant differences in the sporophyte generation as well. Microtea is distinguished from Lophiocarpus by its more herbaceous habit, strictly actinomorphic flowers which are singly attached, tendency to 5 stamens or more, globose anthers, and lack of calcium oxalate crystals or succulence in the leaves. The geographical distribution of the two groups, neotropics (Microtea) versus dry areas of southern Africa (Lophiocarpus), provides additional support for their separation as distinct genera. Walter (1909) described the subg. Schollera containing the generic type, M. debilis Swartz, and one other species, M. portoricensis Urban, and subg. Eumicrotea to include the remaining species. In accordance with the Code, his subg. Schollera must become subg. Microtea, and his subg. Eumicrotea is renamed subg. Moquinia. a. Inflorescences spikes less than 4 cm long; stamens (4-)5 subg, 1. Microtea . Achenes wrinkled or muricate Il. M. portoricensis bb. Achenes spiny 2. M. debilis aa. ear spikes or spike-like racemes greater than 4 cm long at maturity; subg. 2. Moquinia c. Flowers sessile or subsessile, pedicels < 1.5 mm long. d. e bract cepa: each flower 3. M. longebracteata dd. One bract and two smaller bracteoles subtending each flower. e. Leaf blades deltoid. petioles distinct 4. M. scabrida ee. Leaf blades linear to lanceolate, the bases attenuate. f. Inflorescences delicate or filmy spikes; fruits ca 1 mm E diam ed thin and brittle when 5. M. vo ff, Without the above CH of characters Leaf blades narrowly lanceolate; fruits ca 1.5 mm in diam M. sulcicaulis gg. Leaf blades more variable; fruits ca 1.2 mm in diam ....7. M. foliosa cc. Flowers pedicellate, at least some pedicels 2 mm lon Plants suffrutescent at the base; leaves filiform, less than 2 mm wide 8 and ca 1 cm lon M. tenuifolia hh. n herbaceous; leaves lanceolate to elliptic, at least some greater mm wide and 3 cm long 9. M. maypurensis Supc. 1 MICROTEA. subg. Schollera (Rohr & Vahl) H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 127, 1909. [Vor. 55 348 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN l. Microtea portoricensis Urban, Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 3(8): 324, 1885. (Type Sintenis 717 NY, S) Herbs, slender, trailing, primary stems abbreviated. Leaves at the base spatu- late, appearing in some to form a basal rosette, up to 5 cm long and 2 cm wide, stem leaves smaller, oblanceolate to obovate, acute to slightly mucronate, entire, the bases long attenuate. Inflorescences spikes, < 3 cm long, 15-30 flowers. Flowers + sessile; bract single, ca 0.8 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles absent; sepals (4-)5, ca 0.8 mm long, oblong, dry; stamens 5, occasionally 4; the stigmas 2. Achene ca ] mm in diam, testa muricate or wrinkled. 'The Greater Antilles. Cura: Ekman 11495 (S), 13408 (NY, S); Leon 2609 m. 4340 (NY); Leon & Eduard did (NY); eid 771 (NY); Van Hermann 121 (BM Domin aed: c: Ekman 15330 (S). site Eckm Puznro Rico: seas 717 (BM, NY, S) Palen grains ca 2lu (E) X ca 21p (P), ca 20 apertures, exine ca 2u in thick- ness. Pollen examined: Ekman 13408 (NY); Bro. Leon 2609 (NY), 4340 (NY). Although a sharp distinction between this species and the wider ranging M. debilis Swartz is difficult to maintain, the characters of the exocarp, wrinkled in M. portoricensis Urban and spinulose in M. debilis, and the length of the spike, shorter in M. portoricensis, are the most constant. However, Urban's original description of 3-4 stamens does not appear to be correct; three stamens were never observed and four only occasionally. 2. Microtea debilis Swartz, Prodr. 4: 53, 1788. (Type Swartz s.n., location un- known) Schollera debilis Rohr, Skirvt. Naturh. Selsk. Kjorb. 2: 210, 1792. xs ovata Delile, Hort. Monsp., M. debilis var. ovata (Delile) Mog. in DC, Prodr. 13(2): 17, 1849. M. debilis var. rhombifolia Moq., loc. c Herbs, + decumbent, stems AAEE grooved, to 45 cm. Leaves very variable but generally oblanceolate to rhomboid, + acute, entire, the bases long attenuate, up to 8 cm long and 3 cm wide. Inflorescences spikes, < 4 cm long, 10-20(-24) flowers. Flowers + sessile; bract single, ca 1 mm long, thin, lanceolate; bracteoles absent; sepals oblong; stamens 5, the filaments ca 0.5 mm long, the anthers 0.1 mm long; stigmas 2. Achene spiny, ca 1 mm in diam, much over- topping the persistent calyx at maturity. Neotropics. Barris Honpuras: Gentle 1487 (MO); Schipp S-286 (MO). Honpuras: Thieme 5427 (NY); Wilson 384 (NY); Yuncker et al. 8374 (BM, MO, NY); Robertson 5 (B M). UATEMALA: Bernoulli 877 (NY); Deam 6042 (MO, NY); Kellerman 7477 (NY); Pittier 386 (NY). EL Sarvapon: Calderon 1069 (NY). P d Boissier 8712 (NY); Brenes 12242 (NY). PaNa Allen 883 (MO), 1296 (MO); Duke 4023 (MO), 4054 (MO); Fendler 109 (MO); Heriberto 115 (NY); Killip 3423 (NY); Pittier 2709 (NY); Stern et al. 808 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 349 Anticua: Box 1005 (MO, NY). Dominica: Lloyd 402 (NY). Dominican Repusuic: Howard & Howard 9731 (NY). GnENADA: Broadway s.n. (NY). GUADELOUPE: Bertero 93 (MO); Duss 2401 (NY). Harri: Leonard & Leonard 11346 (NY Jamaica: Britton & Hollick 2013 (NY); Harris 10214 (NY). ManriNIQUE: Duss 2063 (NY); Hahn 811 Puerto Rico: Britton & Cowell 1495 ete ‘Britton et al. 6650 (NY); Shafer 2431 Sr. E pad d 569B (NY). St. Krrrs: Britton & Cowell 275 (NY). Sr. Lucia: Box 1999 (NY). St. THomas: Britton et al. 470 (NY Sr. Vincent: Smith & Smith 178 (NY Tosaco: Broadway 4642 (MO, NY); Eggers 5826 (NY). TriniDaD: Britton & Britton 2170 (NY); Broadway 5455 (MO); Fendler 643 (NY); Kuntze 748 (NY BnaziL: RIO NEGRO: vic of Barra, Spruce s.n. (NY). COLOMBIA: ANTIOQUÍA: Vuelta de Acuna, Pennell 3815 (MO, NY). sotivar: Arjona, Killip A Smith ae (NY); Turbaco, Killip & Smith het (NY j MAGDALENA: Chiriguana, Allen 72 (MO); Rincon Hondo, Allen 5 pod bir Santa Marta, Smith 1246 (MO, NY). META: Villavicencio Pennell 1567 (NY). E: Cali, Fosberg 205 VENEZUELA: LARA: betw Yaritagua & Duaca, Saer 355 (NY); WITHOUT l STATE: Cristóbal Colon, Broadway 70 ( NY). Guyana: De La Cruz 1143 (NY), 2093 (MO, NY), 2480 (NY), 2501 (MO, NY), 3548 (NY), 3650 (MO, NY), 4033 (MO, NY); Gleason 18 (NY), 696 (NY); Jenman 5277 (NY); Mell & n 234 (NY). FRENCH ee 222 (NY). SURINAM: Samue Is 1 CUADOR: MILAGRO, TAE 20282 (NY); Naranjito, Camp E 3575 (NY); Río Pita, Asplund es (NY PERU: LORETO: Río Paranapura, Klug 3959 (MO); Yurimaguas, Killip & Smith 28215 (NY). Pollen grains ca 23u (E) X ca 23u (P), ca 20-25 apertures, exine ca 2u in thickness. Pollen examined: Allen 504 (MO), Duke 4054 (MO). Microtea debilis is widely distributed in Central America, the lesser Antilles, the Dominican Republic and Haiti, and northern South America, but is conspicu- ously absent in collections from Cuba, where M. portoricensis appears semi-endemic, notwithstanding Roig & Acuna’s (1951) reference to it in the Flora de Cuba. How- ever, as I have indicated, the two species are closely related and may prove to be conspecific. Susc. 2 Moquinia Nowicke, nom. nov. (Type Microtea paniculata Moq.) subg. Eumicrotea H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 127, 1909. 3. Microtea longebracteata H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 129,. 1909. (Type Sellow 359 photo NY from B Herbs, erect, stems grooved, sparsely branched, to 30 cm. Leaves lanceolate to oblanceolate, acute, entire, the bases attenuate, up to 6 cm long and 1.5 cm wide. Inflorescences spikes, 12-15 cm long, 25-30 flowers. Flowers + sessile or with mi- nute pedicels < 1 mm long; bract single, ca 1-1.2 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles [Vor. 55 350 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN absent; sepals ca 1 mm long; stamens ca 8, + united into a ring at the base, the filaments ca 0.3 mm long, the anthers ca 0.1-0.2 mm long; stigmas 2, recurved. Achenes muricate, ca 0.8-1 mm in diam, overtopping the persistent calyx at ma- turity. BRAZIL: PARAIBA: Areia, de Moraes 974 (NY). PERNAMBUCO: Recife, Pickel 3589 (NY). Pollen grains ca ba (E) X ca 2lu (P), ca 15-aperturate, ora ca 25g in diam, exine 1.5-2q in thicknes Pollen examined: Pichel 3589 (NY). Microtea longebracteata is similar in general habit to M. maypurensis (H.B.K.) G. Don, but is easily distinguished by its sessile flowers and single bract. 4. Microtea scabrida Urban, Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 3(8): 325, 1885. (Type Sello s.n. photo NY, from Bf) M. paniculata Moq. var. latifolia O. Ktze., Rev. Gen. Pl. 3(2): 268, 1898 M. scandens Rusby, Mem. N. Y. Bot . Gard. 7:239, 1927. (Type Cardenas 1942 NY) Herbs, erect, stems grooved, to 1 m. Leaves + deltoid, acute-acuminate, entire, the bases truncate, up to 8 cm long and 4.5 cm wide; petioles to 2 cm long. In- florescences spikes, ca 10-12 cm long, 30-40 flowers. Flowers + sessile; bract single, ca 0.6 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.3 mm long; sepals ca 1.2 mm long, turning dark on dessication; stamens 8(-9), the filaments 0.7-0.8 mm long, the anthers ca 0.2 mm long; stigmas 2 and fimbriolate, or occasionally 3 by subdivision of one of original 2. Achenes sparsely spinulose, ca 1.8 mm in diam. Northern Argentina and Bolivia, occasional from Brazil and Paraguay. BRAZIL: PARANÁ: Therezina, Dusen 11265 (NY, S). PERNAMBUCO: Caxauga, Ridley et al. s.n. (BM). RIO ACRE = Francisco, Ule 936 RGENTI abis or ate, Schwarz 8262 (MO). wisioNzs: Ora Verde, Schwarz 7789 (G); Posadas, "Ekman 6 (S); Puerto Piray, Schwarz 6844 (NY); San Javier, Schwarz 3754 (MO); Cerro San s Schwarz 2892 (MO); Santa Ana, Montes 1509 (MO). asc Tm oe 254 (S); s. loc., no 4008 E BOLIVIA: SANTA : San Raphael, Williams 2 2 (BM, NY); along Rio Yapacani, Kuntze s.n. END), Steinbach 7498 (BM, NY), elite srATE: Cardenas 1942 (NY). Pollen grains ca 22u (E) X 22u (P), 17-20-aperturate, ora ca 2-2.5u in diam, exine ca 2u in thickness. Pollen examined: Montes 1509 (MO). 5. Microtea paniculata Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 18, 1849. (Lectotype selected: Blanchet 2709 K) M. celosioides Moq. in DC., loc cit. Ser edi 472, photo a from G) ^ deiude ian Salzm. in DC, loc cit, nom. nud. pro syn. M. culata. dn erect, stems grooved, to 45 cm. Leaves narrow-lanceolate to lanceolate, acuminate, entire, the bases attenuate, up to 4 cm long and 1 cm wide; + sessile. Inflorescences spikes, ca 9-10 cm long, slender, 20-25 flowers. Flowers + sessile; bract single, 1-1.2 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.5 mm long; sepals ca 1-1.2 mm long; stamens 8, the filaments ca 0.3 mm long, the anthers ca 0.2 mm long; stigmas 2 or 3. Achene spiny, ca 1 mm in diam, overtopping the persistent calyx at maturity. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 35 1 Brazil and Paraguay. BRAZIL: BAHIA: Brasilia, Irwin et al. 9600 (MO); aeu 730 (NY); Paranoa, Void et al. 11258 (MO). WITHOUT state: Gardner 1138 (BM, G, NY), Glaziou 11440 S NR s. loc., Hassler 3981 (NY), 6407 (MO, NY), Jorgensen 4009 (MO, NY). Pollen grains ca 184 (E) X ca 18u (P), ca 15 apertures, ora ca 2.0-34 in diam, exine ca 2u in thickness. Pollen examined: Hassler 6407 (MO). 6. Microtea sulcicaulis Chodat, Bull. Herb. Boiss., sér. 2, 3: 1903. (Type: Hassler 4238 F, K, NY) Herbs, robust, stems grooved, to 45 cm. Leaves narrow-lanceolate to lanceolate- elliptic, acuminate to + mucronate, entire, the bases attenuate, up to 7 cm long and 0.5-1.3 cm wide. Inflorescences spikes, 12-15 cm long, 40-50 flowers. Flowers + sessile; bract single, ca 0.8 mm long; bracteoles two, minute, 0.1 mm long; sepals ca 1.2 mm long; stamens 8, appearing in some to be united into a ring at the base, the filaments ca 0.8 mm long, the anthers 0.2 mm long; stigmas 2. Achene spiny, ca 1.5 mm in diam, much overtopping the persistent calyx at maturity. PARAGUAY: AMAM s. loc., Hassler 9879 NE mem Montium, Hassler 4328 (F, NY). IPACARAY: S. loc. “Hassler 12395 (F, MO, N Pollen grains ca 2lu (E) X ca 2lu (P), ca 15-aperturate, ora ca 2.5-3u in diam, exine ca 2y in thickness. Pollen examined: Hassler 12395 (US). T. Microtea foliosa Chodat, Bull. Herb. Boiss., pér. 2, 3: 418, 1903, emend. Nowicke. (Lectotype selected: Hassler 7605 MO; isolectotypes F, G, NY, S) Herbs, erect, stems grooved, to 40 cm. Leaves mostly lanceolate, mucronate, entire, the bases attenuate, up to 4 cm long and 1 cm wide; sessile or petioles to ca 8 mm long. Inflorescences spikes, 12-15 cm long, slender, 30-40 flowers. Flowers subtended by single bract, ca 0.8 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long; sepals ca 0.9-1 mm long, prominently one-nerved; stamens 8, the filaments ca 0.5 mm long, the anthers ca 0.2 mm long; stigmas 2, spatulate. Achenes spiny, ca 1.2 mm in diam, overtopping the persistent calyx at maturity. PARAGUAY: CONCEPCIÓN: Concepción, Hassler 7605 (F, MO, NY, S). Pollen grains ca 17u (E) X ca l7u (P), + 15-aperturate, ora ca 2u in diam, not well defined, exine ca 24 in thickness. Pollen examined: Hassler 7605 (MO). Sometimes difficult to separate from M. paniculata and M. sulcicaulis, M. foliosa differs from M. paniculata in its more robust habit, sturdy spikes and wider leaves, and from M. sulcicaulis in its smaller fruit size and shorter leaf length. Chodat’s exsiccatae (1903) of Microtea foliosa includes Hassler 6254 and 7605. Walter (1909) reduces M. foliosa to synonomy with Microtea scabrida Urban and cites both of the above collections. However, only Hassler 6254 is a bona fide specimen of M. scabrida; Hassler 7605 (MO) has been selected as the lectotype for an amended description of M. foliosa. [Vor. 55 352 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 8. Microtea tenuifolia Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 18, 1849. (Lectotype selected: Claussen 392 P) Herbs, erect, much branched, + suffrutescent at the base, to 25 cm. Leaves filiform, up to 1 cm long and 1 mm wide, curling when dry. Inflorescences spike- like racemes, ca 8-10 cm long. Flowers with pedicels to 2 mm long; bract single, ca 0.6 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.2 mm long; sepals ca 0.6-0.8 mm long; stamens 8, the filaments 0.6 mm long, the anthers ca 0.2 mm long; stigmas 2(-3). Achene spiny, ca 1 mm in diam, much overtopping the persistent calyx at maturity. BRAZIL: MINAS GERAES: Caldas, Regnell II:11 (NY, US); vic of Lagoa Seca, Williams 5447 (MO, US); ye d’Habira, Claussen 4 (P), 392 (P); Turvo, Hoehne & Gehrt 17464 (NY); s. loc., Riedel 48 (P). Pollen grains ca 18u (E) X ca 18u (P), 17-20 apertures, ora ca 2u in diam, exine ca 1.5-2u in thickness. Pollen examined: Williams 5447 (MO). The suffrutescent, much branched habit and very small, filiform leaves make this the most distinct species of Microtea. 9. Microtea maypurensis (H.B.K.) G. Don, Loud. Hort. Brit. ed. 2, 98, n. 6423, 1839. Ancistrocarpus maypurensis H.B.K., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 2: 186, pl. 122 1817. Galenia celosioides Spreng., Nov. Prov. Hort. Hal. 38, 1819. Potamophila parviflora Schrank, Pl. Rar. Horti Monac. 2: 63, 1819. Ceratococca maypurensis (H.B.K.) Willd. ex Schult. in L., Syst. Veg. ed. 15, 6: 800, 1820. Aphananthe celosiodes Link, Enum. Hort. Berol. 1: 383, 1821. Ancistrocarpus schrankii Lebdeb., Ind. sr Hort. Dorp., 1822. Microtea lanceolata Del., Hort. Monsp., M. glochidiata Moq. in DC., Prodr. 130): 18, 1849. (Syntypes: Blanchet 2680 G, P; Gardner 2311. K) M. sprengelii Moq., loc cit. 19. Ancistrocarpus hexander Gay ex Moq., loc. cit. 17, nom. nud. pro syn. (Type Gay s.n. P) Herbs, stems grooved, moderately branched, erect, to 40 cm. Leaves lanceolate, acute to acuminate, entire, the bases attenuate, up to 5 cm long and 1 cm wide. Inflorescences spike-like racemes, ca 8-10 cm long. Flowers with pedicels to 5 mm long; bract single, ca 0.8-1 mm long; bracteoles two, ca 0.4 mm long; sepals ca 1.2 mm long; stamens 8, the filaments ca 0.5 mm long, the anthers ca 0.1 mm long; stigmas 2, or 4 by subdivision. Achene spiny, each spine having 3-5 hairs at the tip, ca 1-1.4 mm in diam, much overtopping the persistent calyx at maturity. Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay. ec AMAZONAS: Rio Uaupes, Spruce 2546 (NY). sama: Blanchet 2680 (G), s.n. (NY). CEARÁ: phe ride 175 (S). RIO GRANDE DO suL: Tapera, Pickel s.n. (NY). s. loc.: Martius - 8 (M . loc., oo 6 (NY); Hassler 3126 (NY, S). Borivi4: BENI: Beni River, Rusby 1379 Y). LA PAZ: ee Buchtien 7290 (MO, NY). WITHOUT srATE: vic of Guanai, "Bang 1589 (BM, NY). s. loc., Williams 369 (NY). Pollen grains ca 2lu (E) X ca 2lu (P), 20-25 apertures, ora ca 2-2.5u in diam, exine ca 2u in thickness (Fig. 6). Pollen examined: Buchtien 7290 (MO). 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 353 14. LOPHIOCARPUS Lophiocarpus Turcz., Bull. Soc. Nat. Hist. Moscou 16: 56, 1843. (Type L. poly- stachyus 'Turcz Wallinia Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 143, 1849. Herbs, in some species markedly suffrutescent at the base, sparsely or profusely branched, annuals. Leaves alternate or fasciculate, filiform or linear, sometimes + succulent, calcium oxalate crystals present; sessile. Inflorescences spikes, mostly terminal, rarely axillary, flowers in clusters of (2-)3. Flowers perfect, = actino- morphic; bract single, trilobed, the central lobe largest, the bract of the central flower largest; sepals 5, += equal, thin, membranaceous; stamens 4, 3 alternate and one opposite, the filaments short, the anthers longer than broad; ovary spherical, l-carpellate(?), style short, the stigmas 4, filiform. Fruit an achene, muricate, warty, or ridged; seed one. South West Africa and South Africa; a small genus of 3 species characteristic of dry, sandy habitats. Pollen grains single, subprolate, ca 16-234 (E) X ca 20-27u (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 16-17 long and ca lu wide at mid-length, exine ca 1.7-2.9% in thickness, sexine equal to or slightly thicker than nexine and very finely reticulated (Fig. 8). a. Delicate herbs; some inflorescences small and lateral; achenes weakly 16-ribbed l. L. dinteri aa. Without the above combination. of characters. b. Achenes ribbed, or sometimes muricate and ribbed ........................ 2. L. polystachyus bb. Achenes warty to muricate, but not ribbed 3. L. tenuissimus l. Lophiocarpus dinteri Engl. in Engl. & Drude, Veg. Erde 9(3): 138, 1915. (Neo- type selected: Dinter 6885 PRE) Herbs delicate, to 40 cm. Leaves alternate to slightly fasciculate, filiform, up to 3.5 cm long and 1 mm wide. Inflorescences spikes to 30 cm long, mostly terminal but some smaller lateral ones, very slender. Flowers subtended by a trilobed bract, ca 0.7 mm long for central flower, ca 0.4-0.5 mm long for two lateral flowers; sepals + lanceolate, ca 0.8 mm long; filaments ca 0.8-0.9 mm long, the anthers ca 0.4 mm long; stigmas free to base. Achenes weakly 16-ribbed, ca 0.6-0.7 mm in diam. SourH West Arrica: Karibib, Dinter 6885 (BM, K, PRE); Hardy 2061 (PRE). Pollen grains ca 165 (E) X 20u (P), colpi ca 16u long, very narrow, exine ca 1.74 in thickness. Pollen examined: Dinter 6885 (PRE). 