Boehmeria pilosiuscula var. suffruticosa, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.3767/000651913X674116 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D987B7-FFB0-5169-FFBA-5ABFDBCFF80C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Boehmeria pilosiuscula var. suffruticosa |
status |
var. nov. |
b. var. suffruticosa Acharya, Friis & Wilmot-Dear View in CoL , var. nov. — Fig. 38j View Fig ; Map 41 View Map 41
A var. typica atque a multis ceteris speciebus generis axe florali brevissima atque glomerulos femineos contiguos crebrissimos ferenti structura dura interrupte subcylindrica formanti differt; a var. typica etiam parte florifera axis 1–2 cm tantum (nec 3–10 cm) longa, foliis numquam bullatis neque crasse chartaceis atque ad marginem dentes ≤ 30 tantum numero, 1(–1.5) mm tantum altos (nec usque 2 mm altos) ferentibus distinguenda. — Typus: Larsen et al. 44502 (holo K;iso AAU), Thailand, Nan prov.,Sapan falls, 600 m.
Subshrub or herb. Leaves 3–9(–11) cm long; marginal teeth consistently only 25–30(–35), broader rather than more numerous in larger leaves, 1(–1.5) by 2–3(–4) mm; texture very thin-chartaceous; hairs adaxially soft, adpressed or half-adpressed. No entirely male axes seen; female and bisexual axes 1–3 cm long but lower 0.5–1 cm of axis often naked; female clusters contiguous, providing a thick (c. 0.5 cm diam) cylindrical appearance of the inflorescence-architecture which seems to be made up of one inflorescence-bearing axis only.
Distribution ― Burma, Thailand, southern China (including Hainan and Taiwan).
Habitat & Ecology ― Moist areas in evergreen forest, often by streams; roadside banks and barren stony areas; 500–1200 (–1500) m altitude.
Notes ― 1. This variety is distinctive in its female inflorescence-bearing axes which are extremely short (at most 2 cm long) and almost ‘cylindrical’ due to congested masses of clusters, and leaves small, often markedly dimorphic in both size and shape and/or markedly asymmetrical, thin-textured, shallowly serrate soft-hairy, veins slender.
2. This variety is the easier of the two to distinguish from B. virgata subsp. macrophylla var. scabrella . See detailed discussion in Note 8 under the species.
3. The joint publication of this new taxon was accepted by Acharya and is partly based on his earlier unpublished findings.
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.