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24 March 2020 Overview of Psychotria in Madagascar (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae), and of Bremekamp's foundational study of this group
Charlotte M. Taylor
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Taylor, C.M. (2020). Overview of Psychotria in Madagascar (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae), and of Bremekamp's foundational study of this group. Candollea 75: 51–70. In English, English abstract.

Psychotria L. (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae) is a large pantropical genus that is one of the largest genera in Madagascar, with almost all of its species endemic to the island and an unusually wide range of morphological variation. Cornelis E.B. Bremekamp (1888–1984) presented a detailed taxonomic treatment for Madagascar and the Comores that classified 143 species in Psychotria and six segregate genera, and that has been influential in Rubiaceae systematics but also problematic. Molecular systematic studies have found Bremekamp's six genera nested within Psychotria, but did not study most of their unusual characters. Here his genera and their morphological features are studied in light of our current knowledge of Psychotria in Madagascar and overall understanding of this genus. Some unusual characters are detailed here for Malagasy Psychotria. A new name, Psychotria deflexiflora C.M. Taylor, is published as a legitimate name for Psychotria penduliflora Bremek.

Received: May 21, 2019; Accepted: February 7, 2020; First published online: March 24, 2020

Introduction

In this article, Cornelis E.B. Bremekamp's (1888–1984) classification of Psychotria L. in Madagascar (Bremekamp, 1958, 1960, 1963) and the morphological characters on which it was based are evaluated in the context of our current systematic knowledge and view of this genus. His classification has been deeply influential for Rubiaceae systematics, in terms of the genera he accepted, the characters he used, and his underlying philosophy of classification, so understanding his work is important for modern Rubiaceae systematics. The morphological features Bremekamp used to separate many of his genera of Psychotrieae are now known to be highly homoplasious, however, and six of the genera that he recognized in Madagascar are now synonymized with Psychotria based on molecular study by Razafimandimbison et al. (2014). Razafimandimbison et al. did not analyze Bremekamp's generic concepts nor most of his diagnostic characters, and this is done here to accompany that analysis. Bremekamp's generic concepts were based on synthesis of numerous, carefully documented characters across all the species he studied: even if these groups are no longer accepted, these characters do form the phenotypes of the species so understanding these informs us about the ecology and diversification of these plants. Psychotria shows notable diversity in both species numbers and morphological features in Madagascar, and understanding the morphological variation of Psychotria in this self-contained island flora will shed light on the remarkable world-wide species and adaptive radiations that produced this hyperdiverse group.

Bremekamp (1958, 1960, 1963) studied the species of Psychotria and related genera in Madagascar and the Comores in detail, and noted the unusual morphological diversity of these plants here (Fig. 1–3). He presented a regional revision with 147 species that today all correspond to Psychotria; several of these species were found in the Comores, and 143 species were found in Madagascar with all of them endemic there. He classified these species in seven genera, two of them endemic, and diagnosed each genus by a distinctive morphological feature or a combination of features: Apomuria Bremek., Cremocarpon Bremek., Mapouria Aubl., Psathura Comm. ex Juss., Psychotria, Pyragra Bremek., and Trigonopyren Bremek. Although Bremekamp's generic classification is not supported by modern studies that incorporate molecular data, his taxonomic treatment is still very useful for identification of the species. Of these genera, Bremekamp's circumscription of Mapouria for Madagascar was not distinct from Psychotria as this genus was circumscribed by Andersson (2002), and those species were transferred to Psychotria by Davis et al. (2007) and Davis & Govaerts (2008). The other genera Bremekamp separated were then studied in a molecular systematic survey of world-wide Psychotrieae by Razafimandimbison et al. (2014), and found nested within Psychotria and formally synonymized with it. This last study also analyzed two morphological characters and found large-scale systematic patterns within their Indian Ocean species, but it was based on a relatively small sample of Psychotria from this region and overall so much work remains to understand this group.

Psychotria (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae) is a pantropical genus that comprises more than 1500 species of shrubs, small trees, and a few perennial herbs, found in wet to seasonal, tropical vegetation across the Americas, Africa, Madagascar, Asia, Australia, and the Pacific Islands (Razafimandimbison et al., 2014). Study of Psychotria in recent years has shown that this very large genus is systematically complicated and morphologically diverse (Taylor, 1996; Nepokroeff et al., 1999; Andersson & Rova, 1999; Andersson, 2002; Razafimandimbison et al., 2014; Barrabé et al., 2014). Psychotria's species numbers have been increasing markedly in recent years, by the discovery of new species (e.g., Barrabé, 2014; Taylor, 2016; Lorence et al., 2017; Lachenaud, 2019) but even more by the synonymization of other genera with it (Davis et al., 2007; Razafimandimbison et al., 2014). Psychotria is characterized by its perennial, nearly always woody habit; tissues with raphides; deciduous, often bilobed stipules; terminal cymose inflorescences; usually distylous and five-merous flowers; corollas with valvate aestivation; usually bilocular ovaries with a single basal ovule in each locule; drupaceous fruits that are usually fleshy and red at maturity; usually two pyrenes, which lack pre-formed germination slits (PGS's); and seeds with an alcohol-soluble red pigment (Andersson, 2002; Razafimandimbison et al., 2014). Additionally, the stem nodes usually have a ring of persistent colleters that are visible after the stipules have fallen, and dried specimens of Psychotria very often have a distinctive reddish-brown or gray coloring.

Psychotria has a relatively large number of species in most tropical regions, but has several notable centers of species diversity: Mesoamerica (Hamilton, 1989), the Philippine archipelago (Sohmer & Davis, 2007), large island groups in the Pacific (e.g., Smith & Darwin, 1988), New Caledonia (Barrabé et al., 2013), and Madagascar (Bremekamp, 1963). Psychotria is one of the ten largest plant genera of the flora of Madagascar (Gautier et al., 2012). Modern information on distribution and habitat along with specimen data for the species of Psychotria in Madagascar can be found in the Madagascar Catalogue (2020) and in the Rubiaceae Project (2020).

Bremekamp's classification of Malagasy Psychotria in light of recent studies

Bremekamp's systematic views

Bremekamp published various studies of Rubiaceae classification during a period of significant controversy over its familial and generic classification. Before molecular systematic data and techniques became available, classifications were evaluated based on their morphological documentation and their conceptual basis. Bremekamp's studies were detailed and influential (e.g., Bremekamp, 1966), especially with respect to generic delimitations, and his work was accepted by a number of workers, especially in Europe. His views were also sometimes controversial (e.g., Verdcourt, 1958), and his disagreements with other taxonomists cast doubt on other classifications. Modern molecular studies do not support most his groups, as outlined below for his classification of Psychotria, but study of his work gives us useful insights into morphological patterns in these plants, and historical views that are incorporated in today's Rubiaceae taxonomy.

Fig. 1.

Psychotria L. in Madagascar. A. Inflorescence of P. lucidula Baker; B. Short-styled flower form of P. polyphylla Bremek.

[A: Antilahimena 7943; B: Antilahimena 8848] [Photos: P. Antilahimena]

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For Madagascar, Bremekamp (1958, 1963) recognized 44 species of Psychotria, 12 species of Apomuria, 8 species of Cremocarpon, 67 species of Mapouria, 2 species of Pyragra, 4 species of Psathura, and 6 species of Trigonopyren. He diagnosed these genera variously by fruit dehiscence, number of ovary locules and pyrenes, form of the pyrenes, and the presence and pattern of ruminations in the endosperm of the seed. Mapouria was a key genus in his classification, and was circumscribed based on his individualistic concept of Psychotria. Bremekamp also separated several species groups within both Psychotria and Mapouria, based on characters including leaf size, presence vs. absence in the leaves of bacterial nodules and acarodomatia, inflorescence arrangement and position, flower color, fruit size, pyrene form and details, and presence and pattern of endosperm rumination. Bremekamp's genera and species groups are useful today for identification, especially when both flowers and fruits of a plant are known.

Bremekamp's generic concepts of Psychotria and Mapouria and his taxonomic view that this overall group comprised a number of small genera were developed in detail in his study of the Madagascar flora (Bremekamp, 1958, 1963), but his basic taxonomic views were developed in his earlier study of the Surinam flora (Bremekamp, 1934). In the Surinam flora, he studied some characters not previously considered diagnostic in a flora where Psychotria was unusually complicated. In Surinam Bremekamp looked at relatively few species of several large genera, including Psychotria, and the species of those genera were notably different from each other. Here he separated groups of one to five similar species and treated them as distinct genera. Later authors working on the regional flora that includes Surinam, however, have found it difficult to clearly delineate morphological groups within Psychotria and the related Palicourea Aubl., or to place additional species into Bremekamp's generic classification (Steyermark, 1972; Taylor & Hollowell, 2016). In Madagascar, Bremekamp used a genus concept similar to that of his Surinam flora: here he again separated from Psychotria and Mapouria several groups of related species that are similar to each other and share an unusual or distinctive feature.

