A New Species of Thismia (Thismiaceae) from West Kalimantan, Borneo

4Author for correspondence ([email protected])

Communicating Editor: Bente Klitgaard

 

A new species of Thismiaceae, Thismia betung-kerihunensis Tsukaya et H. Okada, found during a botanical survey of Betung-Kerihun National Park, West Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia, is described and illustrated. This species closely resembles Thismia clavigera (Becc.) F. Muell, which is distributed in Borneo, Sumatra, Langkawi, and Thailand; however, it differs in flower shape, size, and color, having conspicuous hood-like appendages at the tip of the brilliant blue-green colored mitre formed by the three inner tepals. Moreover, it differs in the shape of the anther connectives that lack acutely elongated apices and has rectangular glands. The smaller stature of the species also distinguishes it from T. clavigera.

Keywords—
 

Thismia Griff. (Thismiaceae; Merckx 2008) consists of more than 30 mycoheterotrophic species and is sometimes placed in the Burmanniaceae (Ridley 1924; Jonker 1948; Stone 1980; van Steenis 1982; Jarvie 1996; Saunders 1996; Maas-van de Kamer 1998; Yang et al. 2002; Tsukaya and Okada 2005; Larsen and Averyanov 2007; Chantanaorrapint 2008). In the past decade, several new species of this genus have been reported, including Thismia mullarensis from Borneo (Tsukaya and Okada 2005), T. annamensis from Vietnam (Larsen and Averyanov 2007), T. tentaculata from China (Ho et al. 2009), and T. angustimitra from Thailand (Chantanaorrapint 2008). However, the majority of these species appear to have been collected only once or a few times because the supraterrestrial parts of Thismia can be recognized only at the flowering stage and they are rare. In particular, members of section Sarcosiphon (Blume) Jonk., which is characterized by connected inner perianth lobes at the apex forming an erect mitre with three holes and coralloid roots, are quite rare. Thismia clavigera (Becc.) F. Muell. and T. episcopalis (Becc.) J. J. Sm. are representative species of section Sarcosiphon. The former species was originally named after a specimen collected from Gunung (Mt.) Gadin in Sarawak in 1865 (Beccari 1877) and rediscovered at Pulau (Island) Langkawi, Malaya Peninsula, Gunung Leuser Reserve, Sumatra, in 1979 (Stone 1980; Stone and Ratnasabapathy 1980), and in Thailand in 2008 (Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009).

Since the Kalimantan area of Borneo, Indonesia, has a rich biodiversity, particularly in the tropical rain forests, some undescribed members of Thismia are expected to be present there. To conserve this biodiversity against the destruction of natural forests, the “Heart of Borneo” initiative of the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei was initiated in 2007 to protect forests in the trans-border area of Borneo. Furthermore, botanical expeditions in this trans-border area have been planned by the Research Center for Biology – Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) for 2009–2014 to obtain detailed floristic information. As part of this project, we participated in two botanical expeditions in Betung Kerihun National Park, West Kalimantan, Borneo, from December 2009 to January 2011. Betung Kerihun National Park, which covers ca. 800,000 ha of forest, lies to the north of Putussibau, extending to the border with Sarawak. Several new species and a new genus were discovered in this area in the first botanical survey, which was conducted from December 2009 to January 2010 (Okada and Tsukaya 2010; Tsukaya et al. 2011; Vermeulen and Tsukaya 2011). While performing the second floristic survey in this area between December 2010 and January 2011, we found a species of Thismia (Fig. 1

Fig. 1.

Thismia betung-kerihunensis Tsukaya & H. Okada. A-B. Gross morphology of the plant. Two individuals (right, in younger stage) are shown. C. Flower. D. Ovary with a stigma just after the fall of the corolla. Scale for A-C, 1 cm. Scale for D, 1 mm. All pictures were drawn from the type specimen by Hirokazu Tsukaya.

 

) that resembles T. clavigera. Here we describe this previously unrecognized mycoheterotrophic species, and provide a key to the Malaysian species of Thismia.

 
Flower Structure—

Specimens were kept in 50% (v/v) ethanol, and the structure of the entire plant was observed under a stereomicroscope (MZ16a; Leica Microsystems).

 

The Thismia plants (Figs. 1, 2

Fig. 2.

