Isoetaceae - Pteridophyta of Peru - Hickey 1994

Page 1

FIELD1ANA Botany

NEW SERIES, NO.

34

PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU Part VI 22. Marsileaceae-28. Isoetaceae Rolla

M. Tryon

Robert G. Stolze

Department of Biology University of South Florida Tampa, Florida 33620-5150

With

Associate Curator

Department of Botany Field Museum of Natural History Roosevelt Road at Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496

the collaboration of:

R. James Hickey

Benjamin 011gaard

Miami

Aarhus

University, Oxford,

Ohio

Accepted March 30, 1994 Published December 30, 1994 Publication 1461

University, Risskov,

Denmark

MAD

\

Q 1995

PUBLISHED BY FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY


Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

M. ancylopoda; M.

INTRODUCTION

1

1.

Marsilea:

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

1

2.

Salvinia: S.

MARSILEACEAE

2

3.

Azolla: A. filiculoides\ A. microphylla .... 9

22.

minima;

nudum

....

vestita

3

7

S. auriculata

.13

Marsilea

2

4.

Psilotum: P.

23. SALVINIACEAE

5

5.

14

Salvinia

6

6.

Equisetum: E. giganteum; E. bogotense Huperzia: H. eversa; H. binervia; H. linifolia var. tenuifolia; H. cuneifolia

53

Azolla

8

.

.

24. PSILOTACEAE

11

1.

Lycopodium: L. clavatum; L. thyoides

Psilotum

11

8.

Lycopodiella: L. caroliniana var. meridi-

9.

Selaginella: S. peruviana; S. todes; S. exaltata

EQUISETACEAE Equisetum 26. LYCOPODIACEAE

12 16

Huperzia

19

Lycopodium

52 58 66 66 88 89 97

Lycopodiella 27. SELAGINELLACEAE

Selaginella 28. ISOETACEAE Isoetes

ADDENDUM 1

.

2.

Species to Be Added to the Pteridophyte Flora, Parts I-V

59

onale; L. cernua

12

25.

10.

Isoetes:

I.

andicola;

18

I.

haema-

lechleri;

67 I.

di-

90

spora

List of Tables

1

.

97

Data on the diversity of pteridophyte 100

species in Peru

Consideration of Pteridophyte Diversity in Respect to

Ecology and Geography

DEPARTMENTS OF PERU COMPREHENSIVE INDEX TO NAMES

98

...

103 .

.

1

List of

04

1

.

Maps

The most

species-rich departments in

99

Peru 2.

The main their ferns

111

vegetational zones in Peru .

and .101


PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU Part VI 22. Marsileaceae-28. Isoetaceae

"The

Introduction This sixth and final part of the "Pteridophyta of Peru" contains the aquatic fern families Marsileaceae

and Salviniaceae as well as the "fern

al-

lies"

Psilotaceae, Equisetaceae, Lycopodiaceae, brief section on Selaginellaceae, and Isoetaceae.

A

the diversity and ecology are included, written by the senior author. The comprehensive index contains not only the

of the other

names in

this final part but those

five parts as well.

The

general style,

typography, form of citations, and so forth follow the previously published parts. These matters are

adequately dealt with in Part n.s.,

I

(Fieldiana: Botany,

No. 20, 1 989), and it is not necessary to repeat

them

here.

Treatment of the Lycopodiaceae has been contributed by Benjamin 011gaard and that of Isoetaceae by R. James Hickey. Both are recognized specialists in these two families. The other genera are a joint effort of Rolla M. Tryon and Robert G. Stolze, each critically reviewing the treatments

prepared by the other.

Type

collections

from Peru are mentioned

in

Guatemala" and is on a currently working monograph of the family. Consequently, both have a keen understanding of the problems in these pteridophyte families, and ferns

and

for their outstanding efforts in the production of this Flora the authors

We would like to extend special thanks to Blanca Leon (USM) for her invaluable assistance in preparing loans and arranging for their packing and shipment from this important Peruvian herbarium, as well as from the Universidad Nacional de Trujillo (HUT). Rolla

M. Tryon

The illustrations were contributed by Field Museum scientific illustrator Zorica Dabich, who created the original drawings and adapted the rest from those previously used in the Fieldiana: Bot-

any publication "The ferns and fern allies of Guatemala." Her art work, which now has appeared in all six parts of this Flora, is an invaluable complement to the descriptions. We are extremely Thanks also go to Bent Johnsen, free-lance artist of Copenhagen, Denmark, for his drawing ofHuperzia. We also appreciate the valuable comments presented by reviewers of the

Peru range and ecology. The nomenclature of the genera and species is not intended to be complete. It includes all names based on Peru material and other names that are considered useful to mention.

manuscript.

We

are grateful to the officers of the following institutions for granting loans of their material or allowing us to examine specimens in their herbaria: sitet,

Herbarium Jutlandicum, Aarhus Univer-

Denmark

(AAU); Field

Museum

of Natural

Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts most Gray Herbarium (GH), some Arnold Arboretum (A); Herbarium History, Chicago

(F);

Truxillense, Universidad Nacional de Trujillo,

Acknowledgments

Peru (HUT); Missouri Botanical Garden, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio (MU); Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris (P); University of California, Berkeley (uc); United States National Herbarium, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (us); and Herbario

Trujillo,

Benjamin 011gaard produced a recent Index to the names of Lycopodiaceae, as well as taxonomic treatments for the family in "The ferns and fern allies of Guatemala" and in the "Flora of Ecuador." R. James Hickey contributed Isoetaceae for

FIELDIANA: BOTANY,

appreciates the fa-

provided by the Department of Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, and the aid of Alice F. Tryon in the preparation of the treatment of Selaginella.

cilities

grateful to her.

system of Botanico-Periodicum-Huntianum (1968), while those of books and authors generally follow the system of Taxonomic Literature (TL2, 1976 et seq.). The acronyms for herbaria follow Index Herbariorum and are also provided below.

wish to express their deep

appreciation.

the nomenclature but are not repeated in the specimen citations. They are, however, included in the

Abbreviations of periodicals generally follow the

fern allies of

N.S.,

NO.

34,

St.

DECEMBER

Louis (MO);

30, 1994, PP. 1-123


San Marcos, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru (USM). Materials, mostly types, have also been studied in the following herbaria (acronyms follow Index Herbariorum, ed. 8): AWH, B, BKL, BM, BONN, BR, C, CGE, CPUN, CR, DUKE, G, GB, GL, HB, HEID, K, KRA, L, LG, LIL, LINN, LP, MA, MICH, MOL, MSC, NO, NY, PR, Q, QCA, RB, S, SAPF, U, UPS, W, WIS, and Z. This project has been supported in part by grant #BSR-85-16358 from the National Science Foundation, Systematic Biology Program.

in Peru. It is a small plant with

on the

petiole; the filiform leaves (petioles) are 1-

leaflets

cm long. A single subglobose sporocarp is borne

1

base of a leaf. Unless sporocarps are present, the plant can easily be taken for a species of Cyperaceae, which grows in wet habitats that are sim-

at the

ilar to

those of Marsilea.

Marsilea

I.

The work

would not have been possible without this assistance. However, any opinions and conclusions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the

no

grows

Marsilea 485.

L., Sp. pi.

1754.

Figure

1099. 1753; Gen.

TYPE: Marsilea

pi. ed. 5,

quadrifolia L.

1.

views of the Foundation.

Stem usually longcommonly bearing long roots at the nodes

Plants palustral or aquatic. creeping,

Family 22.

of the stem or along the internodes. Leaves with the petiole terminated by 2 adjacent pairs of nar-

MARSILEACEAE

Marsileaceae Mirb., Hist. nat. veg. (Lam. 5: 126. 1802. TYPE: Marsilea L.

& Mirb.)

rowly cuneate to broadly flabellate leaflets that are glabrous or pubescent. Veins more or less anastomosing, usually connected at the margin. Sori

borne within

Stem

short- to long-creeping, slender, often

branched, hardly indurated, bearing trichomes. Leaves ca. 1-40 cm long, with 4, 2, or no leaflets at the

apex of the

petiole, circinate in the bud. Sori

borne within sporocarps, indusiate, with indehiscent, short- to long-stalked, not annulate, megasporangia and microsporangia; heterosporous, spores without chlorophyll.

The Marsileaceae all in

are a family of three genera,

tropical America.

nellidiwn,

and

The genera (Marsilea, Reg-

Pilularid) are clearly distinct

not very closely

and

allied.

There are numerous detailed studies on the

1 to several stalked, indurated sporocarps attached to the petiole or at its base, enclosed by a diaphanous indusium, with microspo-

rangia and megasporangia. Megaspores

somewhat

an apical papillalike laesura, the surface papillate. Microspores spheroidal, trilete,

ellipsoidal with

the surface slightly rugulose.