Molecular data do not support Bremekamp's genera

Nepokroeff et al. (1999) presented the first molecular phylogenetic analysis of world-wide Psychotria and related genera, and found the systematics of this group to be complicated and the existing classifications partially inaccurate in several ways. Their molecular data showed that Psychotria comprised several regional clades that were apparently distinct, and that some smaller genera were nested in them. No Malagasy species were included in their analysis.

Andersson (2002) then used molecular systematic data to analyze the group identified by Nepokroeff et al. (1999) as Psychotria and its closest relatives in more detail, and found a clade he characterized as Psychotria s.str. and noted that several other supposedly distinct genera were nested within it. He also surveyed morphological characters, and identified several features to diagnose Psychotria s.str. The features he used were based in large part on the work of Petit (1964, 1966). Andersson (2002) diagnosed Psychotria s.str. by pollen with simple apertures plus pyrenes that are “usually” plane or shallowly furrowed adaxially, longitudinally ridged abaxially, and lack PGS's. Separately (Andersson, 2001) he also used the presence of an alcohol-soluble pigment in the testa. The genera recognized by Bremekamp that he found to be nested within Psychotria s.str. were Mapouria, which was represented in his analysis by its Neotropical type species and two Malagasy species; Apomuria, represented by its African type species; and Cremocarpon, represented by two samples, neither of them the type: a Malagasy specimen at K that was identified only to genus, and C. rupicola (Schltr.) Bremek. from New Caledonia. The K specimen has not been seen in this study, but it is identified in that institution's online herbarium catalogue as C. lantzii Bremek.

Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) presented a broader molecular systematic analysis of Psychotria s.str. with a focus on the species from the Indian Ocean region, and included representatives of all of Bremekamp's (1963) segregate Psychotria genera from Madagascar. They found his segregate genera nested within several large, supported clades in Psychotria, and some to be polyphyletic. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) adopted a broad view of Psychotria, and synonymized all six of Bremekamp's Malagasy segregate genera within it. They also found no support for any of Bremekamp's informal species groups in Mapouria and Psychotria, though their sampling was not adequate to test the monophyly of all of those. They analyzed only two morphological characters, bacterial nodules in the leaves and schizocarpous fruits, and found those both to be homoplasious; Bremekamp only considered the latter a diagnostic feature at the generic level. Posterior mapping of species characteristics on their molecular phylogram also shows that nearly all of the morphological characters Bremekamp used to separate genera and species groups are homoplasious in the overall group Psychotria. Most of the supported clades that Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) found within Psychotria were not correlated closely with biogeography, and none are (at present) diagnosable morphologically. Their sampling was too limited to provide a confident new systematic framework for this genus, either overall or in the western part of the Indian Ocean, as noted in their discussion.

Molecular systematic results are compared in more detail below for each of Bremekamp's genera in his treatment of Malagasy Psychotria.

Bremekamp's Malagasy genera and their modern identities

Below I review the morphological characteristics and current status of Bremekamp's (1958, 1963) segregate genera of Psychotria. The order of discussion starts with Psychotria and Mapouria, to help connect his classification to modern genus concepts and nomenclature, and then Bremekamp's order of presentation is followed for the remaining genera (the reader may prefer to read these in reverse order, because the last genera here are better delimited than the first and give better insights into Bremekamp's genus concept, while his Psychotria comprised mainly species that lack the apomorphic features of the other genera).

Psychotria

Morphology and identity of Bremekamp's Malagasy Psychotria

Bremekamp (1934, 1961, 1963) circumscribed Psychotria based primarily on pyrene characters, along with some other features he did not explicitly list. He diagnosed Psychotria (Bremekamp, 1934, 1963) by its pyrenes that adaxially have a flat face with two shallow longitudinal grooves that lie on each side of a medial ridge (Bremekamp described this diagnostic pyrene form as a shallow longitudinal excavation divided in two by a medial ridge, but as noted by Piesschaert (2001: 327–328), most taxonomists see the alternative condition, a plane face with two longitudinal furrows). Bremekamp's Psychotria (Bremekamp, 1934, 1961, 1963) was also diagnosed, in practice, by a lack of the features that diagnosed his other genera, i.e., consistently deciduous stipules (Mapouria), pseudoaxillary or axillary inflorescences (Notopleura (Benth.) Bremek., Ronabea Aubl.), capitate inflorescences with each flower involucrate (Cephaelis Sw.), multilocular ovaries (Psathura, Nonatelia Aubl.), dehiscent fruits (Cremocarpon, Pyragra), and pyrenes that are flat on the adaxial face (Mapouria, Gamotopea Bremek.). Bremekamp's diagnosis of Psychotria is problematic, however, because his diagnostic pyrene characters have been shown to vary without any apparent systematic pattern and there is no other feature that diagnoses his group by its presence (i.e., no apomorphy).

Petit (1964) and Piesschaert (2001) surveyed Psychotria pyrenes in Africa and world-wide, respectively, and found continuous variation in the form of the pyrenes' adaxial walls, and no correlation of pyrene form with any other characters or systematic groupings. Additionally, Bremekamp's characterization here is partially inaccurate, because the form of the adaxial pyrene wall varies within some species and even in different fruits of a single plant. Bremekamp's diagnostic feature for Psychotria is, thus, not diagnostic, and the species grouped in Psychotria by Bremekamp (1963) are heterogenous morphologically and difficult to characterize as a group. The only features that seem to be consistent within Bremekamp's Malagasy Psychotria are not unique to it: the mature fruits are blue or white, and Piesschaert (2001) found all the species included here have pyrenes that lack PGS's and have an alchohol-soluble red pigment. The characterization of a genus by its lack of the diagnostic features of other groups results in a classification that with genera variously diagnosed by shared derived features (synapomorphies) and genera that are residual, paraphyletic assemblages that have the ancestral features of the group. This was a common approach to classification in Bremekamp's time, but it is not in accordance with most current plant taxonomy. Modern systematic approaches to classification emphasize the consistent separation of groups that comprise entire lineages and have shared derived features (Razafimandimbison et al., 2014). Bremekamp (1963) recognized seven informal species groups in Psychotria based on leaf size and form, stipule form, drying color of the specimens, inflorescence form, and the presence of bacterial nodules. He designated these groups informally with numbers, and called each a “Group” in his key but a “Taxon” in his species treatment.

Fig. 2.

Psychotria L. in Madagascar. A. Long-styled flower of P. macrochlamys (Baker) A.P. Davis & Govaerts; B. Fruits of P. macrochlamys; C. Habit of P. lantzii (Bremek.) Razafim. & B. Bremer.

[A: Antilahimena 6104; B: Razanatsima et al. 1660; C: Ratovoson 1707] [Photos: A: P. Antilahimena; B: A. Razanatsima; C: F. Ratovoson]

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Bremekamp's Malagasy Psychotria analyzed with molecular data Andersson (2002) did not study any Malagasy or Comoran species classified by Bremekamp (1963) in Psychotria. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014)'s molecular analysis included 13 species from this region that Bremekamp (1963) classified in Psychotria, and found these placed on two clades. The species here without bacterial nodules were grouped with species of Bremekamp's Mapouria, Apomuria, and Psathura.The species with bacterial nodules were grouped with other species of Apomuria and some nodulated African species; here the Malagasy species were grouped on one subclade, and separated from the Comoran species. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) concluded that Psychotria as circumscribed by Bremekamp in Africa and the western part of the Indian Ocean was paraphyletic without the inclusion of Apomuria, Cremocarpon, Mapouria, Psathura, Pyragra, and Trigonopyren.The extensive morphological heterogeneity of Bremekamp's Psychotria is mirrored by the extensive polyphyly they found in this group. In the results of Razafimandimbison et al. (2014), all of Bremekamp's Malagasy Psychotria species groups are paraphyletic.

