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1 January 2011 A Revision of the Large-Flowered Group of Basselinia Vieill. sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl (Arecaceae)
Jean-Christophe Pintaud, Fred W. Stauffer
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Pintaud, J.-C. & F. W. Stauffer (2011). A revision of the large-flowered group of Basselinia Vieill. sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl (Arecaceae). Candollea 66: 147–154. In English, English and French abstracts.

The genus Basselinia Vieill. is endemic to New Caledonia and currently comprises 13 species. It was divided in two sections, sect. Basselinia H. E. Moore & Uhl which includes 5, mostly small and often caespitose species, and sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl, which includes 7 large and solitary species. One species, Basselinia glabrata Becc., remains unplaced to section because it had been once excluded from Basselinia and placed in a separate genus, Alloschmidia H. E. Moore, prior to the sectional treatment of Basselinia. Section Taloua H. E. appears morphologically the least specialized group of Basselinia, and within it, the large-flowered group of species retains the most plesiomorphic characteristics, in habit, inflorescence and floral structure. This group includes three species, one newly described here, Basselinia moorei J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer, and two others, Basselinia velutina Becc. and Basselinia sordida H. E. Moore. Morphology, ecology and distribution of these species are addressed here.

Introduction

The genus Basselinia Vieill. is endemic to the island of New Caledonia, where it is found in all rainforest habitats, from sea-level to the top of the highest mountains, above 1600 m elevation. Basselinia is the largest genus of subtribe Basseliniinae J. Dransf. & al., tribe Areceae Mart., with 13 species (Dransfield & al., 2008; Pintaud & Baker, 2008). The subtribe Basseliniinae is composed of 6 genera and is restricted to the SW Pacific, from Bismarck Archipelago to Fiji islands in the Outer Melanesian Arc (with Physokentia Becc. and Cyphosperma Hook. f.), and in New Caledonia (Basselinia Vieill., Burretiokentia Pic. Serm., Cyphophoenix Hook. f. and Cyphosperma Hook. f.) and Lord Howe Island (Lepidorrhachis (H. Wendl. & Drude) O. F. Cook) in the Inner Melanesian Arc. Basselinia differs from the other genera of the subtribe in producing smaller fruits, with an angle of approximately 90° joining the center of the fruit to the insertion of the embryo and to the stigmatic residue (120° or 180° in the other genera, which generally have basal embryos and apical or excentrically apical stigmatic residues).

The genus Basselinia is complex and its taxonomy remains confused. While Beccari (1920) and Moore & Uhl (1984) recognized about the same number of species in the genus, 10 and 11, respectively, their taxonomic treatments differ considerably, even in the delimitation of the genus. One species was included in the genus Cyphokentia (C. humboldtiana Brong.) by Beccari, but was transferred to Basselinia by Moore and Uhl. Beccari described four new species in the genus, among them B. glabrata Becc., that Moore and Uhl transferred to a new, monotypic genus, Alloschmidia H. E. Moore. The last authors described five new species of Basselinia and divided the genus in two sections, sect. Basselinia H. E. Moore & Uhl and sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl. Section Basselinia included four, mostly small and often caespitose species (one described as new), with frequently bifid or irregularly divided leaves. In the treatment of Moore & Uhl (1984), the concept of the lectotype of the genus, B. gracilis Vieill., is very broad and includes in synonymy three species considered distinct by Beccari (B. billardieri (Brong.) Becc., B. eriostachys Becc. and B. heterophylla Becc., the last described as new). In many respects, sect. Basselinia seems to be the most specialized group within the genus Basselinia. Trends of miniaturization in habit, flower and fruit, and stem ramification that characterize section Basselinia are unique among New Caledonian Areceae, and seem to be linked to an ecological radiation (Pintaud 2006). Pintaud & Baker (2008) considered a narrower concept of Basselinia gracilis, revalidating B. eriostachys. Section Taloua includes 7 larger and always solitary palms, with regularly divided leaves. Moore & Uhl (1984) described four new species in this section. Finally Pintaud & Baker (2008) reintegrated Alloschmidia in Basselinia, and discussed the significance of the unique and shared characters of B. glabrata. However, internal relationships in Basselinia remain confused, and B. glabrata could not be placed in a section. This most recent treatment recognizes 13 species of Basselinia.

