| Literature DB >> 27049519 |
Martin Cheek1, Gill Challen1, Aiah Lebbie2, Hannah Banks1, Patricia Barberá3, Ricarda Riina3.
Abstract
Croton scarciesii (Euphorbiaceae-Crotonoideae), a rheophytic shrub from West Africa, is shown to have been misplaced in Croton for 120 years, having none of the diagnostic characters of that genus, but rather a set of characters present in no known genus of the family. Pollen analysis shows that the new genus Karima belongs to the inaperturate crotonoid group. Analysis of a concatenated molecular dataset combining trnL-F and rbcL sequences positioned Karima as sister to Neoholstia from south eastern tropical Africa in a well-supported clade comprised of genera of subtribes Grosserineae and Neoboutonieae of the inaperturate crotonoid genera. Several morphological characters support the relationship of Karima with Neoholstia, yet separation is merited by numerous characters usually associated with generic rank in Euphorbiaceae. Quantitative ecological data and a conservation assessment supplement illustrations and descriptions of the taxon.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27049519 PMCID: PMC4822767 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1SEM micrographs of pollen of Karima scarciesii.
A. whole grain, B. close-up of rings of subunits, C. surface of pollen grain, D. close-up of supratectal subunits, showing longitudinal ridges, and granulate lacunae base. All from Momoh 94. Scale bars, 20 μm (A), 5 μm (B), 10 μm (C), 3 μm (D).
Fig 2Bayesian consensus tree from analysis of concatenated dataset combining trnL-F and rbcL data showing the position of Karima scarciesii in the inaperturate crotonoids.
Bayesian posterior probabilities and Maximum likelihood bootstrap values (> 0.5 or 50%) are shown above and below branches, respectively. Clades C1, C2 and inaperturate crotonoids according to Wurdack et al. [2].
The characters separating Croton from Karima (Croton characters taken from [20, 21, 22].
| Indumentum | Stellate &/or lepidote | Simple |
| Petiolar or basilaminar glands | Two or more glands usually conspicuous | Glandular tissue entirely absent from leaves. |
| Inflorescence structure | Inflorescences terminal on principal axes, bisexual, with 1-few female flowers at base of otherwise male inflorescence | Inflorescences never present on principal axes, terminal only on spur (lateral) shoots. Male inflorescences (multiple flowers) usually separate from female inflorescences (1-flowered) |
| Flower presentation | Flowers never concealed within bracts | Flowers concealed within concave bracts until immediately preceding anthesis |
| Staminal filaments position within bud | Inflexed | Erect |
| Receptacle | Stamens usually inserted on a raised, hairy receptacle | Receptacle neither raised nor hairy |
The characters separating Karima from Neoholstia.
Data for Neoholstia taken from [23] and from observations on material at K.
| Architecture | Distinct principal vertical (orthotropic) axis and short axillary horizontal (spur or plagiotropic) shoots | Stems not differentiated into orthotropic and plagiotropic shoots |
| Bud-scales | Bud-scales not present, buds (rarely seen) clad with dormant leaves | Abundant, large specialised bud-scales with rounded apices, persistent throughout the year |
| Stipules | Persistent throughout the year, conspicuous, glandular hairy, becoming indurated | “Minute, soon deciduous” [ |
| Leaf-blade | Monomorphic on each plant, rhombic, apex rounded | Usually polymorphic on one stem, larger leaves ovate, often 2–3 lobed, apex acuminate, base cordate, smaller leaves entire, base truncate |
| Sexuality | Monoecious | Dioecious |
| Inflorescence placement | Terminal on axillary shoots, absent from main axis | Terminal on all shoots |
| Female inflorescence | Inconspicuous, 1-flowered, concealed in spur leaves | Conspicuous raceme with numerous flowers |
| Male inflorescence | Flowers usually glomerulate, when in raceme, flowers numerous (>10) at each node, concealed within a naviculate bract until anthesis | Flowers always in long (13–17(–25) cm long) raceme, flowers 1(–2) per node, bract not concealing the developing buds at any stage |
| Staminal filaments | Free to base | Connate at base |
| Geography | West Africa | SE Africa |
Fig 3Karima scarciesii.
A. habit, leafy stems with male inflorescences, B. leaf from near apex of primary axis, abaxial surface, C. node from near apex of primary axis showing base of leaf, stipules and incipient spur shoot, D. stipule, with glandular hairs at margin, E. leafless (dormant) spur shoot clothed mainly in persistent stipules, F. male inflorescence, F1. diagram of dissected inflorescence node/glomule: bract (1), bracteoles (2, 3), lower order bracteoles (4,5,6,7), all cross-referenced to F where visible), flower buds (cross-hatched circles), pedicels of post anthetic flowers (solid black circles); G. male flower newly anthetic (filaments not yet fully extended), proximal sepal lobes removed to expose petals, disc glands and base of stamens, H. male flower, as G, with sepal lobes and petals removed to show disc glands and filaments, I. stamen, J. petal, male flower, adaxial view, K. female flower at anthesis, proximal sepal lobe damaged, L. female flower, portion, in plan view, pistil removed (cross-hatched) showing part of the pentagonal disc, two petals and two sepal lobes, M. petal, female flower, adaxial view, N. transverse section of ovary showing uniovulate locules, O. style and stigmas, plan view, P. style-stigma, side view, Q. fruit, side view with one coccus fallen, exposing axile placented column, R. fruit wall indumentum:tubercule based bristle hairs, S. seed, dorsal (left) and ventral (right) views. Drawn by Andrew Brown from VBS 1223 (A), Momoh 94 (B-D, F-J, O-S); Enti & Agyakwa s.n. (E), Jordan 861 (K-N).
Fig 4Map showing global distribution of Karima scarciesii.
Localities are based on all known herbarium specimen records.