Marsilea is a nearly worldwide genus of perhaps 50 species, with about 1 2 in America. The tropical

American species are poorly known for there are relatively few collections and these often lack sporocarps. The species of Marsilea are most diverse and common in regions that support vernal pools or shallow pools that dry out, at least along the Mexico is one center of diversity, Australia and Africa are others.

Marsileaceae centering on the form and development of the elaborate reproductive structures

borders.

and simplified

The following treatment is based directly on that of Johnson (1986). When necessary, specimens are

leaves. These plants have also been useful in physiological and experimental work on factors influencing leaf form. However, some of

the basic problems concerning the nature of the leaflets and the sporocarp are not resolved, and the phyletic relationships of the three genera are

not wholly certain. Pilularia L. is not in

FIG. (a,

known from Peru. However, americana A. Br. has been collected nearBolivia (as P. mandonii) and it probably also

1

.

Marsilea ancylopoda:

its

end to the sporocarp, there

is

is

con-

attached by neither raphe nor

nected to the petiole. If this stalk

is

inferior tooth. If the stalk is attached along its side

Pilularia

by

indicated as cited by Johnson. The sporocarp is borne on a stalk that

may be an inferior tooth (the end of the stalk). The superior tooth is an extension (the raphe), there

of the sporocarp near the inferior tooth

(fig.

Id).

stem and roots, with sporocarp. Marsilea vestita: d, sporocarps. from Alston 5874, Venezuela, F, d from Sandberg, United States (Idaho), F.)

a, habit; b, leaflet; c,

b from Alston 6354, Venezuela,

F,

c

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


Selaginella horizontalis (Presl) Spring, Bull. Acad. roy. Sci. Bruxelles 10: 226. 1843. Lyco-

with root initiation simultaneous (synchronous) or not (acropetal); subula the distal, non-laminate

podium horizontale Presl, Rel. haenk. 1: 1825. TYPE: Panama, Haenke (holotype,

portion of the

f.

78. PR),

not from Peru as originally thought.

leaf;

the lateral, proximal lam-

ala

inate portion of the leaf, not including the expanded mid vein or sporangial regions; scales

have been arrested early in ontogeny and have become sclerified and blackened; these initially surround the corm apex during leaf primordia that

Family 28.

ISOETACEAE

dormancy and,

Isoetaceae Reichenb., Hot. Damen Kunst. Freunde Pflanzenw. 309. 1828. TYPE: Isoetes L.

Stem erect, subterranean, not indurated, bearing numerous, fleshy to wiry, dichotomously branched roots. Leaves numerous, spirally arranged, ligulate, acicular with a single vein and 4 rows of air chambers, each transversely partitioned by multicellular septa.

Sporangia

foliar, large, single, ses-

as

new

leaves are initiated, are

displaced outward, and hence may be found surrounding the fully developed leaves on a corm;

a multicellular, planar, and glandular tissue growing out of a small pit (foveola) in the proximal portions of the adaxial leaf surface, just ligule

distal to the

sporangium; the ligule is composed of a thickened central region (the cushion) and a nonglanperipheral, delicate margins; labium dular, planar tissue that is apparently a modification of the proximal rim of the foveola; this

form a small,

can be quite extensive and may be erroneously identified as the ligule (it has also been called "pseudoligule"); velum a tissue of leaf derivation

short-lived megagametophyte. Microspores ellipsoidal and monolete, germinating endosporically

that completely or partially covers the sporangium, the latter in most species somewhat impressed

or near the adaxial leaf base. Megaspores tetrahedral-globose and trilete, without chlorosile at

phyll, germinating endosporically to

form a small megagametophyte producing 4

to

tissue

within the leaf tissue.

multiflagellate spermatozoa.

An

ancient genus with representatives

known

from the lower Cretaceous; represented today by a single, distinctive, and cosmopolitan genus exhibiting distant affinities with Selaginella and Lycopodium.

ation,

greatly hindered

by treand active speciboth through hybridization and polyploidy

Species recognition

mendous phenotypic

is

plasticity

&

as well as through diploid divergence (Taylor Hickey, 1992). Species identificatiop is also ham-

pered by these phenomena but is made even more difficult by a suite of specialized characters not

found elsewhere in the plant kingdom. Unique terminology, therefore, is an historic addendum to Isoetes systematics. Most of these novel terms were first introduced by Alexander Braun in 1 864. The use of them, although inconvenient at first, adds clarity and uniformity of understanding. Within the body of this treatment I employ them in the following contexts: corm the "stem" of the plant, that part to which the leaves and roots are attached; fossa the groove (or one of several) on

corm (lateral fossa), or extending way around the corm (circumbasal fossa)

the side of the all

the

and from which roots are derived; synchronous roots acropetal roots

in Isoetes, roots are initi-

ated with a distinctive rhizotaxy (Paolillo, 1963)

88

References

BRAUN, A. 1864. Les especes d'lle Sardaigne. Ann. Sci. Nat. 5: 306-377. FUCHS, H. P. 1982. Zur heutigen Kenntnis von Vorkommen und Verbreitung der siidamerikanischen Isoetes-Arten. Proc. Kon. Ned. Akad. Wetensch. CSS: 205-260. HICKEY, R. J. 1984. Chromosome numbers of Neotropical Isoetes. Amer. Fern J. 74: 9-13. HICKEY, R. J. 1986. Isoetes megaspore surface morphology: Nomenclature, variation, and systematic importance. Amer. Fern J. 76: 1-16. MARSDEN, C. R. 1976. Morphological variation and taxonomy of Isoetes muelleri A. Br., J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 1: 37-54. PAOLILLO, D. J. 1963. The developmental anatomy of Isoetes. Illinois Biol. Monograph 31:1130.

PFEIFFER, N.

1922.

A

monograph of the

Isoe-

Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 9: 79-232. TAYLOR, W. C., AND R. J. HICKEY. 1992. Habitat, evolution, and speciation in Isoetes. Ann. taceae.

Missouri Bot. Gard. 79: 613-622.

WEBER, U.

1922.

Zur anatomic und systematik L., Nova Hedwigia 63: 2 1 9-

der gattung Isoetes 262.

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


I.

to completely covering the ligule, generally thick

Isoetes

Isoetes L., Sp. pi. 2: tris L.

Stylites

1

TYPE:

100. 1753.

/.

and ded

lacus-

TYPE: S. andicola Amstutz = (Amstutz) Gomez. Figure 10.

/.

andicola

tuberculate, or echinate, 132.

Aquatic, amphibious or terrestrial perennials. to vertically or horizontally elon-

Leaves terete, trigonal or triquetrous (sharply

a.

a.

25-50 MHI

long.

2n = 22-

Isoetes has been vari-

suggest that spore morphology is extremely variable and highly subject to convergence.

3-angled). Ligule delicate, to ca. 8 mm, glandular, auriculate. Labium variable in expression, minute

Key

embed-

exposed or

ously divided into sections based on megaspore surface morphology. Recent studies, however,

gate, buried in substrate.

3-angled)

elliptic to ovate,

The cosmopolitan genus

Stem globose, (broadly

Sporangium

in the leaf or partially emergent,

completely covered by the velum. Megaspores laevigate, reticulate, echinate, tuberculate or cristate, 250-1 ,200 Mm in diameter. Microspores laevigate,

Amstutz, Ann. Missouri Hot. Gard. 44: 121.

1957.

fleshy.

to species of Isoetes

Plants of lowland (less than

1

500 m) pools; subula triquetrous;

Plants of high altitude (more than 3000 trigonal; scales usually absent;

or reticulate, not baculate b. b.

m)

scales present;

pools, streams, or moist

megaspores baculate I.I. panamensis

meadows; subula

terete or

megaspores laevigate, tuberculate, pustulate, cristate, echinate, rugulate, b

2. I. novo-granadensis Megaspores reticulate c Megaspores not reticulate, surface ornamentation variable c. Plants diminutive, the leaves of mature, fertile plants rarely longer than 30 in length, scale leaves around corm bases and surrounding shoot apex 3. I. parvula c. Plants larger, only juveniles with leaves less than 30 mm, fertile adult plants larger, lacking

mm

d

scale leaves d.

Velum e.

e.

e of the sporangium, the sporangium essentially exposed Corm vertically elongate, frequently producing unbranched roots only along a lateral groove (fossa); alae extending more than 50% of the total leaf length; sporangia elevated above the leaf base; megaspores laevigate, pustulate or rugulate often variable within

covering, at most,

'/4

.

.

.

.

a single sporangium; mature plants deeply embedded in substrate, with only the distal 4. I. andicola (+/ ) quarter of the leaf tip exposed Corm globose to slightly elongate vertically and producing roots along a continuous extending less than 50% of the leaf length; sporangia subtle, indistinct markings; mature plants not deeply f embedded in substrate, typically with at least the distal half of the leaf exposed f. wide at the base, subula and Leaves broad, 3.5-6 wide at mid-length, 6-8 alae dark brown to dark green, the apex subacute to acute; labium narrowly oblong, 40-60 Mm wide, 140-180 nm high; megaspores of 2 size and shape classes

circumbasal groove basal;

(fossa); alae

megaspores laevigate or with

mm

mm

5. f.

