identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03EA5262FF9FFF89FF287AD14C427A33.text	03EA5262FF9FFF89FF287AD14C427A33.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Rhabdosciadium hizanense Firat & Guzel 2019	<div><p>Rhabdosciadium hizanense Fırat &amp; Güzel sp. nov. (Figs. 4‒8)</p> <p>Type: — TURKEY. B 9 Bitlis: Hizan Province, İhtiyarşahap Mountains (Lolan hill), Mêrga Mehîr plateau, rocky, stone, and calcareous areas, 2221 m, 38°21′38″N, 42°25′39″E, coll. 2 August 2015, M. Fırat 32618 (holotype: VANF, isotypes: HUB, ANK and Herb. M. Fırat).</p> <p>Diagnosis: —The new species is morphologically most closely related to R. anatolyi due to short and wide leaf segments, but differs from it by its 4‒10 × 2‒5 cm leaves (vs. 14‒50 × 6‒15 cm); lanceolate or ovate leaf segments (vs. elliptic or rhomboid), bluish-green appearance (vs. pale green), caespitose habit with dense basal leaves (vs. erect, loose clusters of basal leaves), compound umbels (vs. paniculate-corymbose with some proliferating umbels) and plant height 5‒40 cm (vs. 70‒170 cm).</p> <p>Description: —Perennial, herbaceous, glaucous, and bluish-green plants with taproot 4‒10 × 0.5‒2 cm, and with simple or closely branched 4‒7 × 1‒2.5 cm caudex. Caudex covered with a dense fibrous collar. Stems 5‒40 cm tall, ca. 2 mm at base, dichotomously branched from the middle part of the stem, solid and slightly striate, densely caespitose with sterile shots and dense basal leaves. Basal leaves 1-pinnate, 4‒10 × 2‒5 cm with petiole. Petiole 2‒5 cm, sheathing at base. Sheaths deltoid, 0.5‒1 cm, with hyaline margin 0.7 mm wide. Segments of the basal leaves lanceolate or ovate with regularly serrate margin, 1.5‒2 × 0.5‒1 cm, all sessile. Terminal segment of the basal leaves similar to the lateral ones or tripartite with 1.2‒1.5 × 0.2‒0.5 cm subsegments. Cauline leaves gradually reduced; middle cauline leaves ca. 2 cm long, 1-pinnate or tripartite lamina with 0.4 × 0.2 cm lanceolate to linear segments. Upper cauline leaves bracteiform (prophyll-like), 0.5‒1 cm, completely membranous. Peduncle ca. 2 cm in flowering and ca. 8 cm in fruiting stages. Prophylls 0‒1. Inflorescence a compound umbel. Rays 5‒9, subequal, ca. 0.5 cm in flowering and ca. 2.5 cm in fruiting stages. Pedicels of peripheral male flowers 4‒9, subequal, up to 3 mm; central hermaphrodite fertile flower sessile. Bracts 1‒4, persistent, membranous with brown line, lanceolate to filiform, 1.5‒3 × 0.5 mm. Bracteole persistent, 1‒2, membranous with brown middle line, acuminate 1.5‒2 × 0.1 mm. Flowers 4‒9 per umbellule. Marginal flowers male, only the central, sessile flower hermaphrodite, producing a fruit. Petals white, minute, incurved and glabrous. Sepals reduced. Anthers pinkish-purplish to whitish, 3 mm. Stylopodium conical, not embedded, 0.7 mm. Mature fruits oblong, not curved or occasionally slightly curved in some umbellules (fruit curved when one of the mericarps is not fully developed); one central sessile fruit per umbellule. Both mericarps or occasionally one of them well developed, 13‒15 × 3 mm, glabrous. All mericarp ridges are filiform but conspicuous. Styles 2‒3 mm. Primary ridges of the mericarp producing finger-like projections in the cross sections.</p> <p>Phenology: —Flowering from July to August and fruiting from August to September.</p> <p>Vernacular name: — Rhabdosciadium hizanense is called “Ardek” by the local people in the Hizan district of Bitlis in Kurdish. Rhabdosciadium species are also known by the local people by many names in Kurdish, e.g., “Corix”, “Xandoq” (Fırat 2013).</p> <p>Etymology: —This epithet “ hizanense ” recalls the Hizan district of Bitlis, where the new species was found.