2. Lophiocarpus polystachyus Turcz., Bull. Soc. Nat. Hist. Moscou 16: 56, 1843. (Type Drége 2940 K, PRE) Wallinia polystachya (Turcz.) Moq. in DC., Prodr. 13(2): 143, 1849. Lophiocarpus burchellii Hook. f. in Benth. & H ook. f., Gen. Pl. 3: 50, 1883. (Type Burchell Microtea burchellii Men oF ae Kew Bull. 1909: 135, 1909. M. polystachya (Turcz.) N.E.Br., loc. cit. M. gracilis A. W. Hill, Kew Bu 1910: 56, 1910. (Type Schlechter 11806 K, PRE) Lophiocarpus gracilis (A. W. Hill) Engl. in Engl. & Drude, Veg. Erde 9: 138, 1915. [Vor. 55 354 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN erbs, in some markedly suffrutescent at the base, to 40 cm, moderately to profusely branched. Leaves alternate to fasciculate, filiform to linear, in some slightly succulent, up to 3 cm long and 2 mm wide. Inflorescences spikes, to 25 cm long, terminal, and 50-70 flower clusters. Flowers subtended by a trilobed bract, ca 1.2 mm long for central flower, ca 0.9-1 mm long for two lateral flowers; sepals slightly unequal, 1.2-1.5 mm long; filaments 1.2 mm long, the anthers ca 0.6 mm long. Achenes ribbed, sometimes muricate between the ridges, ca 1.5 mm in diam. South Africa and South West Africa. SouTH AFRICA: CAPE OF GOOD HOPE: y West, Acocks 168 (PRE); Kalahari- Gemsbok Park, Barnard 761 (PRE); i ds pns 12632 (PRE); Prieska, Bryant 909 (PRE); Springbok, Hardy 1710 (PRE); Upington, prn 759 (PRE); Vryburg, d s.n. (PRE), Mogg 8132 (PRE); Warrenton, Leistner 1252 (PRE); s. loc., Acoc 1311 (PRE), Marloth 1426 (PRE). TRANSVAAL: kimberly, Wilman 20234 ae J; D Storey 4064 (PRE). WITHOUT STATE: Asbestos Mts, Marloth 2070 (P SourH West Arrica: Gobabis, Codd 5833 (PRE), de Winter 2468 (PRE), Schlieben 10395 (PRE); Kaoko Veld Reserve, de Winter & Leistner 5786 (PRE); Keetmanshoop, Liebenberg 5187 (PRE), Klein Karas, Ortendahl 79 (PRE); Luderitz, Kinges 2654 (PRE), Merxmuller & Giess 3370 (PRE); Okambahe, Liebenberg 5043 (PRE); Omaruru, de Winter 3156 (PRE); Rehoboth, Basson 37 (PRE); Spitzhopje, Boss s.n. (PRE); Windhoek, Merx- a » i (PRE). out Location: Holub s.n. (PRE). Pollen grains ca 23u (E) X ca 27u (P), colpi ca 17u long, exine ca 294 in thickness (Fig. 8). Pollen examined: Ortendahl 79 (PRE); Liebenberg 5043 (PRE), 5187 (PRE); Schlieben 10395 (PRE) Although a range of variation does exist in general habit, Lophiocarpus burchellii Hook. f. has been reduced to synonomy with L. polystachyus Turcz., since no specific character or set of characters consistently separates the two. Hill (1912) used the condition of the fruit wall, smooth in L. polystachyus and ribbed in L. burchellii, in attempting to validate separate specific status. However, all sheets examined, which had fruits, were ribbed to a greater or lesser degree, includ- ing the type for L. polystachyus, Drége 2940 (PRE). Heimerl (1934) appears to agree with this conspecific treatment, as he states that the above species are scarcely separate from one another. 3. Lophiocarpus tenuissimus Hook. f., Ic. Pl. 1463, 1884. (Type Rehman 4018 K) Microtea tenuissima (Hook. f.) N.E.Br., Kew Bull. 1909: 146, 1909. Herbs slender, becoming suffrutescent at the base, to 25(-30) cm, sparsely branched. Leaves alternate or fasciculate, filiform, up to 2.5 cm long and 1 mm wide. Inflorescences spikes, to 15(-20) cm long, terminal, and 30-40 flower clusters. Flowers subtended by a trilobed bract, ca 0.8 mm long for central flower, ca 0.4 mm long for two lateral flowers; sepals lanceolate, ca 1 mm long; filaments ca 0.8 mm long, the anthers ca 0.5 mm long. Achenes muricate to warty, ca 1.2 mm in diam. iaa Africa. HUANALAND: vic of Kang, Wild 5035 (MO); Okavango Terr, de Winter 4422 BR. s. loc., Harbor 6553 (PRE). Sour H ÁFRICA: CAPE OF GOOD HOPE: Prieska, Bryant 5234 (MO); Vryburg, Mostert 1250 (PRE). TRANSVAAL: Louis Trichardt, Schlieben & Strey 8381 (PRE); Middleburg, Hewitt 1968] NOWICKE—-PHYTOLACCACEAE 355 10437 (PRE); Pietersburg, pos 11010 (PRE); Rustenburg, Codd 2670 (PRE); Silverton, Obermeyer & van Nowhuys 27698 (PRE); Warmbad, Leenderter 6269 (PRE); Witbank, THERN RHODESIA: sen Wild 5329 (MO); Nuanetsi, Drummond 7748 (PRE) OU Wonderbloom Reserve, Repton 1633 (PRE), Smith 6195 (PRE); s. loc., Kirk 47 (PR HAT Schoenfelder S413 (PRE), Wil ld & und 9 (PRE). OUTH West AFRICA: 6983 (PRE); Waterburg, Galpin 51 Pollen grains ca 204 (E) X ca 27u (P), colpi ca I7u long, exine ca 2.24 in thickness. Pollen examined: Harbor 6553 (PRE), Schlieben & Strey 8381 (PRE), Wild 5035 (MO) AGDESTIOIDEAE IV. Subf. Agdestioideae Nowicke, subf. nov. Ovarium 3-4 carpellatum, stigmatibus 3-4, uniseminale. (Type Agdestis Moc. & Sessé) Monogeneric. 15. AGDESTIS Agdestis Moc. & Sessé in DC., Regni Veg. Syst. 1: 543, 1818. (Type A. clematidea Moc. & Sessé) Monotypic. l. Agdestis clematidea Moc. & Sessé in DC., Regni Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 543, 1818. (Type Sessé & Mocifio s.n. MA, not seen) A. teterrima De Not., Ind. Sem. Bot. Genuens 29, 1855. Vines, semi-woody climbers. Leaves deltoid, mucronate, entire, the bases cordate, up to 5 cm long and 6 cm wide, + glabrous, punctated by calcium oxalate crystals; petioles 2-3(-5) cm long. Inflorescences panicles, irregular, ca 12 cm long, terminal or axillary. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic; with pedicels 3-10 mm long; bract single, ca 1.2 mm long, variously placed; bracteoles two, minute, visible only in bud; sepals 4, + equal, ca 4 mm long, yellow-green, net veined, enlarging to ca 8 mm in fruit pu becoming brown, papery and translucent; stamens 15-20, irregularly deposited in a ring at the base, the filaments ca 3.2 mm long, filiform, the anthers ca 1 mm long; ovary semi-inferior, 4-carpellate, the style ca 0.5 mm long, the stigmas 4, papillose and recurved. Fruit an achene; seed one, by abortion of the other 3 ovules. Mexico; reported also from Nicaragua and from southern Florida and parts of Texas (Heimerl, 1934). MEXICO: EA Worth et al. 8716 ue GUERRERO: Mexia 8947 (MO). san LUIS POTOSÍ: Palmer 5 0 (MO); Pringle 3276 (BM. US); Purpus 5387 (MO). TAMAULIPAS: maine 2367 (MO); Dressler 2278 (MO): Pars 420 (MO). vera cruz: Purpus 6004 Es grains single, subprolate, ca 234 (E) X ca 27u (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 12-13 long, exine ca 1.5 in thickness, ca 2.54 in thickness at the poles, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Dressler 2278 (MO). The habit, leaf shape and inferior ovary distinguish this genus readily from all other members of the Phytolaccaceae. [Vor. 55 356 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN STEGNOSPERMOIDEAE V. Subf. Stegnospermoideae H. Walter, Pflanzenr. IV, 83 (Heft 39): 122, 1909. (Type Stegnosperma Benth.) Monogeneric. 16. STEGNOSPERMA Stegnosperma Benth., Bot. Voy. Sulph. 17, pl. 12, 1844. (Type S. halimifolium Benth.) Chlamydosperma A. Rich., Ess, Fl. Cuba 1: 631, 1845. Shrubs, sometimes vine-like or spreading. Leaves alternate, spatulate, elliptic or ovate-orbicular, acute, mucronate, or rounded, entire or + lamellate, the bases obtuse, glabrous, some species + leathery to slightly succulent, calcium oxalate crystals present; petiolate. Inflorescences racemes or few-flowered cymules. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic, with pedicels to 8 mm long; bract single, lanceolate, or elliptic and keeled; bracteoles two, smaller, lanceolate or elliptic and keeled; sepals 5, -- equal, elliptic to ovate, slightly united at the base; staminodia 5, elliptic to ovate, thin, adhering to the sepals; stamens 5, 8, or 10, the filaments widened at the base and united into a ring, the anthers 2X longer than broad; ovary spherical, 3-5 carpellate, style very short or absent, stigmas 3-5, recurved. Fruit a capsule, splitting by 3-5 seams; seeds 3-5, testa smooth, shiny, red-brown to + black. Mexico, south to Nicaragua and in the West Indies; a small genus of three species, easily distinguished from each other. Pollen grains single, subspheroidal to subprolate, ca 28-3lu (E) X ca 30-354 (P), 3-colpate, colpi ca 21-244 long and ca 3.54 wide at midlength, exine ca 3u in thickness, ca 4.5-5 in thickness at the poles, sexine + equal to nexine and mediumly reticulated (Fig. 3). Two important characteristics of the genus Stegnosperma are in marked con- trast to the remaining Phytolaccaceae: presence of petaloid staminodia (often referred to as petals, the occasional presence of anthers indicates otherwise), and the compound ovary of 3-5 carpels, each of which generally forms a seed. a. Inflorescences small axillary cymules I. S. watsonii aa. Inflorescences racemes, 5-7 cm lo i , capsule splitting by 5s 2. S. halimifolium bb. Stipmas 3. 4, capsule splitting by 3. re seams 3. S. cubens l. Stegnosperma watsonii D. J. Rogers, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 36: 475, 1949. (Holotype Palmer 1226 MO) Shrubs, spreading or vine-like, to 5 m. Leaves spatulate to elliptic, rounded, acute, or rarely mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 2.0 cm wide and 3.5 cm long, glabrous, slightly leathery; petioles to 4 mm long. Inflorescences cymules, mostly axillary, rarely terminal, (1-)3-8 flowered. Flowers with pedicels to 6 mm long; bract single, ca 1.2 mm long, elliptic and keeled; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, elliptic and keeled; sepals ca 5 mm long and ca 3 mm wide; staminodia ca 5 mm long and 3 mm wide, constricted at the base; stamens ca 10, the filaments ca 4 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long; ovary 5-carpellate, the stigmas 5. Capsule ca 5 mm in diam, splitting by 5 seams; seeds (4-)5, testa red-brown. 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 357 Restricted to Baja California and sang coastal regions of Mexico. MEXICO: BAJA CALIFORNIA: Wiggins 7681 (F, SINALOA: Jones s.n. (F). SONORA Coville 1646 (US); Gentry 2195 (F, MO, US), 2e & MO); Goldman 399 (US); Keck US); Palmer 1226 (MO); Rose 1211 (US); Rose et al. 12390 (US), 12566 (US), 13231 (US), 15047 (US); Shreve 5992 (F); Wiggins 6247 (US). Pollen grains subspheroidal to subprolate, 29- -3lu (E) X 30-33y (P), colpi ca 2lu long, exine ca 3.54 in thickness, thickened at poles to ca Ou. Pollen examined: Gentry 2975 (MO). 2. Stegnosperma halimifolium Benth., Bot. Voy. Sulph. 17, pl. 12, 1844. (as S. halimifolia) Shrubs, coarse, to 4 m. Leaves ovate, apiculate to + mucronate, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 4 cm long and 2.5 cm wide, glabrous, somewhat succulent or leathery; petioles 2-6 mm long. Inflorescences racemes, 5-7 cm long, terminal, some- times a smaller lateral raceme near the base of the primary one. Flowers subtended by a single bract, 1.6 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 1.4 mm long, lanceo- late; sepals ca 4 mm long and 2.5 mm wide; stamens + 10, the filaments ca 4 mm long, the anthers ca 1.5 mm long; ovary 5-carpellate, the stigmas 5. Capsules 5-7 mm in diam, splitting by 5 seams; seeds 5, red-brown. A distribution similar to S. watsonii; Baja California and northwestern states of Mexico. MEXICO: BAJA CALIFORNIA: Carter et al. 2115, 2497 (MO); Constance 3139 (MO); Fisher s.n. (MO), Gentry 4032 (MO); Johnston 3166 (MO), 3488 (MO); Jones 27465 (MO), 24481 (MO); Purpus s.n. (MO); Sharsmith & Sharsmith 1436 (MO); Shreve 6973 (MO). Pollen grains ca 294 (E) X ca 34u (P) and colpi ca 23u long (Fig. 3). Pollen examined: Purpus s.n. (MO). 3. Stegnosperma cubense A. Rich. in Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, Part 2, Hist. Nat. 10: 309, 12: pl. 44, 1845 Shrubs to 4 m. Leaves ovate to orbicular, mucronate to retuse, lamellate, the bases rounded or obtuse, up to 6 cm long and 3 cm wide, or up to 3.5 cm in diam, glabrous; petioles 6-8 mm long. Inflorescences racemes, 5- 7(-10) cm long. Flowers subtended by a single bract, ca 1.6 mm long, lanceolate; bracteoles two, ca 0.8 mm long, lanceolate; sepals ca 3.7 mm long and 2 mm wide; stamens 5, 8, or 10, the filaments 4 mm long, the anthers 1.6 mm long; ovary 3(-4) carpellate, the stigmas 3(-4). Capsules ca 5 mm in diam, splitting by 3(-4) seams; seeds 1-2(-3), black. Central America, north to Baja California and south to Nicaragua, and the West Indies. MEXICO: CHIAPAS: Morley 710 (MO). corma: Goldsmith 99 (MO). cuerrero: Hinton 5719 (MO). micHoacdn: Hinton 12627 (MO); Leavenworth & Hoogstraal 1394 (MO). OAXACA: Orcutt 3307 (MO). sinacoa: Lamb 465 (MO); Mexia 152 (MO); Ortega 7488 (MO). vera cruz: Purpus 8959 oe 13066 (MO). Nicaracua: Baker 2065 (M CU2A: ds 2027 (MO). Dominican RePuBLIC: Bertero s.n. (MO); Howard 12507 (MO). Bs grains ca 28u (E) X 35u (P) and colpi ca 24u long. Pollen examined: Purpus 8959 (MO). [Vor. 55 358 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BARBEUIOIDEAE VL Subf. Barbeuioideae Nowicke, subf. nov. Ovarium 2-carpellatum, carpellis- que connatis, biseminale; capsula. (Type Barbeuia Du Petit-Thouars) Monogeneric. 17. BARBEUIA Barbeuia Du Petit-Thouars, Gen. Nov. Madagasc. 6, 1806. (Type B. madagascari- ensis Steud.) Monotypic. l. Barbeuia madagascariensis Steud., Nom. ed. 2, 1: 186, 1841. Lianas, branched, drying black. Leaves elliptic, acute, entire, the bases obtuse, up to 8.5 cm long and 4 cm wide, glabrous, somewhat leathery; petioles ca 1-1.5 cm long. Inflorescences axillary fascicles or cymes, 2-10 flowered, rarely 1. Flowers perfect, actinomorphic; with pedicels ca 2.5-4 cm long; bract single, ca 1-1.5 mm long; bracteoles absent; sepals 5, subequal, ovate, ca 4-4.5 mm long and ca 3 mm wide, + leathery; stamens 20-25, inserted on a disc at the base of ovary, the fila- ments ca 2-2.2 mm long, the anthers ca 1.4 mm long; ovary globose, 2-carpellate, the style absent, the stigmas 2, somewhat flattened, the inner margin lightly papil- lose. Fruit a capsule, 2 loculed; seeds two. Matacasy Repustic: Elliot 2748 (BM); Guillot 25 (G); Humbert 3324 (A); Schlieben 8039 (BM, G, K). Pollen grains single, subprolate, ca 2lu (E) X ca 25u (P), 3-colporoidate, colpi ca 10-114 long, exine ca 2-2.5u in thickness, sexine + equal to nexine and finely reticulated. Pollen examined: Guillot 25 (G). The relationship of Barbeuia to the remaining Phytolaccaeceae is tenuous. The ovary structure with two functional united carpels and the striking inflores- cence type are unique. According to Walter's (1909) description of the ovule, it appears to be characteristic of the Centrospermae and should remain in the order, and, while I am inclined to agree with Hutchinson’s (1959) treatment of this species as a monotypic family, I think that until Barbeuia is treated monographi- cally it should be regarded as an anomalous member of the Phytolaccaceae. SPECIES EXCLUDED FROM FAMILY Hilleria subcordata Standley & Williams, Ceiba 3: 199, 1953. (Type León 3488 DiscussioN AND CONCLUSION This revision of the Phytolaccaceae does not change the familial limits as outlined by Heimerl in 1934. It does, however, change the intrafamilial categories and groupings as follows: the Rivineae now become the subf. Rivinoideae and contain two tribes, the Seguierieae and the Rivineae. The differences in fruit and inflorescence type between the two tribes are striking, and justify the recognition of the Seguierieae, The pollen, 3-colpate or 3-colporoidate in the Seguierieae, and 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 359 Fig. 3-8. Pollen in the e. Phyiolaccaceae Fig. 3 Stegnosperma halimifolium Benth., e S equatorial view, X680. Fig. 4 Anisomeria littoralis (Poepp. & Endl.) Moq., polar view, X760. Fig. 6 Microtea maypurensis (H.B.K.) G. Don, pantoporate, Fig. 7 Phytolacca rivinoides Kunth & Bouché, 3- colpate, polar view, X1000. Fig. 8 Lophio- carpus polystachyus Turcz., 3-colpate equatorial view, X870. Fig. 3 after Purpus s.n. (MO); Fig. 4 after Grandjot s.n. (MO); Fig. 5 after Bates 673 (MO); Fig. 6 after Buchtien 7290 (MO); Fig. 7 after Frye & Frye 2548 (MO); Fig. 8 after Liebenberg 5043 (PRE). pantoporate, 12-colpate or 15-colpate in most of the Rivineae, also supports this distinction (Fig. 3-8). All of Heimerl’s tribal groups, Barbeuieae, Phytolacceae (Euphytolacceae), Agdestideae, and Stegnospermeae, now become monotribic subfamilies containing the same genera. The Phytolaccoideae, with their multiple, functional carpels as well as 3-colpate pollen, represent the base of the family and contain three closely related genera, Anisomeria, Ercilla, and Phytolacca, the first two having been placed within Phytolacca by various early authors. The Agdestioideae, with a unique semi-inferior ovary, well-defined cordate leaves and 3-4 stigmas, represent a distinct group, but the similarity between it and some genera in the Rivineae, ie. Ledenbergia, cannot be denied. However, no clear morphological relationships exist for either the Stegnospermoideae or the Barbeuioideae to the remaining Phytolaccaceae, especially in the latter subfamily. In the case of the Stegnos- permoideae, the general habit, inflorescence type, and absence of a true corolla are representative characters of most Phytolaccaceae, but the capsular fruit is not. The inclusion of the Barbeuioideae in the Phytolaccaceae, however, is difficult to justify. Its inflorescence type, ovary structure, and endemism to Madagascar, are all unique for the family. Its evidences of relationship to the other Phytol- [Vor. 55 360 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN accaceae, i.e. lack of corolla, stamen number and attachment, and blackening on dessication, are all vague; certainly its 3-colporoidate pollen adds no evidence for a true connection within the family. For Microtea and Lophiocarpus I follow Eckhardt (1964) and include these genera in the subf. Microteoideae, rather than treat them as anomalous genera as heretofore, The relationship between these two taxa may indeed prove to be superficial, but the relationship of the Rivineae to Microtea, e.g. general habit, geographical location, and pollen morphology, is certainly much closer than to Lophiocarpus. The connection of the Phytolaccaceae to the Chenopodiaceae and Amaranthaceae is best illustrated by Lophiocarpus with its tendency towards suc- culence, reduction in stamen number, scarious bracts, habitat, etc. Within the family, even within genera, eg. Phytolacca, there exists a wide variability, from primitive to somewhat advanced characters. The primitive fea- tures include: alternate, simple, entire leaves; + simple inflorescence types; an absence of a corolla not due to reduction; actinomorphic and perfect flowers; a tendency to many stamens irregularly deposited; superior ovary placement; sep- arate and many carpels; and 3-colpate pollen. The more advanced characters observable in some groups include: reduction of carpel and stamen numbers, and loss, either physical or functional, of the androecium or gynoecium, leading to a dioecious condition. More rarely, a tendency to zygomorphy and inferior ovary position are present. Many more genera have advanced pollen types, i.e. panto- porate, 12-colpate and 15-colpate, and chromosome data for the family indicate many polyploid genera. As might be expected, there is not necessarily a correla- tion between advanced pollen morphology and advanced floral morphology, nor is there a correlation between the different evidences of advanced floral morphology, e.g. Anisomeria exhibits a tendency towards zygomorphy but is primitive in most other floral characters. In conclusion I consider the floral morphology on the whole as moderately primitive, but the pollen shows a wide range of variation from a primitive 3-colpate type, to more advanced types, 12-colpate, 15-colpate and pantoporate, which are well represented. LITERATURE CITED BENTHAM. G. 1839. Observations on some genera of plants connected with the flora of 238. j d ie C. 1828, Continuacion del catalogo de plantas observadas en Chile por el doctor rtero. Mercurio Chileno 1828: 735-749. Bs C. 1915. The phylogenetic taxonomy of flowering plants. Ann. Missouri Bot. Bostick, P. 1965. In Documented chromosome numbers of plants. 