Leaves narrow,

and

Mm d.

alae light green, the apex attenuate; labium depressed-ovate, megaspores similar in size and shape

g.

or

I.

dispora

mm wide at mid-length, 3.6-4 mm wide at the base, subula 540 fim wide,

high;

Velum covering 3A g.

ca. 1.5-1.6

6.

I.

20

1

hewitsonii

more of the sporangium

g

Plants terrestrial or amphibious; distal portions of subulae strongly trigonal; leaves often 7. I. saracochensis leathery or cartilaginous, the apex acute Plants aquatic or occasionally amphibious; distal portions of subulae terete to half-round, h apex attenuate to subacute

lax to erect, flaccid or stiffly turgid, the h.

Leaves

stiffly erect,

often with dark

extremely turgid (to the point of being

brown

brittle),

to nearly sclerotic pigmentation basally;

extensively elongate horizontally; megaspores laevigate

TRYON & STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU.

VI.

dark green, most

corm globose 8.

I.

to

lechleri

89


5cm

5mm 1mm

90

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


Leaves flexuous to weakly erect, barely turgid, bright green and without dark pigmentation basally; corm globose to slightly elongate horizontally; megaspores lae-

h.

vigate to minutely tuberculate or cristate

1.

I

panamensis Maxon & Morton, Ann. Gard. 26: 272-273. 1939. TYPE: Panama, Prov. Panama, vicinity of Bejuco, Woodson et al. 1685 (holotype, us!; isotypes, GH!, NY!).

I.

boliviensis

In ephemeral bodies of water such as rain pools,

soctes

Missouri Hot.

9.

riverbanks, and marshes, from sea level to

1 500 m, Tumbes. Western Guatemala to Panama; coastal Ecuador and Peru; Brazil and Paraguay. Rarely col-

lected. Isoetes pacifica Svenson,

Amer. Fern J.

34: 123. 1944.

TYPE: Ecuador,

Prov. Guayas, east of Chanduy, Svenson 1 1022 (holotype, BKL; isotypes, GH!, NY!). Isoetes savanarum Gomez, Phytologia 49: 339. 1891. TYPE: Costa Rica, Prov. Guanacaste, Gomez

Throughout its range, this species exhibits considerable variation in the shape, size and distribution of the bacula on megaspores. Microspores also vary in surface morphology, but no parallel trends are evident.

17088, as 7055 (holotype, CR!).

this species is

Corm globose, 7-34 mm in diameter, 2-3-lobed, dichotomous roots arising synchronously within the circumbasal fossa(e). Leaves to 100, erect, 160wide at the base, 540(-760) long, 6-16 wide at mid-length; alae colorless 0.5-1. 5(-2) and hyaline proximally, stramineous to bright green or bluish green and chartaceous distally, 2-4 wide at the sporangium, 35-185(-230) long

mm

mm mm

mm

mm

([17-]22-30[-40]% of the total leaf length), apices attenuate; subula triquetrous (sharply 3-angled), stramineous to bright green to bluish green, the apex attenuate to subacute, with 3 groups of fibrous bundles forming distinct longitudinal ridges, continuing to the apex; stomates present; scale leaves present.

mm

Sporangium obovate,

580 (x = 496) Mm

occasionally laterally confluent; equatorial and proximal ridges narrowly triangular to deltoid in cross-section, equatorial ridges often undulate.

20-33 (x

=

26)

Mm

2740

=

m

long, 34) M wide, sparsely echinate, to

Microspores ash-gray, papillate, to laevigate.

(x

2n = 44.

would

Gomez's description of the ligule in /. savannarum refers to the condition of the labium. Tumbes: South of Zarumilla, Ellenberg 1380 (GH,

u).

Isoetes novo-granadensis Fuchs, Caldasia 8:

2.

314-315. 1969. TYPE: Colombia, Comisaria Putumayo, 3250 m, Cuatrecasas 11770

del

(us!).

dichotoma Mora-Osejo & Hagemann, Mutisia 1977. TYPE: Colombia, Dept. Narino, Volcan Galeras, 3900 m, Hagemann & Leist 1773

Isoetes

43: 5.

mm

in diameter, baculate, the bacula

it

flora.

eral, occasionally represented by a whitish, deltate to triangular fragment, 3-4 long, 2.5-4.5 wide. Labium depressed-ovate, entire, laciniate or

shallowly scalloped, 800-2,800 Mm high, 2,5004,500 Mm wide. Megaspores white, not shiny, 380-

count for

Isoetes panamensis is the only Peruvian species with either triquetrous subulae or baculate megaspores and as such is a distinctive element in the

mm mm

mm

single tetraploid

not be surprising to find distinctive reproductively isolated elements within /. panamensis, with the Peruvian material presumably assigned to /. pacifica Svenson.

tan, unspot-

6-12 wide, basal. Velum long, 3.5-7 wide along the lateral rudimentary, 0.2-0.5 edges of the sporangium, absent along the upper edge of the sporangium. Ligule delicate, ephemted,

The

from Costa Rican material;

(COL, HEID!).

Corm

slightly elongate horizontally to globose,

mm

mm

tall and 30 in diameter, 2-lobed, roots arising synchronously within a continuous circumbasal fossa. Leaves to about 80, stiffly erect,

up to 15

to 200 mm long, often with reflexed tips, 6-10 mm wide at the base, 2-7 mm wide at mid-length,

up

dark green to brown proximally, bright to dark green distally; alae dark green to nearly black,

membranaceous, 1.54

mm

wide

at the sporan-

FIG. 10. Isoetes andicola: a, habit; b, proximal portion of leaf showing elevated sporangium; c, enlargement of "b" showing ligule (LI), labium (LA), sporangium (SP). Isoetes lechleri: d, habit; e, proximal portion of leaf showing ligule (LI), velum (VE), sporangium (SP). Isoetes dispora: f, proximal portion of leaf showing labium (LA), velum (VE), sporangium (SP). (a from Hutchison et al. 5890, F, b, c from Saunders 1154, MU; d from Sanchez Vega 1330, F, e from Leon 2074, MU; f from Skillman et al. 12850, MU.)

TRYON & STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU.

VI.

91


gium, 20-140

mm long ([44-]50-63[-70]% of the

leaf length), parallel-sided, their apices attenuate; subula trigonal (broadly 3-angled in cross-section, erect to slightly reflexed, heavily cutinized, the

apex

embedded,

mm

1-2

basal, hyaline, unspotted, 1-3

(10-) the sporangium. Ligule quickly ephemeral, not seen. Labium not evident. Mega-

50-75% down

sharply acute; fibrous bundles absent; stomates absent; scale leaves absent. Sporangium elliptic to

spores reddish

ovate, diaphanous to light brown, concolorous, 49 wide, basal. Velum rudilong, 3.5-5 mentary, represented by a narrow ridge of tissue

echinate.

Mm

brown en masse, 30-36.7

along the lateral portions of the sporangium, absent along the upper edge of the sporangium. Ligule sagittate,

brown, 7-9.5

mm

high, 3.5-5

mm

wide, delicate; the margins especially ephemeral, the cushion occasionally persistent as a widely

ovate remnant, ca. 2

mm

high x 2.5

mm wide.

Megaspores white to light gray, not lustrous, 880-1,120 (;c = 1,015) m in diameter, reticulate; equatorial and proximal ridges

long, 25-28.4 (x

crospores dark brown, 37-52 (x

30-43 (x

=

37)

Wet boggy

nm

=

47)

wide, smooth. 2n

=

deeply embedded in surroundThe Peruvian material is typically

with only the upper half to upper third of the leaves protruding above the substrate.

terrestrial,

Cuzco: Prov. Paucartambo, camino peatonal de El Mirador a Cerro Macho Cruz, 3500-3600 m, Leon 2246 (F).

4.

speciebus altitudis celsis statute parvulo,

scleroticis praesentibus, et

megasporis subfari-

8:

Amstutz, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. TYPE: Peru, Dept. Lima, Prov. Huarochiri, above Casapalca, in alpine bogs, 4750

44: 121. 1957.

&

Stylites gemmifera Rauh, in Rauh Falk, Sitzungsber. Heidelberg Acad. Wiss. Math. Naturwiss. Kl.

1959: 11. 1959. TYPE: Peru, Dept. Lima, Prov. Huarochiri, above Casapalca, von Appen (holotype, HEID). Isoetes andicola var.

