Affiliation:
1. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, UK
2. Institute of Agronomic Research and Development, Herbier National Camerounais, Yaoundé, Centrale, Cameroon
3. Identification & Naming, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK
Abstract
This is the first revision in more than 100 years of the African genus Pseudohydrosme, formerly considered endemic to Gabon. Closely related to Anchomanes, Pseudohydrosme is distinct from Anchomanes because of its 2-3-locular ovary (vs. unilocular), peduncle concealed by cataphylls at anthesis and far shorter than the spathe (vs. exposed, far exceeding the spathe), stipitate fruits and viviparous (asexually reproductive) roots (vs. sessile, roots non-viviparous), lack of laticifers (vs. laticifers present) and differences in spadix: spathe proportions and presentation. However, it is possible that a well sampled molecular phylogenetic analysis might show that one of these genera is nested inside the other. In this case the synonymisation of Pseudohydrosme will be required. Three species, one new to science, are recognised, in two sections. Although doubt has previously been cast on the value of recognising Pseudohydrosme buettneri, of Gabon, it is here accepted and maintained as a distinct species in the monotypic section, Zyganthera. However, it is considered to be probably globally extinct. Pseudohydrosme gabunensis, type species of the genus, also Gabonese but probably extending to Congo, is maintained in Sect. Pseudohydrosme together with Pseudohydrosme ebo sp.nov. of the Ebo Forest, Littoral Region, Cameroon, the first addition to the genus since the nineteenth century, and which extends the range of the genus 450 km north from Gabon, into the Cross-Sanaga biogeographic area. The discovery of Pseudohydrosme ebo resulted from a series of surveys for conservation management in Cameroon, and triggered this article. All three species are morphologically characterised, their habitat and biogeography discussed, and their extinction risks are respectively assessed as Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct), Endangered and Critically Endangered using the IUCN standard. Clearance of forest habitat for logging, followed by agriculture or urbanisation are major threats. Pseudohydrosme gabunensis may occur in a formally protected area and is also cultivated widely but infrequently in Europe, Australia and the USA for its spectacular inflorescences.
Funder
Garfield Weston Foundation and the Bentham Moxon Trust
Cameroon Tropical Important Plant Areas programme
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience
Reference70 articles.
1. The Ebo forest: four years of preliminary research and conservation of the Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes vellerosus);Abwe;Pan Africa News,2008
2. Notes on myrtaceae VII—myrtaceae of French equatorial Africa;Amshoff;Acta Botanica Neerlandica,1958
3. A list of the collectors whose plants are in the Herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, to 31st December, 1899;Anon;Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information,1901
4. Supporting red list threat assessments with GeoCAT: geospatial conservation assessment tool, in: Smith V, Penev, eds. e-Infrastructures for data publishing in biodiversity science;Bachman;ZooKeys,2011
5. Global distribution of species diversity in vascular plants: towards a world map of phytodiversity;Barthlott;Erkunde,1996