65: 2. Sida 2: 165-168. Brown, N. E. 1909. Flora of Ngamiland. Kew Bull. 1909: 81-146. Cuopat, R. 1903. In Chodat & Hassler, Plantae Hasslerianae, Enumération des plantes récoltées au Paraguay. Bull. Herb. Boiss., ser. 2, 3: 387-421. Dreipinc, A. S. 1961. The Betacyanins, a class of red pigments in the Centrospermae, p. 194-211. In, Recent Developments in the se of Natural Pheonolic Com- pounds. W. D. Ollis, Editor. Pergamon Press, New York Ecxarpt, T. 1964. Centrospermae, p. 79-102. In Engler Syllabus der Pflanzenf. 2. Gebruder Borntraeger, Berlin Erprman, G. 1952. Pollen morphology and plant taxonomy. Angiosperms. Almqvist & Wiksell, Stockholm 1968] NOWICKE—PHYTOLACCACEAE 361 Fassett, N. & J. Saver. 1950. Studies E. variation in the weed genus Phytolacca. I. Hy- 9. pa. "e in northeastern Co . Evolution 4: 332-33 Harin, J. 1964. A comparison of Phytolacca. americana and P. rigida. Castanea 29: 155- 164. nir E 1889. Phytolaccaceae, In ENGLER & PnawrL, Pflanzenfam. III 1: 1-1 4. Phytolaccaceae, In Encier & PRANTL, Naturl. Pflanzenfam., ed. 2, 16: 135- ase C. 1963. Numeración cromosómica de plantas ecuatorianos. Cien. Natur. 6: 2-6. » A. W. 1912. Phytolaccaceae, p. 454-459. In W. T. Thistleton-Dyer, Flora Cu Howzrr, I. T. 1960. A mexican pokeberry in San Francisco. Calif. Leafl. West. Bot. 9: 81- Horcrmson, J. 1959. The Families of Flowering Plants. 1. Dictotyledons, ed. 2. Oxford ver. Pu Press, Londo ONE Ls STRIPLING & & R. G. Ross. 1962. a an for some angio- sper of the southern United States and Mexico. Rhodora: 64: 147-161. Macea, 1 F. 1936. Phytolaccaceae, In Flora of Peru. Field Mu: Nat. Hist, Bot. Ser. -55 IRA S. & G. Mancenor. 1958. Deuxieme lists de nombre chromosomiques nouveaux chez diverses dicotyledones et monocotyledones d'Afrique occidentale. Bull. Jard. Bot. rux, 28: 315-329. d y R. & L. Cuarx. 1950. Anatomy of the Dicotyledons. 2. Oxford University ondon. e die. T V. 1952. A new combination in Schindleria. Phytologia 4: 39-41. Nowickz, J. W. 1967. In Chromosome numbers of phanerogams. 2. Ann, Missouri Bot. Gard. 54: 181. Rorc, d T. & J. B. Acuna. 1951. Phytolaccaceae, p. 134-140. In Leon & Aram, Fl, Cuba SAUER, T 1951. Studies of variation in the weed genus Vbi II. Latitudinally adapted iants within a North American species. Evolution 5: 273-279. 52. A geography of pokeweed. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 39: 113-125. SCHMIDT, O. C. 1923. Drei neue a aisle aus Sudamerika. Notizbl. Ber. 8: 312-314. ScHNAcK, B. & G. Covas. 1947. Estudios cariológicos en antótitas. Haumania 1: 32-41. ae T. 1936a. A list of chromosome numbers in angiospermous plants, II. Proc. Acad. Japan 12: 144. - "036b. Studies on the chromosome numbers in higher plants, with special refer- ence to cytokinesis, I. die 7: 544-595. 9 list of chromosome numbers in angiospermous plants, III. Bot Mag. Tokyo 51: 425-426, n H. 1906. Die Diagramme der Phytolaccacean. Bot. Jahrb. 37 tie 85): 1-57. 1909. Phytolaccaceae, In ENGLER, Pflanzenr. IV 83 (Heft 39): 1-1 APPENDIX Materials and Methods for Preparing Slides of Pollen by Acetolysis (modified from Erdtman, 1952). Dried anthers from large flowers or whole dried immature buds of small flow- ers were dissected and placed in centrifuged tubes and the following procedure was utilized, . To the centrifuge tube containing the flower material was added about 9 cc of a mixture 8 parts of acetic anhydride and 1 part concentrated sulfuric acid. 2. It was then heated in a water bath to 98°C for 2 minutes, with gentle stirring. 3. Material was cooled for about 5 minutes, centrifuged®, and decanted. "Speed and time of centrifugation kin vary depending upon the size of the pollen; about 45 seconds at 1000 rpm were used her 362 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 4. To the sediment was added 2-3 cc of 95% ethyl alcohol and sufficient water to fill approximately half the centrifuge tube. 5. The sediment was rinsed through a bronze filter, 200 mesh, then centri- fuged, and decanted. 6. The sediment was rinsed twice more with tap water. T. To the sediment was added about 10 drops of 50% glycerin for about 15 minutes. 8. Material was then centrifuged, decanted, and inverted on filter paper over- night or for 2 hours at 60°C 9. Using a platinum needle, a small piece of glycerin jelly? was rotated in the sediment and placed on a slide. 10. The slide was placed on a warmer at about 80°C; when the jelly melted a cover slip was added, and melted paraffin then added at the cover slip edge, seal- ing all edges and removing all air. 11. Slides were cooled and excess paraffin removed with xylene. DEX OF LATIN NAMES New taxa are in boldface Es all other t type refer to descriptions, numb (t) refer to names incidentally mention Achatocarpaceae 2951 Achatocarpus 295t Adenograma 2947, 2957 Agdestideae 2941, 2957, 35 Agdestioideae 2971, 2987, 355, 3591 Agdestis nd 5t, 296t, 2977, 355; > 355, teterrima 355 Aizoac AME Ponce 3211; americana 331; 0 ; floribunda 325; langsdorffii 325; macrophylla 3291; ure 2 Anisomeria t, , 2967, 29 298, 2991, 300t, 301t, 3597, 3601; chilensis 3001; ers 2997, 300, 3007; de m 2991; drastica 300; fruticosa 2997, 3001, 301; Eon 2997, 300, 3107, 359t Aphananthe Apodostachys 301; pos 302 Barbeuia 294t, 295+, 2977, 358, 3581; T Ceratococca 346; maypurensis 352 are in roman type; numbers in boldface in roman gum refer to synonyms, numbers with dagger Chenopodiaceae 294+, 2951, 3477, 3607 Cheno ie chin 2941, 295T um paniculatum 350 ma 3 Di idymotheca ut 2 Ercilia 2941, 3 Erc m 2941, as, 297+, 2981, 301, 3021, t, 359f, cata 302; syn carpellata Dr 303; volubilis 302, 302T mer Bu T Flueckigera 342; rc a 342 Galenia celosioi Gallesia 294, 2951. 29Tt, 320; pu integrifolia 3 3217, var. 21, var. ovata 321; o2 ft pes a 341 Hilleria 2944, 2957, 2967, 2971, 3321, 339, 3391; E 340; latifolia 2977, 339f, 340, 3417, 3597, var. longifolia 339; longifolia 3394, 339; meziana 3417; ecunda 339+, 3417, 341; subcordata 358 Ladenbergia 342 ‘Glycerin jelly was prepared as follows: gelatin 50 gm, distilled water 175 ml, glycerin 150 ml, phenol (crystals) 7 gm, and heated until clear and stored in refrigerator. 1968] NOWICKE—-PHYTOLACCACEAE Ecc 2941, 295%, 2971, 3321, 342, 421, 359; macrantha 3427, 343; peru- viana 3421; roseo-aenea 335; seguierioides s Limeae 294t Limeum 2947, 2957 E o ae 2941, 2977, 3467, 3477, 353, ; burchellii 353, 3547; dinteri 3537, ; A eae 353; polystachyus 8531. 3547, 3597; tenuissimus 3537, 354 2971, 346, 3477, ; subg. Eumicrotea 3411, 340; Microtea 3477; E LR glochidiata 352; g lat ; omma ; mE $t , 3097, a 248; paniculata 34Tf, on geri var. "satifolic 350; polystachya 353; portoricensis 3477, 348, 348+, 3491; scabrida 3477, 350, 3517; scandens 350; sprengelii 352; sul- cicaulis 347+, 351, 3511, tenuifolia 3411, 352; tenuissimus 3 Microteoideae 2951, 297+, 2981, 346, 3607 Microthea 3 Mohlana 2947, 339; aes 340; E 340; latifolia 340; meziana 341; oralis 340; secunda 341, var. acumina MI Monococeus mae 2957, 2977, 3501. 345; echinop 345 Petiveria. 2041. 6 2977, aes rhe Phaulothamnus 294}, 295 Phytholacca 303 Phytolacca 2941, 2951, 2967, 2977, 2987, 300t, 301t, 3027, 303, 3041, 3057, 359, 3601; subg. Euphytolacca 3041, 3051, 3061, 312; subg. Phytolacca 3067, 312; sect. Phytolacca 3067, 312; sect. Phytolac- castrum 304t, 3067, 312; sect. Phytolac- coides 3057, 306t, 319; subg. Pircunia 304t, 3057, 3067, 307; sect. Pircunia 306t, 307; sect. Pinuniastrum 3047, 307; sect. Pircunioides 3047, 3067, 308; sect. sect. Pircuniopsis 3067, 310; s2ct. Pseudo- lacca 3047, 310; Em 308, 317; acinosa 297+, 304t, 3057, 3061, 307, 3131; acuminata 312; americana 2977, 363 305t, 3067, 317t, 318, 3191; arborea 311; m 29Tt, , 317; bogotensis : 305t, 315, 317, 317, 3185; brachystachys 3041, 3051, 3061, 317; chilensis 300f, 301t, 3047, 3057, 305+, 310; clavigera 3201; cyclopetala 3047, 3057; decandra 313+, 3184; dioica 2967, 2971, 3041, 3057, 3051, 3097, 311; dodecandra 3047, 3057, =F CS 2 ncs 2941, 295, 296, pas 3341, 3557, 356t, 9581, x i 36 oF Phytolacceae 2947, 298, 3597 Phytolaccoideae ie 2957, 2977, 298, 3597 Piercea 332 Pircunia 298, 303, 307; abyssinica 308; chilensis 310; dioica 311; drastica 2997, ent 7; stricta 307, var. lati- folia 307, var. resediformis 307 Pittosporales 295+ Polpoda 2947, 295+ Potamophila 346; parviflora 352 Psammotropha 294+, 2957 Rivina 2941, 2951, 2977, a 3321, 332, fini meee yandra 32, purpurascens 332, 3347; roseoaenea 335; 364 scandens 336; secunda 341; seguierioides 342 Rivineae 2941, 295+, 332, 3587, 3591, 3607 Rivinia 332, 334 Rivinoideae 2971, 298+, 320, 3587 Sarcocoa 3021 Schindleria 294+, 295+, 2977, 3327, 337, 39+; densiflora 3371, 338; glabra 3377, 338: mollis 337+, 338; racemosa 3377, 338; rivinoides 3371, 338; rosea 338; weberbaueri 338 Schollera 346; debilis 348 Seguiera 321 Seguieria 294+, 295t, 2961, 2977, 3207, 321; sect. Euseguieria 3221, 324, 3301; sect. Seguieria 3231, 3247, 328, 3307; Seguieriella 3221, 3231, 3281; sect. Wal- teria 3231, 324; aculeate 331; affinis 3237, 244, 329; alberti 3247, 327, 3271; americana 3237, 324+, 331; brevithyrsa 3231, f, 330; coriacea 3221, 3241, 3267 326; elliptica 327, 330; emarginata 3241, 327, 3211; floribunda 3221, 3247, 325, 3251; foliosa 3221, 3237, Sad, 3251, 3231, laurifolia 3243, iiem an 3237, 325; macrophylla [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN mammifera 3231; ut EU ; parvifolia E T rigida : vauthieri 3221, ~ 326, 3275; votschii 3237; wangerinii 323 Seguierieae 320, 3581 Semonville a 295f Solanoides "332 Stegnosperma 2947, 295t, 2961, 2977, 356, 356 e 3567, 357; halimifolium 3561, 357, 3597; watsonii 3561, 356 Stegnospermeae 2941, 2957, 3597 Stegnospermoideae 2951, 2971, 2981, 356, 359 Suriana 301; volubilis 302 Tersonia 2947, 295 Thouinia integrifolia 320 Tithonia 332 Trichostigma 294+, 295+, 2977, 3321, 334; 3341, 3357, 335, 3377; rivinoides 336 wa 334; octandra 336; peruviana 335; polyandra ; racemosa 338; roseo-aenia 335; ee Wallinia 353; polystachya 353 TWO NEW SPECIES OF POLYGALA ENDEMIC TO PANAMA BY WALTER H. Lewis! Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis ABSTRACT Two species of Polygala belonging to the Timutua of Blake are described as new. Polygala wurdackiana and P. jefensis are endemic, respectively, to isolated and ey rich Panamanian cloud forests a El Valle de Antón in the Province of Coclé and to Cerro Jefe in the Province of Panama Still another genus can Je added to a long list now accumulating of species endemic either to El Valle de Antón, about 50 miles west of the Canal Zone in the Province of Coclé, or to Cerro Jefe, just east of the Zone in the Province of Panama (cf. Dwyer, Taxon 16: 159, 1967). These and other cloud forests, largely from about 2500-3500 ft in elevation, apparently have been the sites of evolution of many taxa, following their isolation from the main North American cordillera, which now vacillates to sea level throughout the length of the isthmus. To the rich cloud forest floras are added two new species of Polygala, one to each area noted, and both closely allied yet quite unlike any others from the New World (for a full comparison with other Panamanian species, see the treatment of the Polygalaceae in the Flora of Panama by Lewis & MacBryde, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 56(1), 1969, in press). Polygala wurdackiana W. H. Lewis, sp. nov.—Fig. 1A-D. Inter species Timutuae Blake remote affinis P. aparinoidi Hooker et Arnott differt habitu suffrutescenti, foliis grandibus usque 3 cm latis, floribus albis pedi- cellis usque 3 mm longis, sepalis et petalis grandioribus, cristis 8-22 lobis vel furca- tis, seminibus ovatis curvis 4 mm longis, arillis obovatis 2.5-3 mm longis. Suffrutescent perennials to 1.3 m, branched above, often with 2-4 branchlets at a node, glabrous, angular, green. Leaves (2-)3-5 in whorls; petioles 4-10 mm long, glabrous; blades elliptic to less commonly ovate, basally somewhat attenuated, apically acute, the margins remotely crenate, glabrous, sparingly punctate, 4-7.5 cm long and 1.8-3 cm wide decreasing in size apically. Inflorescences terminal, racemose, glabrous, the axis elongating to ca 9 cm, the flowers loose; bracts ovate, glabrous, deciduous, 0.8-1 mm long. Flowers white, the pedicels to 3 mm long; outer sepals 3, marginally ciliate, the larger ovate, concave, 2.3-2.5 mm long, the smaller pair ovate to oblong, usually short-connate at the base, sometimes free, 1-1.5 mm long; inner sepals (wings) 2, obovate to oblong-elliptic, apically rounded, basally short-clawed, marginally ciliate, persistent, 3.2-3.8 mm long; petals 3, the keel 2.5-2.8 mm long with a crest 8-22 lobed (often irregularly forked and varying in size), the upper pair obovate, rounded, equaling the keel. Capsules widely oblong, glabrous, 4-5 mm long, 3.2-4 mm wide; seeds 2, ovate, 4 mm long, "Supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Contract No. F44620-67-C- 0055). Ann. Missouri Bor. Garp. 55(3) : 365-367, 1969. [Vor. 55 366 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Fig A. Habit XA. B. outer an nd two in Sis of 12 lobes, "n d petals and anth g obovate aril, Seed of P. je de oe oblong aril, x10. A-D after Lewis e Al 1723 (MO); z ee Bouché s.n. densely pubescent with hairs copper colored at maturity; arils 2.5-3 mm long, the 2 lobes broadly obovate, appressed. Pollen ca 50u (E) X 29u (P), sexine smooth, 6-8 colporate, the colpi 33u long, 54 wide with thick nexinous regions 4u wide between the colpi and thickening to 4u equatorially where the nexine 1968] LEWIS—POLYGALA 367 abruptly thins, synorate, the ora broad; after acetolysis grains readily shatter at the equator. Flowering Jan-May. Apparently endemic to the cloud forest above 2500 ft in the vicinity of El Valle de Antón, Panama. CLÉ: Cerro Pajita, hills N of El Valle de Antón, 1000-1200 m, common, 7 Febr 1947, “Allen & Allen a (MO); Cerro Caracoral (vic of El Valle de Antén), alt ca 1000 m, elfin forest, 19 Jan 1968, Duke & Dwyer 15101 (MO, NY); mountains N of El Valle de Antón, alt 500-8000 ft, cloud forest, 28 May 1967, Lewis, MacBryde, Oliver & Ridgway 1723 (holotype MO, isotypes DUKE, K, UC, US Polygala wurdackiana is named for Dr. John J. Wurdack, Department of Botany, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., a student especially of South American members of the family. Polygala jefensis W. H. Lewis, sp. nov.—Fig. 1E. Polygala wurdackiana affinis sed differt laminis acuminatis et dense puncta- tis, sepalis parvioribus uterque praebens glanes grandiores binatas, arillis lobis oblongis. Herb to shrub 2 m high (Duke 9431), branched above with 2-3 branchlets per node, glabrous, angular. Leaves 4-5 in whorls; petioles usually 4-7 mm long, glabrous; blades elliptic, somewhat attenuated basally, acuminate apically, the margins remotely crenate, glabrous, densely punctate, the more mature 4-5.5 cm long and 2-2.5 cm wide. Inflorescences terminal, racemose, glabrous, the axis to 7 cm long, the flowers + loose; bracts ovate-lanceolate, ciliate, deciduous, 0.8-1 mm long. Flowers greenish white, the pedicels to 2 mm long; outer sepals 3, marginally ciliate, the larger ovate, concave, 2 mm long, the smaller pair ovate to oblong, 1 mm long, usually shortly connate at the base, each with 2 large glands; inner sepals (wings) 2, broadly obovate, apically rounded, basally short-clawed, persistent, marginally ciliate, 3.5 mm long, 2.5 mm wide; petals 3, the keel 3 mm long with a crest 6-20 lobed (mostly 6), the upper pair obovate, rounded, 3 mm long, glabrous. Capsules widely oblong to subglobose, glabrous, 4 mm long, 3-3.5 mm wide; seeds 2, ovate, curved, 4 mm long, pubescent with hairs copper colored at maturity; arils 2.8-3 mm long, the 2 lobes oblong, appressed. Flowering Jan- uly. ender to Cerro Jefe, Province of Panama; closely allied to P. wurdackiana. Ma: Cerro Jefe, alt 3400 ft, Bouché s.n., 31 Jan 1954 (holotype a Duke 9431 ao, E Jan 1967; alt 2700-3000 ft, Tyson et al. 4397 (MO), 9 Tuly 1966 PSIDIUM (MYRTACEAE) IN THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS? BY Duncan M. PORTER Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis ABSTRACT three insular taxa of Psidium are described, and a key to them is provided. The relationships of the endemic Psidium galapageium are discussed, and P. galapageium var. howellii is described as new In a survey of the Myrtaceae for the Flora of the Galápagos Islands, it has become increasingly obvious that three taxa of Psidium are present in the archi- pelago. The first is P. guajava L., the cultivated guava, which has escaped and become naturalized on several of the islands. The second is the endemic P. gala- pageium Hook. f., a common tree of the transition and Scalesia forests of the larger islands. The third proves to be an undescribed variety of P. galapageium. These three taxa may be aaa by means of the following key: Flowers ca 2.5 cm in diam 1(-3)-flowered dichasia; buds 7-10 mm th leaves borne to pete menie slightly pe rere) 5-14 cm long, 2-6 c wide, persistent I P. guajava rs ca 1-1.5 cm in diam, solitary; buds 4-5 mm long; leaves elliptic to ovate or occasionally suborbiculu: equilateral, 1.8-5.5 cm long, 0.9-26 cm wide, deciduous. Buds posue closed at anthesis except for a terminal pore, distally glabrous calyx o yac Misses calyptra .......... 