Corm vertically elongate, 20-67

mm

mm

tall,

11-15

-lobed (2-3-lobed in juvenile plants), roots arising acropetally along a single (2in diameter,

1

3) lateral fossa(e) (in juveniles arising synchronously within a continuous circumbasal fossa). Leaves 200 or more, stiffly erect in terrestrial individuals, weakly recurved in submerged individ-

mm

mm

wide at the 30-50(-75) long, 3.5-6 wide at mid-length, dark brown to black proximally, bright to dark green distally; alae colorless and hyaline to dark brown or black, chartaceous proximally, membranaceous distally, 1-

mm

mm wide at the sporangium, 20-37 mm long

(55-85% of the

mm

gemmifera (Rauh) Gomez, Bre-

nesia 18: 4. 1980.

2.8

differt.

Corm

1

Stylites andicola

base, 4-7

Isoetes parvula Hickey, sp. nov.

aliis

Gomez, Brenesia

1980. Figure lOa-c.

uals,

nosis

33.2)

wide, shortly

m, Amstutz 2000 (holotype, MO).

soil,

ing vegetation.

Isoetes andicola (Amstutz)

4.

long, 132.

terrestrial species

Ab

nm

=

TYPE Peru, Dept. Ayacucho, Prov. Ayacucho, Laguna Yaurihuiri, about 205 km from Nazca on the road to Abancay, rocky and stony slopes, dominant in site with seeping water, 4300 m, Brandbyge 321 (holotype, AAU!). High-altitude seeps, 4300 m, Ayacucho. Known only from the type specimen.

/urn

3500-3600 m, Cuzco. Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. Known from Peru only by this single collection. The species is common in moist paramos throughout Ecuador and Colombia where it grows either as a submerged aquatic or, more commonly, as a

squamis

26.4)

(x

obsolete.

straight, distinct, as high or slightly higher than broad, generally obscured by the dense muri. Mi-

3.

=

mm

mm

Labium

mm long,

Velum incomplete, extending

wide.

leaf length), each apex obtuse; su-

in diameter, bilobed; globose, 3-5 dichotomous roots arising synchronously within

bula trigonal, highly cutinized, strongly reflexed in terrestrial plants, weakly reflexed to arcuate in sub-

the circumbasal fossa. Leaves 8-15,

merged plants, the apex attenuate to acute; fibrous bundles absent; stomates absent, scale leaves absent. Sporangium elliptic to obovate, superficial to emergent, chocolate-brown, concolorous, 2.5-5.5 wide, positioned 3.5-9 long, 1.7-3

mm long, mm wide at

mm

stiffly

reflexed,

20-30

3-4

0.5

mid-length; alae hyaline, 0.5-1

wide

at the base,

0.3-

mm wide at the sporangium, 0.5-1 mm long (2550%

of the total leaf length), each apex attenuate; (?), bright green, not highly cu-

subula half-terete

tinized, straight to slightly reflexed, the

apex

at-

tenuate; fibrous bundles not evident; stomates not seen; scales present. Sporangia circular to elliptic,

92

mm

above the

mm

leaf base.

mm

Velum rudimentary,

repre-

sented by a narrow ridge of tissue along the lateral portions of the sporangium, absent along the upper

edge of the sporangium. Ligule triangular, weakly

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


mm high, 2-2.5 mm wide;

the total leaf length), each apex attenuate; subula

and ephemeral, the cushion

trigonal, highly cutinized, straight to slightly re-

cordate, off- white, 3-4.5

the margin delicate persistent, deltate,

Labium

mm high,

2-3

1

.8-2.3

mm wide.

deltate to depressed-ovate, entire, dark

brown, 280-320 urn high, 180-240 Mm wide. Megaspores mottled, gray on brown, or uniformly brown, not lustrous, 460-720 (x = 559) pm in diameter, laevigate to obscurely pustulate, the pustules occasionally merging laterally to form short

flexed, the apex blunt, subacute; fibrous bundles not evident; stomates absent; scales absent. Sporangia ovate to obovate, essentially superficial,

brown, concolorous or occasionally with scattered dark spots, 2.5-4.5 long, 2-3.5 wide. Velum completely absent. Ligule ephemeral, occasionally represented by a dark auriculate fragbasal, light

meandriform rugae; equatorial and proximal ridges straight, distinct, as high or slightly higher than broad. Microspores dark brown, 35-43.8 (x = 39) Mm long, 28.8-37.5 (x = 32) pm wide, scabrate.

2n = 44. Vegetative reproduction by mae.

cortical

4100

to

mm

puna

4900 m, Lima, Pasco

(numerous collections), Junin, Cuzco, Puno. Peru and Bolivia.

The inclusion of Stylites as a generic synonym of Isoetes is well supported by the early development of the sporophyte and the internal anatomy of the plants (Hickey, unpubl.) as well as the confirmation of the chromosome number as 2n = 44. Earlier reports of 2n = 48-52 are incorrect.

mm

mm

wide. Labium light ment, 2.5 long by 2 to dark brown, narrowly oblong, often cryptic, 1 401 80 Mm long, 40-60 fim wide, the apex asymmetric, erose. Megaspores gray, not lustrous, laevigate to minutely tuberculate, dimorphic, showing I

In wet, boggy soil or inundated plains of

vegetation from

gem-

mm

(x

=

Types

spores (sensu Marsden 1976), 750-1,125 920) Mm wide, the proximal and distal ridges

and

II

Microspores gray en = 40.3) urn long, 26.3-32.5 masse, 37.5-42.5 (x = 29.9) Mm wide, laevigate to slightly papillate. (x laevigate, straight, distinct.

TYPE fiafe,

Peru, Dept. Lambayeque, Prov. Ferre-

Dist. Incahuasi, Jalca,

Laguna Tembladera, et al. 12850 (ho-

Cerro Negro, 3300 m, Skillman lotype, MU!; isotypes,

High-altitude

F!,

paramo

HUT!). (aquatic?),

3300 m, Lam-

bayeque. Lima: Prov. Huarochiri, Laguna Caprichosa, 4800 m,

Rauh 186 (M). Lago Aguascocha, near Mina Caprichosa, 4780 m, Hutchison & Tovar 4244 (c, E, F, o, L, MICH, MU, s, uc, us, wis). Pasco: Prov. Pasco, Cerro de Pasco, ca. 4300 m, Asplund 11830 (s). Junin: Prov. Jauja, Pachayo, 3800 m, Ameghino (MU). Prov. Huancayo, Laguna Condoray, 4700 m, Marshall, 6 Sept. 1961 (BM). Prov. Junin, 13-14 km N of Junin, Karrfalt & Hunter 22 (USM). Prov. Tarma, Lago Junin, east side near road, 13 km north of Junin, 4100 m, Hutchison et al. 5890 (F, NY, uc, us). Cuzco: In high Andes above Cuzco, toward Puno, Gomez AS2189 (CR). Prov. Chumbivilcas, Laguna Huarmicocha, 4600 m, Curlier 241 (USM). Puno: Prov. Carabaya, pampa de Lacka Macusani, 4360 m, Vargas 7128 (us). Isoetes dispora Hickey, sp. nov. Figure lOf.

5.

Differt ab aliis speciebus Isoetes, megasporis dimorphis necnon laevibus, sporangiis paene superficiaribus, subulis plus minusve triquetris et labiis ligulatis.

Corm 20

globose to slightly elongate vertically, ca. ca. 30 high, 2-lobed, dichoto-

mm wide,

mm

mous roots arising synchronously from a complete circumbasal fossa. Leaves

ca. 30, stiffly erect, dark to dark green proximally, dark green diswide at the base, tally, to 65 long, 6-8 3.5-6 wide at mid-length; alae dark green,

brown

mm

mm

mm

mm

chartaceous to sub-membranaceous, 2-3 wide at the sporangium, 10-20 long (15-34% of

mm

TRYON &

STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA

OF PERU.

Known

only from the type specimen.

is, despite being known only from the type collection, a very distinctive species. The

Isoetes dispora

combination of dimorphic, laevigate megaspores, nearly superficial sporangia, more or less trigonal subulae, no velum, and a strap-shaped labium difit from all other known collections of The presence of dimorphic megaspores is

ferentiate Isoetes.

normally taken as an indication of hybridity, often involving unbalanced genomes. The materials of Skillman et al., however, have certain anomalies suggesting that alternative possibilities should be entertained. Notable among these is the absence of any other collected taxa from the Lambayeque region. Hybrids are typically found in lower numbers than the sum of their parental taxa and it seems unlikely that three individual Fl hybrids

would be the

sole collections

from a mixed pop-

ulation of quillworts. Furthermore, there is no evidence of vegetative reproduction in these speci-

mens, suggesting that all three have had separate from spore. In addition, there is a previously undescribed regularity to the production of the two spore types in this material. Careful dissection of individual sporangia showed that each sporangium contained 20 spores, of which 1 were large and fully formed and contained cytoplasm, whereas the other 10 were flattened in the equaorigins

VI.