Thismia betung-kerihunensis Tsukaya & H. Okada. A. Habitus. B. Three collected plants are shown. The thin root system observed under the middle individual does not belong to Thismia. The scale is in centimeters. C. Close-up of the flower preserved in 50% ethanol. The perianth tube was opened by a longitudinal slit. Note the absence of an acute apex in the anther connectives. Scale, 1 mm. D-E. Outer (abaxial) view of the anther connective. a, anther thecae; g, gland. Note the absence of acute apices and rectangular shape of the glands. Scale, 1 mm. Panel E shows the three-dimensional shape of the connectives and hairs from a specimen in 50% ethanol. F. Magnified image of the gland shown in panels D and E. Note the aggregates of round, nipple-like cells. Scale, 100 mm.

 

) collected from Betung Kerihun National Park, West Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia, had brilliant blue-green flowers 1.8 cm in length, excluding the 1.5 cm long claviform tentacles/appendages. The root system was coralliform. The connected inner perianth lobes at the apex forming an erect mitre with three holes and coralloid roots clearly showed that this species belongs to section Sarcosiphon (Bl.) Jonk. Moreover, the presence of three slender tentacles on the mitre suggested a close relationship between this species and T. clavigera. To date, no other species bearing this type of tentacle on the mitre has been discovered. The collected species clearly differs from T. clavigera in terms of the color and shape of the mitre. While T. clavigera is “luteo-crocei” (Sarawak specimen; Beccari 1877) or “all yellow-orange” (Langkawi specimen; Stone 1980), the mitre of our new specimen is blue-green. As seen in the color photographs in the report of Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint (2009), individuals of T. clavigera collected from Thailand show indigo blue only in the anther connectives; the mitre is “yellow-orange,” while the perianth tube is “bright pink-red.” Since all known specimens of T. clavigera from various localities have a yellow-orange mitre, the blue-green color of the new sample is unique. In addition, the shape of the mitre in the new specimen is unique. Thismia clavigera and the new specimen share “a dome-shaped mitre with three wide archway-like openings” (Stone 1980). Importantly, only the figure of T. clavigera in Beccari (1877) shows small but significant appendices that look like eaves; all other reports on T. clavigera describe the absence of such appendices (Stone 1980; Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009). The new specimen had a mitre bearing three hood-shaped appendices (arrows in Fig. 2A) that are not observed, or seen only poorly, in T. clavigera. Since Beccari (1877) described poorly developed, eave-like appendices in the figure of T. clavigera, it is possible that this quantitative difference is intraspecific variation; however, the conspicuous development of the mitre appendices in the new specimen is a unique character considering that the specimen is smaller in stature than T. clavigera, as described below.

Moreover, we found morphological and qualitative differences in the anther connectives. First, the morphology of the wing of the anther connectives differs. The wing of the anther connectives in T. clavigera is hairy, has an unequal margin (with an elongated, triangular lamina), and is acute at the apex (Stone 1980; Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009). The new specimen also has hairy anther connectives (Fig. 2E), but the margin of the connectives is equal in shape and lacks an acute, elongated apex (Fig. 2C-D). Second, whereas a round, nectariferous gland is described for T. clavigera (Stone 1980; Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009), the new specimen has rectangular, long glands (“g” in Fig. 2D-F). These characters are completely different from those seen in T. clavigera.

Quantitative differences were also recognized. The flowers in the new specimen, including the appendages, are 3.0–3.7 cm in length, which is smaller than in T. clavigera from Thailand (up to 6 cm; Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009) but similar to that in T. clavigera from Langkawi (ca. 3 cm; Stone 1980) (Fig. 2B). Irrespective of the similarity in overall flower size, the anther thecae is ca. 3.5 mm (Stone 1980) or 2 mm long (Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009) in T. clavigera compared to ca. 1 mm long in the new specimen (Fig. 2D). While tepal size varies in many taxa, anther size is a more stable character; consequently, this difference distinguishes the new specimen. In addition, the new specimen has smaller ovaries (1.3–2.8 mm long; Fig. 2B-C) than T. clavigera (5 mm long; Stone 1980; Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint 2009). A smaller stature is also evident in other parts of the plant. While the stem of T. clavigera is reported to be ca. 12 cm long and bears 1–5 flowers, that in the new species is only 2–3 cm long and bears 1–2 flowers. The floral bract is also smaller in the collected species (8 vs. 12 mm long for T. clavigera). Taken together, the new species appears to be distinct from T. clavigera.