2a. P. galapageium var. ian bb. Buds z lobed apically, o at anthesis, tomentose; calyx splitting irregu- larly into 4 unequal lo 2b. P. galapageium var. howellii aa pp p ic 5 EB = (D l. Psidium guajava L., Sp. Pl. 470, 1753. Small trees to 8 m high; branchlets 4-angled to slightly 4-winged, incon- spicuously punctate-glandular, tomentose with white or gray trichomes. Leaves opposite, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, slightly inequilateral, apex obtuse to apiculate, usually abruptly rounded or occasionally narrowed to an obtusely pointed or rounded tip, base abruptly rounded or obtuse, decurrent on petiole, inconspicuously punctate-glandular and thinly pubescent to glabrate above, thickly and more conspicuously punctate-glandular and tomentose beneath, especially on veins, main veins reddish and prominent beneath, impressed above, 5-14 cm long, 2-6 cm wide, persistent; petioles tomentose, 4-5 mm long. Buds tomentose, punctate- glandular, constricted below calyx, distal portion enlarged and ovoid to ellipsoid, apex acute, completely closed before anthesis, 7-10 mm long; bracteoles 2, sub- ulate, tomentose, 2-2.5 mm long. Flowers on branches of recent growth, ca 2.5 cm in diam, in a 1(-3)-flowered dichasium, terminal flower sessile, laterals on tomentose pedicels 10-12 mm long; peduncles tomentose, 10-20 mm long; hy- panthium tomentose, punctate-glandular, slightly constricted above ovary, 4-6 *Dr. ers McVaugh, University of Michigan, and Dr. Ira L. Wiggins, Stanford University, e Kp d read and com mented on the eds for this paper. Field studies in the Gal s Islands were accomplished under National Science ouem Grant GB-5254, inquir by the California pushes of Sciences, San Francisc ANN. Missourr Bor. Garp. 55(3): 368-371, 1969. 1968] PORTER—PSIDIUM 369 mm long; calyx appressed-pubescent, basally punctate-glandular, at anthesis split- ting irregularly into 4-5 lobes ca 1 cm long, whitish and sericeous within, per- sistent on fruit apex; petals 5, thin, delicate, broadly oval to elliptic, concave, 12-19 mm long, 6-10 mm wide, caducous; filaments white, spreading, longest as long as style; anthers versatile; style glabrous, 8-11 mm long; stigma capitate, slightly 2-lobed. Berry globose, glabrous, roughened with punctate glands, pale yellow and ca 2 cm in diam at maturity. Citation of the complete synonomy for this species is impossible at present. ISLA FLOREANA: wet meadow, rain forest E Floreana Peak, Howell 8898 (CAS). ae nr village be Wreck Bay, Willows s.n., 18 Apr 1932 (CAS). ISLA SANTA CRUZ: S out- skirts Bella Vista, 490-500 ft, common to 1800 ft, Wiggins & Porter 624 (CAS). This native of tropical America is widely cultivated and has become naturalized throughout the tropics. In the Galápagos Islands it has escaped from cultivation and has become common in the more mesic forests on several of the larger islands. 2a. Psidium galapageium Hook. f. (Trans. Linn. Soc. 20: 224, 1847) var. gala- pageium. Small trees or shrubs, to 8 m high; trunk to ca 1 m in diam, bark smooth, pinkish-gray; branches divaricate; branchlets terete, gray, punctate-glandular, tomentose to lanate with reddish to white or yellowish trichomes, becoming glabrate, bark becoming stringy, ultimate branchlets and leaves sometimes covered with a scurfy reddish bloom. Leaves opposite, elliptic to ovate, equilateral, apex acute to acuminate, base narrowly cuneate, decurrent on petiole, drying flat and usually black above and paler beneath or sometimes reddish-brown, subcoriaceous, shortly appressed-pubescent to glabrate, except for sparingly pubescent reddish + prominent midvein, both surfaces punctate-glandular, paler and more prominently so beneath, margins slightly revolute, 21-54 mm long, 9-26 mm wide, deciduous; petioles tomentose, flattened, slightly twisted, 1-3 mm long. Buds pyriform, punctate-glandular, contracted basally into a conic + pubescent pseudostalk 1-1.5 mm long, distal portion subglobose and glabrous, apex obtuse, at anthesis closed except for a minute apical pore bearing some projecting trichomes, 4-5 mm long; bracteoles 2, linear, tomentose, 3-3.5 mm long, caducous. Flowers on branches of recent growth, ca 1-1.5 cm in diam, solitary; peduncles opposite, slightly curved, spreading, tomentose, 6-10 mm long; hypanthium slightly constricted above ovary, tomentose below constriction, punctate-glandular, ca 2 mm long; calyx calyptrate, circumscissile ca 1 mm above ovary summit, calptra glabrous, + persistent by one side, pubescent and punctate-glandular within, calyx further splitting longitudinally into several segments following anthesis, forming a lobed persistent ring ca 1 mm high on fruit summit; petals 5, obovate, concave, 8-9 mm long, punctate-glandular, caducous; filaments filiform, white, spreading, to 4 mm long, inserted on tomen- tose punctate-glandular inner wall of hypanthium; anthers versatile, ovoid; ovary 3-loculed; style as long as stamens, lower 3⁄4 pilose, base persistent; stigma capitate. Berry globose to subglobose, glabrous, roughened with punctate glands, yellow at [Vor. 55 370 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN maturity, drying black to reddish-brown, 6-13 mm in diam, pericarp 1 mm thick; seeds several per locule, angular, dark, ca 5 mm long, testa bony. SLA FERNANDINA: meadow on SW part of island, alt ca 300-310 m, Hendrickson H-61 (DS). ISLA ISABELA: Iguana Cove, Snodgrass & Heller 126 (DS, GH); pa at 100 ft, low forest trees common at 350-600 ft, Villamil, p 3025 Ros. H, ups ISLA PINTA: Occas small trees, 500-1000 ft, SE side, Stewart H). ISLA SAN SALVADOR: Darwin s.n., Oct 1835 (CGE), Scouler s.n. (lectotype E forest d 1000-1500 Y 'Eriesson sn, T Sept 1947 (CAS); occas small trees, 350-2800 ft, James Bay, Stewart 3029 (CAS); ridge leading to main peak at W end, nr NE end of James "Bay, slender tree to 8 m, ca : m, doe & Porter 272 (CAS, MO), common second level tree among Bursera a, a 355 m, Wiggins & Porter 273 (CAS, MO). ISLA SANTA CRUZ: lower part of forest belt, Howell 9286 (CAS, GH); bushes at 300 ft, gradually increasing in size to 600 ft where la forest trees, Academy Bay, Stewart 3028 (CAS); Transition Zone, among Pisonia, c cadem ay-Bella- Vista trail, Itow 31 (DS); tree E m, Transition Zone, 100 m, “Old Trail” Academy Bay- Bella Vista, Wiggins 18399 (DS, MO); small tree ca 6-8 m, Transition Zone, ca 50 m, “new road” T Bay-Bella Vista, Wiggins 18760 (DS, © ; shrub or ny a ca 200-300 m, EI Chato, 15-18 km W Bella V Vista, Hendrickson H-38 (DS); above Fortuna, upper part forest belt, Howell 9266B (CAS), upper part Scalesia Zone, ca 420 m, Itow 102 (DS). Following his description of Psidium galapageium, Hooker (1847) cited both the Darwin and Scouler collection from Isla San Salvador. He did not indicate which was the type. Scouler’s specimen is in bud, while that of Darwin bears mature fruits. The Scouler specimen is chosen as the lectotype, as it clearly ex- hibits the characters that differentiate var. galapageium from var. howellii. The two varieties are virtually indistinguishable in collections bearing only mature fruits. The fruits of Psidium galapageium, like those of P. guajava, are edible. The label of Ericsson, 7 Sept 1947, bears the notation, “Fruits yellow, with a slight taste of turpentine; said to be poisonous, but I ate them and they did me no harm. Liked by birds. A goose we killed was full of them.” 2b. Psidium galapageium var. howellii D. M. Porter, var. nov. A var. galapageio gemmis 5-lobis apicibus et calycibus dehiscentes irregulariter in 4 segmentis differt. Differing from var. galapageium in being shrubs or small trees 2-6 m high. Leaves elliptic to ovate, occasionally suborbicular, apex acute to acuminate or rarely obtuse or retuse, base obtuse to narrowly cuneate, usually decurrent on petiole, shortly appressed-pubescent, especially along midvein, sometimes becom- ing glabrate except for midvein, 18-55 mm long, 10-21 mm wide; petioles 2-3 mm long. Buds tomentose, more thickly so below, distal portion ovoid, apically 5-lobed, acute, open at maturity. Flowers ca 1 cm in diam; hypanthium tomentose; calyx open in bud, 5-lobed, lobes free in mature bud, tomentose, tomentose within, at anthesis irregularly splitting between 4 lobes into 4 persistent segments 2.5-3 mm long, 1 segment larger and terminated by 2 lobes; petals 4-5.5 mm long, ca 3 mm wide; filaments white, greenish basally, 4-5 mm long; style pilose basally. Berry drying reddish-brown, 8-11 mm in diam; seeds reddish-brown. p La So bed common bushes & low trees, 150-400 ft, Wreck Bay, Stewart 3026 & (CAS, GH, MO); tree 5-6 m, impt in forest betw Wreck Bay & El Progreso, Wiggins Porter 370 (CAS, MO); shrub 2 m, forest ca 35 km above Wreck Bay along rd to El 1968] PORTER—PSIDIUM 371 Progreso, Wiggins & Porter 398 (holotype MO, isotype CAS). ISLA SANTA CRUZ: 8- es ft, in forest with Scalesia & Psidium dominant, 6 mi NW Academy Bay, Taylor TT46 AS). This endemic variety is named for Mr. John Thomas Howell, recently retired Curator of the Department of Botany, California Academy of Sciences, indefatigable collector of the Galápagos flora. The character of a circumscissile versus an irregularly dehiscent calyx is ex- ceedingly variable in Psidium, even within individual species (Amshoff, 1956; McVaugh, 1963a, b). However, in the case of P. galapageium, this character does not appear to vary within the different populations on separate islands. Specimens from Isla San Cristóbal have lobed calyces; those from the islands of Fernandina, Isabela, Pinta, San Salvador, and Santa Cruz (with one exception) have calyptrate calyces. The two varieties are allopatric in distribution, except for the collection of P. galapageium var. howellii known from Isla Santa Cruz (Taylor TT46). 'The label of this specimen bears the notation, “Perhaps a shrubby form of Ps. gala- pageium, a common tree in the forest.” Thus, the two varieties may prove to differ in habit as well as in the morphology and dehiscence of the calyx and the pubescence of the buds and leaves. Further field study is needed to ascertain the biological and ecological relationships between the varieties in this area where they are geographically sympatric. Johnston (1931) indicated that certain populations of Psidium on Socorro Island, off western Mexico, were doubtfully referable to P. galapageium. Others were referred to a new species, P. soccorense Johnst. Stebbins (1966, p. 49) has ventured the opinion that, "In many respects the Galápagos P. galapageium ap- pears to me to be as similar to the widespread tropical American P. sartorianum (Berg) Ndzu. as to the plant from the Revillagigedos, while the latter bears a considerable resemblance to P. salutare (H.B.K.) Berg, of southern Mexico." Psidium sartoranium is found in forests and savannas below 1500 m from Mexico to northern Colombia and Venezuela, while P. salutare occurs in savannas below 1000 m from Mexico to the Guianas (McVaugh, 1963a, b). McVaugh (pers. comm.), however, indicates that both the Galápagos Islands and Socorro Island col- lections show close affinities with P. sartorianum, perhaps representing insular populations of the later. Psidium salutare is a very different species, showing no close relationships to these insular populations. This whole complex is badly in need of taxonomic revision. LITERATURE CITED AMsHOFF, G. J. H. 1956. Notes on Myrtaceae. VI. Acta Bot. Neerl. 5: 277 Hooxer, J. D. 1847. An enume ps ion of the pl ol the Galápagos es with descriptions of those which are new. Trans. Linn. Soc. 20: 163-233. Jounston, I. M. 1931. The flora of the Revillagigedo Islands. Proc Calif. Acad., ser. 4, -104 McVaucH, R. 1963a. Tropical American Myrtaceae. II. Notes on generic concepts and descriptions of previously unrecognized species. Fieldiana:Bot. 29: 391-532. 1963b. Flora of Guatemala. Myrtaceae. Fieldiana:Bot. 24 (pt. VII, no. 3) :283- 405. STEBBINS, G. L. 1966. Variation and adaptation in Galápagos plants. pp. 46-54 In R. L. Bowman, ed., The Galápagos. Univ. of California Press, Berkeley & Los Angeles. A REVISION OF THE PANAMANIAN SPECIES OF RONDELETIA (RUBIACEAE)? BY JosePH H. KIRKBRIDE, JR.? St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri ABSTRACT A key to and descriptions of the Panamanian taxa of Rondeletia are given; two new taxa are den bed. INTRODUCTION The genus Rondeletia was first described by Plumier (1703) and named in honor of the physician Gulliaume Rondelet of Montpellier, and it was subsequently taken up by Linnaeus (1753). Several other generic names were introduced after this. Planchon (1849) divided Rondeletia into three genera, creating two new ones, Rogiera and Arachnothryx. He based the separation principally on the condition of the orifice of the corolla and the number of floral limbs. Rondeletia was 5- merous with an annular callosity at the orifice of the corolla, Rogiera was 5-merous with the orifice of the corolla yellow-bearded, and Arachnothryx was 4-merous with the orifice of the corolla nude and the indumentum generally arachnoid-tomentose. Hooker (1873) reduced Rogiera to synonymy under Rondeletia and made Arachnothryx a section of the genus. Schumann (1891) followed his lead. Standley (1918), in his revision of Rondeletia in North America, reduced both genera to synonymy, establishing the generic limits that have been accepted to the present. Steyermark (1967) resurrected Arachnothryx and transferred many South American species into it. He did not consider the species from Central America, Mexico, or the West Indies, which seem to form the major evolutionary centers of the genus. To evaluate the situation properly, it is essential that the species in these areas be studied critically. Since Standley's revision of the genus for North America, six new species of Rondeletia have been described from Panama, three by Standley and three by Dwyer & Hayden. FLORAL AND FRUIT MORPHOLOGY The flowers provide the majority of the diagnostic characters. The number of floral limbs can be important, but it must be used with caution due to the t Rewritten portion of a thesis submitted to the Department of Biology and Graduate School of Saint Louis University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Science (research). wish to express appreciation to the Society of the Sigma XI for their support, in part, of yes field work tha t went into the preparation of this paper. I also wish to thank M mens for study or who aided in other ways, and I am dee E. grateful to the Missouri Botanical Garden for ie privilege of using its inm. library and di facilities. Present address: The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, New Yor 98 ANN. Missourt Bor. Garp. 55(3) : 372-391, 1969. 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 373 variability in the number of limbs. The calyx lobes are the most valuable char- acter at the specific level in Panama. They are extremely variable between species in size and shape and are stable enough within the species to make adequate specific determinations. The corolla is also used at both group and specific levels based on its indumentum, length, condition of the orifice, and number of limbs. Heterostyly has been found in one taxon from Panama, R. salicifolia Dwyer & Hayden subsp. salicifolia. Presumably it is rare in the genus, although readily occurring throughout the rest of the family without regard to phylogenetic relation- ships (Vuilleumier, 1967). The placenta shape is variable enough to separate some taxa and show relationships. The mature fruit is one of the principal characters for generic determination. The shape and dehiscence are used at the group level, but at the specific level the fruit is of little use across the full range of the genus, although it has practical value in a key to the Panamanian species. It appears that the morphology of the ovules or seeds might be useful at the group level; they are either winged at one or both ends, or not winged. DISCUSSION Rondeletia is confined to the neotropics except for several species reported from the Himalayas. The two main evolutionary and distributional areas of the genus are Mexico-Central America and the West Indies. There is also a smaller center in northern South America. Panama is at the edges of the Mexico-Central American and the South American complexes having affinities with both. 'The Panamanian species fall into two general phylogenetic patterns: 1) those species which while obviously related, as evidenced by morphological characters, represent the products of strongly divergent evolutionary lines; 2) a group of endemics whose close phylogenetic inter-relationships are currently extremely difficult to determine. Except for their calycine lobation, these endemics, viz. R. salicifolia, R. cooperi, R. secunda, R. bertieroides, and R. platysepala, are difficult to delimit as species. They exhibit certain similarities of structure in the following characters: 4-merous condition, septicidal capsules (R. secunda excepted), fruits up to 4 mm in diameter, corolla naked at the throat, ovules not winged, and one or more calyx lobes expanded. The remaining seven Panamanian species of Rondeletia fall into the former phylogenetic pattern. Even R. odorata var. breviflora, R. hamelifolia, and R. panamensis, presumably closely related, show strong divergence in certain features: amount of pubescence, type of leaf, type of inflorescence, length of the calyx lobes, length of the corolla tube, shape of the fruit, and appendages on the ovules. In the Panamanian members of the genus, it is this type of divergence which allows the taxonomist to easily segregate these taxa as species. A world revision of Rondeletia may permit a more critical evaluation of the strength of these char- acters at the species level. eed for an overall seein ae 5 this large genus and related taxa is obvious what this nes emphasizes first, however, is the necessity for major collecting vi n. at higher elevations so that some he ha of the variation of species populations is possible.—Editor [Vor. 55 374 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN In his recent South American revision of Rondeletia, Steyermark (1967) resur- rected the genus Arachnothryx Planchon. He effectively divided the species formerly assigned to Rondeletia between Rondeletia (12 species) and Arachnothryx (21 species). Because his generic key is so important in modern Rondeletia re- search, it is given below: “Capsule loculicidally dehiscent; seeds fusiform, winged, caudate at one or both ends, the testa shallowly reticulate with elongated cells; orifice of corolla with a conspicuous thickened annular callosity; tube of corolla glabrous within; corolla-lobes 5; calyx lobes 5; disk densely hirsutulous, projecting above the sinus at the base of the ie lobes, the calyx-tube not developed or obsolete; stipule inconspicuous, triangular or deltoid; pubescence of iy ice outer surface of corolla, or vegetative hited usually not pannose nor arachnoid-pubescent. l Rondeletia. a septicidally dehiscent; a rhomboidal to triangular, compressed, not winged udate, the testa deeply foveolate and rugulose thickened with sunken pentagonal or qe agon nal cells; orifice of pier naked, without a thickened callosity; tube of corolla pubescent within in basal portion; corolla- lobes 4; calyx-lobes 4; disk usually glabrous, sunken below sinus at the base of the calyx-lobes, the calyx-tube obviously manifest; stipule sees eer developed, oblong or oblong-lanceolate; pubescence of hypanthium or vegetative parts usually pannose or arachnoid- p ent. Arachnothr ix." This key effectively deals with the species of Rondeletia in South America, but is open to criticism in the case of the Panamanian species. Rondeletia secunda matches the key for Arachnothryx except that it has loculicidally dehiscent fruit. Also, the key is not effective in separating those species which are bearded in the throat of the corolla such as R. amoena and R. dukei SYSTEMATIC TREATMENT Rondeletia L., Sp. Pl. 172, 1753. Petesia P. Br., Hist. Jamaica, 143, tab. 2 & 3, 1756. Lightfootia Schreb., Gen. 122, 1789, non L'Her. (Sert. Angl. t. 4, 1788). des F. Gmel, Syst. 2: 362, 1791, non Thunb. (Vet. Akad. Handl. Stock. 