93


tonal plane and contained no cytoplasm. Because of space limitations within the sporangia, the spores

gray en masse, 28-35 (x = 31.7) nm long, 21-28 = 24.9) Mm wide, with acute to truncate echinae. (x

derived from each megaspore mother cell retained their tetrad orientation, and so it was possible to

Vegetative reproduction by cortical budding.

observe directly the end products of all meiotic events ( 1 total) in two separate sporangia. In all cases tetrads consisted of two large globose spores

TYPE Peru, Dept. Cajamarca, Prov. Celendin, desvio a Guagal siguiendo la ruta a Celendin, 3700

and two smaller

Taken

flattened ones.

together,

these data are inconsistent with previous data on Isoetes hybrids, leading us to believe that these plants are either sexual or apogamous. Apogamy in the genus is relatively rare, being confined to a few species in Australia and India.

In virtually

all

known

cases of apogamy in Isoetes,

microspores are either rare or lacking and the megaspores are irregular in shape, often forming Type HI spores or having single contact faces, i.e., diplospores. Such is not the case in Isoetes dispora.

The presence of normal microspores (less than 10% abortion) and the extreme regularity of megaspore

m, Sanchez Vega types, ASU!,

man who first introduced both botany and Isoetes.

excitement of

A delicate and distinctive species, with the genappearance of a rigid Isoetes boliviensis, but stiffer leaves and no velum. The large megaspores suggest polyploidy. Additional collections should be sought to determine the chromosome number of this species and to encompass its vari-

with

Isoetes saracochensis Hickey, sp. nov.

among

in Selaginella and during oogenesis in mammals.

development

angiosperms and

Species

foliis latis,

subulus valde trigonis, apicibus

acutis corneisque, sporangiis basalibus, velis fere pletis et

com-

megasporis laevibus ad ieniter rugulatis a con-

generibus diversa.

Isoetes hewitsonii Hickey, sp. nov.

6.

me to the

eral

7.

meiotic products in a fashion analogous to that seen during megaspore

iso-

This species is dedicated to Dr. Walter Hewitson, a student of the fern genus Osmunda and the

in this species

therefore, reflect differential

2021 (holotype, MU!;

High-altitude aquatic endemic, 3700 m, so far

ation.

may,

et al.

CPUN).

known only from Cajamarca.

production suggest meiotic consistency, albeit irregular. The presence of two types of megaspores resource allocation

F!,

mm

Species nova L. dispora proxima, cujus megasporis laevibus, velo carenti et subulis infirme triquetris habet. Differt megasporis uniformibus et foliis angustatis habens apicibus attenuatisque minus corneis.

Corm globose, 2-lobed, 17-23 in diameter, with dichotomous roots arising from a continuous circumbasal fossa. Leaves 13-14, stiffly erect, 55135

wide

mm

mm

5-7

mm

at mid-length; alae chartaceous, light to

dark

long,

6-10

wide

basally,

mm

Leaves

wide at the sporanbrown, extending 1.2-3 gium, 35-75 long (46-73% of the leaf length), apices acute; subula highly cutinized and strongly trigonal, with 3 distinct, rounded ridges continuing

mm long, 3.5-6 mm wide at mid-

to the apex; leaf apices acute, sharp, corneous; fibrous bundles absent; stomata absent; scale leaves

Corm

mm

globose, slightly elongate laterally, ca. 1 5 wide, 2-lobed, with fleshy dichotomous roots

arising from a continuous circumbasal fossa. light green, 10-20, erect, 50-160

mm wide at the base,

1.5-1.6

length; alae light green to hyaline, chartaceous,

mm

absent.

Sporangium

elliptic to ovate,

long (36-46% of the total leaf length), each apex attenuate; subula weakly triquetrous, highly cutin-

concolorous, wide, basal. Velum virtually complete, extending (%)% or more down from the upper edge of the sporangium. Ligule

ized, straight, the

delicate, transparent, broadly to

0.9-1.5

mm wide at the sporangium,

23-27

mm

apex attenuate, scales absent. Sporangia elliptic, embedded, although only slightly so for the megasporangia, light tan, concolorous, 2.8-4

mm long,

1.5-2

mm wide, basal.

Velum completely absent. Ligule widely ovate, au-

mm

mm

ephemeral, ca. 1.1 high by 0.6 wide, the margins entire. Labium tan to pale green, depressed-ovate, ca. 12 Mm high by 54 (j.m wide. riculate,

Megaspores

white, laevigate,

650-750 (x = 715)

Mm in diameter; proximal ridges straight, distinct, the equatorial ridge distinct or not. Microspores

94

2.5-6

mm

long, 2.5-3.5

mm

narrowly ovate with a weakly cordate base, 1 .9-2.7 high, 1 .72 wide, ephemeral, frequently degraded in mature leaves. Labium light to dark brown, a transverse ridge along the lower border of the fove-

mm

mm

100-150 Mm high, 500-800 Mm wide. Megaspores white to gray, 400-620 (x = 515) Mm

ola, entire,

in diameter, laevigate or with indistinct to distinct, short, low meandriform rugae; equatorial and proximal ridges straight, distinct, with equatorial ridges as broad as high and proximal ridges fre-

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


quently twice as broad as high. Microspores dark = 33.5) t*m long, gray to dark brown, 30-36 (x 22-28 (x = 24.3) ^m wide, with clavate or echinate projections.

TYPE

Peru, Dept. Puno, Laguna Saracocha, Tutin 1424 (holotype, BM; isotype, BM). Submerged or emergent in high-altitude lakes,

14,000

ft,

3900-4400 m, Cuzco, Puno. This species is fairly well described despite the few collections available. It is distinctive but obviously belongs in an alliance close to 7. lechleri. The extensive velum and the distinctive labium are shared characteristics that are quite unusual in the genus for this part of the world. The /. lechleri is

distinctive unto

it-

having a number of unique characters (horizontally elongate corm, turgid leaf condition) that self,

set

it

apart from

7.

Isoetes lechleri Mett., Fil. Lechl. 2: 36. 1859.

TYPE:

Peru, "in laguna cacuminis, Cordler. Agapata," Lechler 1937 (holotype, B!; iso-

pr.

types, G! [2 sheets], UPS!, frag.

Isoetes

soda A.

cum

s!).

Figure lOd-e.

Verb. Bot. Ver. Brandenb. 4: 332. Peru, in laguna cacuminis (mixta pi an tula repente ignota), Lechler 1937 b (hoBr.,

TYPE:

1862.

lotype, B!). Isoetes glacialis Asplund, Ark. Bot.

20A: 34-35. 1926.

TYPE: Bolivia, Dept. La Paz, Prov. Murillo, Jainvags stationem La Cumbre, 4700 m, Asplund 4041 (holotype, UPS!; isotypes, G!, M!, s!). Isoetes laevis Weber, Hedwigia 63: 252. 1922.

TYPE:

Peru, Dept. Ancash, Cordillera regia uber Caraz, auf dem Grunde eines Tumpels, vollig untergetaucht, 4400 m, Weberbauer 3111 (holotype, B!). Isoetes peruviana Weber, Hedwigia 63: 246. 1922.

TYPE:

mm

mm

1.8 wide, the more persistent high, 0.8-2 cushion ovate to widely ovate, ca. 0.8-1 high, 0.4-0.6 wide. Labium not evident. Mega-

mm

mm

spores white, laevigate, typically shiny, showing variable abortion, 280-440 (x = 340) ^m wide, the equatorial ridges indistinct in larger spores, the

proximal ridges sharp, distinct. Microspores gray in mass, 33.8-38.8 (x = 36.2) long, 26.3-30 = 28.1) Mm wide, with acute to truncate pro(x

m

jections.

2n = 44.

saracochensis.

Cuzco: Chectuyoc, near Sicuna, 3950 m, Tutin 1406 (BM). Prov. Cafias, Laguna Langui y Layo, Chavez 2313, 2321 (MO). Puno: Prov. Carabaya, Lake Chungara, 4400 m, de Macedo & Enriquez (GH). Prov. Lampa, Laguna Lagunilla, ca. 4300 m, Tutin 1407 a, 1420 (BM).

8.

mm

complete to nearly complete, extending 75-100% down the sporangium. Ligule ephemeral, ovate to very widely ovate, with an auriculate base, 1.2-

mm

Endemic.

complex (below), however,

mm

20-55 long (46-75% of the total leaf length), each apex attenuate; subula terete, dark green, the apex attenuate to subacute, corneous; fibrous bundles absent; stomates absent; scale leaves absent. Sporangium obovate to elliptic, hyaline, unspotted, 4-19 wide, basal. Velum long, 3.5-4

Peru, Dept. Junin, Prov. Tarma, Beige

von Huacapistana, 3500 m, Weberbauer 2228 (holotype, B!; isotype, B!; frag., UPS!; photos, s and UPS of B).

westl.

