Lycianthes stephanocalyx (Brandegee) Bitter

Primary tabs

Lycianthes stephanocalyx (Brandegee) Bitter

Descripción

Perennial herb to climbing shrub, erect, often recumbent with age, to 2 (3) m tall, dying back to rhizomes. Indument of small, white, uniseriate, multicellular, simple, curved, eglandular, appressed-ascending trichomes 0.1–0.6 mm long. Stems green when young, glabrous to sparsely pubescent, compressed and ribbed upon drying in a plant press, brown and woody with age; upper sympodial branching points monochasial or dichasial. Leaves simple, the leaves of the upper sympodia usually paired and unequal in size, the larger ones with blades 3.5–15 × 1.5–6.2 cm, the smaller ones with blades 0.7–6.5 (10.5) × 0.5–3.1 (5) cm, the leaf pairs similar in shape, the blades ovate (sometimes narrowly), elliptic, or obovate, the blades of both the large and small leaves chartaceous to thick chartaceous, glabrous to sparsely pubescent, the base truncate, cuneate, or attenuate, sometimes oblique, the margin entire, the apex acute to acuminate, the petiole 0.1–0.9 (2) cm long, sometimes absent, the large leaf blades with 3–6 primary veins on each side of the midvein. Flowers solitary, axillary, pendent; peduncles absent; pedicels 12–45 mm and arching to deflexed in flower, to 53 mm long and deflexed in fruit, glabrous to sparsely pubescent; calyx 1.5–3 (4) mm long, 3–4 mm in diameter, obconic to campanulate, glabrous to sparsely pubescent, the margin truncate, with 10 linear, spreading to reflexed appendages 1.5–5 mm long emerging 0.5 mm below the calyx rim; fruiting calyx usually enlarged, widely campanulate to bowl-shaped, 1.5–4 mm long, 3–8 mm in diameter, the appendages 2–8 mm long, spreading; corolla 0.5–1.4 cm long, campanulate to reflexed in orientation, stellate in outline, divided 1/3–2/3 of the way to the base, (lobes shallow on first day that the flower opens, becoming deeper each subsequent day that the flower opens), with interpetalar tissue, adaxially and abaxially white to light purple, glabrous; stamens equal, straight, the filaments 1–1.5 mm long, glabrous, the anthers 4.5–7 mm long, lanceolate, connivent to connate at edges to adjacent anther, yellow, glabrous, poricidal at the tip, the pores round, dehiscing distally, not opening into longitudinal slits; pistil with glabrous ovary, the style 6–9 mm long, linear, straight, glabrous, the stigma truncate. Fruit a berry, 3–10 (17) mm long, 3–9 (12) mm in diameter, globose to ovoid, orange to red at maturity, glabrous, lacking sclerotic granules. Seeds 7–60 per fruit, 1.5–3 × 1.5–2 mm, flattened, depressed ovate in outline, tan to orange, the surface reticulum with a tight serpentine pattern with shallow luminae.

Chromosome number. Unknown.A

Floración

May–SepA

Fructificación

Sep–DecA

Forma de vida

Terrestre

Forma de crecimiento

HierbaA

Nutrición

Autotrófica

Ejemplar revisado

Type. Based on Solanum stephanocalyx Brandegee, Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. 6: 374. 1917. Type: Mexico. Veracruz: Zacuapan, Jul 1915, C. Purpus 7519 (holotype: UC [UC178649]; iso types: GH [00077535], NY [00139030]).

Representative specimens examined. Guatemala. Huehuetenango: Sierra de los Cuchumatanes, between Xoxlac and Nucapuxlac, [15.3094, -91.4894], 1650–2500 m, 17 Jul 1942, J.A. Steyermark 48960 (NY). Izabal: Chickasaw Farm of the United Fruit Company, about 15 km north of Quirigua, 70 m, 28 May 1922, P.C. Standley 24628 (GH). Petén: Dolores, bordering Río Mopan, in clearing 6 km SE, [16.5089, -89.4065], 29 Jun 1961, E. Contreras 2566 (CAS, MO). Mexico. Chiapas: Mpio. Ocosingo, 5 km al S de Campamento COFOLASA, el cual está a 24 km al SE de Crucero Corozal, camino Palenque-Boca Lacantum, [16.6556, -90.8063], 220 m, 24 Sep 1984, E. Martínez S. 7847 (NY). Hidalgo: 53 km al noreste de Zimapan, [21.1662, -98.9166], 1000 m, 7 Nov 1979, R. Hernández Magaña 3898 (MEXU). Oaxaca: Dto. Tehuantepec, 3 km al norte de Santa María Guienagati, carretera a Guevea de H, 16.7167, -95.3667, 460 m, 27 Aug 1991, A.D. Campos-Villanueva 3849 (MEXU). Puebla: road (575) Cuetzalan to San Antonio Rayón [Santiago Yancuictalpan], 20.0617, -97.4706, 592 m, 10 Nov 2014, P. Acevedo-Rodríguez 16044 (DAV). Querétaro: 2 km al sureste de Neblinas, Río Tancuilín, 21.2662, -99.0537, 610 m, 12 Sep 1990, H. Rubio 1954 (DAV, IEB). San Luis Potosí: San Antonio, [21.6180, -98.9039], 7 Sep 1978, J. Alcorn 1649 (TEX). Tabasco: a orillas del Chinilkija en el ejido Linda Vista, [17.4058, -91.5075], 2 Aug 1990, M.A. Magaña 2299 (MEXU). Veracruz: 6 km en línea recta al sureste de Zontecomatlán, ejido Cabellete, 20.7172, -98.3667, 800–1100 m, 8 Sep 2000, A. Rincón G. 1869 (IEB, MEXU).A

