Psoralea forbesiae
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Ordo: Fabales
Familia: Fabaceae
Genus: Psoralea
Name
Psoralea forbesiae C.H.Stirt., A.Bello & Muasya sp. nov. – Wikispecies link – Pensoft Profile
- Psoralea sp. 15, Stirton & Schutte in Manning & Goldblatt, Strelitzia 29: 574 (2012).
Diagnosis
Similar to P. axillaris L., but differs in being a resprouter with numerous shoots emerging from a woody rootstock; older plants producing a cluster of shoots (burst-branching) at the ends of the previous seasons’ terminal shoots giving an untidy habit (versus a much-branched reseeder with single stem, never with burst branching); stems coarsely fissured and greyish with age (versus furrowed, heavily lenticelled and brownish); leaves 3-foliolate; leaflets partially conduplicate, linear-oblong, with raised crater-like glands and scarcely visible veins (versus leaves 3–5-foliolate; flat, lanceolate, distinctly veined with small sunken glands); lateral leaflets symmetrical, 2–3 mm broad (versus lateral leaflets asymmetrical, 3–8 mm. broad); flowers well exerted from leaves, mauve to pale lavender, wings white (versus mostly hidden within leaves, mauve to purple with purple veins, wings mauve); standard white to pale mauve and with a single purple vertical flash plus a few shorter darker veins towards base of standard, apex greenish on front and back (versus mauve with strongly purple veins and violet basal patch, apex not greenish on front and back); wing petals flared outwards (versus wing petals held vertically).
Type
SOUTH AFRICA, Western Cape Province, 12.5 km from Swartberg Pass – Prince Albert Road to Gamkaskloof, 33°21'11.9"S, 21°56'32.3"E, 1417 m, 24 November 2011, flowering, Stirton & Muasya 13279 (Holotype: BOL!).
Description
Tall densely branched shrubs to 2.5 m, resprouter, bluish-green, most parts covered in small crater-like glands; mature plants can be hemispherical. Stems many, green turning bluish- green to brown with age, coarsely fissured, older plants produce burst branching at the ends of previous season's seasonal shoots giving an untidy habit; seasonal shoots glaucous, glabrous, densely covered in small raised crateriform glands. Leaves pinnately 3-foliolate, yellowish-green, semi-conduplicate, semi-succulent, glabrous, crowded at the end of bare branches on older stems or distributed along short branches on young shoots, petiolate. Stipules triangular, short, straight, stiff, erect, fused near their base, glabrous, glandular, rapidly senescent, persistent, shorter than petiole. Leaflets linear-oblong, symmetrical, glabrous, bluish-green; apex acute, tip deflexed, terminal leaflets 20–30 × 1.4–3.0 mm, laterals (12) 15–24 × 1.5–3.0 mm, petioles (7) 10–11 mm long; rachis 2–5 mm long, small, terminal leaflet longest. Inflorescences axillary, borne in upper axils of seasonal shoots, 1 (2) flowers per axil, pedunculate, pedicel 4–5 mm long, shorter than calyx tube; peduncles rigid, 26–35 mm long, longer than the subtending leaf; cupulum terminal, 3-fid, teeth equal, triangular, minute, warty, glabrous, 1.7–1.8 mm long. Flowers 8white to pale mauve, held above the foliage. Calyx 5 8 mm long; ribbed, densely glandular, glands smaller on triangular teeth; lobes equally developed, shorter than the calyx tube, glabrous, carinal lobe slightly wider; ribs and tube sometimes flushed purple. Standard 7–8 × 10–11 mm, white or pale mauve fading towards margins, with a purple vertical flash tapering to the apex and some basal veins purplish, apex greenish on front and back. Wing petals 8–11 × 4–5 mm, white, tips sometimes pale lavender, longer than keel, blade flared outwards, sculpturing present. Keel 7–8 × 4 mm, white but apically suffused with dark violet-purple on inner apex. Pistil stipitate, ovary glabrous but sparsely covered in club-shaped glands, style glabrous, curved upwards, thickened at point of flexure. Fruits 1-seeded, papery, enclosed within calyx, surface reticulate. Seeds black (Fig. 1).
Distribution, habitat and ecology
Psoralea forbesiae is a locally common species known only from the mid- to upper altitudes on the southern slopes and plateau of the Swartberg Mountains of the Western Cape Province (Fig. 2). It occurs in seepages, gulleys and along streams in mountain fynbos between 1200–1700 m (a.s.l.). It is restricted to the South Swartberg Sandstone Fynbos and North Swartberg Sandstone Fynbos vegetation types (FFs 23 & FFs 24) (Mucina and Rutherford 2006[1]). It forms part of an introgressive hybrid swarm with P. sordida on the flanks of the road leading up the southern slopes of the Swartberg Pass (Bello et al. 2018[2]). The flowers are visited by black Megachilid and Xylocopid bees.