Mapouria

Morphology and identity of Bremekamp's Malagasy Mapouria

Bremekamp (1963) recognized 66 species of Mapouria from Madagascar and one from the Comores based on diagnostic pyrene and endosperm characteristics, but these plants are widely variable in their other morphological features. Even apart from new insights we have now from molecular analysis, his separation of Mapouria here was problematic because his pyrene and endosperm characters vary widely in Psychotria, and his use of the name Mapouria for this group was based on an inaccurate interpretation of the name Psychotria.

Bremekamp (1934, 1961, 1963) diagnosed Mapouria and separated it from Psychotria by pyrenes that are flat adaxially (i.e., plane, without a groove or ridge), endosperm that is sparsely to densely ruminated but lacks the distinctive T-shaped intrusion of Apomuria, stipules that are deciduous, and distylous flowers. He circumscribed Mapouria to include also the Paleotropical genus Grumilea Gaertn. (Bremekamp, 1961). However, the ruminated endosperm that Bremekamp (1963) used to diagnose Mapouria has been demonstrated (Petit, 1964; Piesschaert, 2001; Sohmer & Davis, 2007) to be extensively variable even among closely related species in Psychotria, so this feature does not diagnose systematic groups. The form of the adaxial pyrene face has been also demonstrated to vary widely in Psychotria (Petit, 1964; Piesschaert, 2001), as discussed in the previous section. And, most species of Psychotria have deciduous stipules and distylous flowers. This leaves Bremekamp's Mapouria diagnosed only by a combination of several variable features. Petit (1964: 24) tested the morphological characterization of Bremekamp's new group and concluded that it could not be separated from or within African Psychotria. Petit (1964) formally synonymized Grumilea with Psychotria, and informally commented that Mapouria in Bremekamp's classfication also could not be separated.

Mapouria was included in Psychotria in the Neotropics by most authors starting in the early 20th century (e.g., Standley, 1930; Steyermark, 1972), but it was still recognized there by Bremekamp (1934) and then extended by him to Madagascar (Bremekamp, 1961, 1963). Davis et al. (2007) reviewed the morphological characters and available molecular studies of Bremekamp's Paleotropical Mapouria, and concluded again that it was not distinguishable from Psychotria. They formally transferred Bremekamp's species to Psychotria with the necessary new nomenclatural combinations (Davis et al., 2007; Davis & Govaerts, 2008), but did not study this group taxonomically or comment on the nomenclatural aspects of Bremekamp's use of that name.

Mapouria was the largest genus Bremekamp (1963) recognized in the Malagasy Psychotria, and as a group its species are generally recognizable by the combination of their deciduous stipules, ruminate endosperm, and lack of the features that characterize most of the other genera. Mapouria in Madagascar has sometimes been characterized informally by its bright yellow corollas with relatively long tubes and its red fruits, but Bremekamp also included here species with white corollas and blue or white fruits. Bremekamp recognized seven informal species groups of Mapouria based on morphological features such as corolla color, inflorescence position, rumination pattern of the endosperm, and the presence of acarodomatia on the leaves. He designated these species groups only with numbers, and called them “Groups” in his key but “Series” in the taxonomic treatment.

Bremekamp's Malagasy Mapouria analyzed with molecular data

Andersson (2002) included the type of Mapouria, from the Neotropics, and two Malagasy species in his analysis, and studied two of Bremekamp's diagnostic characters, endosperm rumination and stipule persistence. He found Mapouria's type nested in his Psychotria Clade I and synonymized this name. He found one of his Malagasy Mapouria species placed in his Clade III, and the other was placed by itself within his Psychotria s.str. Andersson also found the presence and pattern of endosperm rumination and stipule persistence to be widely homoplasious across his analysis of Psychotria. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) studied nine species of Bremekamp's Mapouria, and found them all separated from each other on well supported clades, and all grouped with species that Bremekamp classified in Psychotria. None of the Malagasy species of Bremekamp's Mapouria were found to be closely related to the type of Mapouria by either Andersson or Razafimandimbison et al., nor to the type of Grumilea by Razafimandimbison et al. The extensive morphological heterogeneity of Bremekamp's Mapouria is mirrored by the extensive polyphyly found in this group by molecular analysis (Razafimandimbison et al., 2014). In the results of Razafimandimbison et al., some of Bremekamp's Malagasy Psychotria species groups are paraphyletic and the others were not sampled adequately and can't be evaluated.

The name Mapouria as used by Bremekamp

Separation of Bremekamp's segregate genera from Psychotria required him to determine appropriate names for them, and their names depended on the identity of Psychotria. Bremekamp's analysis of Psychotria's identity was idiosyncratic, and as result so was the name he used for his largest segregate genus. Psychotria was described with one species, P. asiatica L., that was based on one paleotropical element from Asia and one neotropical element from the Antilles (Bremekamp, 1961; Petit, 1964; Davis et al., 2001). Because there were two elements, Bremekamp (1961: 317) concluded that Psychotria was a “nomen confusum” whose identity could not be determined. Bremekamp diagnosed his newly separated genera in part by stipule persistence, and he concluded that Psychotria as originally described probably had persistent stipules. He did not see any original material that corresponded to P. asiatica, but based his conclusion only on later use of that name by some other authors. Based on this, he then decided that P. asiatica did not agree with the genus he diagnosed by having deciduous stipules, so another name was needed for that newly separated genus. He then concluded that Mapouria was the oldest name in this group that demonstrably had deciduous stipules, and that Grumilea shared this feature and was not distinct from Mapouria. Bremekamp (1961) then used the name Mapouria for his newly separated Malagasy genus, and noted that using this name for this group was due to a possible major change in nomenclatural usage of the name Psychotria. He explained that if the type of Psychotria was eventually studied and confirmed to have persistent stipules, most of the species across the world with names in Psychotria should instead be called Mapouria. Bremekamp then recommended that in this case, for nomenclatural convenience, a different type should be chosen for Psychotria, and it should agree with his Mapouria so these numerous name changes would not be needed (he did not comment on how to resolve the nomenclature of the species with persistent stipules that he placed in Psychotria). Bremekamp's views here were contrary to our current nomenclatural practice (Turland et al., 2018), so his conclusions conflict with today's nomenclature and have created lasting confusion. Current nomenclatural practice prefers to find the identity of a name by direct study of original material, to confirm this identity before the name is used or a substitute name adopted, and to propose formal conservation of names that are problematic instead of just mentioning a possible problem.

Fig. 3.

Psychotria L. in Madagascar. A. Leaves with bacterial nodules of P. pachygrammata Bremek.; B. Leaves with retuse apices of P. biloba (Bremek.) Razafim. & B. Bremer; C. Unusually large green fruits of P. tolongoinensis A.P. Davis & Govaerts; D. Dense pubescence of P. rufovillosa (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts; E. Blue fruits of P. glaucifolia A.P. Davis & Govaerts; F. White fruits of P. decaryi Bremek.

[A: Syde et al. 291; B: Bolliger 123; C: Razafindrahaja 242; D: Antilahimena 8184; E: Callmander 393; F: Rasoanindriana et al. 148] [Photos: A, C, D, F: P. Antilahimena; B: R. Bolliger; E: M. Callmander]

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The identity of Psychotria was also reviewed contemporaneously but separately by Petit (1964), who did study the original material of Psychotria. He concluded that its two type elements are morphologically consistent and the Asian material should be considered the type of P. asiatica. He confirmed that both of the original elements have deciduous stipules, so Bremekamp's interpretation of this name was inaccurate. Davis et al. (2001) then reviewed the identity of P. asiatica in more detail, and formally accepted Petit (1964)'s conclusion as a lectotypification (the problem that Bremekamp noted with the characteristics of Psychotria has since been resolved by separating many of the heterogeneous Psychotria species into other genera and even tribes, e.g., Andersson, 2001; Razafimandimbison et al., 2014).

