Piper caninum Blume
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.3767/000651913X665053 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AF8788-F726-FFA4-91C0-BE20912B7284 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Piper caninum Blume |
status |
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5. Piper caninum Blume View in CoL — Fig. 3a View Fig
Piper caninum Blume (1826) View in CoL 214; Quisumb. (1930) 120; Chew (1972) 5; R.O. Gardner (2006) 580; Spokes (2007) 239; R.O. Gardner (2010) 8. — Type: Blume s.n. (holo L n.v.), Java.
Distribution — Western Malesia to the Solomon Is. and northeastern Australia.
Habitat & Ecology — In forest, 0– 500(–1600) m altitude.
Notes — Recognized by its chartaceous, greyish to olive-brown leaves which usually have a light cover of short pale bristly hairs. Rarely, the indument is subvillous (Streimann 8368, Morobe Province, near Lae , 250 m). Because of the similarity of leaf shape, texture, glandularity and nervation in P. caninum and P. interruptum , and because of the variability of the latter’s indument, sterile specimens can be hard to place as one rather than the other of these two species.
The two highest-altitude specimens I have seen are both from 1600 m: Brass 24814, Milne Bay Province, Goodenough I.; NGF 37258, Western Highlands, Kopiango .
Van Royen (1982: 1269, f. 403) incorrectly described P. caninum as reaching “the upper subalpine shrubberies [at] 3290 m ”. This altitude, and his f. 403, are based just on Vink 17365, which belongs to P. rodatzii of the P. macropiper species-complex.
Johns et al. (2006: 401) cite a Kloss specimen collected from “Camp IX– XIII” [c. 1700 – 3150 m] on Mt Jaya (Carstenz). I have not been able to check this specimen at BM, and regard even 1700 m as an anomalously high altitude .
The leaf blades of Hoogland & Craven 10805 (East Sepik Province, Hunstein River, c. 150 m) measure only 7 by 2 cm. With this exception, and even at altitudes above 500 m, narrow-leaved plants seem not to occur in New Guinea. This contrasts greatly with the situation in the Philippines ( Gardner 2006).
Three collections have leaves that are unusually coriaceous and glossy: Brass 24814 (cited above); Clemens 4520, Morobe Province, Ogeramnang; NGF 20253, Central Province, Woitape. They are not otherwise unusual.
Takeuchi 14166 (Morobe District, Guam River, c. 80 m, A) has a 30 cm long infructescence (in typical P. caninum , 8(–12) cm) and elongate bracts, as in P. interrruptum . But the densely hairy leaves suggest P. caninum , as do the hairy rachis and stipitate fruitlets. I therefore leave this collection undetermined.
BM |
Bristol Museum |
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.
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Piper caninum Blume
Gardner, R. O. 2013 |
Piper caninum
Blume 1826 |