Moore & Uhl (1984) considered Basselinia velutina Becc. as the least specialized species in the genus, because of its large staminate flowers, fruit with stigmatic remains near the middle and prophyll sometimes completely encircling the peduncle. The significance of the complete or incomplete prophyll in Basseliniinae has been discussed in detail by PINTAUD & BAKER (2008). Moore & Uhl (1984) described a new species with large staminate flowers, B. sordida H. E. Moore, closely related to B. velutina. Here we describe a third species in this group, which we call the large-flowered group of Basselinia sect. Taloua. Flower size in species of Basselinia is reported in Table 1.

Table 1.

Flower size in Basselinia species. Length refers to bud length just prior to anthesis (data from MOORE & UHL, 1984 and present study).

t01_147.gif

Taxonomic treatment

  • Basselinia velutina Becc., Palme Nuova Caledonia: 75. 1920.

    Typus: New Caledonia: without locality, Pancher s.n. (holo-: FI-BECC!; iso-: P!).

    Solitary, monoecious, unarmed, pleonanthic tree palm. Stem 6–12 m tall, ca. 15 cm dbh, enlarged to 22 cm diam. at base, brown to grey, with slightly to moderately prominent leaf scars. Leaves 10–12, arcuately spreading, regularly pinnate. Leaf sheath caducous, forming a loose, largely open, to prominent and tight, cylindrical crownshaft, covered abaxially with a dense and short indument of red-brown to grey floccose scales, 0.6–1 m long; petiole concave adaxially, more or less winged by sheath extensions, 4–35 cm long; rachis slightly to strongly recurved, 2.15–3 m long; pinnae 33–45 on each side, regularly arranged, stiff, directed forward and upward, light green; medifixed or longifixed ramenta abundant on nerves abaxially, especially on midrib, all along the pinna; basal pinnae ca. 50 × 0,4–1 cm, median pinnae 1,1–1,35 m long × 2.8–6 cm wide, apical pinnae ca. 45 × 1–2,5 cm. Inflorescences 1–4 simultaneously, infrafoliar, to 1.1 m long; pendulous, covered with a short, velutinous indument of grey scales; peduncle 7–15 cm long, flattened; prophyll completely or incompletely encircling peduncle at insertion, 65–74 cm long; peduncular bract to 84 × 15 cm, thick, woody, prominently rostrate, covered outside with a ± persistent indument of grayish or reddish-brown scales; rachis 21–34 cm long, with 10–16 first-order branches; rachillae 30–66 cm long and 5–7 mm diam. Staminate flowers 7–8 mm long; 6–7 mm diam. at anthesis, pale brown; sepals 4 mm long, 3–4 mm wide, ovate-oblong, slightly acute towards the apex, strongly keeled, distinct, imbricate; petals 3.8–4 mm long, 3–4 mm wide, elliptic, glabrous and extremely thick, connate up to mid-height, valvate at the apex; stamens 6, 6–7 mm long, filaments 6 mm long, 0.9–1 mm diam., connate at the base for 3 mm, cylindrical, with an extremely thin apex; anthers 2 mm long, 1 mm wide, dorsifixed, bifid at the base and apex, latrorse; pistillode 4 mm long, 2 mm diam. at mid-height, with no stigmatic branches differentiated; ovoid to ovoid-oblong. Pistillate flowers 5–6 mm long, 4 mm diam. in late bud, borne throughout the rachillae or almost completely absent and then the whole inflorescence staminate; sepals 3.5–4 mm long, 3.5–4 mm wide, oblong, only shortly connate at the base, imbricate; petals 4 mm long, 3.8–4 mm wide, distinct, imbricate except for the briefly valvate apices; staminodes 1–3 at one side of the gynoecium, shortly connate at the base, 1.5–1.7 long, 0.8–1 mm wide at the base, acute at the apex; tooth-like; gynoecium syncarpous, 5 mm long, 3.8–4 mm diam., ovoid-oblong, 3-locular; stigmas 3, prominent, recurved, densely covered with long papillae on the ventral side. Fruit ellipsoid to subglobose, black at maturity, 11–13 × 9–10 mm, with stigmatic remains between middle and 1/3 from base.