11: 26, Arac morpha Desv. in Hamilt., Prodr. 28, 1825. 1849. hni Rogiera Planchon, Fl. Serres 5: 442, 1 Arachnothryx Planchon, loc. cit Shrubs or trees, the ortis terete or angular. Stipules interpetiolar, variable in length and width, rostrate, acute, acuminate, obtuse or cuspidate at the. apex, entire or very rarely bilobate, usually persistent, erect or rarely reflexed. Leaves opposite, simple, sessile to pedicellate, the blade ovate, elliptic, obovate, oblong,’ or very rarely circular, obtuse, acute or acuminate at the apex, variable at the base, the venation pinnate with the secondary veins. arcuate, anastomosing near the margin of the leaf, very rarely bullate between the secondary veins, tertiary veins running at right angles to the secondary veins or open reticulate, pubescent to glabrous above, densely pubescent to glabrous and the midrib and secondary veins generally raised beneath, entire, very rarely revolute at the margin, coriaceous, chartaceous or membranaceous. Inflorescences terminal or axillary, commonly paniculate, rarely thyrsoid or of compound dichasia or racemose or spike-like, 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 375 pedunculate. Flowers pedicellate to sessile; hypanthium rotund or oblong, with an annular disk; calyx-lobes 4-6(-7) often unequal, sometimes foliaceous, often basally connate, variable in length and width; corolla with the tube usually slender, variable in length, the throat bare, bearded or with an annular callosity, the 4-6 lobes usually spreading, obtuse, imbricate in the bud; stamens 4-6, alternate with the corolla-lobes, variably attached in the tube, the filaments sometimes of variable length, the anthers oblong, dorsifixed, introrse, with 4 thecae, included or rarely excluded; style rarely variable in length; stigma bilobate or very rarely trilobate; ovary 2- or very rarely 3-loculate, the septum fully fused or rarely in- completely fused; placenta axile, polymorphic interspecifically; ovules many. Fruit a capsule, globose or rotund or rarely transverse elliptic or ovoid, -2-celled, loculicidally or septicidally bivalvate, the valves often bipartite, the seeds many, minute, sometimes winged at one end or at both ends. KEY TO THE PANAMANIAN SPECIES OF RONDELETIA a. Leaves coriaceous. bullate, the margin revolute ..................-- l. R. odorata var. breviflora aa. Leaves subcoriaceous, chartaceous, or membranaceous, non-bullate, the margin not revolute. Leaves with the lower surface with a dense whitish- or grayish- indumentum. c. Leaves densely grayish arachnoid-tomentose beneath; inflorescence a few-flowered modified thyrse, 4-5 cm long; calyx-lobes ae Ld 13 TE cc. Leaves densely white-tomentose beneath; inflorescence bru 2d cm. long; calyx-lobes triangular or oblong, 0.5-1.7 mm lon R. "e NOR bb. Leaves with the = wer surface with a moderate to sparse ier eae glabrate, or glabrou. d. Stipules ieee leaves subcoriaceous; corolla-tube densely yellow-pilose in the throat 4. R. amoena dd. Stipules erect; leaves chartaceous or membranaceous; corolla-tube never yellow-pilose in the throat. e. Flowers 4-merous; mature capsule to 4 mm in diam, septicidal (except R. secunda); seeds rectangular. One calyx-lobe 2 or more times longer than the other 3 lobes; capsule globose, rotund or ovoid, costate or rugose, sparsely strigose, E or glabrou g. m rge calyx lobe 6-11 5 mm long, 3.5-6.5 mm wide, capsule E costate, glabrate when mature ....................... . R. salicifolia gg. puse Meri obe 2-7.4 mm long, 0.7-2.2 mm wide; capsule globose, rotund, or ovoid, costate or rugose, pcs strigose or gla h. Hypant nthium densely strigose; capsule ovoid, costate, v uiid strigose . cooperi hh.Hypanthium arachnoid-tomentose; capsule globose or Hee costate or rugose, glabrous. i. Small calyx-lobes linear or narrowly oblong, 1.7-4 mm long, 0.2-0.6 mm wide; capsule rotund, rugose when mature, glabrous, loculicida DER EM 7. R. secunda ii. Small calyx-lobes triangular to broadly triangular or oblong, 0.3-1.8 mm long, 0.5-0.9 mm wide; capsule lobose, costate, glabrous, septicidal ............ 8. R. bertieroides ff. Calyx-lobes ca equal in Sane bin not known) ....... 9. R. platysepala ee. Flowers 5-merous or 5- & 6-m mature capsule ik seen for R. dukei) 8-10 mm in diam, loculicidal; seeds winged [Vor. 55 376 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN All calyx-lobes on the inflorescence 1-9.5 mm long; annular callosity at the orifice of the corolla; placenta hemispherical. k. Calyx-lobes 5 or 6, 1-2 mm long; corolla-tube 6-9 mm long Ty " capsule pgr elliptic in radial section ........ 10. R. hamelifolia . Calyx-lobes 5, ca mm long; corolla-tube 13-18 mm long; psule globos R. panamensis jj. Sev lyx-lobes the inflorescence to 3.8 cm long e no annular callosity at de orifice of the corolla; placenta llong 12. R. dukei l. Rondeletia odorata Jacquin var. breviflora Hooker, Curtis Bot. Mag. tab. 6350, Shrub with the branchlets terete, the younger portions ferrugineous-hirsute, the older portions brown and glabrous. Stipules broadly triangular with a rostrate apex, 2.2-3.9 mm long, 1.3-4 mm wide. Leaves sessile or subsessile, the petioles to 2 mm long; blade subovate to elliptic or subobovate, 1.8-4.7 cm long, 1-2.8 cm wide, subacute at the apex, subcordate at the base, coriaceous, densely scabrous above when young, sparsely scabrous above when older, bullate between the second- ary veins, sparsely hirsute on the veins and the midrib and secondary veins promi- nently raised beneath, the tertiary veins open-reticulate, the margin revolute. Inflorscences terminal, contracted thyrses, 1-2.2 cm long, the floriferous portion of the axes with 2 basal foliar bracts 3-8 mm long and 2.5-5 mm wide; peduncles 3.2-7 mm long; axes ferrugineous-hirsute. Flowers pedicellate, the pedicels ca 2 mm long, with a linear bractlet to 4 mm long and ca 0.5 mm wide; hypanthium ferrugineous-tomentose, rotund, ca 2 mm long, the disk ca 1 mm in diam, sparsely puberulent; calyx-lobes 6, narrowly oblong, ca 4 mm long, ca 1 mm wide, very sparsely tomentose outside, glabrous inside; corolla bright red, the tube 5 to 7 mm long, very sparsely tomentose outside, glabrous inside, the 5 lobes obtuse, ca 2.5 mm long, with an annular callosity at the orifice of the corolla, ca 0.4 mm thick; stamens 5, the filaments ca 1 mm long, attached at the middle of the tube, the anthers oblong, ca 2 mm long; stigma bilobate or trilobate, the style thick and glabrous; ovary 2- or 3-loculate, as indicated by the stigma; placenta obovate, ca 1.3 mm long, ca 1 mm wide, with rectangular ovules. Fruits not seen. CANAL ZONE: Matachin to Las Cascadas, Cowell 359 (NY). This variety is confined to Cuba, except for one collection from the Canal Zone. It is odd that it has not been recollected in the Canal Zone, one of the most thoroughly collected areas in Panama. 2. Rondeletia darienensis Standley, N. Amer. Fl. 32: 53, 1918. Branchlets terete, arachnoid-tomentose when young. Stipules narrowly ovate, 7-8 mm long, 1.5-2.5 mm wide, with a sheathing base 5-6 mm wide, abaxially glabrous, adaxially tomentose along the margin and sericeous in the center, the sheathing base tomentose when young. Leaves with the petioles 3-18 mm long, arachnose when young; blade elliptic or narrowly ovate, 7.5-17 cm long, 2.5-7 cm wide, acuminate at the apex, cuneate or obtuse at the base, densely grayish arachnoid-tomentose and the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins running at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences axillary, 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 377 modified thyrses, 4-5 cm long, few-flowered, subtended by 2 bracts 3-4 mm long; peduncle 1-1.5 cm long, sparsely arachnoid-tomentose. Flowers 4-merous, with 1 or 2 bractlets, pedicellate, the pedicels densely white-arachnoid-tomentose, 1-11 mm long; hypanthium densely white-tomentose, oblong, ca 3 mm long, ca 2 mm wide; calyx-lobes lanceolate, 1-1.3 cm long, 0.2-0.4 cm wide, acute at the apex, arachnoid-tomentose outside, glabrous inside, with 3 parallel veins; corolla (fide Pittier) with the tube 15 mm long, white-woolly-tomentose on the outside, yellow in the throat, the lobes rounded, irregular, = 5 mm long; stamens (fide Pittier) attached in the upper 14 of the tube. Capsules (fide Standley) ca 4 mm long. DARIEN: Boca de Paurando, on Sambu River, S Darien, alt 20 m, Pittier 5684 (holotype US, isotype F). The inflorescence is a modified thyrse composed of three dichasia of which two flowers have been lost from each of the basal dichasia. This species is distin- guished by all four calyx-lobes, not just one being expanded, with the lobes lanceolate and 1-1.3 cm long; in addition the under surface of the leaves is densely grayish arachnoid-tomentose. It is known only from the type collection. 3. Rondeletia buddleioides Bentham, Pl. Hartw. 69, 1840.—Fig. 1. Arachnothryx buddleioides (Bentham) Planchon, Fl. Serres 5: 442, 1849. Rondeletia affinis Hemsley, Diag. Pl. Nov. 28, 1879. Tree or shrub to 15 m high with trunk diam to 15 cm, the branchlets terete or angular, terminally white-tomentose, the older portions brown and glabrous. Stipules erect, oblong to narrowly oblong to linear or rarely ovate to broadly ovate to ovate at the base and triangular at the apex, 4-10 mm long, 0.5-5 mm wide. Leaves with the petioles 0.3-2 cm long, the younger white-tomentose, the older glab- rous; blade ovate to elliptic or obovate, 2.5-21 cm long, 1-7 cm wide, acute to abruptly acuminate at the apex, subobtuse to cuneate or attenuate at the base, sparsely arachnoid-tomentose when young but soon glabrous and asperous or non- asperous above, densely white-tomentose and the midrib raised beneath, the tertiary veins running at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal and pseudo-axillary, racemose with equally pedunculate cymules or helicoid-cymules, 2.5-32 cm long; peduncle 0.4-8.5 cm long; main axes densely white-tomentose when young, but soon glabrous. Flowers sessile or subsessile, 4-merous; hypanthium densely white arachnoid-tomentose, rotund, 1-1.5 mm long, the disk ca 0.1 mm thick, 0.2-0.6 mm in diam, glabrous; calyx-lobes equal or unequal, basally connate for ca 0.5 mm, triangular or oblong, 0.5-1.7 mm long, ca 0.7 mm wide, reflexed at maturity; corolla with the tube 6-11 mm long, arachnose outside, the basal l^ sparsely villous inside, the lobes 2-3 mm long and wide, irregularly shaped, arachnoid-tomentose outside, papillate inside; stamens subsessile, attached above the indumentum, the anthers oblong, ca 1.5 mm long; placenta obovate, rarely elliptic, 0.5-0.9 mm long, 0.5-0.7 mm wide, with rectangular ovules. Capsules oblong-globose, 3-4 mm long, sparsely tomentose when mature, septicidal. This is a mountainous species found about 300 m growing in cloud forest. So far, it has been collected on the Pacific slope from Chiriqui to east of the Canal Zone and on the Atlantic slope in Bocas del Toro. It probably will be found along [Vor. 55 378 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN X NANN ES NS) n Y á wy S rad bm lj W Li Hy ESS AT ey 57777) 7 Li p Jm; Wig J} 7 $] ys 17 ^ “a LES i Ls ET dn ML Fig. 1. Rondeletia buddleioides Bentham: A, flowering branch (X14); B, flower (caX215); C, opened corolla-tube (caX212); D, ovary cross section with placenta and ovules omitted (caX 10). the entire corresponding Atlantic slope also. It ranges from east of the Canal Zone to Mexico, and, judging from the number of collections, is as common at higher elevations across its entire range as it is in Panama. The isotypes collected in Mexico and deposited in the New York Botanical Garden differ from the Panamanian collections in leaf size, stipule shape, and the length of the peduncles of the cymules. Certain collections from the entire range of the speices also show a great deal of variation. A representative sampling of the species across its entire range is necessary before it will be possible to understand its variation and consequent taxonomic ramifications. The stem bearing a terminal fruiting inflorescence shows at the time of fruit dehiscence, at the uppermost node, a short branchlet from an axillary bud of 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 379 several nodes. This eventually develops into a full-size terminal inflorescence. I have used the term pseudo-axillary to describe it. This species is represented in Panama by two varieties: a. Upper surface of the leaf blade non-asperous var. buddleioides aa. Upper surface of the leaf blade asperous var. aspera 3a. Rondeletia buddleioides var. buddleioides. CHIRIQUÍ: rocky plains ca 5 mi S of Boquete, Allen 4699 (F); elevated gravel benches 1 mi SW of Boquete, Allen 4718 (F); Finca Lérida, Allen 4753 (MO), Woodson & Schery 222 (F, GH, MO); Bajo Mono-Robalo Trail, Allen 4785 (F, NY), 4829 (F); Finca Collins, Blum & Dwyer 2423A (MO), Ebinger 717 (MO), wi et al. 1128 (GH, MO, US), 2037 (MO), 2044 were Bajo Charro, Davidson 231 (A, F, MO, US); Volcan de Chiriqui, Davidson 918 (A, F, MO, US); Boquete, Davidson 1060 (A, F, MO, US), Dwyer 6955 (MO), 7004 (MO); Cerr rro Horqueta, Dwyer et al. 551 (GH, MO, US), von Hagen & von Hagen 2151 (MO), Kirkbride 155 (MO, NY); Llanos Francia, Dwyer & Hayden 7592 (MO), Stern et al. 1199 (GH, MO); 1.5 mi from Boquete towards David, Dwyer & Hayden 7626 (MO); nr Pinola on the Chiriquí Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 864 (MO, NY); betw Pinola & Quebrada Hondo on the Chiriquí Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 905 (MO); betw Pinola & Quebrada Seco on the Chiriqui Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 1023 (MO, NY); = we S | z D 0 ln N e lc 5 ) : er 1495 (F S), 206 (MO), Ebinger 394 (MO); Fort Sherman, Pifia Highlands, Hayden 120 (MO); Cerro Azul to Cerro Jefe, Tyson et al. 4328 (MO). 3b. Rondeletia buddleioides var. aspera Kirkbride, var. nov. Differt a var. buddleioide superficie laminae folii aspera. BOCAS DEL TORO: a Vista Camp on the Chiriquí Trail, alt 1000 m, Cooper 615 (F, NY, Y); betw CE pm t above Buena Vista) & Quebrada Higueron on the Chiriqui Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 780 (holotype MO, isotype NY), 796 (MO, NY). Standley placed the first collection of this taxon, made by G. Proctor Cooper, in R. buddleioides Bentham. It has only very immature floral buds and Thomas A. Sprague of Kew (in correspondence with S. J. Record) challenged this specific identification. My recent collection, which bears fruit and more mature floral buds, leaves no doubt that it belongs to Rondeletia. Inflorescence, floral, foliar, and stipule characters place it in R. buddleioides, but the asperous condition of the upper leaf surface warrants establishing it as a separate variety. A population of eight to ten trees, to 30 m high with a 3-10 cm diam, is located on the Chiriquí Trail just above Buena Vista. 'The diagnostic character of the new variety, the asperous leaf-surface, is obvious in the field. 4. Rondeletia amoena (Planchon) Hemsley, Diag. Pl. Nov. 26, 1879.—Fig. 2. Rogiera amoena Planchon, Fl. Serres 5: 442, 1849. R. menechma Planchon, loc. cit. Rondeletia versicolor J. Smith, Bot. Mag. tab. 4579, 1851. R. latifolia Oersted, Kjoeb. Vidensk. Meddel. 1852: 43, 1852. R. rugosa Bentham ex Oersted, loc. cit 380 [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN > DF anes ted EROM eGR AS Iw AS SANT OT PAS SNR E ADS NANI] ROSE eod LLL ee on Uu s n T" nine e eae in f ONZ me 7i TN mE d d | o. e Fig. 2. Rondeletia amoena (Planchon) Hemsley: A, flowering branch (X14); B, flower (caX2); C, opened corolla (caX2); D, ovary cross section with placenta and ovules omitted (caX3!4); E, immature fruit (caX2). Rogiera latifolia Decaisne, Rev. Hort. sér. 4, 2: 121, 1853. R. versicolor Lindley & Paxton, Fl. Gard. 2: 69, : Rondeletia schumanniana K. Krause, Bot. Jahrb. 40: 315, 1908. Shrub or tree to 14 m high and 10 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, termi- nally ferrugineous-pilose, the older portions brown and glabrous. Stipules reflexed, triangular to broadly triangular, 4-17 mm long, 3-10 mm wide, obtuse at the apex, sericeous outside, sericeous or puberulous along the edge and glabrous in the center on the inside. Leaves with the petioles 3-18 mm long, ferrugineous-pilose when young but soon brown and glabrous; blade subovate to elliptic or very rarely circular, 5.5-20 cm long, 2.7-12.8 cm wide, acute to abruptly acuminate at the apex, obtuse, subtruncate, or subcordate at the base, subcoriaceous, the midrib and secondary veins above with the pubescence strigose and the intercostal areas with 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 381 a sparsely strigose pubescence or glabrous, the midrib and secondary veins beneath with the pubescence sericeous or strigose and the intercostal areas sparsely pilose or glabrate, the midrib and secondary veins prominently raised beneath, the tertiary veins open-reticulate. Inflorescences terminal and axillary, paniculate, 3.5-16 cm long, ca as broad or broader than long; peduncle 1.5-8.5 cm long; floral axes fer- rugineous-pilose, the mature fruiting axes glabrate. Flowers with several bractlets, sessile or subsessile, the pedicels white-velutinous, 1-2 mm long; hypanthium densely ferrugineous- or white-tomentose, rotund, ca 2 mm long, the disk ca 0.1 mm thick, ca 0.7 mm in diam, glabrous; calyx-lobes 5-6(-7), unequal, basally con- nate for ca 0.5 mm, broadly triangular to triangular-oblong, 0.5 mm long, 0.25-0.75 mm wide; corolla with the tube 9-14 mm long, tomentose on the outside, densely yellow-pilose in the throat, with the hairs septate, glandular-pubescent below inside, the lobes 5-6, obtuse, 2-3.5 mm long, sparsely tomentose outside, glabrous inside; stamens attached at ca the middle of the tube, the filaments 1.5-2. long, the anthers oblong, ca 2 mm long; placenta hemispherical, ca 1.5 mm in diam, with many winged ovules. Capsules broadly transverse to transverse elliptic, to 6 mm in diam, tomentose when young, very sparsely tomentose or glabrate when mature, loculicidal. CHIRIQUÍ: llanos on slopes of Volcán de Chiriquí Viejo & along Rio Chiriquí Viejo, Allen 994 (GH, MO); "New Switzerland," Allen 1350 (F, GH, MO, NY, US); Llano del Bajo Mono, Davidson 471 (F); Volcán de Chiriqui, Davidson 951 (A, F, , US); Cerro Horqu Duke et al. 13650 (MO); betw Pinola & Quebrada Seco e bus Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 1026 (MO, NY), 1036 (MO, NY); Alto Lino, Bro. e 839 forests aroun vete, Pittier 2917 (G , US); Cerro de Lino, Pittier 3024 (US); p Agu S iriquí Volcano, Pittier 3120 ( erro Vaca & Hato del Loro, Pittier 5388 (US); valley of the upper Rio Chiriqui Viejo, hite 19 (E : ; vic o Cerro Punta, Lia io hiriquí Viejo ley F, , MO); é y 2 Peña blanca, Woodson & "Schery 311 (F, MO); Casita Ala Woodson et al 810 (A, F, MO, NY). This species occurs between 1000 and 3000 m elevation from Chiapas, Mexico, to Chiriquí, Panama. It is distinguished by its large reflexed stipules, subcoriaceous leaves, and paniculate inflorescences. 