 

In the past decade, several new species of Thismia have been discovered, but no new species has been reported for section Sarcosiphon. The new species described in this study is morphologically similar to T. clavigera, but has different morphological characters and a different flower color. Although T. clavigera has been collected from three distinct areas (Sarawak, Langkawi, and Sumatra), the observed differences were not seen in the other individuals collected.

 

We herein describe a new species, T. betung-kerihuensis, which can be inserted into the ‘Key to species’ of Thismia in Flora Malesiana I, 4 (Jonker 1948) 22, modified by Tsukaya and Okada (2005) and Chantanaorrapint and Chantanaorrapint (2009) as follows.

 

Thismia betung-kerihunensis Tsukaya & H. Okada sp. nov.—TYPE: INDONESIA. West Kalimantan: Betung Kerihun National Park, near Sungai (River) Tobong Kopang, ca. 228 m altitude, 00° 54′51.1″N, 113° 40′20.7″E, on a slope under tropical rain forest (lower hill forest), mainly composed of Dipterocarpaceae, December 27, 2010, H. Okada, H. Nagamasu, & H. Tsukaya HT1012 (holotype: BO; isotype: TI, preserved in 50% ethanol).

Herbae terrestris, erectae. Thismia clavigera (Becc.) F. v. M. affinis, sed corolla caerulea, lobi affixi appendicis cuculatae conspicuae, connectivum staminis absque oxysegmentum trigonus, glans rectangularis (non semiglobosa) differt.

Terrestrial, achlorophyllous herb, mycotrophic. Stems erect, simple, bearing 1–2 flowers, bluish white at young stage, turning pale purple, then pale brown, 3–4 cm long. Roots coralliform, brown, tips whitish. Leaves spirally arranged, lanceolate, to 5 mm long, pale whitish blue to pale brown. Floral bracts to 8 mm long, 2 mm wide, lanceolate, acuminate. Flowers 2 cm long, excluding the tentacles; basal perianth tube white with indigo and brown with 12 nerves at young stage, which turns pale brown with purple-dark blue nerves later, 1.1–1.2 cm long, glabrous; throat margin thickened; outer perianth lobes deltoid, minute; inner perianth mitriform with clawed lobes, incurved, centrally adnate to form a dome-shaped mitre with three wide windows, midveins riblike, bearing three hood-like accessory lobes at the tip and three slender claviform appendages. The mitre is blue-green, 4.4–6.9 mm long, except for the ca. 15-mm-long claviform appendages, which are pale blue at the base and tinged with orange at the tip at the young stage. Stamens 6, borne on the thickened margin of the perianth-tube, curved downwards, filaments short, ribbon-shaped, free; connective broad with a quadrangular wing, hairy, connate to form a tube; anther thecae oblong, adnate, seen on the adaxial side of the connectives, 0.9–1.1 mm long; gland present near the apex on the line of fusion between the connectives, rectangular, 0.6–0.8 mm long, 0.2 mm wide. Stigmas free, ca. 1.4 mm long. Ovary 1.3–2.8 mm long and cup-shaped. Fruit not seen.

Note

We collected three individuals in a less than 10 m×10 m square in the locality. No other individual was discovered in neighboring places during the botanical survey, suggesting that this species is rare even in the Betung-Keruhin National Park, although the type locality is under protection. Areas around the type locality were rich in mycoheterotroph species, such as four Burmanniaceae (one species of Gymnosiphon and three Burmannia), two Polygalaceae (two Epirixanthes), two Triuridaceae (two Schiaphila), and seven Orchidaceae (three Lecanorchis and so on) species, but none co-habited with this species.

 

The authors thank the Secretariat of Permission for Foreign Research, the Ministry of Research and Technology, Republic of Indonesia (RISTEK), who kindly gave permission for the field research in West Kalimantan, and the Indonesian Institute of Science (LIPI) and the Betung Kerihun National Park office, for kindly allowing this study to take place in Betung Kerihun National Park, West Kalimantan. We also thank Dr. Dedy Daernadi of LIPI, Mr. Ujang Hapid of Herbarium Bogoriense (BO), Mr. Mustarr Udin, Mr. Suherman, and Mr. Jon for helping to conduct the botanical surveys during the expedition.

 
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