Corm

In high-altitude ponds and streams, typically submerged, 33004750 m, Cajamarca, San Martin, Ancash, Junin, Ayacucho, Cuzco, Puno. Peru and Bolivia.

The high-altitude ponds, lagunas, and streams of south-central Bolivia and central Peru are replete with laevigate-megaspored plants that have the same overall form but that differ from one population to another in the extent of pigmentation, the size and rigidity of the leaf, and the amount of lateral growth in the corms. Quite a few of these variants have been formally recognized as discrete species and even more are now published (FuchsEckert,

1

982) as nom. nud. Nearly

be tetraploids, with 2n = 44. The publication = 44 for 7. "ticlioensis" Fuchs (Hickey, 1 984) of 2n ined.,

I.

glacialis,

and

corm shape, velum structure, and ligule form strongly suggest a common origin for these plants. All of these plants undoubtedly have had a com-

mon hybrid origin, and it would appear that rapid speciation via reciprocal gene silencing is occurring. Each population, or perhaps even subsets

tetraploid

arising

synchronously within the circumbasal fossa. Leaves

and erect, 88-160(-240) wide at the base, 2-3 wide at mid-length; alae dark green to dark brown, wide at the sporangium, nearly black, 2-3.5

to 20-40, stiffly turgid

mm

long,

8-19

mm

mm

mm

TRYON & STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU.

herzogii (in part) are reThe distinctive color-

ation,

within a population,

mm

dichotomous roots

7.

ferable to this assemblage.

wide, 2-5

high;

populations as ev-

idenced by irregularly shaped or sized spores. To date, all of these populations have been found to

(globose) laterally elongate, distinctly bilobed [more so in damaged specimens], 1 5-44

mm

all

show some degree of meiotic abnormality

is differentially

silencing the

genome down to the diploid level. As this phenomenon proceeds, genetic isolation slowly builds up and functional spores become rarer and

We

rarer. are left, then, with a mosaic of variable morphologies, established by drift or perhaps selection, which are partially isolated from each

VI.


other and perpetuated by vegetative reproduction (corm budding). An examination of only a few

populations gives a false sense of discreteness, and only after a broad survey can one observe the complete intergradation in forms. All

of these popu-

lations are, therefore, best included within a single

species concept,

Sagdstegui

general form of

it

13098 and 14347, while of the have much longer,

boliviensis,

Isoetes boliviensis

9.

slenderly tapering leaves, with pigmentation along the bases. Provisionally,

247. 1922.

7. lechleri off. Likewise, provisionally assigned to lechleri. This collection has the darkened leaf

& Young 2833

velum coverage

typical of 7. lechleri. It differs in having a large (up to 5 long), strongly auriculate ligule more typical of 7. andina of Ecuador,

mm

Colombia, and Venezuela and in having emarginate ala apices reminiscent of those seen in 7. karstenii (s.l.) of Colombia and Venezuela. The species is best distinguished by its brownish (almost caramel) coloration and the distinctly terete leaves that are turgid to the point of being

Herbarium material

is

best identified by

coloration, the presence of a horizontally elongate corm (in most populations), the laevigate megaspores, the

more or

less

complete velum, and the

widely ovate ligule which has a tendency toward

an auriculate base. Isoetes lechleri

is

a plant of high-altitude (over

3500 m) lakes, streams, and pools. It grows in both shallow and deep water, with an individual plant's form being strongly influenced by water depth. Shallow plants have short, stiffly rigid leaves. Plants of deeper water "etiolate": the leaves are a

more

lax

and considerably

bit

longer. Vegetative re-

production, by corm budding, is very common and may be a primary means of reproduction. The plants often form dense mats in quiet water; in

streams and shallows the plantlets are often broken off and transported by animals or wave/current

one road, cutting between two lakes, was completely covered by washed-out plants and corms. action. In Bolivia

Cajamarca: Pozo Kuan, 3790 m, Sagdstegui et al. 13098 & 14011 (F, HUT, MU). Prov. Contumaza, Pozo Kuan, 3900 m, Sagdstegui et al. 14347 (F, HUT, MU). San Martin: Prov. Mariscal Caceres, forest on the edge of Laguna de Chochos, corner of Rio Abiseo National Park, 3300 m, Young & Leon 4856 (MU). Ancash: Prov. Huari, Huascaran National Park, 4440-4490 m, D. Smith et al. 12355 (HUT). Prov. Yungay, Laguna de Llanganuco, 4100-4200 m, Enderlin (USM). Lima: Prov. Cajatambo, Raura, perimetro de Ada, 4800-4900 m,

NW

96

La Paz, via

(holotype, G!; isotypes, BM!, G!).

Corm 1

brittle.

Bolivia, circa

is

bases and alae, laevigate megaspores, and extensive

Weber, Nova Hedwigia 63:

TYPE:

ad Coroico, Lancha, 5000 m, Mandon 1532

has been identified as

Leon 7.

7.

lechleri.

more

narrower,

some

/.

et al.

Chanco & Montoya 188 (MU). Pasco (as Junin): Huaron, 4200 m, Asplund 11828 (c, G [2 sheets], NY, s, UPS, us.). Junin: Prov. Yauli, Ticlio, small lake, 4750 m, Asplund 11669 (s). Ayacucho: Prov. Huanta, Mt. Razuhuillca, 4000-4100 m, Weberbauer 7500 (F, NY, us). Cuzco: Prov. Canas, Laguna de Langui y Layo, 3900 m, Chavez 2323 (GH). Prov. Paucartambo, Leon & Young 2833 (F, USM). Puno: Cordillera Real, Laguna Rinconada, 4680 m, Thomasson (s). lake,

6

mm

globose to slightly elongate laterally, 5in diameter, 2-lobed;

dichotomous roots

arising synchronously within the circumbasal fos-

Leaves to 40, delicate, flexuous, erect to laxly wide spreading, 70-1 20(-240) long, 6-1 6 at the base, 1-1.5 wide at mid-length; alae sa.

mm

mm

mm

hyaline to light brown, 1-2

mm wide at the spo-

mm

rangium, 20-30 long (1 2-33% of the total leaf length), each apex attenuate (rarely truncate); subula terete, bright green, the apex attenuate; fibrous bundles absent; stomates absent; scale leaves absent. Sporangium obovate to elliptic, hyaline, wide, basal. unspotted, 5-8 long, 3-5

mm

mm

Velum incomplete to complete, extending 6-100% down the sporangium. Ligule ephemeral, widely

mm

ovate, with an auriculate base, ca. 2 high, 1.7 the more cushion wide, persistent narrowly depressed-ovate, often bilobed, ca. 0.2 high, 0.6 wide. Labium not evident. Megaspores

mm

mm

mm

white to light gray, laevigate to minutely tuber= 433) /nm wide, the culate, shiny, 380-460 (x

and proximal ridges sharp, distinct. Mi= 33) um long, crospores gray in mass, 26.3-40 (x 20-30 (x = 25.3) /mi wide, with acute to truncate equatorial

projections.

2n =

22.

and ver4100-5000 m, Cajamarca, San Martin,

In shallow water, edges of lakes, ponds, nal pools,

Ancash, Lima, Pasco, Junin, Ayacucho, Cuzco, Puno. Peru and Bolivia.

A

very distinctive plant due to

its

small and

relatively delicate appearance; several collectors

have even suggested that it is an annual. This is the only Peruvian species with lax, flexuous leaves. It has a partial to complete velum normally covering about 75% of the sporangium, corms that are slightly elongate horizontally, and megaspores that are laevigate to minutely tuberculate. It is

found

and

in shallow

lakes.

(= ephemeral?) portions of ponds

The microspores

are quite distinctive

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


having acute or club-shaped pro-

in appearance,

jections which themselves are spiny. Microspores

of some

/.

vigate. Isoetes herzogii is a high-altitude, nearly

lechleri collections are similar.

The only counts

2n = 22, are

for this species,

nearly complete velum, and has megaspores that vary from tuberculate to rugulate to nearly lae-

emergent plant of streams and shallow pools.

from Bolivian material. La Libertad: Prov. Huamachuco, east of Quiruvilca, 4100 m, Hutchison et al. 6143 (F, GH, MO, NY, uc, us). Ancash: Prov. Yungay, Huascaran National Park, 41004200 m, D. Smith et al. 10432 (F, MO, MU). Huascaran National Park, 4500 m, D. Smith et al. 9210 (MO, MU). Lima: Prov. Huarochiri, Ticlio Pass, between Lima and Oroya, 4840 m, Hutchison et al. 6081 (c, E, F, G, GH, HEID, L, LIL, M, MICH, MO, NY, s, uc, wis). Junin: 5 km of la Oroya-Huanabove Hacienda Cochas, 34 km cayo Route 3 on road to Pachacayo, 4425 m, Keeley & Keeley 11087, 11088 (MU, occ).