  • Common name. — Not reported.

  • Distribution and ecology. — Widespread but patchily distributed in the mountains of New Caledonia at middle elevation (400–1000 m), where it is found exclusively in primary rain forest (Fig. 3). In north-eastern and central New Caledonia, this species is restricted to schistose rocks, while in the south of the island, it occurs on ultrabasic rocks. This species tends to be gregarious where it grows, and reaches or exceeds the forest canopy. It has been considered to grow also at high elevation in north-eastern New Caledonia (MOORE & UHL, 1984; Hodel & Pintaud, 1998), but these cloud-forest populations appeared to belong to B. moorei, newly described here.

  • Other specimens studied. — New Caledonia: Haute Neuménie, canopy component of rain forest on oxydic alluvium along the river, 650 m, 2.VI.1996, Hodel & Pierson 1500 (NOU, NY, P); Plateau de Dogny, 900–1000 m, 10.IX.1958, MacKee 6573 (K); Katrikoin (Haute Boghen), exploitation forestière Launay, 400–500 m, 17.VI.1965, MacKee 12808 (K, P); Farino, Pic Vincent, 650 m, 10.IV.1973, MacKee 26531 (BH, K, P); Plateau de Dogny, 1000 m, 22.IV.1980, MacPherson 2608 (BH, K, MO, NOU, P); east slopes of Mont Panié on trail from Tiaot to summit, about 500 m, 23.VI.1971, Moore, Brinon, Schmid & Veillon 9964 (BH, K, NOU, P); Katrikoin (Haute Boghen), 440 m, 2.VII.1971, Moore, Brière, Gay & Lavoix 9972 (BH, K, NOU); Mont Panié, ca. 500 m, 6.XI.1978, Moore 10463 (BH, K); Mont Panié, sentier de Tao au sommet, 700 m, 20.IX.1995, Pintaud 283 (K, NY); Mont Panié, sentier de Tao au sommet, 800 m, 5.VI. 1996, Pintaud & Hodel 365 (P); bassin supérieur de la Boghen, vers 500 m, 13.XII.1967, Schmid 2561 (BH).

  • Notes. — Although the type lacks indication of locality, the collections made by Pancher (apparently with Lécard) are known to come from central-western New Caledonia. The recently discovered population of the upper Neumenie valley, in south-eastern New Caledonia, although geographically isolated and growing on a different substrate, does not show significant morphological difference with the central and northeastern populations (HODEL & PINTAUD, 1998).

  • Basselinia sordida H. E. Moore in Allertonia 3: 361. 1984.

    Typus: New caledonia: north slopes and ridge of Petit Boulinda 1010–1100 m, 13.X.1972, Moore, Jaffré, Latham & Schmid 10072 (holo-: BH!; iso-: NOU!).

