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Altingia yunnanensis

Altingia yunnanensis
Altingia yunnanensis in Kunming Botanical Garden
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Altingiaceae
Genus: Liquidambar
Species:
L. yunnanensis
Binomial name
Liquidambar yunnanensis

Altingia yunnanensis is an evergreen tree species in the small family Altingiaceae within the order Saxifragales. It is native to Southwest China (Yunnan) and Vietnam.

Description

Vegetative characteristics

The evergreen tree reaches a height of (3–)15–30 m. The young branches are sparsely pubescent and later become glabrous; older branches are gray-brown to gray, striped, and covered with lenticels. The bud scales are narrow-ovate. The phyllotaxis of the leaves is spiral, and they have a thick, (1–)1.5–2 cm long, glabrous petiole. The stipules are linear to filiform and 2–5 mm long. They are caducous, leaving small scars. The simple, undivided, pinnate leaf blade is elongated-ovate or elongated-elliptical, 6–15 cm long and 3–7 cm wide. It usually has a wedge-shaped, sometimes almost rounded base, and a pointed to acuminate apex. The blade is leathery, pale-colored on the underside, and glabrous. It has 6–9 pairs of both adaxial and abaxial lateral veins. The leaf margin is serrate to dentate almost to the base.

Reproductive characteristics

The sexual distribution of the flowers is monoecious. The flowers lack a perianth.

Male inflorescences are multi-flowered, ellipsoidal, approximately 1 cm long head. They are pedicellate and arranged in clusters at the ends of the branches or just below them. The male flowers consist only of separate stamens with sessile, basifixed anthers. The two truncate thecae each consist of two pollen sacs and open longitudinally by a slit.

The head-like female inflorescences are usually arranged in racemes. They have a 3–4(–6) cm long, pubescent peduncle, surrounded at the base by four ovate, about 15 mm long bracts, and consist of 16–24 flowers. These contain only the half-inferior ovary, which consists of two fused, free only at the tip carpels, an enclosing disk, and several scale-like staminodia. The two filiform, 3–4 mm long styles are brown and pubescent. Each of the two locules contains numerous ovules on the central placentation.

The 3–6.5 cm long pedicellate fruits are 1.5–3 cm wide and nearly spherical with a truncate base. The individual fruits are woody, dehiscent, and slightly brownish-pubescent capsules, which open loculicidally with two valves. The upper part of the style and the staminodia are no longer present in the fruiting state. The seeds are angular.

Altingia yunnanensis flowers from March to May and fruits from May to July.

Chromosomes

Altingia yunnanensis has a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 32.[1]

Distribution and habitat

Altingia yunnanensis is presented as an endemic species in Southeast Yunnan Province, China, in the Flora of China.[2] However, other sources also report occurrences in Vietnam, both near the Chinese border in the provinces of Lào Cai[3] and Cao Bằng, as well as in the south of the country near Nha Trang.[4]

The tree species grows in mountain forests.

Taxonomy and systematics

The species was first described in 1913 by Alfred Rehder and Ernest Henry Wilson based on two collections made by Irish plant collector Augustine Henry.[5] As the publication was actually dedicated to the collections of E.H. Wilson, and in this case the underlying collections were from another collector, the description appeared only as a footnote to Liquidambar formosana var. monticola

Etymology

The specific epithet yunnanensis refers to the type locality of the species in Yunnan Province, China. The genus Altingia is named in honor of Willem Arnold Alting (1724–1800), the Governor-General of Dutch East Indies during the time when the first describer Francisco Noroña visited Java.[6]

References

  • M.-L. Tardieu-Blot: Hamamelidaceae. In: Flore du Cambodge, du Laos et du Vietnam. Fasc. 4. Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris 1965, pp. 75–116.
  • Zhang Zhiyun, Zhang Hongda, P. K. Endress: Hamamelidaceae. In: Flora of China. Vol. 9, Science Press, Beijing, Missouri Botanical Garden Press, St. Louis 2003, ISBN 1-930723-14-8, pp. 18–42. (Altingia yunnanensis – online)

Notes

  1. ^ Alfred Rehder; Ernest Henry Wilson. Charles Sprague Sargent (ed.). "Altingia yunnanensis". Tropicos.org: Index to Plant Chromosome Numbers (IPCN). Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. Retrieved 2024-09-25.
  2. ^ Zhang Zhiyun, Zhang Hongda, P. K. Endress: Hamamelidaceae. In: Flora of China. Vol. 9, Science Press, Beijing, Missouri Botanical Garden Press, St. Louis 2003, p. 21. (online)
  3. ^ S. M. Ickert-Bond, J. Wen: Phylogeny and biogeography of Altingiaceae: Evidence from combined analysis of five non-coding chloroplast regions. In: Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 39, 2006, pp. 512–528. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.12.003
  4. ^ M.-L. Tardieu-Blot: Hamamelidaceae. In: Flore du Cambodge, du Laos et du Vietnam. Fasc. 4. Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris 1965, p. 94.
  5. ^ A. Rehder, E. H. Wilson: Hamamelidaceae. In: C. S. Sargent (ed.): Plantae Wilsonianae. An enumeration of the woody plants collected in western China for the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University during the years 1907, 1908, and 1910 by E.H. Wilson. (= Publications of the Arnold Arboretum. 4). Vol. 1, 1913, pp. 421–432. (online)
  6. ^ F. G. Hayne: Getreue Darstellung und Beschreibung der in der Arzneykunde gebräuchlichen Gewächse. Vol. 11, Berlin 1830. (Preview at Google Books)

Further reading