</p> <p>Ethnobotanical usage: — Rhabdosciadium hizanense is collected by the local people to make brooms. It is also a fodder for grazing cattle and sheep.</p> <p>Habitat and ecology: —The species is perennial and grows on the rocky, stony, and calcareous areas at an elevation of 2221 m with plants such as Prangos pabularia Lindley (1825: 7) Prangos platychlaena Boissier (1860: 457), Pimpinella kotschyana Boissier (1844: 133), Bunium cylindricum Drude (1898: 194), or Campanula stricta Linnaeus (1762: 238).</p> <p>Distribution and proposed conservation status:— Rhabdosciadium hizanense only occurs on the İhtiyarşahap Mountain (Hizan/ Bitlis) and can be considered endemic to eastern Anatolia. It represents an Irano-Turanian mountain element. The distribution area of R. hizanense covers less than 20,000 km 2. The species was collected from one locality where about 5000 individuals occur. Some anthropogenic or grazing effects were observed on the population. According to the IUCN (2016) criteria and categories, we here assess R. hizanense as Vulnerable (VU).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EA5262FF9FFF89FF287AD14C427A33	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Firat, Mehmet;Güzel, Yelda	Firat, Mehmet, Güzel, Yelda (2019): Contributions to the taxonomy of the Irano-Turanian genus Rhabdosciadium (Apiaceae): Nomenclatural notes, carpology, molecular phylogeny and the description of a new species from Bitlis (Turkey). Phytotaxa 395 (3): 179-198, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.395.3.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.395.3.3
03EA5262FF9BFF85FF28794C48007511.text	03EA5262FF9BFF85FF28794C48007511.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Rhabdosciadium anatolyi Lyskov & Kljuykov 2017	<div><p>Rhabdosciadium anatolyi Lyskov &amp; Kljuykov (2017) (Figs. 9‒14)</p> <p>Type: — TURKEY. Hakkâri province: 20 km E of Hakkâri. <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=43.816666&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=37.466667" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 43.816666/lat 37.466667)">Wet</a> rocky northern slope near the snowfield, alt.= 2620–2630 m elevation, 37°28′N, 43°49′E, 3 July 2014, Lyskov &amp; Krupitsky 14-TR-135 (holotype: MW0595616 [photo!]; isotypes: GAZI!, W).</p> <p>Epitype (designated here): — TURKEY. C9 Hakkâri, Yüksekova Province Sat Mountains, from Kepirê to <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=44.21389&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=37.37583" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 44.21389/lat 37.37583)">Gera Mezin region</a>, rocky, stone, and calcareous areas, 2600 m elevation, 37°22′33″ N, 44°12′50″ E, coll. 5 August 2013, M. Fırat 30400 (VANF); isoepitypes: HUB, ANK and Herb. M. Fırat).</p> <p>Emended description: —Perennial, herbaceous, glabrous, and pale green plants with taproot 12‒35 × 5‒17 cm and simple or closely branched 10–15 × 5–17 cm caudex. Caudex covered with dense fibrous collar. Stems 70‒170 cm tall, ca. 4 mm at base, dichotomously branched from the middle part of the stem, solid and slightly striate. Basal leaves forming erect, loose clusters with the sterile shoots, 1-pinnate or irregularly and weakly 2-pinnate, 14‒50 × 6‒15 cm with petiole. Petiole 5‒20 cm, sheathing at base. Sheaths deltoid, 1.5–2 cm, with hyaline margin 1 mm. Segments of the basal leaves elliptic or rhomboid with serrate or irregularly biserrate margin, 2.5‒7 × 1.5‒4 cm, the upper segments sessile. Lower ones with petiolules up to 5 cm long. Terminal segment of the basal leaves similar to the lateral ones or tripartite with 2.5‒6 × 0.8‒4 cm subsegments. Cauline leaves gradually reduced. Middle cauline leaves similar to basal ones but much smaller, ca. 16 × 4 cm in outline, 1-pinnate with ca. 