    Solitary, monoecious, unarmed, pleonanthic tree palm. Stem 6–12 m tall, 10–15 cm dbh, brown to grey, with prominent leaf scars. Leaves (7-)10–12, ascending to arcuately spreading, regularly pinnate. Leaf sheath caducous, forming a prominent and tight, cylindrical to swollen crownshaft, covered abaxially with a dense and short brownish-grey tomentum, 0.6–0.7 m long; petiole concave adaxially, more or less winged by sheath extensions, 15–20 cm long; rachis slightly to strongly recurved, 1.8–2.1 m long; pinnae (25-)30–35 on each side, lanceolate-terete, regularly arranged, moderately stiff, often curled apically, directed forward and upward, glossy dark green; nerves punctuated or covered by minute scales abaxially, with sparse to abundant, small longifixed or medifixed ramenta all along except on tip; basal pinnae 28–32 × 0.6–0.7 cm, median pinnae 60–90 × 3–5 cm wide, apical pinnae ca. 25 × 1.7–2.5 cm. Inflorescences 1–4 simultaneously, infrafoliar, to 80 cm long and 90 cm wide; stiffly spreading to moderately pendulous, covered with a dense, short, white, hairy-scaly indument; peduncle 7–12 cm long and 4–5 cm wide, flattened; prophyll incompletely encircling peduncle at insertion, slightly shorter than peduncular bract, this 50–60 cm long, thin, chartaceous, rostrate, covered outside by a short whitish-greyish tomentum of appressed scales, glabrous inside; rachis ca. 14 cm long, with 10–15 first-order branches; rachillae 30–45 cm long and (3-)4–5 mm in diameter. Staminate flowers 3.2–4 mm long; 3.3–4 mm diam. at late bud; sepals 1.8–2 mm long, 1.5–1.9 mm wide, circular-oblong, rounded towards the apex, distinct, imbricate; petals 3.1–3.3 mm long, 2–2.2 mm wide, elliptic, glabrous, slightly connate at the base, valvate at the apex; stamens 6, 3 mm long, filaments 2 mm long, 0.3 diam., cylindrical, basally connate, apically connecting to the anther through a 1 mm long, flat articulation; anthers 2 mm long, 1 mm wide, dorsifixed, bifid at the base and apex, latrorse; pistillode 2.1–2.3 mm long, 1 mm diam. at mid-height, with no stigmatic branches differentiated; ovoid-oblong. Pistillate flowers 4 mm long, 3.5 mm diam. in late bud, borne throughout the rachillae, supported with a short stalk; sepals 3–4 mm long, 3–3.5 mm wide, almost circular, only shortly connate at the base, imbricate; petals 4 mm long, 3–3.2 mm wide, slightly connate at the base, imbricate but open at the apex; staminodes 3 at one side of the gynoecium, shortly connate at the base, 1–2 long, 0.5–0.8 mm wide at the base, acute at the apex; tooth-like; gynoecium syncarpous, 3.8 mm long, 3.5 mm diam., ovoid, 3-locular, ovary wall thickened towards the apex; stigmas 3, thick and elongated, recurved covered with short papillae on the ventral side. Fruit subglobose, wider than high 10 × 11 mm, with stigmatic remains in upper 1/3, mature color unknown.

  • Common name. — Not reported.

  • Distribution and ecology. — Widespread but patchily distributed on the ultrabasic mountains of New Caledonia at high elevation (1000–1500 m) (Fig. 3), where it is found exclusively in primary cloud forest. This species tends to be gregarious where it grows, and reaches or exceeds the forest canopy. Although thought initially to be restricted to two nearby ultrabasic massifs of central-western New Caledonia (Mé Maoya and Boulinda), it has been subsequently collected or sighted farther north and east (Tchingou massif) and also in the southern massif, both on the western side (Dent de Saint Vincent, Pic du Rocher) and on the eastern side (Haute Neuménie). It is absent from the North East due to lack of ultrabasic substrate in this sector.

  • Other specimens studied. — New Caledonia: cuvette sur le flanc est du Mont Xé Ré Mwé, 1100 m, 8.VI.1996, Hodel & al. 1510 (NOU, NY, P); Mont Boulinda, pente nord, 1150–1300 m, 28. VIII. 1967, MacKee 17367 (K, P); contrefort ouest du Mé Maoya, au-dessus de la mine Emma, 1350–1500 m, 13.I.1970, MacKee 21408 (K, P), 21415 (K, P); Mont Boulinda, crête du sommet sud, 1200 m, 31.VII.1973, MacKee 27077 (BH, K, P); ridge of Mé Maoya, above mine Emma, 1300 m, 10.IV.1980, Moore & MacPherson 10553 (BH, NOU); Massif du Tchingou 1180 m, 13.XII.1983, Morat 7664 (K, NOU); Mé Maoya, upper Nodela valley, 1000 m, 19.III.1996, Pintaud & al. 329 (P), 336 (K), 337 (NY); Mé Maoya au-dessus de la mine Emma, 1300 m, 7.II.2000, Pintaud & Tivollier 565 (G, P); Mé Maoya vers 1350–1400 m, 7.II.2000, Schmid 3000 (BH); Massif du Tchingou vers 1250 m, 10.XII.1986, Veillon 6122 (K, NOU).

  • Notes. — This species is readily distinguished by its peculiar bright-white to yellowish-white indument on inflorescences, and shows almost no variation over its extended and disjunct range.

  • Basselinia moorei J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer, spec. nova (Fig. 1, 2)

    Typus: New Caledonia: Mont Panié, 1080 m, 4.X.1978, Moore & Morat 10403 (holo-: BH!; iso-: NOU!).

    Haec species hactenus cum B. velutinae confusa, sed pinnis proximalibus vix ramentaceis, inflorescentiis cum rachilla fere dimidio curtiore, fructibus maturis miniatis differt.

    Solitary, monoecious, unarmed, pleonanthic tree palm. Stem 6–10 m tall, 10–15 cm dbh, brown to grey, with slightly to moderately prominent leaf scars. Leaves 8–10, arcuately spreading, regularly pinnate. Leaf sheath caducous, forming a loose to rather prominent, somewhat swollen crownshaft, covered abaxially with a dense and short brown or grey tomentum, 0.5–0.7 m long; petiole concave adaxially, prominently winged by sheath extensions, 15–20 cm long; rachis slightly to strongly recurved, 1.6–1.9 m long; pinnae 25–35 on each side, regularly arranged, moderately stiff, directed forward and upward, light green; medifixed or longifixed ramenta scarce, restricted to the base of nerves abaxially; basal pinnae 38–40 × 2 cm, median pinnae 64–66 × 4 cm wide, apical pinnae ca. 40–42 × 2 cm. Inflorescences 1–3 simultaneously, infrafoliar, to 50 cm long and 60 cm wide; stiffly spreading, divaricate, covered with a velutinous, brownish-grey, hairy-scaly indument; peduncle 10–12 cm long, flattened; prophyll incompletely encircling peduncle at insertion, peduncular bract rostrate; rachis ca. 10 cm long, with 5–10 first-order branches; rachillae 20–36 cm long. Staminate flowers 5–6 mm long; 4.5–5 mm diam. at late bud; sepals 3.5–3.8 mm long, 2.5 mm wide, ovate-oblong, slightly acute towards the apex, distinct, imbricate, strongly cucullate at early bud stage; petals 5 mm long, 3 mm wide, elliptic, glabrous, connate up to mid-height, valvate at the apex; stamens 6–7, 3.5–4 mm long, filaments 2 mm long, 1 mm diam., connate at the base for 2 mm, cylindrical, apically connecting to the anther through a 1 mm long, laminar articulation; anthers 2 mm long, 1 mm wide, dorsifixed, bifid at the base and apex, latrorse; pistillode 2.5–3 mm long, 2 mm diam. at mid-height, ovoid, with no stigmatic branches differentiated. Pistillate flowers 4–5 mm long, 4 mm diam. in late bud, borne throughout the rachillae, supported with a short stalk; sepals 3.8–4 mm long, 3.5–3.8 mm wide, circular-oblong, only shortly connate at the base, distinct, imbricate; petals 3.8–4 mm long, 3.6–3.8 mm wide, distinct, imbricate but open at the apex; staminodes 3–6 at one side of the gynoecium, shortly connate at the base, 1.2 long, 1 mm wide at the base, acute at the apex; tooth-like; gynoecium syncarpous, 3.5–3.8 mm long, 3.5 mm diam., globose, 3-locular; stigmas 3, poorly differentiated, recurved, shortly papillate on the ventral side. Fruit globose, 13 mm diam., bright red at maturity, with lateral stigmatic remains.

  • Common name. — Not reported.

  • Distribution and ecology. — Only known from the upper slopes of Mont Panié, above 900 m elevation on the eastern side and above 1400 m elevation on the western side, almost reaching the summit (1628 m) (Fig. 3), in cloud forest on schistose rocks, dominated by Agathis montana de Laub (Araucariaceae). The species grows abundantly as a canopy-emergent component. It replaces Basselinia velutina, which grows at a lower elevation on Mont Panié. Basselinia moorei is the fourth endemic palm species described from Mont Panié (the others are B. favieri H. E Moore, Clinosperma macrocarpa (H. E. Moore) J.-C. Pintaud & W. J. Baker and Kentiopsis piersoniorum J.-C. Pintaud & Hodel), further emphasizing the significance of this mountain as a biodiversity and conservation hotspot (PINTAUD & al., 2001).