Addendum 1.

W

The following species have come to the attention of the authors as growing in Peru, after their generic treatment

Comments Isoetes triquetra A. Braun, Verh. Bot. Vereins Prov.

Brandenburg 3

(4):

Paris 6: 326. 1827.

332-333. 1862. TYPE:

Lechler 3337 (holotype,

B!;

na,"

ofe). triquetra (A. Braun) Kuntze, Rev. gen. pi.

5.

Gomez,

Bre-

1980.

The type material for this species is very fragmentary. There are no megaspores and the microspores are of a very common form (echinate). The most distinctive features of the specimen are the trigonal subula, the

moderate labium, and the

large

auriculate ligule. In these regards, the type of L. triquetra is nearly identical to /. andina of Ecuador, Colombia,

other

and Venezuela but

known Peruvian

Soc. Linn.

"Crescit in Guia-

Herb. Desvaux.

This species has an alate rachis and petiole and

sometimes subdimorphic. Illustrations are Hooker & Greville, Icones Filicum, t. 204. 1831 (as T. bancroftii) and Vareschi, Flora de Vene-

collections.

from all have argued

I

35:

Weber, Hedwigia 63: 250. 1922. TYPE: Bolivia, Tunari, 4300 m, Herzog2083

Isoetes herzogii

(holotype, M; isotypes,

L!,

zuela, Vol.

1

(Helechos),

t.

47. 1969.

Loreto: Prov. Maynas, Puerto Almendras, van der Werff

9845 (MO), 9795 (MO),

et al.

det.

K. U. Kramer.

Trichomanes crispumL., Sp.pl. 1097. 1753. TYPE: "Martinica," Plumier, Traite foug. Amer., t. 86. 1705.

differs

243-246. 1986) for the conspecificity of these taxa. The major argument against the common identity is distribution (some 1 ,400 km separate the type locality of I. triquetra from the nearest "good" locality of /. andina).

(Taxon

Mem.

is

Isoetes lechleri var. triquetra (A. Braun)

nesia 18:

P,

TYPE:

Trichomanes coriaceumKunze, Linnaea9: 105. 1834. TYPE: "Prope Collares, Brasiliae," Poeppig in 1832 (Diar. 2981), not located.

photos, s and UPS

2:828. 1891-1893.

had been published.

Trichomanes arbuscula Desv.,

Peru, Sachapata (am ostlichen Abhang der Cordillera von Peru), in pascuis humidis,

Calamaria

Species to Be Added to the Pteridophyte Flora, Parts I-V

M!, us!; frag., UPS!).

Although not recorded from Peru, this species geographically proximate in Bolivia and should be expected in Peru. The species has stiffly erect,

This is a critical and polymorphic species (see Windisch, Bradea 6: 99. 1992 for discussion). Huanuco: Prov. Pachitea, region of Pucallpa, Wall11-261088 (z), det. K. U. Kramer.

nofer

Pterozonium paraphysatum (A. C. Sm.) Lell., New York Bot. Card. 17: 13. 1967.

Mem.

Syngramma paraphysata A. C. Sm., Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 58: 301. 1931. TYPE: Venezuela, Amazonas, Cerro Duida, Tate

441 (NY;

frag., us).

is

narrow, subulate leaves with attenuate apices. It lacks the pigmentation typical of /. lechleri, has a

TRYON & STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU.

This species is distinguished by the scales (vs. trichomes) on the stem, the keeled lamina, and relatively distant veins.

VI.

97


Comprehensive Index

to

Names

Accepted names are in roman type, synonyms are in italics, and new names are in boldface. A page is provided for the principal place, or the only place, where the name occurs. Prefixes (1-6) indicate the number of the volume or part, followed by a hyphen and then the page number within that part. (Thus, the prefix "6" indicates entries for the present series number of Fieldiana, whereas lower

number

numbers indicate entries for previously published parts, their series numbers as follows: 1 = New Series No. 20; 2 = No. 22; 3 = No. 29; 4 = No. 27; 5 = No. 32.) Entries for Parts I through V pertain only to names of species and genera. Listings for categories above and below these taxa may be found in the indices to those particular parts.

Acrospermum

hackelianum 4-6 1

maxonii 5-112 Acrostichum 2-81 acuminatum 4-154 adenolepis 4- 1 66

hartwegii 4-135 hayesii 4-136

haynaldii 4-136 heterophyllum 5-63

reptans 5-153

rufum 2-47 scariosum 2-32 schomburgkii 4- 1 44

albescens 4-121 alcicorne 5-181 alienum 4- 1 00

hickenii 4-136

serratifolium 4-101

horridulum 4-137 huacsaro 4-137

serratum 4-101 serrulatum 5-83

apodum 4-157

/zysm';t4-138

aureonitens 2-48 aureum 2-83

ilvense 4-94

setigerum 4- 1 60 sinuatum 2-34

insigne 4-6 1

sorbifolium 4-105

auricomum 4-125

japurense 4-107 juglandifolium 4-6 1 laminarioides 4-139 lanuginosum 2-32 latifolium 4-140 lechlerianum 4-141

sphenophyllum 4-169 squamipes 4-161

bakeri 4-125

barbatum 4-125 bonariense 2-28 calaguala 4-137 calomelanos 2-18

calophyllum 4-166 castaneum 4- 1 27 caudatum 4-64 cervinum 4-85 chrysoconium 2-20 chrysolepis 4-6 1 chrysophyllum 2-16 ciliatum 4-128 citrifolium 2-92 cladotrichum 4-125 curvans 4- 1 66

leprosum 4- 1 42 leptophyllum 4- 1 46

cuspidatum 4- 1 29 danaeifolium 2-83 decoration 4-129 denticulatum 4-131

nicotianifolium 4-102 nigrescens 4-148

dichotomum 1-33 digit at

um

1-33

discolor 4- 1

30

dissimile 4- 1 66

diversifolium 4- 1 30 ebeneum 2- 1 8

elegans 1-34

elongatum 4- 1 62 engelii 4-131

erinaceum 4-132 erythrolepis 4- 1 32 eximium 4- \ 33 fendleri 3-68

flabellatum 4-169

flaccidum 4-133 fractiseriale 4-60

furfuraceum 4- 1 64 glabellum 4- 1 34 graminioides 5-72 guamanianum 4-135

104

lindenii

4-142

/inrf/gii'4-103

lingua 4-142

litanum 4-143 luridum 4- 1 44 mathewsii 4-144 minutum 4-146 moorei 4-167 muscosum 4-147

nivosum 4-148

nodosum 1-15 oligarchicum 4-102 orbignyanum 4-151 osmundaceum 4-62 pachyphyllum 4-151 paleaceum 4-152 pandurifolium 4-105 papillosum 4-152 patinii 4-153 peltatum 4- 1 69 petiolosum 4-154 phlebodes 4-107 piloselloides 4- 1 54 plumbicaule 4-60 plumosum 4-155 poeppigianum 4-156 polybotryoides 4-6 1 polypodioides 5-137 preslianum 4-128 propinquum 4-156 quitense 4-157

stenopyllum 4-161 suberectum 4-61 tambillense 4- 1 62 tartareum 2-19 tectum 4-162 tenuiculum 4-163 tereticaulon 2-40 thalictroides 2-50 thelypteris 3-6 trifoliatum 2-21 unitum 4-146 villosum 4-156 Actinostachys 1-33 digit ata 1-33 pennula 1-36 Adiantopsis 2-34 chlorophylla 2-36 paupercula 2-34 radiata 2-36 ternata 2-36 Adiantum 2-52 alarconianum 2-67 amabile 2-56 anceps 2-68 capillus-veneris 2-58

cayennense 2-64 ceciliae 2-63 chilense 2-57 concinnum 2-58 crenatum 2-57 cuneatum 2-56 decorum 2-56 deflectens 2-62 delicatulum 2-62 digitatum 2-61 dolabriforme 2-62 filiforme 2-62 flagellum 2-62 fructuosum 2-64

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


Hoffmannia

6- 1

aphylla 6- 1

1

1

Holodictyum 5-2 Homoeotes 1-76 heterophylla 1-94

Huperzia 6-19 acerosa 6-46 acifolia 6-28 affinis 6-30 andina 6-35 aqualupiana 6-48 arcuata 6-25

