Anthurium palenquense Croat

First published in Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 78: 694 (1991)
This species is accepted
The native range of this species is Ecuador. It is a subshrub and grows primarily in the wet tropical biome.

Descriptions

CATE Araceae, 17 Dec 2011. araceae.e-monocot.org

General Description
Terrestrial; stem green turning brown, calloused, 15-30 cm long, 1-2.5 cm diam.; leaf scars obscured by root mass, 1 cm high, 1-1.5 cm wide; roots numerous, descending, grayish or green, smooth or scurfy, blunt, 1-20 cm long, 2-5 mm diam.; cataphylls membranous to subcoriaceous, lanceolate, 4.5-17 cm long, narrowly acute and apiculate at apex, green tinged reddish at margins, drying pale tan (B & K yellow 5/10), persisting semi-intact or as coarse linear fibers or as bundles of linear fibers, often with the apex remaining intact. LEAVES erect to spreading; petioles (6)l0-30 cm long, 5-20 mm diam., sharply triangular, flattened to broadly convex adaxially, the margins winged, sharply angular abaxially; geniculum scarcely thicker and slightly paler than petiole, the angular ribs often conspicuously and minutely undulate, 1-3 cm long; sheath 1-2 cm long; blades subcoriaceous to coriaceous, elliptic to lanceolate or oblanceolate, long-acuminate at apex (the acumen flat to slightly inrolled), attenuate with conspicuously concave margins at base, (16)30-64(70) cm long, (7.5)10-23 cm wide, broadest usually near or below the middle, the margins broadly undulate; upper surface matte, velvety, the cells convex, sunken, forming an alveolate pattern when dried, dark green (B & K green 4/2.5), lower surface matte, paler (B & K green 7/2.5); midrib flat to obtusely angular at base, becoming sharply acutely raised toward the apex above, acutely raised (knife-edged), and higher than broad below; primary lateral veins (9)14-30 per side, departing midrib at 40-65(80)° angle, ascending straight to the collective vein, weakly sunken to weakly raised above, darker than surface and weakly raised below; interprimary veins numerous, scarcely sunken, ± parallel to and less conspicuous than primary lateral veins; tertiary veins obscure above and below; collective vein arising from near the base, weakly sunken or weakly raised above, weakly raised or flat below, prominulous when dried, equally as prominent as primary lateral veins, 5-18 mm from margin. INFLORESCENCES erect to slightly spreading or ± pendent, shorter than leaves; peduncle 10-60 cm long, 2-10 mm diam., 0.3-3 x as long as petiole, green to dark purple or heavily tinged-mottled with red-purple (B & K red-purple 2/2.5), ± quadrangular or with 2-4 irregular ribs and convex sides; spathe spreading and weakly twisted or reflexed, membranous to subcoriaceous, green tinged maroon at margins and along main nerves (B & K red-purple 2/10), minutely palespeckled (at least abaxially), narrowly lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, 3-12 cm long, 0.5-2.5 cm wide, broadest near base, inserted at 30-90° angle on peduncle, acuminate at apex (the acumen inrolled, (2)5-15 mm long), acute to decurrent at base; stipe 3-15 mm long in front, 1-5 mm long in back; spadix yellow-green tinged with purple, becoming purple-violet or dark green tinged purplish at anthesis, cylindroid, sometimes weakly tapered, erect to curved, (2)4-12 cm long, 3-5 mm diam. near base, 3-4 mm diam. near apex; flowers with a faint, sweet, fruity scent, square to rhombic, 2-3.8 mm long, 1-3.8 mm wide, the sides straight to gradually sigmoid; 2-5 flowers visible in principal spiral, 2-6 in alternate spiral; tepals matte to semiglossy, minutely papillate and weakly punctate; lateral tepals 1.4-2.6 mm wide, the inner margins broadly convex, turned up against pistil, the outer margins 2-sided; pistils exserted 0.4-1.5 mm, glossy, green, sometimes tinged with purple around the stigma; stigma ellipsoid, greenish, 0.4- 0.8 mm long, 0.25-0.4 mm wide, brushlike with blunt papillae, droplets appearing 1 week before stamens emerge; stamens emerging rapidly in a regular sequence from the base, the laterals preceding the alternates by 5-28 spirals (by ca. 34 the length of the spadix), held erect above tepals and pistil; filaments translucent, exserted, 0.6-1 mm long, 0.4 mm wide; anthers orange (B & K yellow-red 7/10), 0.4-0.6 mm long, 0.5-0.7 mm wide, not obscuring pistil; thecae ellipsoid, 0.25 mm wide, weakly divaricate; pollen orange to yellow fading to cream-white (B & K yellow-red 7/ 2.5). INFRUCTESCENCE with spathe persisting; spadix 5-15 cm long, 0.5-1.5 cm diam.; berries dark purple, ovoid, acute at apex, 5-11 mm long, 5- 6 mm diam.; pericarp thickened, with numerous raphide cells; seeds 1-2 per berry, with numerous raphide cells, rounded to ovoid, usually flattened on one side, 4-5.6 mm long, 3.2-3.8 mm diam., 1-2.8 mm thick, with a translucent gelatinous appendage at both ends.
Distribution
Ecuador in Esmeraldas, Cotopaxi, Los Ríos, and Pichincha provinces. Most collections were made at the Río Palenque Biological Station in Los Ríos.
Conservation
Least Concern (LC)
Habitat
Mature forest or in disturbed primary forest in tropical moist and premontane wet forest life zones.
[CATE]

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/42937/10766011

Conservation
LC - least concern
[IUCN]

Extinction risk predictions for the world's flowering plants to support their conservation (2024). Bachman, S.P., Brown, M.J.M., Leão, T.C.C., Lughadha, E.N., Walker, B.E. https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/nph.19592

Conservation
Predicted extinction risk: threatened. Confidence: confident
[AERP]

Sources

  • Angiosperm Extinction Risk Predictions v1

    • Angiosperm Threat Predictions
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
  • CATE Araceae

    • Haigh, A., Clark, B., Reynolds, L., Mayo, S.J., Croat, T.B., Lay, L., Boyce, P.C., Mora, M., Bogner, J., Sellaro, M., Wong, S.Y., Kostelac, C., Grayum, M.H., Keating, R.C., Ruckert, G., Naylor, M.F. and Hay, A., CATE Araceae, 17 Dec 2011.
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Herbarium Catalogue Specimens

    • Digital Image © Board of Trustees, RBG Kew http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
  • IUCN Categories

    • IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Kew Backbone Distributions

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
  • Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
  • Kew Science Photographs

    • Copyright applied to individual images