Apomuria

Bremekamp's Apomuria

Bremekamp (1963) also separated Apomuria from Psychotria by pyrene form plus the pattern of endosperm rumination, and his circumscription and characterization of this genus were also problematic morphologically. He diagnosed this genus by pyrenes that are generally plane (i.e., not grooved) adaxially, and endosperm that is entire (i.e., not ruminate) except for a distinctively shaped, medial, adaxial groove or invagination (Fig. 4B, D). This hollow adaxial groove intrudes deeply into the endosperm, then branches to form two flattened, hollow “wings” or extrusions that extend laterally; he called this a T-shaped intrusion. Bremekamp included in Apomuria 11 species from Madagascar, and A. punctata (Vatke) Bremek. of the Comores and East Africa. This group is heterogeneous morphologically overall, and some of these species have morphological features that he did not include in the characterization of the genus (e.g., endosperm with several unbranched ruminations in addition to the characteristic T-shaped intrusion, Fig. 4B, D) while others have characters he did not notice. Bremekamp (1963: 88) also mentioned that some additional species in continental Africa shared the characters of Apomuria, and he stated that they also belong to Apomuria but did not provide a complete list of these or nomenclatural transfers. One of these was Psychotria kirkii Hiern, which lacks a T-shaped intrusion in the endosperm but has multiple adaxial ruminations (Fig. 4E). The continental African species, including Apomuria punctata, all have bacterial nodules in their leaves, which is an unusual feature in Psychotria. Bremekamp noted this character but did not consider it significant to diagnose a genus. He included his Malagasy species with bacterial nodules in Psychotria, not Apomuria, and considered the Malagasy species of Apomuria to all lack nodules. But, he overlooked the nodules of A. bullata Bremek. (newly reported here: Perrier de la Bâthie 6926, P image seen; Dorr 3237, MO). Thus, Bremekamp's circumscription and characterization of Apomuria are based on both variable characters and incomplete documentation of the species.

Petit (1964, 1966) evaluated these particular pyrene and endosperm characters and concluded that they are highly variable. He documented several African Psychotria species with Apomuria's characteristic endosperm ruminations that differ in all their other features from all of Bremekamp's species, and concluded (Petit, 1964: 24) that Apomuria was not separable from Psychotria. Piesschaert (2001: 317) also evaluated these pyrene and endosperm characters, and showed that endosperm rumination is highly variable in Psychotria. Piesschaert studied limited material from Madagascar, but Capuron (1973) reached a similar conclusion for the Malagasy Psychotria. Apomuria was included in Psychotria by Schatz (2001), but continued to be recognized in Madagascar by other authors (e.g., Davis et al., 2007).

Bremekamp's Apomuria analyzed with molecular data

Andersson (2002) showed that the T-shaped endosperm intrusion is highly homoplasious in world-wide Psychotria, and concluded that Apomuria is not separable morphologically based on this diagnostic feature and formally synonymized it with Psychotria. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) studied two species of Apomuria, both of which are nodulated species and neither of which is the type. They found these species separated from each other and grouped with species of Psychotria, and agreed with its synonymization.

Fig. 4.

Some morphological features of Psychotria L. in Madagascar. A–B. Apomuria, Psychotria biloba (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts: A. Fruiting branch; B. Cross-section of seed (removed from pyrene). C–D. Apomuria, Psychotria punctata Vatke: C. Fruit; D. Cross-section of seed. E. Psychotria kirkii Hiern, cross-section of seed. F–G. Psathura, Psychotria borbonica (J.F. Gmel.) Razafim. & B. Bremer: F. Fruit; G. Cross-section of fruit, with four pyrenes. H–I. Psathura, Psychotria batopedina (Verdc.) Razafim. & B. Bremer: H. Fruit; I. Cross-section of fruit, with five pyrenes. J. Unusual stipules in Malagasy Psychotria L. (TAYLOR, in press). K–N. Trigonopyren, Psychotria tsiandroi Razafim. & B. Bremer.: K. Node near stem apex with developed stipule, unbroken and with glandular projections; L. Node below the node shown in K, with aging stipule that is falling off in fragments; M. Node in lower part of stem, with old stipule that has fallen off except for persistent basal part of sheath; N. Cross-section of pyrene. O–P. Trigonopyren, Psychotria bealanensis Razafim. & B. Bremer: O. Fruit; P. Cross-section of fruit, with two pyrenes.

[A: Du Puy et al. 757; B: Villiers 4881; C–D: Barthelet et al. 1474; E: Kuchar 23683; F–G: Blackburn 3200; H–I: Andriananrista 126; J: Antilahimena 2657; K–N: Bollinger et al. 240; O–P: Antilahimena 403]

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Trigonopyren

Bremekamp's Trigonopyren

Bremekamp (1963) also separated Trigonopyren based on pyrene and endosperm characters, and his circumscription and characterization of this genus are also problematic morphologically. He diagnosed this genus by endosperm without ruminations or furrows, and pyrenes that are trigonous in cross-section and have smooth thin-textured walls (Fig. 4K–P). Bremekamp included here eight species from Madagascar and one from the Comores that share a set of additional features: costate internodes (Fig. 4K–M), a distinctive stipule form and dehiscence scar (Fig. 4K–M), pedunculate cymose inflorescences, four- or five-merous flowers, and a generally green or grayish green drying color. He also diagnosed Trigonopyren by its apparently monomorphic (i.e., not distylous) flowers with the stigmas exserted and the anthers partially exserted. These species are morphologically recognizable as a group, but his diagnostic characters are not unique in Psychotria and some of them vary within this group. As noted above, the presence and pattern of endosperm rumination is variable across Psychotria without evident systematic pattern.Trigonous smooth pyrenes are found as occasional developmental variants in Psychotria species with abaxially rounded pyrenes, so this form is not unique to this group, and the pyrenes of the Trigonopyren species actually vary from this form to abaxially rounded and adaxially furrowed and ridged. The walls of Trigonopyren's pyrenes are distinctive in being relatively thin, but similarly thin pyrene walls are found widely in Psychotria in Madagascar and elsewhere. The other characters Bremekamp (1963) used to characterize Trigonopyren, the unusual stipules and floral biology, are not unique either in Psychotria plus his descriptions were not completely accurate.The stipule form of Trigonopyren is distinctive, but is also found in some species of Bremekamp's Psychotria (e.g., P. perrieri Bremek.). Monomorphic flowers are found in occasional species of Psychotria, and at least some species of Trigonopyren are actually distylous. Trigonopyren was provisionally synonymized with Psychotria by Schatz (2001), but was recognized by other authors (Piesschaert, 2001; Davis et al., 2007).

Bremekamp's Trigonopyren analyzed with molecular data

Andersson (2002) did not evaluate Trigonopyren. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) studied four samples of Trigonopyren, with three of them identified to species. Their analysis found these grouped together on a clade nested in Psychotria, and they synonymized Trigonopyren.

Psathura

Bremekamp's Psathura

Bremekamp (1963) characterized and expanded the classical genus Psathura, which he diagnosed by ovary and pyrene characters, but his circumscription and characterization of this genus are also problematic morphologically. He diagnosed Psathura by its 3- to 5-locular ovaries, and fruits with 3 to 5 pyrenes that are triangular in cross-section and have two plane adaxial faces (Fig. 4F–I). He also informally characterized Psathura by endosperm that is not ruminated. Bremekamp's Psathura included four species from Madagascar that are heterogeneous in other morphological features, plus four other species from Mauritius and Reunion. As noted above, the presence and pattern of endosperm rumination is variable across Psychotria without evident systematic pattern. The multilocular ovaries and triangular pyrene shape are not separate characters, because pyrene form is constrained by the packing of several pyrenes into a subglobose structure. Abaxially the pyrenes of his Psathura species vary markedly, from smooth to deeply longitudinally ridged, so this characterization was not accurate.

This leaves the multilocular ovary as the only diagnostic feature for Psathura, and it is a morphological character of interest in Rubiaceae but is problematic as a diagnostic character of a genus. Number of ovary locules and pyrenes is variable in many Rubiaceae tribes and genera (Robbrecht, 1988) and within some species (Steyermark, 1972). Psychotria has mostly 2-locular ovaries, but this condition does vary. For example, several African species of Psychotria were separated as Camptopus Hook. f. based in part on their 3- to 4-locular ovaries, but Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) found these species nested within Psychotria. Number of ovary locules was noted by Bremekamp (1963: 175) himself to vary within some Psathura species. The separation of Psathura from Psychotria based on 3 vs. 2 ovary locules is at best arbitrary, and this difference is now blurred by a newly discovered species with both 2- and 3-locular ovaries on the same plant (Taylor, in press). Psathura was not mentioned by Schatz (2001), but was recognized by other authors (Piesschaert, 2001; Davis et al., 2007).

Bremekamp's Psathura analyzed with molecular data

Andersson (2002) did not find enough information to evaluate Psathura, and considered it a name of uncertain application. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) included five Psathura species in their molecular analysis, two from Madagascar and three from the Mascarenes, and found them all deeply nested on a clade of Psychotria. Razafimandimbison et al. found two groups within their Psathura species, with the Mascarene species grouped together and the Madagascar species grouped with several species of Bremekamp's Psychotria. They did not analyze the systematics of multilocular ovaries, but mapping this feature on their cladogram now finds some of the multilocular Psathura species separated from the multilocular Camptopus species and some of them from each other, and this feature to be homoplasious.