5. Rondeletia salicifolia Dwyer & Hayden, Phytologia 15: 58, 1967. Shrub or tree to 8 m high and 6 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, white- tomentose when young, the older portions glabrate. Stipules erect, narrowly triangu- lar to triangular or rarely broadly triangular, 3-9.5 mm long, 2-4 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp 0.5-6.5 mm long, tomentose to glabrate on the outside, sericeous on the inside with several finger-like structures, these ca 0.5 mm long and 0.07 mm in diam, dark red or black when dry. Leaves petiolate with the petioles 2-15 mm long, tomentose when young but soon glabrate; blade elliptic to narrowly elliptic, rarely narrowly oblong, narrowly ovate, or narrowly subobovate, 3.5-21 cm long, 1-9 cm wide, long-acuminate at the apex with the acumen 0.5-2 cm long, attenuate to cuneate or subacute at the base, arachnoid-tomentose above and tementose below when young but soon glabrate above and glabrate or sparsely tomentose [Vor. 55 382 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN on the veins and the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins open reticulate or running at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal, axillary and psuedo-axillary, paniculate with the branches helicoid- cymose and often secund, 3.5-12 cm long; peduncle 0.5-6 cm long; axes white- arachnoid-tomentose when young, sparsely tomentose when fruit mature. Flowers 4-merous, sessile or pedicellate with the pedicels to 2 mm long, white arachnoid- tomentose; hypanthium sparsely tomentose, rotund, 1.2-2.3 mm long, the disk ca 0.1 mm thick, ca 0.5 mm in diam, glabrous; calyx-lobes glabrous on the inside, with a few appressed hairs on the outside, unequal, basally connate for ca 0.5 mm with 1 lobe 3 or more times longer than the other 3, the larger lobe elliptic or subovate, 6-11.5 mm long, 3.5-6.5 mm wide, acute at the apex, the small lobes elliptic or oblong or triangular, 0.7-3.5 mm long, 0.5-2.7 mm wide, acute at the apex; corolla with the tube 8-15 mm long, with a few appressed hairs on the out- side and 14-14 basally puberulent below the anthers inside, the lobes obtuse, 3-4 mm long and wide. glabrous inside, with a few appressed hairs on the out- side; stamens variably attached in the tube, the filaments 0.5-2 mm long, the anthers ca 3 mm long; style 6-14 mm long; ovary with a thick septum fused only at the base or completely fused, the placenta V-shaped or elliptic with rectangular ovules. Capsules globose, 3-4 mm in diam, costate, glabrate when mature, septi- cidal, the calyx persistent. is species is presumbly endemic to Panama. It appears to spread over the mountains of the Cerro Jefe region and is found in the western river valleys of Bocas del Toro. Probably, it will be found in the neighboring river valleys of Costa Rica. It appears to be closely related to R. aetheocalymma J. D. Smith of Guatemala, which has narrowly oblong stipules, subcoriaceous leaves and larger fruits. Cusp of the stipule 0.5-2 mm long; mature leaves glabrate beneath, the iss veins open reticulate; tube of the corolla ca 15 mm long; septum of the ovary fused only at the base, the placenta V-s su ils salicifolia Cusp of the stipule 3-6.5 mm long; ae leaves sparsely tomentose on the veins beneath, the tertiary veins running at right angles to the secondary ex tube of the corolla ca 8 mm long; septum of the ovary completely fused, t placenta elliptic subsp por. £5 D d 5a. Rondeletia salicifolia subsp. salicifolia. PANAMA: betw Cerro Jefe & Eneida, alt 700-966 m, Dwyer et al. 8215 (MO); Altos de Río pus alt 833 m, He et al. 2315 (MO); Cerro Jefe, alt 900-1000 m, T'yson et al. 3319 (holotype MO). This subspecies exhibits a complicated form of heterostyly. When the style is ca 13 mm long, the stigma is ca 1.3 mm long, the stigmatic surface is smooth, the filaments are ca 2 mm long, the stamens are attached ca 14 of the way up from the base of the tube, and the tube is puberulent ca 1% of the way up from the base inside. When the style is ca 6 mm long, the stigma is ca 2.5 mm long, the stigmatic surface is densely granulate, the filaments are ca 0.5 mm long, the stamens are attached ca 34 of the way up the tube from the base, and the tube is puberulent ca 4 of the way up from the base inside. Heterostyly is also known to occur in a number of other genera of the Rubiaceae (Vuilleumier, 1967). 1968] KIRKBRIDE—-RONDELETIA 383 The inflorescences of the holotype are presumably immature. In the matura- tion of the inflorescence the ovary and calyx lobes develop first, with the floral axes being very short and the corolla only 1-3 mm long. Subsequently, both the corolla and the floral axes lengthen as much as five times. Thus a mature in- florescence is twice the size of the immature inflorescences as represented by those found on the holotype. 5b. Rondeletia salicifolia subsp. brevicorolla Kirkbride, subsp. nov. Differt a subsp. salicifolia cuspide stipulae 3-6.5 mm longa, foliis maturis sparsim tomentosis in venis subter, venis tertiariis currentibus in angulis rectis venis secundaris, tubo corollae crea 8 mm longo, septo ovarii omino connato, placenta elliptica. BOCAS DEL TORO: Changuinola "Valley, Cooper & Slater 98 (F); a Me betw Quebrada Hu uron & Quebrada Schlunjik, alt ca 100 m, Kirkbride & Duke 467 (MO, loud forest above Quebrada Huron on Cerro Bonyik, alt 166-400 m, E ips & Duke 597 (holotype MO, isotype This taxon does not appear to be heterostylous. The stamens are attached at ca the middle of the corolla-tube. 6. Rondeletia cooperi Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4: 267, 1929. Tree or shrub to 7 m high and 5 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, terminally densely white-strigose, the older portions sparsely strigose, the internodes unequal, 1.5-25 cm long. Stipules erect, triangular to very depressed triangular, 39-4 mm long, 2-7.5 mm wide, abruptly acuminate with the acumen 0.5-1(-1.5) mm long, strigose or sericeous-strigose on the outside, sericeous on the inside with several finger-like structures, these ca 0.7 mm long and 0.1 mm in diam, dark red when dry. Leaves petiolate with the petioles 0.2-3 cm long, densely strigose when young but sparsely so when mature; blade narrowly elliptic to elliptic, 11-21 cm long, 4.5-9 cm wide, acuminate at the apex with the acumen (1-)1.5-25 cm long, at- tenuate to short-attenuate or cuneate at the base, densely to sparsely strigose on the veins when young but soon glabrate above, strigose to densely white-strigose on the veins when young but soon strigose beneath, the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins running -- at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal, paniculate with the branches modified compound dichasia, 9-25 cm long; peduncles unequal, 3-16.5 cm long; peduncle and secondary axes strigose. the floral axes densely strigose. Flowers 4-merous, sessile or pedicel- late with the pedicels to 1(-3) mm long, densely strigose; hypanthium densely ferrugineous-strigose, oblong, to 2 mm long and 1.3 mm in diam, sericeous-strigose; calyx-lobes basally connate for ca 0.5 mm, l(or 2) lobes 3 or more times longer than the other (2 or) 3 lobes, the large lobe narrowly elliptic to elliptic or ovate, 3.4-43 mm long, 1.2-2.2 mm wide, obtuse at the apex, sparsely strigose on both sides, the small lobes narrowly oblong to oblong or triangular, 0.9-1.3 mm long, 0.3-0.6 mm wide, acute at the apex, sparsely strigose inside, strigose outside; corolla with the tube 9-11 mm long, strigose outside, the lobes obtuse, ca 4 mm long, sericeous-strigose outside near the base. Capsules ovoid, to 4.5 mm long, to 3.5 [Vor. 55 384 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN mm in diam, costate, sparsely strigose when mature, septicidal to ca the middle, calyx lobes persistent; seeds rectangular. EL TORO: Buena Vista Camp, Chiriqui Trail, alt 416 m, Cooper 600 (ho be F, isotypes NY, Y); betw Buena Vista coffee finca & Cerro Pilón, e "Trail, Kirkbride & Duke 703 (MO, NY); Punta Pefia, alt ca 333 m, Lewis et al. 2158 (MO). This species is known only from the vicinity of the type locality, an area of rain forest on the Atlantic slope with no appreciable dry season. Kirkbride & Duke 703 bears what appear to be two types of fruit, capsules and berries. They have similar internal structures: 2 locules, many ovules, and axile placentation. However, the septum of the baccate fruit has increased in thickness tremendously and the tissues of the septum appear to be abnormal. This abnormal development of the fruit is probably caused by an exterior agent, such as a virus. 7. Rondeletia secunda Standley, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 18: 141, 1916. Shrub with the branchlets terete, terminally sparsely tomentose, the older portions glabrous. Stipules erect, triangular, 3-6 mm long, 2-3.5 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp 1.5-3.5 mm long, connate at the base, glabrous on the outside. Leaves subsessile with the petioles 1.5-4.5 mm long, glabrous; blade narrowly elliptic to elliptic or rarely subovate, 7.5-16 cm long, 3.3-6 cm wide, acuminate or rarely abruptly acuminate at the apex, acute or rounded at the base, glabrate on both surfaces, the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins running + at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal, paniculate with the branches helicoid-cymose and secund, 6-9 cm long; peduncle 4-6 cm long; axes sparsely arachnoid-tomentose but glabrate when the fruit is mature. Flowers 4-merous, subsessile, the pedicels to 0.5 mm long, sparsely arachnoid-tomentose; hypanthium very sparsely arachnoid-tomentose, rotund, 0.8-1.5 mm long, the disk ca 0.1 mm thick and 0.5 mm in diam, glabrous; calyx-lobes with a few hairs or glabrous on both sides, unequal, basally connate for ca 0.2 mm, with 3 lobes linear or narrowly oblong, acute or obtuse at the apex, 1.7-4 mm long, 0.2-0.6 mm wide, 1 lobe narrowly obovate, acute or obtuse at the apex, 3.6-7.4 mm long, 0.7-1.4 mm wide, this lobe twice as long as the other 3 lobes; corolla with the tube 9-12 mm long, sparsely villous on the outside, the lobes obtuse, 2-3 mm long, with a few hairs on the outside, papillate on the inside; stamens attached below the middle of the tube. Capsules rotund, ca 4 mm in diam and high, when young faintly costate when dry, when mature glabrous and rugose when dry, loculicidal, the calyx lobes segs until pes seeds rectangular. SAN BLAS: Permé 229 (F, US); headwaters of Río Cuadi, along e river, alt 91 m, ae d al 3657 (MO); “forests around Puerto Obaldia, alt 0-50 m, Pittier 4279 (holotype US, isotype NY). This endemic species is known only from the eastern end of San Blas, but it will probably be found in the western end of the province and in Colombia in the area adjacent to San Blas. It is distinguished by its one enlarged calyx-lobe and three linear to narrowly oblong calyx-lobes, 1.7-4 mm long, which persist on the rugose fruit. 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 385 8. Rondeletia bertieroides Standley, Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4: 267, 1929 Tree or rarely shrub with the branchlets terete or subterete, terminally arach- noid-tomentose, the ‘older portions glabrous. Stipules erect, triangular to ovate, 4-7 mm long, 2.5-45 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp 1-3 mm long, connate at the base, glabrous on the outside, sericeous on the inside with several finger- like structures, these ca 0.5 mm long and 0.1 mm in diam, red when dry. Leaves petiolate with the petioles 0.2-3 cm long, arachnoid-tomentose when young but soon glabrate; blade narrowly elliptic or very rarely elliptic or subovate, 5.5-22.5 cm long, 1.7-6 cm wide, long-acuminate to rarely acute at the apex, attenuate to cuneate or rarely acute at the base, sparsely arachnulose above and arachnose beneath when young, glabrate when mature, the tertiary veins running + at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal or very rarely axillary, paniculate with the branches helicoid-cymose or bearing reduced compound dichasia, 7-20 cm long, pedunculate with the peduncles 2.5-5 cm long, or sessile with 2 basal branches (fide Standley) 1-8 cm long, the axes tomentose when young but glabrate when fruit mature. Flowers 4-merous, subsessile, the pedicels to 0.5 mm long, tomentose; hypanthium arachnoid-tomentose, rotund, 1.3-1.5 mm long, the disk 0.1-0.2 mm thick, 0.5-0.7 mm in diam, with a few straight erect hairs ca 0.5 mm long or glabrous; calyx-lobes glabrous on the inside, with a few hairs or glabrous on the ouside, unequal, basally connate for ca 0.5 mm, with 3 lobes triangular to broadly triangular or oblong, 0.3-1.8 mm long, 0.5-0.9 mm wide, | lobe elliptic or narrowly obovate or rarely oblong, acute or very rarely obtuse at the apex, (1.3)2-4.2 mm long, 0.8-2.7 mm wide, this lobe 3 or more times longer than the other 3 lobes, the 3 small lobes reflexed after loss of the corolla; corolla with the tube 9-12 mm long, sparsely strigose on the outside, puberulent on the inside below the anthers, the lobes obtuse, ca 2.5 mm long; stamens sub- sessile, the filaments of equal length but variably attached, all at the same level in each flower. from below the mouth to the middle of the tube, the anthers 2-2.7 mm long; ovary with a thick entire or incompletely fused septum, the basal fusion ca l4 of the way up, the placenta elliptic or V-shaped with rectangular ovules. Capsules globose, ca 4 mm in diam, costate, glabrous when mature, septicidal, the calyx-lobes persistent. DEL TORO: Buena Vista Camp, Chiriqui Trail, alt 1000 m, Cooper 598 (holo oo F, isotypes NY, Y); betw Buena Vista ay hen nca & Cerro Pilón, cloud forest, Chiriquí Tra il, Kirkbride & Duke 712 (MO, NY), 713 (MO, NY); betw Ed (just above Buena Vista) & Quebrada Higueron, Chiriq EL Kirkbride & Duke 798 (MO, NY), 799 (MO, NY). cocrí: El Valle de Antón, Sm 1000 m, Allen 3409 (F); loud forest on slopes of Cerro Pilón nr El Valle de Antón, alt 700-900 m, at 12161 (MO); rain forest on Cerro Caracoral below the elfin forest, Kirkbride 1124 MO, NY). vecacuas: forested slopes of Cerro Tute, vic Santa Fe, alt 800 m. Allen 4368 a 4369 (NY). This endemic species is very heterogeneous. The collections from El Valle generally have smaller leaves, a shorter inflorescence, and more indumentum than do the collections from Bocas del Toro and Cerro Tute, but these characters all overlap, making them useless as key characters. In addition to these differences between the two groups is the fact that the septum of flowers from El Valle was [Vor. 55 386 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN entire, while the septum of those from Bocas del Toro and Cerro Tute was in- completely fused. My field observations in Bocas del Toro and at El Valle tend to support the separation of the two groups. It appears that two taxa are involved here, but I am unable at this time to determine any characters in each which would make them readily separable in a key. Perhaps more intensive field work and collecting at all three areas will provide the necessary characters for an movi separation or for a more positive description of this taxon as a heterogeneous on . The collections from El Valle also RERUM Rondeletia platysepala Standley, but R. platysepala has all 4 calyx-lobes ca equally expanded. 9. Rondeletia platysepala Standley, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 27: 343, 1940. Tree to 6 m high, the branchlets terete, terminally sparsely strigose, the older portion glabrous. Stipules erect, triangular, 2-3 mm long, 1-1.8 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp ca 0.75 mm long, glabrous on the outside, strigose on the inside with several narrowly elliptic finger-like structures near the apex, these ca 0.5 mm long and 0.2 mm in diam, black when dry. Leaves subsessile with the pet- ioles 1-3 mm long, strigose; blade narrowly elliptic or narrowly oblong, 4.4-8 cm long, 1.3-2.3 cm wide, abruptly long-acuminate at the apex, acute at the base, very sparsely tomentose above when young but soon glabrous, the midrib and secondary veins sparsely strigose and the intercostal areas glabrous beneath when mature, the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins open- reticulate. Inflorescences terminal, paniculate with the branches cymose or heli- coid-cymose, 3-9 cm long; peduncle 1.5-4 cm long; axes tomentose. Flowers 4- merous, sessile or pedicellate, the pedicels to 5 mm long; hypanthium tomentose, oblong, ca 1.5 mm long, the disk ca 0.3 mm thick and 0.8 mm in diam, glabrous; calyx-lobes ca equal on each flower, laminar-like, elliptic, the apex acute or obtuse, 1.7-4.2 mm long, 0.6-2.5 mm wide, very sparsely tomentose on the out- side, very sparsely tomentose to glabrous on the inside; corolla with the tube 7-11 mm long, tomentose on the outside, sparsely puberulous below the middle inside, the lobes obtuse, ca 2.5 mm long; stamens subsessile, the anthers oblong, ca 2 mm long, attached above the middle of the tube; placenta subobovate, ca 1.3 mm long, ca 0.7 mm wide, ca 0.2 mm thick. Fruits not seen. cocti: vic of El Valle, N rim (wet), Allen 1791 (holotype F, isotypes GH, MO, NY). This endemic resembles Rondeletia bertieroides Standley, but it is readily distinguished by its four ca equally expanded calyx-lobes. Rondeletia bertieroides has one lobe ca 3 times longer than the other three lobes. 10. Rondeletia hamelifolia Dwyer & Hayden, Phytologia 15: 58, 1967. Shrub 3-8 m high, to 5 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, terminally sparsely tomentose, the older portion glabrous, the internodes of variable length, 0.5-6 cm long. Stipules erect, triangular, 4-8 mm long, 2-4 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp 2-4 mm long, sericeous on the outside and the inside with several nar- rowly oblong finger-like structures on the inside, ca | mm long and 0.2 mm in 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 387 diam, black when dry, the stipules below the terminal inflorescence often bilobate. Leaves with the petioles to 8 mm long, white-tomentose when young, but soon glabrate; blade narrowly elliptic to elliptic, 4.5-20 cm long, 1.5-6.5 cm wide, acute to acuminate at the apex, attenuate at the base, membranous, very sparsely sericeous on the veins above, tomentose on the midrib and secondary veins and sparsely tomentose on the tertiary veins and the midrib and secondary veins raised beneath, the tertiary veins open reticulate. Inflorescences terminal and axillary, paniculate, 2-7(-13) cm long; peduncle 1.5-6 cm long with 2 foliaceous bracts at the apex, narrowly elliptic to elliptic, 1.2-3 cm long, 4-12 mm wide; axes white- tomentose becoming glabrate as the fruit matures. Flowers sessile or pedicellate, the pedicels to 3 mm long, white-tomentose; hypanthium white-strigose, rotund, 1.5-2 mm long, the disk ca 0.2 mm thick and 0.8 mm in diam, puberulent; calyx- lobes 5 or 6, unequal, narrowly oblong, the apex acute, 1-2 mm long, very sparsely tomentose outside, sparsely and minutely strigose inside, becoming reflexed at maturity; corolla with the tube 6-9 mm long, white-strigose outside, glabrous inside, the lobes 5, obtuse, ca 2.5 mm long and wide, with an annular callosity ca 0.5 mm thick at the orifice of the corolla; stamens with the filaments ca 1 mm long, attached at the middle of the tube, the anthers oblong, ca 2.5 mm long; placenta hemispherical, ca 0.5 mm in diam, with winged ovules. Capsules trans- versely elliptic in radial section, to 8 mm in diam and 5 mm thick, sparsely puberulous, lightly costate, loculicidal. Los sANTOS: Caififistulo, Dwyer 2458 (MO). veracuas: Santiago, Dwyer 1350 (holotype MO); 4 mi from Pan-Amer Hwy toward Atalaya, Dwyer & Kirkbride 7410 GH, MO, US), 7422 (MO); nr Ponuga, Dwyer & Kirkbride 7443 (GH, MO); 2 mi W of Santiago on Pan-Amer Hwy, Dwyer et al. 7556 (GH, MO, US); 50 mi W of Santiago on Pan-Amer Hwy, down embankment, Kirkbride & Hayden 164 (MO, NY); Cafiazas, Tyson 3638 (MO). This endemic species is found in savanna areas of the Azuero Peninusla and Veraguas Province. These areas undergo a very marked dry season each year. lI. Rondeletia panamensis DC., Prodr. 4: 408, 1830.—Fig. 3. Shrub or tree to 6 m high and 5 cm in diam, the branchlets terete, terminally white-tomentose, the older portions glabrous. Stipules erect, triangular to broadly triangular, 3-5 mm long, 2-7 mm wide, cuspidate with the cusp ca 2 mm long, tomentose on the outside but glabrate when older. Leaves with the petioles 2-6(-13) mm long, the younger white-tomentose, the older glabrate; blade narrowly el- liptic to broadly elliptic or subovate, 2.5-15 cm long, 1.5-7 cm wide, acute to subacuminate at the apex, subattenuate to attenuate at the base, very sparsely tomentose on the veins and the midrib raised beneath, the tertiary veins running -- at right angles to the secondary veins. Inflorescences terminal and axillary, of compound dichasia with the secondary axes compressed, 1.5-7 cm long; peduncle 0.5-4 em long; axes white-tomentose becoming sparsely tomentose as the fruit matures. Flowers 5-merous, with several bractlets, sessile or pedicellate, the pedi- cels to 7 mm long, white-tomentose; hypanthium densely white-tomentose, rotund, ca 2.5 mm long and 3 mm in diam, the disk ca 0.25 mm thick and 0.75 mm in diam, puberulent; calyx basally connate for ca 1.5 mm, the lobes narrowly ovate, 388 Fig. 3 C, opened [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN iS i AN YS, 2 PEN Ji 7, 74 y (j Mn by Wings SE e LONER RRS {ERISA NENT SSA WRG ESSEN SIS = =. NS AN Y REIRI NNR SASANN eram. LXI? Hy PEF EEO 2 m BENIN FESS t PRISER q SNAN S [RSS ST : z uz if 5, PETRA SS yr " — ESS bi FEE SRA ts PARA SQ is FS ge” j a Dae” E ] Pie i D ES 4 W P 1 of uum SER . Rondeletia panamensis DC.: A, flowering branch (X15); B, flower (X195); corolla (X134); D, immature fruit (X2). with the apex acute, ca 8.5 mm long and 2.5 mm wide, ca 1 mm thick near the base, sparsely tomentose outside, densely sericeous at the base and glabrous at the apex inside; corolla with the tube 13-18 mm long, villous-sericeous outside, glabrous inside, the lobes unequal, obtuse, 4 lobes ca 5 mm long and wide, 1 lobe ca 3 mm long and wide, sparsely sericeous in the center outside, sparsely puber- ulous inside, with an annular callosity ca 0.5 mm thick at the orifice of the corolla; stamens with the filaments ca 2 mm long, attached above the middle of the tube, the anthers oblong, ca 2 mm long; placenta hemispherical, ca 0.5 mm in diam, 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 389 with winged ovules. Capsules, globose, to 10 mm in diam, sparsely tomentose when mature, loculicidal, 2-valvate, the calyx-lobes persistent. CANAL ZONE: 2 mi W of Balboa, Correll 12257 (GH, NY); forests along banks uebrada Fea, Quebrada Pura, & Caño ds Río Chagres, 70-100 m, Dodge & of Q Allen 17413 (MO); Albrook Site, U.S. Center, Dwyer 7123 (MO); Ancón Hill, alt 200 m, Killip 3004 (GH, NY), i (0$), 12061 m. "Piper 5569 (GH, NY, US), Williams 24 (NY); Thunder Hill, Curundu, McDaniel 5189 (MO); Sosa Hill, Balboa, dira 25272 (US); see Standley 26996 (A, US); Las es Trail betw Fort Clay- on & Corozal, Standley 29060 (US); betw Tumba Vieja & Salamanca, alt 66 m, Steyer- bis & Allen 16757 (MO); nr Tropic Survival School, Curundu, Tyson & Dwyer 4464 (MO); vic Salamanca Hydrographic Station, Rio Pequení, alt ca 80 m, Woodson et al. 1562 (A, F, NY). paren: Chepigana, Duke 277 (MO); vic Pinas, Duke 10626 (MO); Puerto St. Dorotea, Dwyer 2203 (MO), 2259 (US). PANAMA: Pan-Am Hwy nr Jenine, Duke 3843 (MO); Río Chagres, 1 mi above Madden Lake, Duke 4482 (GH, MO); gallery along Río Mamoni, Duke 5686 (GH, MO); Río Charco-Espir itu, Tocumen Hwy, Duke. 5706 (GH, MO); forests of upper Rio Mamoni, alt 150-400 m, Pittier 4475 (NY, US); Rio Tapia, Standley 28083 (US). PROVINCE UNKNOWN: Duchassaing s s.n. (F, GH). This is a lowland endemic known only from the Canal Zone, the Pacific lowlands of the Province of Panama from the Canal Zone to the Río Bayano, and central Darien. It will probably be found in the Pacific lowlands from the Canal Zone to Darien and possibly in the Choco area of Columbia. It is readily distinguished from other species by its large tomentose fruits bearing the persistent calyx-lobes and its large pubescent flowers. 12. Rondeletia dukei Dwyer & Hayden, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 54: 144, 1967. —Fig. 4 Shrub ? with the young portions of the branchlets purplish-black when dry, angular, and glabrous, the older portions of the branchlets brown, terete, and glabrous. Stipules erect, triangular to broadly triangular, 3-6 mm long, 2-4 mm wide, glabrous. Leaves with the petioles 0.7-3 cm long, purplish-black when dry, ciliate in the axil; blade elliptic-obovate, 5.5-10 cm long, 3.5-6 cm wide, obtuse at the apex, cuneate at the base, rigidly membranous, glabrous, the midrib pur- plish-black, raised beneath, the tertiary veins open-reticulate. Inflorescences ter- minal or axillary, spike-like, 3.5-8 cm long; peduncle (0.2-)2-4.5 cm long, to 1.5 mm in diam, angular, minutely farinose. Flowers with several bractlets, mostly sessile, the occasional pedicels white, to 3 mm long; hypanthium densely white- sericeous, rotund, 1.5-2 mm long, the disk ca 0.4 mm thick and 1 mm in diam; calyx lobes 5(-6), basally connate for ca 0.5 mm, rotund to broadly ovate, ca 1.5 mm long, 1.5-2 mm wide, 1 or 2 calycine lobes of the lowest flowers disposed as broad foliose blades, the stalk linear, to 3 mm long, the blade broadly ovate, to 3.5 cm long, cuneate, brownish-yellow when dry; corolla with the tube 1-8 mm long, strigose outside, villous at the throat, the lobes 5-6, 2-3 mm long, obtuse, puberulent outside, papillate and purple when dry inside, patulous at anthesis; filaments unequal, 0.3-3 mm long, attached at the throat of the corolla-tube; anthers 5 or 6, oblong, 1.5-5 mm long, subversatile, some subsessile, some exserted; stigma exserted; placenta oblong, ca 1.5 mm long, ca 0.1 mm wide, ca 0.25 mm high, with the ovules winged when immature. Fruits not seen. DARIEN: Río Pirre, Duke 8329 (holotype MO, isotype NY). 390 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN S A e s Ae LA e. EC CAES ae Sow ww LPA b k if »» us [ NY 7 P p BH KAD he PKA ne LiB CRUS SA SR S M N TANA C A wa = v a» J " [Vor. 55 Fig. 4 Rondeletia dukei Dwyer & Hayden: A, flowering branch (X15); B, flower X315); C, opened corolla (X32); D, ovary cross section with placenta and ovules omitted (X815). This species differs from the others in Panama by its extremely large foliar calyx-lobes on the lowest flowers of the inflorescence and its filaments of variable length. On the specimens observed, 10 of the 12 leaves had deformed apices of their blades. This species is known only from the type collection. The common name found on the label, madrofio according to the collector probably denotes the large foliar calyx-lobes, and is probably not species specific. 1968] KIRKBRIDE—RONDELETIA 391 EXCLUDED SPECIES Rondeletia laniflora Bentham, Pl. Hartw. 85, 1841. Arachnothryx laniflora (Bentham) Planchon, Fl. Serres 5: 442, 1849. This taxon resembles Rondeletia buddleioides Bentham somewhat. It is re- ported by Seemann (1854) to have been collected on Chiriqui Volcano; the speci- men was not available for examination, but may be a misidentified R. buddleioides. Rondeletia nicaraguensis Oersted, Kjoeb. Vidensk. Meddel. 1852: 43, 1852. This taxon was described from Nicaragua and reported from Panama by Oersted. The description of the corolla and leaves seems unusual for Rondeletia, and neither the ovarian nor the fruit structure was described. No specimen was available for examination. LITERATURE CITED OOKER, Sr D. 1873. Rubiaceae, In BENTHAM & Hooxer, Genera Plantarum 2: 7-151. Ho 187 LiNNAEUS, C. 1753. Species Plantarum 172. Stoc Pu J. D. 1849. Flore des Serras er des Jardins de L'Europe (ed. L. van Houtte) 5: PLUMIER, C. 1703. Nova Plantarum Ed 15, tab. 12. Par CHUMANN, K. 1891. Rubiaceae, In ENGLER & PRANTL ue Pfa ae 4: -156. Seeman, B. 1854. The i of the Voyage of H. M. S. Herald (Flora of the Isthmus of anama) 1-486. STANDLEY, P. C. 1918. ai N. Amer. Fl. 32: 44-8 STEYERMARK, J. 967. Rubiaceae, In MAGUIRE & A LABORATORS, The Botany of the Guayan a Highland—Part VIL Mem. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 17: cages dug B. S. 1967. e origin and evolutionary developenetit of “hererostyly, in the angiosperms. Evolution 21: 210-226, A NEW SPECIES OF CUCURBITA FROM ECUADOR By Huc C. Cutter AND Tuomas W. WHITAKER? Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis and U. S. Department of Agriculture, La Jolla, California ABSTRACT A new species of Cucurbita from South America is described. This species, Cucurbita ecuadorensis, is the first wild species of Cucurbita described from northwestern South America. Cucurbita ecuadorensis has been excavated from pre-ceramic, pre-maize levels in Coastal Peru. It appears to be more closely related to the South American C. maxima and C. andreana than to other species in the genus. Recent interest in the solitary bees of the genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith stimulated an intensive search for species of Cucurbita and the bees associated with each species (Hurd & Linsley, 1964, 1966, 1967). On a collect- ing trip for solitary bees, Dr. and Mrs. A. E. Michelbacher were in Ecuador from January 27 to February 16, 1965. They made three collections of a large, wild gourd, Through the courtesy of the Michelbachers, seeds from these collections were grown in experimental gardens and greenhouses at Tucson, Arizona, and La Jolla, California. These collections belong to an undescribed species of Cucurbita. Cucurbita ecuadorensis Cutler & Whitaker, sp. nov.—Fig. 1-3. Plants scandens ad 10 m fortasse plus alta, spicula et trichomata diffusa, interdum ad nodos radicans, cirrhi crassi, saepe tripartiti et plerumque circinati; folia plerumque 12-32 cm lata, lato-ovato ad reniforma, lamina opaco-viridis, plerumque superficie pallido-viridis, basi lato-cordata, quinquelobata, lobi laterales saepe vadosiores, lobi basales circiter ad dimidium distantiae versus costam divisi, apice mucronati, supra diffuso-ciliati, subtus pubescentes, margines irregulares, petioli maturi, 8-16 cm longi, plerumque laminam aequantes, trichomatibus et apiculis ornati; flores solitarii campanulati aurantiaco-fulvi; flores staminati pedicel- lati, pedicellis brevibus ciliatis, 2-5 cm longis, corolla 5-8 cm longa, tubus 3-5 cm longus, calyx ciliatus, lobi angusti et acuti, 1-2 cm longi; flores pistillati pedicellati, pedicellis brevibus, ciliatis, 2-5 cm longis, corolla 5-9 cm longa, tubus 3.5-5 cm longus, lobi calycis filiformes, 1 cm longi, pedunculi graciles, 4-8 cm longi angulati, apiculati, origine vix turgidi; pepo globosus vel subglobosus, 16 cm diametro, cremeus ad opaco-viridis, plerumque cremeus et lineis viridibus maculisque ornatus, interdum maturite fulvi, pulpa alba, saepe acris sed magis sapore placenti parata, ' We are pleased to acknowledge the cooperation of Dr. and Mrs. A. E. Michelbacher and Professor Paul D. Hurd, Jr. of the University of California, Berkeley, for making col- lections and contributing the materials that made this study possible. The Latin description was prepared by Dr. John D. Dwyer, St. Louis University, the chromosome counts and information on species hybridization were furnished by Dr. W. P. Bemis, University of Arizona, and the electrophoretic analyses by Dr. J. R. Wall, Texas Technological College. ANN. Missourt Bor. Garp. 55 (3): 392-396, 1969. 1968] CUTLER & WHITAKER—CUCURBITA 393 SSUBLOPONSE ^ Fig. 1. Typical mature leaves of Cucurbita ecuadorensis grown at La Jolla from seed collection in Gua yaquil, Ecuador; note 5-lobed leaves with traces of secondary lobing; X 3/10. loculi 3, semina ovata, 1.1-1.5 cm longa, 0.7-0.8 cm lata, corpus album ad brun- neolum, margo quam corpore conspicue opacior. Annual when grown in California and Arizona; vine up to 10 m or more, often clambering over shrubs; stems striate with scattered spicules and hairs, some- times rooting at the nodes; tendrils thick, usually tripartite, often coiled on them- selves; leaves usually 12-32 cm wide, broadly ovate to nearly reniform in outline; blade dark green, usually with light green blotches on upper surface, base broadly cordate, deeply 5-lobed, lateral lobes often shallower, basal lobes often divided nearly 14 way to mid-vein, tips of lobes mucronate, upper surface with scattered hairs, lower surface pubescent; margins irregular, denticulate at vein ends; petiole 8-16 cm long when mature, usually as long as blade, with hairs and spicules; flowers solitary, campanulate, orange-yellow; staminate on short, hairy pedicels 2-5 cm long; corolla 5-8 cm long; tube 3-5 cm long; calyx hairy, lobes narrow and pointed, 1-2 cm long; pistillate on short, hairy pedicels, 5 cm long; corolla 5-9 cm long; tube 3.5-5 cm long; calyx-lobes filiform, 1 cm long; peduncle slender, 4-8 cm long, angled, spiculate, slightly enlarged at attachment; pepo to 16 X 16 cm, creamy to dark green, usually creamy with green lines and spots, sometimes turning yellow at maturity; flesh white, stringy, sometimes bitter, but usually with pleasant cucumber-like flavor; locules 3; seeds ovate, 1.1-1.5 cm long, 0.7-0.8 cm wide; body white to tan; margin conspicuous, darker than body. Ecuador: 5 mi W of Guayaquil; abundant, no bloom; y gourds of spin end hanging from shrubs, 2 Febr 1965 (holotype MO, isotype US). 19 mi N of Balzar, ca 60 m of Guayaquil, fruits from previous years hanging from ue 4 Febr 1 ( On the river nr Ambuqui, NE of Ibarra, in deep hot valley, alt ca 2,500 ft, 14 Febr 1963 [Vor. 55 394 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN . €. ecuadorensis C. andreana from Guayaquil C. ficifolia C. maxima cv. 'Banana' Fig. 2. Seeds of Cucurbita ecuadorensis compared with those of celosely related species: C. andreanna, C. maxima & C. ficifolia; X 115. (MO). Nr Ambuqui, hway I, 14 Febr 1965 (MO). 10 mi N of Guayaquil, 15 Febr 1965. All s aq & Michelbacher rx. : Site PV45-136 on Bay of Ventanilla, cut 1, level 7, and cut 1A, level 6. Estimated to be im 300 » B.C., Edward P. Lanning s.n California: La Jolla, grown from seeds collected by the Michelbachers at the type locality (MO, US). La Jolla, grown from o collected by the Michelbachers nr Ambuqui; ighway 1, (MO, US). Both by Whitaker The species differs from the UR — andreana Naud. in having large, deeply lobed leaves, and a large, globular non-bitter fruit. The only other pre- Columbian species of Cucurbita from South America are the cultivated ones, C. ficifolia Bouche, C. moschata Duchesne ex Poir. and C. maxima Duchesne. Cucurbita ecuadorensis differs from wild Central American and North American species by the large leaves and fruit, by the virtual absence of bitter taste in the flesh of the fruit, and by the prominent seed margins. The margins are slightly darker than the cream color or light tan seed body. Rinds, seeds and peduncles of a species of Cucurbita, similar to C. ecuadorensis, 1968] CUTLER & WHITAKER—CUCURBITA 395 Fig. 3. Fruit of Cucurbita ecuadorensis; X 3/9. have been excavated by Lanning (1967) from pre-Columbian pre-ceramic and pre-maize sites in coastal Peru. He lists these specimens as C. andreana and as a wild cucurbit. Cucurbita ecuadorensis has 20 pairs of chromosomes, the same as other species of Cucurbita. It hybridizes readily with C. maxima (Whitaker, Bemis & Wall, un- published data). Fertility decreases to about 50% in the F, plants, but F, proge- nies, and backcrosses to either parent can be obtained. Fertility is greatly decreased in most individuals in the F, and backcross progenies. Some individuals in these progenies are characterized by complete sterility of the staminate or pistillate flowers. Also, various patterns of chlorophyll deficiencies of both leaves and stems occur. Hybrids between Cucurbita ecuadorensis and the following species have been made and F, plants grown: C. moschata, C. lundelliana Bailey, and C. okeecho- beensis Bailey. The fertility of these hybrids has not yet been determined. Cucurbita ecuadorensis was included in a numerical taxonomic study of Cucurbita (Rhodes et al., 1968). The results indicate it was not closely associated with other [Vor. 55 396 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN species of Cucurbita or with interspecific hybrids, but it did show some affinity with the lundelliana group (C. lundelliana, C. okeechobeensis and C. martinezii Bailey). There was also an indication of association with C. ficifolia, a cultivated species, sympatric in part of its range with C. ecuadorensis. J. R. Wall (unpublished data) has studied the electrophoretic characterization of nine populations of Cucurbita species and the hybrid of C. ecuadorensis X C. maxima cv. ‘Pink Banana’. He has demonstrated that, on the basis of electropho- retic mobilities of leucine amino-peptidase (LAP) and alpha-napthyl acetate esterase (Est), E. ecuadorensis can be separated from other species of Cucurbita. Aside from its interest as an important factor in the co-evolution of the bee, Peponapis in South America, C. ecuadorensis appears to be the first truly wild species of Cucurbita described from South America. The feral species, C. andreana Naud. (Crovetto, 1965), and the closely related cultivated species, C. maxima Duch., are the only other species of the genus thought to have originated in South America. The discovery of this new species suggests that insects may be useful guides to unreported species in Cucurbita. Furthermore, some modification of cur- rent ideas of the origin, domestication, and dispersal of the cultivated Cucurbita may be in order. LITERATURE CITED Crovetro, R. M. 1965. Flora de la Province de Buenos Aires. Cucurbitaceae. 4(5a) :390- Hurp, P. D., Jr. & E. G. Linster. 1964. The squash and gourd bees—genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith—inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15): 375-47 1966. The Mexican qs and gourd bees of the genus Peponapis (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Ann, Ent. Soc. Amer. 59: 8 —. e South American squash an M goid bees of the genus Peponapis (Hymenop- Apoidea). Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 60: 647-661. re E P. 1967. Pera before the Incas. sy Hall, N. H. pg. 53. Ruopzs, A. M., W. P. s, T. W. WHITAKER & S. G. Car eed 968. A numerical taxo- nomic study of Cucurbita. Brittonia 20: :251 -266. NOTES HEDYOTIS ACEROSA VAR. BIGELOVII, COMB. NOV. (RUBIACEAE) The name Hedyotis acerosa Gray var. polypremoides (Gray) W. H. Lewis in Ann, Missouri Bot. Gard. 55: 31, 1968, is superfluous. Clearly the earliest available is Houstonia polypremoides var. bigelovii Greenman so that the correct name for the atypical variety of this species is Hedyotis acerosa Gray var. bigelovii (Greenman) W. H. Lewis, comb. nov., based on Houstonia polypremoides var. bigelovii Greenman, Proc. Amer. Acad. 32: 291, 1897 (Type Bigelow 437 GH).— Walter H. Lewis, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. SISYRINCHIUM DIMORPHUM palestine A NEW SPECIES FROM TEXAS AND MEX Sisyrinchium dimorphum R. Oliver, sp. nov. Herba perennis glabra, caule inter- dum sine bracteis foliacea, floribus azureis parvis, filamentis connatis, capsulis globesis. Perennial 9-32 cm tall; roots coarse from a short rhizome, Leaves 1.5-3.5 mm wide, 5-30 cm long. Stems 0.3-1.3 mm wide, wings 0.2-0.4 mm wide, usually less than 4 the width of the stem. Leafy bract 4-14 cm long. Floral bracts equal or the outer bract to 10 mm longer than the inner, outer bract 12-30 mm long, con- nected 4-7 mm at base, inner 11-19 mm long. Flowers blue, tepals alternating wide and narrow, 6-9 mm long, 1.5-4 mm wide; anthers 0.8-1.3 mm long. Capsules iin 4-5 mm high. Plants dry olive-green. xico: Tamaulipas: betw Guamos & Padilla, abundant on moist river bank, 25 Mar 1925, Runyon 773 E andera Co: 2 mi N of Utopia, Sabinal River, open wet pasture nr river, 3 July 1963, "Correll ih al. 28230 (LL); Sabinal River Valley, 3 mi N of Vanderpool, in Seepy ground of dark calceareous clay, 13 May 1956, McCart 5761 (SMU). Burnet Co: e mi S s Burnet on Hwy 281, rocky creek bed, 1 May, 1947, Whitehouse 18427 (SMU). pr 194 of Inks Dam, on gentle slope in granitic area, 28 , Lundell & Lara 14549 (LL). Travis Co: Austin, a of Texas nde shady are in wi ower garden, 7 May 1957, McCart 5734 (SMU); 1 mi W o n Dam, Sears along stream in limestone hills, 14 Apr 1946, Warnock 46121 (b. UBI 13 (LL). Uvalde Co: nr Laguna, edge of Nueces River, 3 Apr 1942, Lundell 10967 (LL); “Chalk Bus moist rocky bank of Nueces River, 11 Apr 1918, Palmer 13328 (MO); Ep al River Bank, 9 Apr 1917, Palmer et al. 15996 (LL); San Felipe Springs, Del Rio, infrequen along nee alt 950 ft, 7 Apr 1951, Warnock & Cameron 9889 (LL, SMU); freq e in limestone soil at San Felipe Springs, Del Rio, 7 Apr 1951, Warnock & Potius. 9894 (holotype SMU, isotype LL). Sisyrinchium dimorphum seems most closely related to S. demissum Greene with stems both scapose and foliaceous, and pedicels longer than the spathes; but can be distinguished by the smaller flowers, narrower tepals, and plants drying olive-green.—Royce L. Oliver, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. ANN. Missouni Bor. Garp. 55(3): 397-400, 1969. [Vor. 55 398 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN NOTES ON SOME AMERICAN SPECIES OF VOYRIA (GENTIANACEAE) Voyria bilobata A. Robyns, sp. nov.; ab omnibus speciebus Voyriae neotropicis calyce intus basi squamellis 5 instructo, ovario supra basin glandulis 2 oppositis anguste ellipticis donato stigmateque 2-lobato primo visu sat differt—Fig. 1. Herbula saprophytica, chlorophyllo carens, usque ad 15 cm alta, caule erecto gracili tereti aurantiaco-rubro simplici vel parte inferiore bifurcato glabroque. Folia squamiformia, opposita, decussata, sessilia, vaginantia, membranacea glabraque; squamae caulis parte superiore remotae, usque ad 5 mm longae, internodiis multo breviores, ovatae, apice acuminatae, squamis oppositis basi ca 2 mm connatis; squamae caulis parte inferiore vix breviores, internodiis -- aequantes. Flores terminales, solitarii, usque ad 17 mm longi; calyx tubuloso-campanulatus, hyalinus, obtuse 5-angulatus, 5-lobatus, ca 4 mm longus, intus basi 5 squamellis lobis oppositis transverse ellipticis apice emarginatis ca 0.5-0.6 mm latis instructus, lobis subaequalibus apice subacutis ca 1 mm longis et basi ca 0.8 mm latis, sinibus rotundatis; corolla aurantiaca, tubo anguste cylindrico circa ovarium leviter ventricoso fauce vix dilatato ca 10.5 mm longo et ca 2 mm diam, lobis ut videtur patentibus anguste oblongis apice acutis ca 6-6.5 mm longis et ca 1.3 mm latis; antherae sessiles, sub corollae tubi fauce insertae, introrsae, cohaerentes, basi bilo- batae, ca 1.5 mm longae (appendicibus inclusis), thecis apice rotundatis basi brevissime appendiculatis appendicibusque vix 0.5 mm et inconspicue puberulis; gynoecium ca 8-9 mm longum, ovario sessili anguste oblongo ca 4.5-5 mm longo et ca 0.5 mm supra basin glandulis 2 oppositis anguste ellipticis ca 1.5 longis instructo, stylo filiformi et ca 3.5-4 mm longo, stigmate 2-lobato et ca 2 mm diam. AMA: BOCAS DEL TORO: Punta Peña, vic of Chiriquicito, alt ca 1000 ft, rain forest, T Ta 1967, Lewis, Escobar, MacBryde, Oliver & Ridgway 2181 (holotype MO). The small scales at the base within the calyx, the ovary with 2 basal, narrowly ovoid, opposite glands, and the 2-lobed stigma readily separate V. bilobata from all other neotropical species of Voyria Aubl. Except for the bilobed stigma, this new species fits very well within the definition of the genus Voyria given by A. Raynal in 1967 [Etude critique des genres Voyria et Leiphaimos (Gentianaceae) et révision des Voyria d’Afrique. Adansonia, sér. 2, 7: 53-71]. According to Raynal (p. 64), the stigma of Voyria is always entire (“jamais bilabié"), while the stigmas of Leiphaimos Schlecht. & Cham. and Voyriella (Miquel) Miquel are 2-lobed. The characters used for separating the saprophytic gentians into supraspecific units differ from one author to another. For Raynal, the genus Leiphaimos is separated from Voyria by the burmannioid habit of the inflorescence and mainly by the special structure of the stigma (loc. cit. pp. 64-65). For L. O. Williams (Fieldiana: Bot. 31:411-415, 1968), Leiphaimos can easily be separated from Voyria by the winged seeds and the elator-like hairs along the sutures inside the capsule, Voyria having wingless seeds and no elator-like hairs in the capsule. The seed character is considered by Raynal to be quite variable (loc. cit. p. 60). In view of these different opinions concerning the delimitation of the saprophytic genera Voyria and Leiphaimos and in abscence of a comprehensive revision of the 1968] NOTES 399 Fig. 1. Voyria bilobata A. Robyns: A habit (X1); B, flower, longitudinal section (X 5); C, calyx spread out showing the 5 small scales (X 71); D, corolla spread out showing the 5 stamens (X 5); E, gynoecium showing 1 gland (X 5). After Lewis et al. 2181. [Vor. 55 400 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN New World saprophytic gentians, I shall treat the genus Voyria in the broad sense (sensu lato) in my forthcoming revision of the Gentianaceae for the Flora of Panama. Therefore, the following transfer from Leiphaimos to Voyria is needed: Voyria stellata (Standley) A. Robyns, comb. nov., based on Leiphaimos stellatus Standley, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 20: 197, 1919 (Panama, Venezuela, Brazil, and Peru).—André Robyns, National Foundation for Scientific Research, Belgium. THE FIRST JESSE M. GREENMAN AWARD The 1968 and first Jesse M. Greenman Award for the best Ph. D. dissertation published in 1967 in plant systematics was awarded to Dr. Carl S. Keener, As- sistant Professor of Botany and Curator, Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Keeners paper on “A biosystematic study of Clematis subsection Integrifoliae (Ranunculaceae)” was completed at North Carolina State University at Raleigh and published in the Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society 83: 1-41, 1967. The Greenman Award of $100 is given annually at the AIBS meetings by the Alumni Association of the Missouri Botanical Garden in honor of Dr. Jesse M. Greenman, the dedicated scholar and teacher who was Curator of the Herbarium from 1913-1945. Papers published in 1968 are being received for consideration by Dr. David M. Gates, Director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 2315 Tower Grove Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, until 1 May 1969.—Editor. GENERAL INDEX TO VOLUME 55 African Lagenaria, a new species of, 69-72 Anderson, Edgar: experimental studies of the species concept 179- Asclepiadaceae, notes on, of Panama 48-50 Baker. a new species of Stelis M Orchidaceae) from Panama 68- a panamensis 34 Blackwell Will H.: revision of Bouvardia (Rubiacea e) 1-30; Sapotaceae, Family 154, Flora of Panama 145-169 baea neo tro icae novea II. new a of Priorheca, Hampea A Quara- ribe Bouvardia, revision of, 1-30; standleyana 13 Cephaelis bristanii LY : camponutas 35- ; rigidifolia Chakravarty, ew species of African Lagenaria (Cucurbitaceae) 69-72 Claytonia, karyotypes = Lee to classifi- cation and phylogeny in 64-67 Cochlospermaceae; a pae Cochlospermum Gack aan: a second species of, from Panama 75-77 Cucurbita ecuadorensis 392-396 new species of African am Hugh C. and Thomas W. Whita à new species of (Gucorbita from Ecuador 392.396 Cynanchum infimicola 48-49 Duroia panamensis Dwyer, John D. and Sister Hayden species of a T M. Victoria w and noteworthy woody Rubiaceae of Panama 34- Ecuador, a new species of Cucurbita from 3 Elias, Thomas S. 60-63; notes on the genus Inga II 72-73; Vitaceae, Family 112, Flora of Panama 81-92 ded rocacpe ata 303 Eriotheca peruviana 51-52 ne» annual, from Utah 74- mature leaves - segments 199-200; sori 200-201; spores 201; gametophytes 201-202; ecology an g- n 202-203; logy of root prolifera- tions 203; sporogenesis and E life cycle 203-204; sexual igate apogamous life RE „alternation of 1-216; aa re- vision of the Polypodium pectinatum- plumula complex 216-218; key 218-220; sages 220-267; literature 267; figures ut-anguis 39-41 Flacourtlaseae. Family 128, Flora of Panama 93- asseltia rigida 77-78; Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns, comb. nov. Flora of the Galápogos Islands 173-175 r Flora North America project 176-17. Flora of Pana 171-173; Famil , Vitaceae 81-92; : 128, Flacourtiaceae 93-144; Family 154, Sapotaceae 145-169 CBE: Islands, flora of 173-175; m (Myrtaceae) in the, 368-371 oe new species of Lisianthus 60-63; notes on American species a Voyria 398-400 Gonolobus inaequa 9; lewisii nA 50 Hampea, Pa a neotropicae novea 9; dukei 52-53; BE E 93-54 some edyotis; acerosa var. bigelovii comb. nov. (Rubiaceae) 397; notes on, in North meri -33 Illinois, the illustrated d of, 176 Illustrated flora of m s 176 nga, notes on t ne sii pet rete Jesse reenman Awar Kar otypes in relation to classification and phylogeny in Po des 64-67 Keener, Carl S. 400 amanian species o Minus aired 372-391; floral and orpho logy 372-373; discussion 373-374; eumd Poner 314-391 Lagenaria Picot nuta xn Leguminosae; a new Panan 365- Lewis, Walter and Yutada Suda: karyotypes in m E classification and phylogeny in Clayt ipe po species of, from Panama 62-63 the illustrated Myrtaceae; um in the Galápogos Is- lands 368-3 New and conis woody Rubiaceae of Lon a 34-47 8 North gri notes on Iedyotis in, 31-33 palyn y of the |; DAN SA 294-364; synopsis 402 of the Phytolaccaceae 296-297; taxonomy 74 E literature cited 360- 361; appendix Sisyrinchium dimorphum oiner Royce L.: rom Texas (Iridaceae), a new species and Mexico a Stelis fimbriata 68-69 Ormosia peruviana 79 Quararibea, Bombacaceae neotropiaceae new species of Eriotheca, , 51-59; bilobata 54-56; Ham and Jonsltubuloss 56-51; sanblasensis 57- ; wurdackii 58- 58 9 Panama, the flora of 171-173; Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Ro byns, a new species of Flacourtiaceae from, 77-78; ne and noteworthy woody Rubiaceae of, 34- 47; a new sp of Stelis from, 68-69; new species of Lisianthus from, 60-63 notes on up rie: of, iai b sec- ond species of Cochlospermum ae oS species of Polygala endemic Pa ee aout study of the Phytolac- caceae 294-36 Phytolaccaceae, palynotaxonomic study of the, 294-364 Polygala, two new species of, endemic to Panam d oes jefensis 367; wurdack- delen pena a new annual Eriogonum Polypo pectin atum-plumula complex, sereno relationships. in the, 193- 293: absidatum -239; um 237-238; i 8- 209; ampery: larium var. abbreviatum 256; r, la ch- niferum 254-255; var. consimile var. pastazense 262; cuprio- lepis 224-225; eurybasis var. aa 244- 245; var. villosum S odon var. 9; var. robus Psidium galapageium var. howellii 370- uh Porter, Duncan M.: the flora of the pagos e 173-175; Psidium (Myra: n the Galápagos Islands 368-371 nae d (Myrtaceae) in the Galápagos Is- an eu poo 41-42; grandi- [Vor. 55 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN carpa 42; horizontalis Sw. subsp. basi- cordata 42; olgae 42-44; umbelliformis Reveal, OS L.: a new annual Eriogonum from Utah 74-75 ea of Bouvardia 1-30 ob An Bombacaceae neotropicae novae II, species of iotheca, Hampea and Quararibea 51-59; Flacour- tiaceae, Family 128, Flora of Panama 93- 144; Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A Robyns, comb. nov. (Flacourtiaceae) 78-79; notes on some American species of Voyr ia a second s (Gentianaceae) 398-400 o ochlospermum (Cochlospermaceae) -7 é and Thomas S. Elias: new Distenthus. Ciena) from Panama 60- Rondeletia, a revision of the Panamanian of, -391; floral and fruit morphology 372-373; systematic treatment ; -buddleiodes var. aspera 379; an WO ama -47; on yotis in North America 31-33; re ies 2 Bou- vardia 1-30; a revision ana- manian species of Rondeletia 372. 391 Rudd, w Ormosia (Legu- minosae) from Peru Sapotaceae, Family 154, Flora of Panama 145-169 Sisyrinchium dimorphum d a new species from Texas and Mex 97 Shetler, Stanwyn G.: Flora North a project 176-178 sre concept, experimental studies of the Stelis B 68-69 Suda, Yutada 64-67 Vitaceae, Family 112, Flora of Panama 81- 9 Utah, a new annual Eriogonum from, 74- ue Tou O.: notes on Asclepiadaceae of Panama 48-50 Voyria bilobata 398-400 Whitaker, Thomas W.: 392-396 ANNALS VOLUME 55 1968 OF THE NUMBERS 1-3 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN Dates of Publication for Volume 55 No. I, pp. 1-80, September 9, 1968 No. 2, pp. 81-170, October 22, 1968 No. 3, pp. 171-402, April 30, 1969 PUBLISHED BY THE picis OF TRUSTEES OF THE opis BOTANICAL GARDEN "nu GTON UNIVERSITY PRESS - LOUIS, MISSOURI 63110 CONTENTS OF VOLUME 55 NUMBER 1 Revision of Bouvardia (Rubiaceae) by Will H. Blackwell meme 1-30 Notes on Hedyotis (Rubiaecae) in North America by Walter H. Lewis eene 31-33 New and noteworthy woody Rubiaceae of Panama by John D. Dwyer and Sister M. Victoria Hoy deti. ient 34-47 Notes on Asclepiadaceae of Panama by Louis O. Williams .....———————— 48-50 Bombacaceae neotropicae novae IJ. New species of Eriotheca, Hampea and Quararibea by André Robyns eene 51-59 New species of Lisianthus (Gentianaceae) from Panama by André Robyns and Thomas S. Elias —.------------------- re 60-63 Karyotypes in relation to classification and phylogeny in Claytonia by Walter H. Lewis and Yutaka Suda 64-67 NOTES «ante ....68-19 A new species of Stelis (Orchidaceae) from Panama 68-69. A new species of African Lagenaria (Cucurbitaceae) 69-72. Notes on the genus Inga II 72-73. A new annual Eriogonum from Utah 74-75. A second species of Cochlospermum (Cochlospermaceae) from Panama 75-77. Hasseltia rigida Woodson ex A. Robyns, a new species of Flacourtiaceae from Panama 77-18. Mayna zuliana (Pittier) A. Robyns, comb. nov. (Flacourtiaceae) 78-79. A new Ormosia (Leguminosae) from Peru 79. NUMBER 2 FLORA OF PANAMA, PART VI Family 112. Vitaceae by Thomas S. Elias Family 128. Flacourtiaceae by André Robyns FLORA OF PANAMA, PART VIII Family 154. Sapotaceae lii 8l- 92 93-144 145-169 by Will H. Blackwell, Tr. NUMBER 3 The Flora of Panama by Walter H. Lewis, The Flora of the Galápagos Islands by Duncan M. Porter, The Illustrated Flora of Illinois by Robert H. Mohlenbrock, Flora North America Project by Stanwyn G. Shetler 171-178 Experimental studies of the species concept 179-192 by Edgar Anderson Interspecific relationships in the Polypodium pectinatum-plumula complex 193-293 by A. Murray Evans Palynotaxonomic study of the Phytolaccaceae hy Joan W. Nowicke 294-364 'Two new species of Polygala endemic to Panama by Walter H. Lewis 365-361 Psidium (Myrtaceae) in the Galápagos Islands 368-370 by Duncan M. Porter A revision of the Panamanian species of Rondeletia (Rubiaceae) by Joseph H. Kirkbride, Jr. 372-391 A new species of Cucurbita from Ecuador 392-396 by Hugh C. Cutler and Thomas W. Whitaker NOTES 397-400 Hedyotis acerosa var. bigelovii, comb. nov. (Rubiaceae) 397. Sisyrinchium dimorphum (Iridaceae), a new species from Texas and Mexico 397. Notes on some American species of Voyria (Gentianaceae) 398-400. The First Jesse M. Greenman Award 400. Index to Volume 55 401-402 ERRATUM Page 36, line 35. For ‘Lewis et al. 1759 (MOY read ‘Lewis et al. 1759 (holotype MO). M bu Sage o ios rd E ORE DE cn a ME. cor The previous issue of the ANNALS oF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN, Vol 95, No 2 = an = pp. 81-170, was published on October 22, 1968. PUBLISHED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN AND WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY PRESS ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 6311