Nombre común

Español (San Luis Potosí): arete de la virgenA,B, flor de mariposaA,B, tomatilloA,B; Popoloca (Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave): masan ayA,B

Distribución

Belize nativeC, Guatemala nativeC, Honduras nativeC, México (Country) nativeC: Chiapas present; Hidalgo present; Oaxaca present; Puebla present; Querétaro de Arteaga present; San Luis Potosí present; Tabasco present; Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave present

Elevación

301050 mA

Ecología y Hábitat

Mexico (Chiapas, Hidalgo, Oaxaca, Puebla, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí, Tabasco, Veracruz), Guatemala (Huehuetenango, Izabal, Petén), Belize, and Honduras (and possibly further south in Central America), in tropical rainforest, tropical dry forest, tropical moist forest, and cloud forest, sometimes in coffee plantations or disturbed forest, near rivers or waterfalls, in gorges, or on the sides of canyons.A

Tipo de vegetación

Selva mediana, Selva alta, Bosque de neblina/mesófiloA

Categoría IUCN

No incluidaD

Categoría NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010

No incluidaE

Conservación

Lycianthes stephanocalyx is a widespread species ranging from western Mexico to Honduras, represented by 68 collections and occurring in six protected areas. The EOO is 361,720.394 km2 , and the AOO is 260 km2 . Based on the IUCN (2019) criteria, the preliminary assessment category is Least Concern (LC).A

Estatus del taxón

(A) Como definida actualmente, probablemente una entidad natural (monofilética)

Discusión taxonómica

Lycianthes stephanocalyx is a rhizomatous herb (that can sometimes produce above-ground woody growth) with white stellate flowers and equal, connate anthers. Its closest relatives are not yet fully known, but they are probably other species with equal stamens and stellate corollas such as L. heteroclita and L. geminiflora. It was placed by Georg Bitter in his series Pilifera (Bitter, 1919), but it is probably not closely related to the other species he placed in the series, such as L. pilifera and L. quichensis, both of which are shrubs occurring at relatively high elevations (Dean et al. 2019b). Lycianthes stephanocalyx is sometimes confused with L. pilifera in herbaria, because both species have flowers with equal stamens, and L. pilifera sometimes has one-flowered inflorescences. Lycianthes stephanocalyx does overlap in distribution with L. pilifera and differs in having red fruit (rather than dark purple), connivent yellow anthers (rather than free purplish anthers), and small whitish curved trichomes (rather than straight brown pointed trichomes) (Dean et al. 2019b).

It is possible this species flowers and fruits throughout the year in some locations. The first author observed in the field in Mexico that the corollas are open in the very early morning and closed by late morning.A

Bibliografía

A. Dean, E., Poore, E., Anguiano-Constante, M. A., Nee, M. H., Kang, H., Starbuck, T., Rodrígues, A. & Conner, M. 2020: The genus Lycianthes (Solanaceae, Capsiceae) in Mexico and Guatemala. – PhytoKeys 168: 1- 333
B. Standley, P. C. 1940: Studies of American Plants-IX. – Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 22 (1)
C. Dean, E., Poore, E., Anguiano-Constante, M. A., Nee, M. H., Kang, H., Starbuck, T., Rodrígues, A. & Conner, M. 2020: The genus Lycianthes (Solanaceae, Capsiceae) in Mexico and Guatemala. – PhytoKeys 168: 1- 333
D. IUCN 2022: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Versión 2022-2
E. SEMARNAT 2019: MODIFICACIÓN del Anexo Normativo III, Lista de especies en riesgo de la Norma Oficial Mexicana NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010: 101 pp. – https://www.dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5578808&fecha=14/11/2019#gsc.tab=0 [accessed 2023-05-04 06:16]
F. Dean, E., McNair, D.M., Castillo-Campos, G., Starbuck, T., Anguiano-Constante, M. A., Mawdsley, K., Véliz Pérez, M. E. & Archila, F. 2019: Identification of the Mexican species of Lycianthes series Piliferae (Capsiceae, Solanaceae) and the rediscovery of Lycianthes caeciliae. – Phytotaxa 425(3): 163-189. http://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.425.3.6
G. IUCN 2019: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species