Phenology
Flowering takes place between November and March.
Etymology
The specific epithet forbesiae honours Scottish born Helena Madelain Lamond Forbes (1900–1959) who immigrated to South Africa with her parents when young. She worked at the National Herbarium in Pretoria, visited Kew Gardens for one year and ended up as the Curator of the Natal Herbarium (NH). She wrote local floras of Isipingo and Malvern districts in Natal but is best known for her revisions of Tephrosia and Psoralea in South Africa (see Gunn and Codd 1981[3], Glen and Germishuizen 2010[4]).
Preliminary conservation status
More information is needed to evaluate the conservation status of this species as it is part of an introgressive hybrid swarm with P. sordida (Bello et al. 2018[2]). Based on the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria guidelines the new species is treated as “Data Deficient (DD)” (IUCN 2012[5]).
Related species
Psoralea forbesiae is part of the Psoralea verrucosa complex with special affinities to P. triflora Thunb. and P. verrucosa Willd. It has been confused in the past with P. verrucosa and usually named as that species. However, P. verrucosa is an allopatric species from the Cederberg region (versus Swartberg Mountains), with glaucous and prominently warty stems and leaves (versus bluish-green stems and leaves covered in small raised crateriform glands) and multi-flowered pedunculate inflorescences (versus single-flowered axillary inflorescences). Psoralea triflora is an allopatric lowland coastal species of shorter stature (<1.5 m) and differs from P. forbesiae in its flat, 1.0–1.7 mm broad, keeled leaflets with impressed glands (versus semi-conduplicate 1.4–3.0 mm broad leaflets densely covered in small raised crateriform glands); peduncles 10–15 mm long (versus peduncles 26–35 mm); and with mauve standards with purple veins, prominent central purple flash and nectar guide, back purple (versus standard white to pale mauve with a single purple vertical flash plus a few shorter darker veins towards base of standard, white with apex greenish on front and back). It is difficult to name some material belonging to P. forbesiae in the Swartberg Mountains owing to the presence of an introgressive swarm there. Psoralea sordida, with which it hybridises, is a lanky 1–2-stemmed shrub with erect short virgate branches in its upper parts (versus many-stemmed, densely branched large shrubs tending to hemispherical in shape); with digitately (3)5(7)-foliolate glabrous green leaves with sunken glands (versus pinnately 3-foliolate bluish green leaves with raised crateriform glands); leaflets linear-lanceolate, 0.2–0.3 mm wide (versus leaflets linear-oblong, 1.5–3.0 mm wide); 3-flowered axillary inflorescences shorter than the subtending leaves with stout and rigid 2–4 mm long peduncles (versus 1(2)-flowered inflorescences longer than the subtending leaves, with filiform and 26–35 mm long peduncles); and calyx lobes equally developed (versus unequally developed).
Specimens examined
Cement bridge across river just west of Bothashoek in Groot Swartberg Mountains, (3321CB), 10 March 2015, Du Preez 29 (BOL).
Top of Swartberg Pass, Swartberg Mountains (3322AC), 10 December 1978, Stirton 10308, 10331 (PRE).
Swartberg Pass, Swartberg Mountains (3322AC), 17 February 2014, Bello, Stirton, Muasya & Chimphango 182, 207, 208, 209, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227 (BOL).
1.6 km from Swartberg Pass – Prince Albert Road to Gamkaskloof, (3322AC), 24 February 2011, Stirton & Muasya 13272 (BOL).
Bassonsrust, Upper Cango Valley, (3322AC), 29 March 1975, Moffet 672 (NBG).
8 km from Prince Albert – Oudtshoorn road to Die Hel, (3322AC), 1 January 2008, Muasya & Stirton 3592 (BOL).
Original Description
- Stirton, C; Bello, A; Muasya, A; 2018: Psoralea forbesiae (Psoraleeae, Fabaceae), a new species from the Swartberg Mountains of South Africa PhytoKeys, (99): 93-99. doi
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Other References
- ↑ Mucina L, Rutherford M (2006) The Vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho, and Swaziland. Strelitzia 19: 1–807.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Bello A, Stirton C, Chimphango S, Muasya A (2018) Morphological evidence for introgressive hybridization in the genus Psoralea L. (Psoraleeae, Fabaceae). South African Journal of Botany.
- ↑ Gunn M, Codd L (1981) Botanical Exploration of Southern Africa. A.A. Balkema, Cape Town, 298 pp.
- ↑ Glen H, Germishuizen G (2010) Botanical Exploration of Southern Africa (2nd edn). Strelitzia 26. South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria, 489 pp.
- ↑ IUCN (2012) IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: Version 3.1 (2nd edn). IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK.