Ridleyandra chuana
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Ordo: Lamiales
Familia: Gesneriaceae
Genus: Ridleyandra
Name
Ridleyandra chuana Kiew sp. nov. – Wikispecies link – IPNI link – Pensoft Profile
Diagnosis
In its leaf surface with mammillate hairs and its narrowly lanceolate bracts, Ridleyandra chuana resembles Ridleyandra atrocyanea (Ridl.) A.Weber but it differs in its shorter peduncles 6–8.5 cm long (not 8–12 cm), pedicels 5–7 mm long (not 10 mm) and its shorter 3–5 cm long white corolla with purple lines (not purple-black and 5–7 cm long). In flower colour and pattern it is similar to Ridleyandra kelantanensis Kiew but differs not only in its mammillate leaf surface but also in its longer petioles (2.3–3 cm long not 1–1.75 cm in Ridleyandra kelantanensis), smaller teeth on the leaf margin (2.5–3 × 1.5–3 mm not 4–5 × 3.5 mm), larger bracts (4–6 mm long not 2–3 mm), and corollas with a much narrower lip ca 13 mm wide (not 24 mm wide).
Type
Peninsular Malaysia. Pahang: Gunung Ulu Kali, 27 Jan 1999 (fl.) LSL Chua FRI 40758 (holotype: KEP!; isotype: KEP!).
Description
Perennial herb. Stem woody, usually unbranched, rarely 2-branched, erect, 12–19 cm tall, 3–5 mm diam., upper part of stem, petiole, leaf margin, lower surface of veins, peduncle and pedicel and sepals hispid; hairs reddish brown, dense, unbranched, multiseriate, ca. 2 mm long and on the margin and veins 3–4 mm long. Leaves in unequal pairs clustered in a rosette at the top of the stem, lowermost to 7 mm apart, deep green above, whitish green beneath; subsessile or lower leaves with petiole 2.3–3 cm long, ca. 6 mm diameter; lamina oblanceolate, 11–12.5(–14.5) × 2.7–4.5 cm, narrowed to base, margin serrate, teeth tip rounded, 2–3 × 1.5–3 mm, towards the base teeth divided almost to midrib, 5–9 × 2.5–4.5 mm, apex acute to acuminate, above hairs dense, surface mammillate with hairs raised on narrow cones, minutely punctate beneath; midrib impressed above, prominent beneath, lateral veins 17–18 pairs. Inflorescence 1-flowered, rarely 2-flowered then flowers open in succession, peduncle 6–8.5 cm long, dark maroon-purple, slightly curved upward; bract pair pale green, positioned 5–10 mm below the calyx, narrowly lanceolate, 4–6 × 0.75–2 mm, pedicel dark maroon-purple, 5–7 mm long. Flowers with sepals divided to base, dull purple or pale green with a red midrib, lanceolate, 4–7.5 × 1.5–2.5 mm, hispid; corolla funnel-shaped, 3–4 cm to tip of lower lip, tube 2–3 cm long, ca. 2 mm diam. at base dilating to 10 mm at the mouth, outside minutely pubescent, white at the base becoming tinged purple at the tube dilates, inside white with mauve or purple lines with 3 lines extending into each of the three lobes where they spread and coalesce leaving a white margin around each lobe, lobes projecting ca 10 mm beyond the tube, lateral lobes ca. 4 × 5 mm and the centre lobe ca. 5 × 6 mm; stamens 4 in 2 pairs, filaments white, lower pair ca. 23 mm long, upper pair ca. 26 mm long, anthers creamy white, ca 1 mm long, joined in pairs, staminode ca. 3 mm long; nectary annular, ca. 1 mm high; ovary ca. 3 cm long, pale mauve, stigma white, broadly spathulate, ca. 2 × 1.5 mm long, apex emarginated. Capsules glossy, deep purple, slightly curved upward, glabrous, 5–6.5 cm long, 2.5–4 mm diam., sepals persistent and clasping the base.
Distribution
Endemic in Peninsular Malaysia, Pahang (Fraser’s Hill and Gunung Uli Kali) (Map 1).
Ecology
On moss-covered granite rock embedded in soil or on low moss-covered granite boulders, in extremely damp, deeply shaded conditions on steep slopes in valleys. One population occurs in lower montane forest at 1250 m and the other in upper montane forest at–1570 m.
Etymology
Named in honour of Dr Lillian Swee Lian Chua, botanist and conservationist, who first discovered this species on Gunung Kali while making an ecological inventory of the summit flora (Chua and Saw 2001[1]).
Conservation status
EN B2ab(ii,iii). Following the 2001 IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, (IUCN 2001[2]) this species is assessed as Endangered because it is known from two localities, one of which is threatened and only 130 known individuals. The population at Fraser’s Hill falls within a Totally Protected Area (Chua 2010[3]) and consists of about 30 plants that grow in an undisturbed site away from tourist trails and is too remote to be affected by development. The other population consists of less than 100 plants at Gunung Ulu Kali, which is on private land in a hill resort that is severely threatened by road widening and associated landslips, by changes in microclimate due to edge effect as the forest becomes more and more fragmented and from and that is in danger of encroachment from future development. The chance of this latter population surviving is very slim. On the other hand, the rediscovery of the Fraser’s Hill population after a hundred years illustrates the resilience of species to survive if the habitat remains undisturbed.
Other specimens examined. Peninsular Malaysia
Pahang: Gunung Ulu Kali–26 Nov 2007 LSL Chua & R Kiew FRI 46936 (KEP!); Fraser’s Hill– 4 Nov 1932 EJH Corner s.n. (SING!), 16 Aug 1937 EJH Corner s.n. (SING!), 18 Nov 2007 MY Chew et al. FRI 53772 (KEP!), 24 Feb 2008 R Kiew RK 5412 (KEP!).
Discussion
Plants in both populations are identical in all characters except for sepal length (6.5–7.5 mm in the Ulu Kali population and ca. 4 mm in the Fraser’s Hill population).
In both the original collections (Chua FRI 40758 and Corner s.n. 1932) only a single flowering specimen was collected suggesting that this is not a free-flowering species. Monitoring over a longer period by JPC Tan suggests that there is a low level of flowering throughout the year with periodic bursts of more intense flowering. This same pattern is seen in some species of Codonoboea, such as Codonoboea platypus (C.B.Clarke) C.L.Lim (Kiew 2009b[4]).
Original Description
- Kiew, R; 2013: Ridleyandra chuana (Gesneriaceae), a new species from Peninsular Malaysia PhytoKeys, 25: 15-19. doi
Other References
- ↑ Chua L, Saw L (2001) A reassessment of the flora of Gunung Ulu Kali, Genting Highlands, Malaysia–preliminary findings and trends. Malayan Nature Journal 55: 65-76.
- ↑ IUCN (2001) IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria version 3.1. IUCN Species Survival Commission, IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, U.K.
- ↑ Chua L (2010) Species assessment and conservation in Peninsular Malaysia. In: Kiew R, Chung RCK, Saw LG, Soepadmo E, Boyce PC (Eds) Flora of Peninsular Malaysia 2,1: 47–54.
- ↑ Kiew R (2009b) The natural history of Malaysian Gesneriaceae. Malayan Nature Journal 61: 257–265.
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