Cremocarpon and Pyragra

Bremekamp's Cremocarpon and Pyragra

Bremekamp (1958, 1963) re-characterized and expanded the poorly known genus Cremocarpon, and described Pyragra with several similar features. These were both separated from Psychotria by their unusual fruits, which are schizocarpous with two mericarps that are connected to a fibrous carpophore (Fig. 5). Cremocarpon was further diagnosed by its ellipsoid fruits with hemispherical mericarps (Fig. 5A–M), and Pyragra by its laterally compressed fruits with mericarps that are flattened and winged (Fig. 5N–Q). Bremekamp (1958) included in Cremocarpon eight species from Madagascar, one from the Comores (C. boivinianum Baill., the type of the genus), and one from New Caledonia (C. rupicola), and considered this last species to represent a striking biogeographic disjunction in this group. The species of Pyragra are similar to each other and grow in the same region in Madagascar. These two genera were provisionally synonymized with Psychotria by Schatz (2001), but were recognized by other authors (Piesschaert, 2001; Davis et al., 2007).

The dehiscent schizocarpous fruits of these genera are highly unusual morphologically in Psychotrieae, and their form and origin are of interest for understanding this tribe. This unusual fruit form is studied in detail below for this reason, both morphologically and as to results of molecular systematic analysis. The unusual fruit form of these two genera is apparently not otherwise known in Psychotrieae, but not entirely unlike that of other species. The mericarps of Cremocarpon (Fig. 5A, C–D, H, J) resemble the pyrenes of fleshy-fruited Psychotria species, and the distinctive flattened mericarps of Pyragra (Fig. 5N, Q) are similar to the flattened, laterally winged pyrenes in the fleshy fruits of some Pacific Psychotria e.g., P. ireneae Barrabé (Barrabé, 2014: 107, fig. 4), P. eumorphanthus Fosberg (Piesschaert, 2001: 407, fig. 10.7A–C). And, the carpophores of the schizocarpous fruits agree in position and form with fibrous structures that are generally found inside the fleshy fruits of Psychotrieae and Palicourea (Capuron, 1973; Piesschaert, 2001).Thus, it seems likely that the fruits of Cremocarpon and Pyragra differ their dry and dehiscent mature condition, not in their basic anatomy or form, so it is not unlikely that this feature has been derived more than once in Psychotria (Capuron, 1973). Beyond this, the endosperm form of the various Malagasy species of these two genera vary widely, as detailed by Bremekamp (1958). The form of the carpophores and mericarps also varies among the species of these genera, and the fruits may vary in mode and perhaps even presence of dehiscence. The two Pyragra species (Fig. 5N–Q) have ovoid, apparently dry mericarps with flattened margins, and are borne on a well developed, flattened carpophore that is formed by (or next to) the septum and persists on the pedicel, and the mericarps apparently fall separately. The fruits of C. lantzii are similar to those of Pyragra except its mericarps are smaller and ellipsoid, and appear to separate or fall off simultaneously from the persistent carpophore. The fruits of C. boivinanum (Fig. 5A), C. fissicorne Bremek., C. pulchristipulum Bremek., C. sessilifolium Bremek., and C. tenuifolium Bremek. have slender carpophores that are bifid at the top, and unwinged mericarps that separate from each other but remain attached to the carpophore at the top. And, Piesschaert (2001: 326) did not find clearly developed schizocarpy in the New Caledonia species of Cremocarpon, and suggested that its fruits are not schizocarpous but just contain well developed mesocarp fibers that persist on the pedicels after the rest of the fruit has fallen. Such fruit fibers are particularly well developed in the Malagasy species C. trichanthum (Fig. 5I–M), and clearly developed schizocarpy has similarly not been found in this species in this current study; in fact, its fruits are white at maturity and become juicy inside a stiff or leathery exocarp that covers the entire structure. Thus, based on morphological study, the schizocarpous fruits of Cremocarpon and Pyragra do not all share the same form but are actually heterogenous, so they probably do not share a single evolutionary origin, and some of these fruit structures appear to be misinterpreted. This means that even though this fruit character is unusual and distinctive, it is problematic as the diagnostic character of a genus.

Bremekamp's Cremocarpon and Pyragra analyzed with molecular data

Andersson (2002) included two species of Cremocarpon in his analysis, the New Caledonian species and the Malagasy C. lantzii, and no species of Pyragra. He found the Cremocarpon specimens nested within Psychotria, and synonymized these based on his analysis. He also synonymized Pyragra based on Piesschaert's (2001) suggestion that this might be justified. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) analyzed 11 identified samples of these genera, with the two species of Pyragra and eight samples of Cremocarpon: seven from Madagascar, representing six species and one unidentified sample, and the New Caledonian species. They also analyzed the systematic distribution of schizocarpous fruits in Psychotrieae. Razafimandimbison et al. found Cremocarpon and Pyragra nested in Psychotria, and synonymized these genera. They found at least two independent occurrences of schizocarpous fruits in Psychotria, with the New Caledonian species placed on a different regional clade from the schizocarpous Malagasy and Comoran species. The schizocarpous species were placed basally in their Western Indian Ocean clade, with the C. lantzii separated from the other schizocarpous Malagasy and Comoran species. Razafimandimbison et al. posited that schizocarpous fruits evolved once among the Psychotria species in this region, and suggested that this entire Psychotria clade may ancestrally have had schizocarpous fruits and then had one subsequent reversal to the drupaceous fruits found in most of the species.

Morphological diversification in Psychotria of Madagascar

Below several unusual morphological characters of Psychotria in Madagascar are highlighted and some terminology is clarified, because much Psychotria morphology has been incorrectly understood due to incomplete and conflicting descriptions. All the features discussed below are taxonomic characters used by Bremekamp (1963) and/or Taylor (in press). The morphological features of Psychotria's species are correlated with their ecology and subject to selective pressure, so morphology is important for understanding evolutionary radiation of this genus in Madagascar. Psychotria shows notable morphological variation throughout its range (Andersson, 2002), while at the same time most of its species are remarkably similar in characters and pollination and dispersal modes. This means identification of individual species requires careful morphological observation. Psychotria has more morphological diversity in Madagascar than in most other geographic regions, and has some features here that are uncommon or unknown elsewhere.

Habit and drying color

Psychotria species in Madagascar are mostly evergreen, erect, regularly branched shrubs and small trees (Fig. 2C), which is the common growth habit in this genus. A few Malagasy species appear to be deciduous. The “trash bucket” habit, with an unbranched main stem bearing well developed subsesssile leaves that accumulate detritis at their bases, is found in a few Malagasy Psychotria species from wet forest (e.g., P. simianensis (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts). One Malagasy species is unusual (though not unique) in the genus in its low habit with prostrate main stems that produce adventitious roots (Taylor, in press).

Psychotria is generally distinctive in its reddish brown, dark brown, dark gray, or grayish green drying color, and herbarium specimens are frequently recognizable to genus by their color (Hamilton, 1989; Taylor, 2012). A number of Malagasy species dry with a clear green color that is uncommon in Psychotria elsewhere. Bremekamp (1963) frequently noted drying color in his treatment, and this detail is often useful for identification but this may vary with drying method and perhaps ecological or plant chemistry factors.

Leaves and stipules

Several species of Psychotria from Madagascar have unusual, deeply retuse leaf blades (e.g., P. biloba (Bremek.) Razafim. & B. Bremer, P. retusa (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts; Fig. 3B, 4A) that are apparently not found in this genus elsewhere. In the upper portions of these leaves, the main part of the blade extends apically in two rounded lobes and the costa is shorter than these lobes. The secondary veins in the upper portion of the retuse blades are generally markedly curved and sometimes are closely set on the short costa. These leaf blades generally have obtuse to truncate tops when young, then as the leaf grows the upper part of the blade enlarges more than the costa. Species with this leaf form are found in both humid and seasonal vegetation. Only one species with retuse leaves was included in the analysis of Razafimandimbison et al. (2014), so whether this feature has arisen more than once remains to be tested.

Bremekamp (1960, 1963) noted the presence of bacterial nodules (i.e., bacteria leaf-galls; Robbrecht, 1988: 51–52) in some Psychotria species in Madagascar and the Comores (Fig. 3A), and this is an unusual feature in Rubiaceae that is found only in the African genus Sericanthe Robbr., some African species of Pavetta L., and some African and western Indian Ocean species of Psychotria. The bacterial leaf nodules in the Malagasy species of Psychotria are presumably similar in form, development, and function to those in African Psychotria (e.g., Pinto-Carbo et al., 2016). The bacteria in these nodules are nitrogen fixers and obligate symbionts of the genus Burkholderia Yabuuchi et al. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) studied the systematic distribution of bacterial leaf nodules in Psychotria, and found at least two separate origins of this feature with both represented in Madagascar. Bremekamp documented variation in the form and position of the nodules: reticulated vs. simple to sparsely branched, and scattered in the lamina vs. only next to the costa. Nodules near the costa are sometimes few and difficult to see, and as noted above, Bremekamp overlooked these in Apomuria bullata.

Bremekamp (1963) also noted that acarodomatia (i.e., domatia; Robbrecht, 1988: 49–50) are often found on the leaves in Psychotria in abaxial axils of the secondary veins at the costa. He used presence and form of the domatia as a taxonomic character, but these are not always consistent in Psychotria. The presence of domatia sometimes varies within individual Psychotria species (e.g., Hamilton, 1989). Bremekamp recognized one domatium form, the crypt-type domatia (i.e., including pit-type, pocket-type, and crypt-type acarodomatia of Robbrecht) that is found in at least half of his Malagasy Psychotria species, but noted that tufts of trichomes borne on the flat surface of the lamina in the vein axils in other species might also be considered domatia (i.e., tuft-domatia of Robbrecht). The domatium forms separated by Robbrecht are not always distinct in Psychotria, so Bremekamp's keys can sometimes be problematic to use: crypt-type domatia may be densely pubescent inside, and axillary tufts of trichomes may be surrounded by low to developed ridges of tissue that could be considered a weakly formed (or reduced) crypt-type domatium or could be just a drying artifact.

Fig. 5.

Some morphological features of Psychotria in Madagascar. A–D. Cremocarpon, Psychotria boiviniana (Baill.) Razafim. & B. Bremer: A. Dehiscing fruit; B. Cross-section of seed (with pyrene wall removed); C. Dehiscing fruit; D. Fruit. E–H. Cremocarpon, Psychotria lantzii (Bremek.) Razafim. & B. Bremer: E. Fruit; F. Fruit partially dehisced, with carpophore and one mericap (behind carpophore); G. Carpophore persisting on pedicel; H. Cross-section of pyrene. I–M. Cremocarpon, Psychotria trichantha Baker: I. Fruit; J. Mature fruit smashed by pressing, internal view with two pyrenes; K. Mature fruit smashed by pressing, external view; L. Fruiting pedicel with fruit fallen and persistent fibers; M. Cross-section of seed (removed from pyrene wall). N–Q. Pyragra, Psychotria ankarensis (Bremek.) Razafim. & B. Bremer: N. Fruit just starting to dehisce; O. Fruit partially dehisced, with carpophore and one mericap (behind carpophore); P. Carporphore persisting on pedicel; Q. Cross-section of pyrene with seed removed.

[A, B: Barthelet & Mchanga 1543; C, D: Bremekamp (1958: fig. 20); E: Rabehevitra 4421; F, G: Rabehevitra 4386; I, L: Antilahimena 4478; J, K, M: Antilahimena & Edmond 3397; N, O, Q: Cheek 1436; P: Rakotonandrasana 1011]

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Stipules vary widely in form and size in Psychotria, and often are useful taxonomic characters to separate species (e.g., Hamilton, 1989; Taylor, 2002). A wide range of stipule form is found in Psychotria in Madagascar, with some forms that are not known elsewhere so their description here expands our knowledge of morphological radiation in Psychotria. The stipules of Psychotria are most often deciduous and present only on the stem apex. Most of the species in Madagascar have interpetiolar stipules that are triangular or shortly bilobed. In some species, however, the stipules are partly fused into a well developed tube (i.e., sheathing), or fully fused into a conical cap (i.e., calyptrate; Taylor, 2002). Some Malagasy Psychotria species have an unusual form not reported from elsewhere: the stipules are persistent, well developed, and fused around the stem into a cupuliform tube (e.g., P. onivensis (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts; Fig. 4J; Taylor, in press).

Inflorescences, flowers, and fruits

Both world-wide and in Madagascar, the inflorescences in Psychotria have generally green to whitened axes and bracts but vary notably in arrangement, position, and number of flowers. One aspect of inflorescence arrangement has been interpreted differently by different authors, which has created conflicts in species taxonomy and problematic keys for Psychotria: the interpretation of “pedunculate”. In Madagascar, Bremekamp (1963) made a careful distinction for the branched inflorescences in Psychotria as either pedunculate or sessile, and used this as a taxonomic character. In his treatment, a pedunculate inflorescence has one peduncle that supports all the axes and flowers, has small bracts at its top, and is subtended by well developed leaves, while a sessile inflorescence has three or more fasciculate peduncles, with these borne on a structure that has large bracts (or small leaves) at its top and is subtended by well developed leaves. Several authors have considered these two distinct inflorescence forms and distinguished Psychotria species based on this (Bremekamp, 1963; Sohmer & Davis, 2007), but most authors have not. These other authors have noted that the difference between these two inflorescence arrangements is only the size of the basal most inflorescence bracts, which is not a difference of actual arrangement, it is an interpretation of a variable character. These other authors have noted that variation in size of these bracts is continuous in some species, and considered Bremekamp's “pedunculate” and “sessile” to be variants of the same basic inflorescence arrangement and not species differences (e.g., Standley, 1938; Steyermark, 1972; Hamilton, 1989; Taylor, 2012).

Several Malagasy Psychotria species have an unusual inflorescence arrangement apparently not found elsewhere: apparently axillary inflorescences that are borne in both axils of stem nodes well below the stem apex. Bremekamp (1963) called these pseudoaxillary inflorescences, and separated species with these inflorescences in his Mapouria Group I. In general this is a good taxonomic character, but his interpretation differs from more common usage and there seems to be some variation in the development of this feature. The inflorescences of the Malagasy species do not agree morphologically with Robbrecht's (1988: 68) definition of pseudoaxillary inflorescences, which are found in various species of Psychotria. Pseudoaxillary inflorescences sensu Robbrecht are developmentally terminal on stems with sympodial growth, so after the inflorescence is formed, then the stem continues to grow from only one of the subtending axillary buds, and it produces another terminal inflorescence. This growth form produces inflorescences regularly situated in only one axil of each stem node. In contrast, the inflorescences of Bremekamp's Mapouria Group I are regularly produced in both axils of the the stem nodes and not at the stem apex. Bremekamp interpreted these inflorescences as borne terminally on axillary brachyblasts, or short lateral stems, produced from axillary buds (e.g., P. andapae A.P. Davis & Govaerts, P. paradoxalis (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts). This agrees with Robbrecht's view that axillary inflorescences in Rubiaceae (i.e., those borne from both axils of a node and not at the stem apex) can be considered morphologically to be terminal inflorescences that are borne on contracted brachyblasts. Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) studied very few species of Mapouria Group I, so whether this inflorescence arrangement has arisen more than once remains to be tested.

The flowers of Psychotria generally have five calyx lobes, five corolla lobes, and five anthers, a condition usually called “five-merous” in Rubiaceae even though the ovary is nearly always bilocular. Not infrequently, one or a few flowers on an individual inflorescence are four-merous or six-merous in Psychotria and related tribes, but such species are generally characterized by their most common condition even when some variation is noted (e.g., Bremekamp, 1963; Steyermark, 1972; Taylor, 2012). A few Psychotria species in all regions have consistently four-merous flowers. Bremekamp used flower merosity to distinguish some species, but it is a problematic taxonomic character.

Flowers of Psychotria are generally distylous with two different flower forms, an arrangement sometimes also called heterostylous or heterodistylous (Robbrecht, 1988: 122–125). A distylous species has two floral forms, but individual plants of this species bear only one flower form. The two flower forms differ in the positions of the stigmas and anthers, which are separated spatially and are reciprocally positioned between the long-styled and short-styled forms (i.e., pin and thrum, respectively: Robbrecht, 1988; Hamilton, 1989). Confirmation of distyly requires finding both flower forms for the species. Most if not all of the Psychotria species in Madagascar are distylous, with the stigmas exserted on a well developed style and anthers included on short filaments in the long-styled form (Fig. 2A), and the stigmas included on a short style and anthers exserted on well developed filaments in the short-styled form (Fig. 1B; e.g., Robbrecht, 1988: 125, fig. 47; Hamilton, 1989: 74, fig. 8). Bremekamp used the presence vs. absence of distyly to distinguish some Psychotria species, but at least some species he considered monomorphic (i.e., with only one flower form) are now documented to be distylous by newer collections.

Terminology for the Rubiaceae calyx and ovary has varied widely among authors, based on differing morphological interpretations, resulting in some confusion. The flowers of Psychotria have an inferior ovary that is covered by layers of tissue that represent the fused calyx corolla, and androecium, or collectively a hypanthium. This ovary portion of the flower has sometimes been described separately from the calyx, but other times has variously been considered part of the calyx, a hypanthium, or part of the same structure as the tubular free part of the calyx. The free part of the calyx has also been described in various ways: some authors regarded it as separate from the ovary and called it variously the calyx (e.g., Standley, 1938; Robbrecht, 1988: 74), the calyx tube (Bremekamp, 1963), or the calyx limb (Taylor, 2012), while other authors considered the ovary and the free portion of the calyx as on one structure (e.g., Verdcourt, 1976; Sohmer & Davis, 2007). And, when the free part of the calyx limb ranges is lobed, some authors regarded this as one lobed structure but others (e.g., Bremekamp, 1963) described the lobes as separate from the tubular, unlobed, basal portion of the calyx limb. These various morphological interpretations are not inaccurate, but the exact calyx structure being described is not always specified in taxonomic treatments. This can generate confusion when different authors give different size measurements for apparently the same structure. Combining the measurements of the ovary and free calyx limb is particularly problematic, because the ovary changes markedly in size as the flower matures so the size of this combined structure can vary with developmental stage more than species identity.

Corolla color is generally white, cream, or pale yellow in Psychotria of all geographic regions (Fig. 1A, 3B), but some Malagasy species are unusual in their bright yellow to orange flowers (Fig. 1B, 2A). Bremekamp characterized several of his species groups of Mapouria by this feature. Flower color was not studied in the molecular analysis of Razafimandimbison et al. (2014), and cannot be posteriorly mapped on their phylogram due the many samples that are not identified to species.

Fruits, pyrenes, and seeds

The fruits of Psychotria are fleshy and indehiscent, and comprise the tissues of the inferior ovary and hypanthium and contain two to several pyrenes (Sohmer & Davis, 2007: 7, fig. 1). These Rubiaceae fruits have long been considered a kind of drupe, but they do not match the classic drupe (e.g., Prunus L., Rosaceae) so many authors call them “drupaceous”. As discussed below in the section on ecology, Psychotria fruits in Madagascar vary in size and color, and as noted above, some are schizocarpous.

Pyrene and endosperm characters have been used to diagnose the genus Psychotria, species groups within this genus, and other Rubiaceae genera by a number of authors (e.g., Müller, 1881; Bremekamp, 1934, 1963; Robbrecht, 1989; Piesschaert, 2001; Andersson, 2001, 2002), but these characters are variable and sometimes problematic taxonomically. Psychotria fruits contain two hemispherical or plano-convex pyrenes (Fig. 4O; Sohmer & Davis, 2007: 7, fig. 1), each with one seed, except a few Malagasy species have three to five ovary locules and pyrenes and their pyrenes are triangular in cross-section (Fig. 4G, I). The pyrene wall is an adherent layer of endocarp, and varies in texture from papery to hard or bony. The pyrene wall often opens along weak spots, the PGS's. The presence and arrangement of these PGS's have been considered important systematic characters in Psychotria (Petit, 1964; Robbrecht, 1989; Piesschaert, 2001; Andersson, 2002). Piesschaert (2001: 436) surveyed this feature in detail in Psychotrieae and Palicoureeae, and found “[t]he basic PGS-pattern is consistent within a genus, but additional PGS's may occur [within that genus]”. Psychotria has been characterized as lacking PGS's on the pyrenes (Andersson, 2002; Piesschaert, 2001), so these pyrenes finally split open irregularly from the base at the raphal plug (Piesschaert, 2001: 321). There is wide variation in the presence and form of PGS's in Psychotria, however (Piesschaert, 2001; Davis et al., 2001). PGS's have not been surveyed well for Malagasy Psychotria species. This character is not well enough known to map on the phylogram of Razafimandimison et al. (2014).

The endosperm of Psychotria is entire (i.e., solid throughout) in some species but in other species it has holes and invaginations, called ruminations, as detailed above. Endosperm rumination varies widely in Psychotria world-wide. It has been surveyed in some detail regionally by Petit (1964) and Sohmer & Davis (2007), and broadly worldwide by Piesschaert (2001). The presence and pattern of endosperm rumination vary widely within Malagasy Psychotria. These endosperm details were considered by Bremekamp (1963) to indicate relationships among species. In particular, he distinguished between endosperm that is ruminated only on the adaxial surface of the seed and endosperm that is ruminated on both adaxial and abaxial surfaces. However, in Malagasy Psychotria the pattern and degree of rumination sometimes varies within a species, some endosperm ruminations are small and may be overlooked if the seed is not studied carefully (e.g., P. aegialodes (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts), and Bremekamp's distinction between the adaxial and abaxial surface is difficult to locate on seeds with obtuse to rounded junctions between these surfaces. Andersson (2002) studied this character in his analysis, and found it homoplasious. Posterior mapping on the results of Razafimandimbison et al. (2014) of presence vs. absence of any endosperm rumination and of rumination in the form of a T-shaped intrusion also suggests these features are homoplasious.

Fig. 6.

Distribution of Psychotria L. in Madagascar.

Each circle represents a specimen locality for a specimen of this genus. The map is based on c. 2700 specimen records that can be found in the Tropicos (2020) database.

img-z16-1_51.jpg

Ecology, diversification, and biogeography of Psychotria in Madagascar

Diversification and ecology

Psychotria is found in most habitats in Madagascar (Fig. 6), with its highest species diversity in evergreen humid vegetation. This genus is also well represented in seasonal habitats in western Madagascar, and is even found within the subarid southwestern area. As noted above, most species of Psychotria worldwide are evergreen but a few species in all geographic regions, including Madagascar, are at least facultatively deciduous (e.g., P. boenyana (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts). This aspect is not well documented for most Malagasy species, but adaptation to dry habitats may be a factor in the diversification of Psychotria here.

Psychotria has a relatively large number of species in Madagascar for the area of the island, compared to both Psychotria in continental regions and other Rubiaceae genera here. Some other Rubiaceae also show notable endemic species radiations within Madagascar (e.g., Danais Comm. ex Vent.: Buchner & Puff, 1993; Puff & Buchner, 1994; Gaertnera Lam.: Malcomber & Taylor, 2009; Taylor et al., 2014; Pavetteae, De Block, 2018; De Block et al., 2018). Psychotria and Gaertnera have the largest documented species radiations radiations and are similar in habit, inflorescence form, flower biology (including distyly), size, and color, fruit size and form, and apparently generalist pollination and dispersal syndromes. Generalist modes presumably provide access to a relatively wide range of pollinators and dispersers, and reduce reproductive limitation due to these factors. Malagasy Psychotria species mostly have white, cream, or yellow corollas with tubes 2–6 mm long, which could agree with a generalist pollination mode.

Most of the largest genera in Rubiaceae are distylous (e.g., Palicourea Aubl., Palicoureeae; Ophiorrhiza L., Hedyotideae; though certainly not all, e.g., Ixora L.). Distyly promotes outcrossing within a population, which may be a factor in systematic diversification. Distyly is sometimes lost in peripheral populations (Sobrevila et al., 1983; Hamilton, 1990; Sakai & Wright, 2008; Consolaro et al., 2011), and in species with very limited ranges (Hamilton, 1990). Most Malagasy Psychotria species are confirmed to be distylous, which suggests they have robust populations.

Psychotria's fruits are dispersed by animals, which eat the fleshy portion and pass the pyrenes unopened but scarified through their digestive tract. The hard walls of the pyrenes protect the embryo inside, but also can prevent it from emerging. The pre-formed germination slits and enlarged raphal plugs found in many species are assumed to be release mechanisms for the embryo, but this does not actually seem to have been studied nor has any relationship been investigated between PGS development and form and type of fruit disperser. A few species in Africa and Madagascar have purple-black fruits borne on unusual fruiting pedicels that become elongated, swollen, fleshy, and brightly colored (e.g., P. rubropedicellata (Bremek.) A.P. Davis & Govaerts), presumably to attract dispersers and perhaps as an accessory part of the fruit that is also eaten. Similar fruits and swollen pedicels are also found in some Malagasy species of Chassalia Comm. ex Poir., which perhaps share the same dispersers.