6-43 attenuata 6-37 bifida 6-28 blepharodes 6-30 binervia 6-26 brevifolia 6-39 brongniartii 6-27 buesii 6-42 campiana 6-47 capellae 6-32 caracasica 6-40 aristei

colanensis 6-3 crassa 6-33

1

cuneifolia 6-50 curvifolia 6-46

darwiniana 6-33 dichaeoides 6-48 dichotoma 6-26 durissima 6-51 ecuadorica 6-29 engleri 6-39 ericifolia 6-48 e versa 6-29 filiformis 6-46 funiformis 6-42 hartwegiana 6-40 heteroclita 6-48 hippuridea 6-24 hohenackeri 6-40 hypogaea 6-36 kuesteri 6-30 jenmanii 6-44 lechleri 6-25 lindaviana 6-44 linifolia 6-43 var. jenmanii 6-44 var. tenuifolia 6-44 loxensis 6-26 lucidula 6-19 macbridei 6-32 mandiocana 6-45 mexiae 6-28 mollicoma 6-45 molongensis 6-47 montana 6-25 myrsinites 6-49 nesselii 6-34 nuda 6-25 papillata 6-3

1

parvifolium 6-28 passerinoides 6-4 1 var. nitens 6-4 1 pearcei 6-30 phylicifolia 6-49

mexiae 1-59 microcarpum 1-68 mirincum 1-58

pilgeriana 6-34

polycarpos 6-37 polyclada 6-5 1

polylepidetorum 6-3 1 pruinosa 6-5 1 quadrifariata 6-49 reflexa 6-27 var. bifida 6-28 var. minor 6-28 var. reflexa 6-28 rosenstockiana 6-42 sagasteguiana 6-37 sanctae-barbarae 6-35 sarmentosa 6-45 saururus 6-35 selago 6-19 sellifolia 6-38 socratis 6-42 sotae 6-43 subulata 6-50 taxifolia 6-41 tenuis 6-46 tetragona 6-38 unguiculata 6-29 weberbaueri 6-30 weddellii 6-26 wilsonii 6-44

Hydroglossum 1-33 oligostachyum 1-33

Hymenodium kunzeanum 4-151 Hymenophyllum 1-50 adiantoides 1-66 amabile 1-70 andinum 1-62 apiculatum 1-59 axillare 1-62

molle 1-65 nuil tialat urn 1-73 multiflorum 1-63 myriocarpum 1-62 nigrescens 1-63 nigricans 1-63 pedicellatum 1-57 peltatum 1-57

peruvianum 1-75 platylobum 1-68 plumieri 1-72 plumosum 1-72 poeppigianum 1-76 polyanthos 1-59 polycarpum 1-64 procerum 1-65

pulchellum Hooker 1-70 pulchellum Mett. 1-65

pyramidatum 1-74 reniforme 1-64 rimbachii 1-64 ruizianum 1-69 rupestre 1-82 simplex 1-69 speciosum 1-70 spectabile 1-70 sprucei 1-76 superbum 1-72 tarapotense 1-75 tenerrimum 1-66 tomentosum 1-73 tortuosum 1-57 trapezoidale 1-69 trianae 1-61

beyrichianum 1-68 calodictyon 1-56 ciliatum 1-67 contortum 1-64

trichomanoides 1-61 trichophyllum 1-65 trifidum 1-76

crispatulum 1-68 crispum 1-67 cristatum 1-55 dendritis 1-59 dependens 1-72 dicranotrichum 1-50 ectocarpon 1-57 elegans 1-66 elegantulum 1-70 endiviifolium 1-63 fendlerianum 1-64

tunbridgense 1-50 undulatum 1-63 valvatum 1-68 verecundum 1-75

Hymenostachys diversifrons 1-91

Hypoderris stuebelii 4-103 Hypolepis 2-106

bogotensis 2-1 10 flexuosa 2-110 hostilis

2-110

nigrescens 2-109 obtusata 2-110

ferax 1-61 fragile 1-69

fucoides 1-55

parallelogramma 2-110

fusagasugense 1-73 fusugasugense 1-73 hirsutum 1-66

pteroides 2-111 stuebelii

2-109

tenuifolia 2- 106

interruptwn 1-72

karstenianum 1-71 lamella turn 1-58

Isoetaceae 6-88

latipes 1-59 lindenii 1-71

Isoetes 6-89

andicola 6-92 var.

lineare 1-66

TRYON & STOLZE: PTERIDOPHYTA OF PERU.

gemmifera 6-92

andina 6-97 boliviensis 6-96

lobatoalatum 1-74 mathewsii 1-60

VI.

113


incana 5-125

dispora 6-93

6-95 herzogii 6-97 hewitsonii 6-94 karstenii 6-96 lacustris 6-89 laevis 6-95 lechleri 6-95

glacialis

var. triquetra 6-97 novo-granadensis 6-91

pacifica 6-9

loxensis 5-65

Lepicystis 5-125

dichotoma 6-9 1

1

Lepidotus auct. 6-58 Lepidotus Mirbel 6-52 alopecuroides 6-6 1 cernua 6-63 clavata 6-54 contexta 6-62 magellanica 6-56 Lepisorus 5-140 Leptochilus alienus 4-100

meridensis 5-64 M<&Z 5-56 obtusifolia 5-67 ornifolia 5-62 pteropus 5-63 schomburgkii 5-66 serrulosa 5-62 squamulosa 5-65 stenophylla 5-65 stipitellata 5-65 volubilis 5-70

panamensis 6-9 1

bradeorum 4-103

Lomaridium

parvula 6-92

crenatus 4-101

peruviana 6-95 saracochensis 6-94 savanarum 6-9 1 soda 6-95 "ticlioensis" 6-95 triquetra 6-97

guianensis 4-109

semicordatum 1-101 Lomariopsis 4-105 erythrodes 4-107 fendleri4-106 japurensis 4-106 latipinna 4-107 nigropaleata 4-108 sorbifolia 4-105

Jamesonia 2-8 2-12 blepharum 2-14 boliviensis 2-12 cinnamomea 2-14 glutinosa 2-13 goudotii 2-12 imbricata 2- 1 3 paleacea 4-54 alstonii

scalaris 2- 1 2

2-1

1

Lacostea tanaica 1-89 Lastrea cheilanthoides 3-34 nitens 3-35 poeppigiana 3-57 poiteana 3-65 pubescens 4-3 1 recedens 4-3 1 ntt/w 3-26 scabriuscula 3-44 Lastreopsis 4-3 1

4-102 4-103

nicotianifolius

4-102

oligarchicus 4- 1 03

pandurifolium 4-105 serratifolius 4-101 serratus 4-101 stuebelii 4-103 Leptocionium 1-50 dicranotrichum 1-50 fucoides 1-56 pedicellatum 1-57 Leptopteris 1-20 Lindsaea 2-115 arcuata 2-117 divaricata 2-118

hemiglossa 2-122 lancea 2-121 latifrons 2-122 portoricensis 2-120 phassa 6-98 schomburgkii 2-122 spruceana 2-118 sprucei 2-118

Lecanium 1-88

Lellingeria 5-72

tenuifolia

2-106

Lophidium 1-33 elegans 1-34 flabellum 1-34 latifolium 1-33

poeppigianum 1-36 Lophosoria 1-107 pruinata 1-109 quadripinnata 1-107

Loxoma

1-98

Loxoscaphe 5-4 concinna 5-4 thecifera 5-48

Loxsomopsis 1-99

1-98

tarapotensis 2-118

costaricensis 1-99

trapeziformis 2-115

lehmannii 1-99

ulei2-122

notabilis 1-99

Litobrochia horizontalis 2-77

Lomagramma 4-109 guianensis 4-109

Lomaria 5-56

arborescens 5-62 aurata 5-67 caudata 5-66 chilensis 5-62 cordata 5-62 cuspidata 5-64 divergens 5-63

major 5-96

ensiformis 5-64 euphlebia 1-101

114

lindeniana 2-113

;?tea 2-80

Loxsoma

apiculata 5-94

myosuroides 5-82 phlegmaria 5-97 pseudocapillaris 5-94 subsessilis 5-95 tunguraguae 5-95

hirsuta 2-113

stricta2-121

angustifolia 5-64

recedens 4-3 1 tenera 4-3 1

Lonchitis 2-113

taeniata 2-118

acwta 5-64 andina 5-61

amplissima 4-33 effusa 4-33 exculta 4-35 killipii 4-33

membranaceum

lindigi

guianensis 2-120

peruviana 2- 1 1 pulchra 2-11 rotundifolia 2-10

scammanae

killipii

fragile 5-64

fraxinea 5-59 heterophylla 5-63 linariaefolia 5-68

pearcei 1-99

Lycopodiaceae 6-16 Lycopodiella 6-58 sect.

Campylostachys 6-60

Caroliniana 6-58 Lycopodiella 6-60 alopecuroides 6-6 1 camporum 6-63 caroliniana var. meridionalis 6-6 1 cernua 6-63 contexta 6-62 descendens 6-64 glaucescens 6-64 inundata 6-58 matthewsii 6-6 1 pendulina 6-65 riofrioi 6-65 Lycopodium 6-52 sect. Caroliniana 6-60 sect. Complanata 6-52 sect.

sect.

FIELDIANA:

BOTANY


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