2.5 × 1.3 cm leaf segments. Upper cauline leaves bracteiform (prophyll-like), 1.5 cm × 3 cm. Peduncle ca. 2 cm in flowering and ca. 7 cm in fruiting stages. Prophylls 0‒1. Inflorescences paniculate-corymbose with some proliferating umbels, even proliferating umbellules, that form a second- or third-degree irregularly branched inflorescence. Rays 5‒7, subequal, ca. 0.5 cm in flowering and ca. 2 cm in fruiting stages. Pedicels of peripheral male flowers 2‒5, subequal, up to 5 mm; central hermaphrodite fertile flower sessile. Bracts deciduous, membranous with brown lines, 2‒7 in flower and in early stages of fruit, 0 in mature fruit, ovate, 3‒6 × 0.5–3 mm. Bracteoles 1‒5, deciduous, membranous with brown middle line, acuminate 1‒1.5 mm × 0.1 mm. Flowers 6‒9 per umbellule. Marginal flowers male, only the central, sessile flower hermaphrodite, producing a fruit. Petals white, minute, incurved and glabrous. Sepals reduced. Anthers purple to claret red, 3 mm. Stylopodium conical, not embedded, 0.8 mm. Mature fruits oblong, not curved or occasionally slightly curved in some umbellules (fruit curved when one of the mericarps not fully developed); one central sessile fruit per umbellule. Both mericarps or occasionally one of them well developed, 14‒17 × 3‒4 mm, glabrous; some mericarps, slightly stalked at base. All mericarp ridges filiform and inconspicuous. Styles 1‒4 mm. Primary mericarp ridges only slightly protruding in the cross sections.</p> <p>Phenology: —Flowering from July to August and fruiting from August to September.</p> <p>Vernacular name:— Rhabdosciadium anatolyi is called “Kerewz” by the local people of the Hakkâri /Yüksekova Province.</p> <p>Ethnobotanical usage:— Rhabdosciadium anatolyi is a popular wild edible plant eaten by the local people. It is cooked as stew or egg-vegetable. Fresh leaves and stems are chopped and added to yogurt and served as appetizer. Moreover, it is added to ‘otlu peynir’ (a traditional herbed cheese). It is harvested in summer, dried under the sun for a month, and collected as hay. In winter, when snow falls, it is brought to the villages using sleds. It is an important fodder for sheep and goat breeding.</p> <p>Habitat and ecology: —The species is a perennial that grows on rocky areas at an elevation of 1300‒2700 m, with plants such as Prangos ferulacea (Linnaeus 1762: 358) Lindley (1825: 7), Prangos pabularia Lindley, Campanula persica Candolle (1839: 483), Pimpinella kotschyana, Allium microspatum Ekberg (1969: 20), Scorzonera latifolia Candolle (1838: 124), Hypericum scabrum Linnaeus (1755: 25), and Amygdalus carduchorum Bornmüller (1938: 257).</p> <p>Distribution and proposed conservation status:— Rhabdosciadium anatolyi only occurs on the Sat mountains (Yüksekova/ Hakkâri) and can be considered as endemic to eastern Anatolia. It represents an Irano-Turanian mountain element. The distribution area of Rhabdosciadium anatolyi covers less than 20,000 km 2. The species was collected from one locality where about 50,000 individuals occur. Some anthropogenic or grazing effects were observed on the population. According to the IUCN (2016) criteria and category, we herein assess Rhabdosciadium anatolyi as Vulnerable (VU).</p> </div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EA5262FF9BFF85FF28794C48007511	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Firat, Mehmet;Güzel, Yelda	Firat, Mehmet, Güzel, Yelda (2019): Contributions to the taxonomy of the Irano-Turanian genus Rhabdosciadium (Apiaceae): Nomenclatural notes, carpology, molecular phylogeny and the description of a new species from Bitlis (Turkey). Phytotaxa 395 (3): 179-198, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.395.3.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.395.3.3