The exocarp color of Psychotria fruits apparently signals to dispersers that a fruit is ripe, and may change from green to bright red within hours. Mature Psychotria fruits worldwide are generally 3–8 mm in diameter with a thinly leathery, red or orange exocarp and a juicy, colorless or whitened mesocarp, and are mostly dispersed by birds. Red and orange are the most common fruit colors in Madagascar (Fig. 2C, 3A), but black, blue, and/or white mature fruits are also found; some white fruits are an intermediate stage and later ripen to blue (Fig. 3E), but some species do have white mature fruits (Fig. 3F). Different fruit colors may attract different dispersers, and this may be a factor in diversification of this group here. A few fruits of Malagasy Psychotria are unusual in their relatively large size, 15–20 mm in diameter, fleshy texture, dull brown or perhaps green mature color (e.g., P. nossibensis A.P. Davis & Govaerts), and in some species an unusually large and lax infructescence. These are similar to fruits of other groups that are known to be eaten by lemurs. The Malagasy Psychotria species with relatively large fruits have inflorescences and corollas of average size, so these large fruits do not appear to result from a general size increase in reproductive structures of the species. As detailed above, a few species of Malagasy Psychotria have unusual dry, schizocarpous fruits, for which the dispersal mode is unknown.

Biogeography

The molecular phylogeny of Psychotria in Madagascar was analyzed by Razafimandimbison et al. (2014), with a broad sampling from across the Indian Ocean region. They found the Malagasy species all nested within world Psychotria, and three separate colonizations of the island. One colonization appeared to be from Africa, while the others could be from Asia, the Pacific, or Africa. Many of the Malagasy Psychotria species they studied were grouped with Psychotria species from Madagsacar, the Mascarenes, the Seychelles, and the Comores. All but one of the species with bacterial nodules were grouped on another lineage, with nodulated African species of Psychotria. Another, larger group of Malagasy Psychotria species were grouped with African and Comoran species on a clade that also had Asian and Neotropical species. Razafimandimbison et al. were not able to identify individual species groups and radiations within Malagasy Psychotria. Eventually, delimiting such radiations along with their morphological features and fine-grained geographic patterns within the island help understand why there are so many species of Psychotria here.

Key to Psychotria and genera of Palicoureeae in Madagascar

The following key separates Malagasy genera that have commonly been confused with Psychotria. Because of the particular characters used to contrast genera in this identification key and the morphological variation in Psychotria, various groups of species of Psychotria are keyed in different leads.

1. Inflorescences regularly axillary (i.e., produced in both axils of nodes along the stem), short, subcapitate to congested-cymose 2

1a. Inflorescences terminal, pseudoaxillary (i.e., produced in one axil of a node along stem), or borne on short axillary shoots, variously subcapitate to congested-cymose, laxly cymose, or paniculiform 3

2. Drupe when fully developed with two pyrenes that are each 1-celled; endosperm starchy Psychotria

2a. Drupe when fully developed with 1 pyrene that is 1-celled; endosperm oily Saldinia

3. Stipules generally deciduous via fragmentation with the persistent parts becoming hardened (i.e., indurated) and often yellowed, the sheath enclosing pubescence along the stem that dries whitened to yellowed or is deciduous Chassalia

3a. Stipules completely deciduous, or deciduous via fragmentation with the persistent parts papery to somewhat hardened and turning brown or reddish brown, the sheath enclosing persistent or deciduous, ferruginous, pilosulous pubescence that is matted, whitish to ferrugineous, pilosehirsute pubescence, or deciduous pilosulous pubescence4

4. Pyrenes abaxially three-angled, longitudinally 4–5-ridged, or rounded and smooth; stipules pesistent to deciduous; erect shrubs and small trees Psychotria

4a. Pyrenes abaxially rounded and smooth; stipules persistent; creeping herbs 5

5. Leaves elliptic, acute to truncate or rounded at base; endosperm entire to ruminated in various patterns Psychotria

5a. Leaves cordiform, basal lobes well developed; endosperm entire 6

6. Fruits red, orange, or blue Geophila

6a. Fruits yellow Puffia

Taxonomy

Psychotria L., Syst. Nat. (ed. 10), 2: 906, 929, 1364. 1759.

  • Typus: Psychotria asiatica L.

  • = Mapouria Aubl., Hist. Pl. Guiane 1: 175. 1775.

    Psychotria sect. Mapouria (Aubl.) Benth. in Vidensk. Meddel. Dansk Naturhist. Foren. Kjoebenhavn 1852: 32. 1853. Typus: Mapouria guianensis Aubl.

  • = Grumilea Gaertn., Fruct. Sem. Pl. 1: 138. 1788. Typus: Grumilea nigra Gaertn.

  • = Psathura Comm. ex Juss., Gen. Pl.: 206. 1789. ≡ Nonatelia sect. Psathura (Comm. ex Juss.) Kuntze, Revis. Gen. Pl. 1: 291. 1891. Typus: Psathura borbonica J.F. Gmel.

  • = Cremocarpon Boivin ex Baill. in Bull. Mens. Soc. Linn. Paris 1: 192. 1879. Typus: Cremocarpon boivinianum Baill.

  • = Pyragra Bremek. in Candollea 16: 174. 1958. Typus: Pyragra obtusifolia Bremek.

  • = Apomuria Bremek. in Verh. Kon. Ned. Akad. Wetensch., Afd. Natuurk., Tweede Sect. 54(5): 88. 1963. Typus: Apomuria mollis Bremek.

  • = Trigonopyren Bremek. in Verh. Kon. Ned. Akad. Wetensch., Afd. Natuurk., Tweede Sect. 54(5): 105. 1963. Typus: Trigonopyren pauciflorus Bremek.

  • Notes.Psychotria includes at least 1500 species found in moist to wet vegetation throughout the tropics, and as currently circumscribed (Razafimandimbison et al., 2014) it comprises all the species of Psychotrieae. Bremekamp's species of Mapouria from the western Indian Ocean were transferred nomenclaturally to Psychotria by Davis et al. (2007) and Davis & Govaerts (2008). Bremekamp's species of Apomuria, Cremocarpon, Psathura, Pyragra, and Trigonopyren that did not already have names in Psychotria were transferred nomenclaturally to that genus by Razafimandimbison et al. (2014).

  • Psychotria deflexiflora C.M. Taylor, nom. nov.

  • Psychotria penduliflora Bremek. in Verh. Kon. Akad. Wetensch., Afd. Natuurk., Tweede Sect. 54(5): 133. 1963 [nom. illeg.; none Ridl., 1923].

  • Holotypus: Madagascar: Reg. SAVA [Prov. Anstiranana]: sommet du Marojejy, 27.V.1949, Cours 3459 (P [P00086200] image seen).

  • Note. – The name Bremekamp used for his new species inadvertently repeated an epithet that had previously been used for a different, validly published Psychotria name. The replacement epithet here intends to follow his original intent in naming his species.

  • Acknowledgments

    Many sincere thanks are due to my colleagues Laurent Gautier, Chris Birkinshaw, Suzanne Hirth, Heidi Schmitt, Zach Rogers, John Snodgrass, Jennifer Kuhl, Pete Phillipson, George Schatz, and especially Roy Gereau for information and logistical help; to Burgund Bassüner for preparation of the distribution map; to the valient collectors of the MBG-Madagascar program for their extensive documentation of the Malagasy Rubiaceae; to Chris Davidson, Pete Phillipson, Clement Hamilton, and Richard Abbott for encouragement and advice regarding this work; to all field botanists for their beautiful and very useful field pictures, especially those who served to illustrate this manuscript: Patrice Antilahimena, Ralph Bolliger, Martin Callmander, Fidy Ratovoson and Aina Razanatsima; to Chris Davidson and Sharon Christoph for support for travel to Madagascar; to an anonymous reviewer; and especially to Martin Callmander for invaluable editorial help.

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    © CONSERVATOIRE ET JARDIN BOTANIQUES DE GENÈVE 2020
    Charlotte M. Taylor "Overview of Psychotria in Madagascar (Rubiaceae, Psychotrieae), and of Bremekamp's foundational study of this group," Candollea 75(1), 51-70, (24 March 2020). https://doi.org/10.15553/c2020v751a5
    Received: 21 May 2019; Accepted: 7 February 2020; Published: 24 March 2020
    KEYWORDS
    Apomuria
    Cremocarpon
    Madagascar
    Mapouria
    Psathura
    Psychotria
    Psychotrieae
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