  • Other specimens studied.New Caledonia: Mont Panié 900–1600 m, 31.X.2002, Mouly 337 bis, leg. Letocard (G, P); Mont Panié 1100 m, 24.IX.2004, Munzinger, Blaffard & Butin 2406 (NOU, P); Mont Panié, 1400–1500 m, 8.IV.2006, Munzinger 3401 (G, NOU, P); Mont Panié en forêt à Agathis montana, 1350–1650 m, 19.IX.1966, Schmid 1614 (BH).

  • Notes. - This species has been overlooked and confused with the co-occurring Basselinia velutina. However, there is very limited overlap of the two species on Mont Panié, since B. moorei replaces B. velutina above 900 m elevation. The two species are nevertheless conspicuously different in the abundance and disposition of ramenta on the abaxial side of pinnae, in inflorescence architecture and fruit color, among other characters (Table 2). Several morphological features shared by B. moorei and B. sordida, including the peculiar, flattened articulation that connects the filament to the anther, the pedicellate pistillate flower, and stigmas with short papillae, rather suggests a sister relationship of these two species, that would be edaphic vicariants within the New Caledonian cloud forests.

  • Fig. 1.

    Habit and vegetative morphology of Basselinia moorei J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer. A. Habit of an individual growing in the cloud forest of Mont Panié, 1300–1600 m elevation ; B. Detail of crownshaft and infrafoliar inflorescences ; C. Simultaneous infructescences ; D. Rachillae bearing ripe fruits.

    [Photos : A: Daniel and Irène Letocard ; B: Rémy Amice; C–D: Henri Leveque]

    f01_147.jpg

    Fig. 2.

    Reproductive morphology of Basselinia moorei J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer. A. Inflorescence bearing early buds ; B. Late male bud ; C. Male bud with calyx removed ; D. Sepals in ventral view ; E. Petals in ventral view ; F. Androecium at bud stage showing inflexed anthers ; G. Pistillode from side view ; H. Stamen showing the flattened articulation connecting the filament to the anther ; I. Late female bud ; J. Female bud with calyx removed ; K. Sepals in ventral view ; L. Petals in ventral view ; M. Syncarpous gynoecium from side view ; N. Fruits showing mid-height stigmatic remains.

    [A, N: Munzinger 3401, P; B–M: Moore & Morat 10403, BH] [Drawings J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer]

    f02_147.jpg

    Fig. 3.

    Distribution map of the large-flowered species of Basselinia sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl in New Caledonia: Basselinia velutina Becc. (rhomboids) ; B. sordida H. E. Moore (circles) ; B. moorei J.-C. Pintaud & F. W. Stauffer (triangle).

    f03_147.jpg

    Table 2.

    Differences between the three species of the large-flowered group of Basselinia sect. Taloua.

    t02_147.gif

    Acknowledgements

    The authors want to thank the curators of the herbaria BH, FI, G, K, NOU, NY and P, who kindly provided specimens on loan or enabled access to their collections. They are also grateful to Jérôme Munzinger (IRD, New Caledonia), Daniel and Irène Letocard, Henri Leveque, Rémy Amice, and the Association Chambeyronia, for providing material and information on the species studied. Alain Chautems is greatly thanked for the Latin diagnosis. Patrick Perret and the team of the library of the Conservatory and Botanical Garden of Geneva kindly enabled access to their outstanding collections.

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    © CONSERVATOIRE ET JARDIN BOTANIQUES DE GENÈVE 2011
    Jean-Christophe Pintaud and Fred W. Stauffer "A Revision of the Large-Flowered Group of Basselinia Vieill. sect. Taloua H. E. Moore & Uhl (Arecaceae)," Candollea 66(1), 147-154, (1 January 2011). https://doi.org/10.15553/c2011v661a17
    Received: 8 July 2010; Accepted: 23 December 2010; Published: 1 January 2011
    KEYWORDS
    Arecaceae
    Basselinia
    New Caledonia
    taxonomy
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