A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia

A new Bromheadia species was rescued and collected from a fallen tree in one of the active logging sites by an avid nature conservationist and activist Mr. Dome with the UPM Orchid Research team. This collaboration was initiated as a conservation effort that is aimed to rescue as much orchids from t...

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Main Authors: Besi, Edward Entalai, Nikong, Dome, Mustafa, Muskhazli, Go, Rusea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pakistan Botanical Society 2020
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/87617/1/ABSTRACT.pdf
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author Besi, Edward Entalai
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
author_facet Besi, Edward Entalai
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
author_sort Besi, Edward Entalai
collection UPM
description A new Bromheadia species was rescued and collected from a fallen tree in one of the active logging sites by an avid nature conservationist and activist Mr. Dome with the UPM Orchid Research team. This collaboration was initiated as a conservation effort that is aimed to rescue as much orchids from the depleted forests to be nurtured exsitu in a managed conservatory. The genus Bromheadia was established by Lindley in 1841 based upon Grammatophyllum finlaysonianum in 1833 (Comber, 2001). The genus was named after Sir Edward French Bromhead, whose studies of the natural affinities of plants are well known to systematic Botanists (Kruizinga et al., 1997). The genus Bromheadia was later defined into sections Bromheadia and Aporodes by Schlechter (1914: 367) based on their vegetative dissimilarity. They are easily comparable by the shape of the leaves; Sect. Bromheadia has leaves dorsiventrally flattened, tip bilobed, blade more or less narrowed at the base; and Sect. Aporodes has leaves laterally flattened, tip acute, blade not narrowed at the base. The two groups are placed together in one genus of Bromheadia, in spite of the differences in habit, because of the presence of unique two lateral rostellar flaps, which meet over the viscidium covering the upper margin of the stigma. The new species described in this paper is belongs to Sect. Aporodes. In Bromheadia sect. Aporodes, the dimensions of the leaf, the leaf index, and the relative length of the upper stem internode compared with the lower part of the stem, offer the diagnostic characters (Kruizinga et al., 1997). The new species differs distinctively in plant and flower sizes if compared to other species of the same section. Its small and tufted habit had provided initial possible new entity to justify it as a new species to science. There are 31 species of Bromheadia listed in World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (WCSP) with 20 species are belonging to Sect. Aporodes (WCSP, 2018, June), excluding one species insufficiently known due to all known specimens were destroyed during the second world war, but it was stated to be related to B. aporoides and B. falcifolia (in Kruizinga et al., 1997) and 12 species are found in Peninsular Malaysia with seven species from Sect. Aporodes (Ong et al., 2017).
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spelling upm.eprints-876172022-07-06T08:22:51Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/87617/ A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia Besi, Edward Entalai Nikong, Dome Mustafa, Muskhazli Go, Rusea A new Bromheadia species was rescued and collected from a fallen tree in one of the active logging sites by an avid nature conservationist and activist Mr. Dome with the UPM Orchid Research team. This collaboration was initiated as a conservation effort that is aimed to rescue as much orchids from the depleted forests to be nurtured exsitu in a managed conservatory. The genus Bromheadia was established by Lindley in 1841 based upon Grammatophyllum finlaysonianum in 1833 (Comber, 2001). The genus was named after Sir Edward French Bromhead, whose studies of the natural affinities of plants are well known to systematic Botanists (Kruizinga et al., 1997). The genus Bromheadia was later defined into sections Bromheadia and Aporodes by Schlechter (1914: 367) based on their vegetative dissimilarity. They are easily comparable by the shape of the leaves; Sect. Bromheadia has leaves dorsiventrally flattened, tip bilobed, blade more or less narrowed at the base; and Sect. Aporodes has leaves laterally flattened, tip acute, blade not narrowed at the base. The two groups are placed together in one genus of Bromheadia, in spite of the differences in habit, because of the presence of unique two lateral rostellar flaps, which meet over the viscidium covering the upper margin of the stigma. The new species described in this paper is belongs to Sect. Aporodes. In Bromheadia sect. Aporodes, the dimensions of the leaf, the leaf index, and the relative length of the upper stem internode compared with the lower part of the stem, offer the diagnostic characters (Kruizinga et al., 1997). The new species differs distinctively in plant and flower sizes if compared to other species of the same section. Its small and tufted habit had provided initial possible new entity to justify it as a new species to science. There are 31 species of Bromheadia listed in World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (WCSP) with 20 species are belonging to Sect. Aporodes (WCSP, 2018, June), excluding one species insufficiently known due to all known specimens were destroyed during the second world war, but it was stated to be related to B. aporoides and B. falcifolia (in Kruizinga et al., 1997) and 12 species are found in Peninsular Malaysia with seven species from Sect. Aporodes (Ong et al., 2017). Pakistan Botanical Society 2020 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/87617/1/ABSTRACT.pdf Besi, Edward Entalai and Nikong, Dome and Mustafa, Muskhazli and Go, Rusea (2020) A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia. Pakistan Journal of Botany, 52 (3). 1019 - 1023. ISSN 2070-3368 https://www.pakbs.org/pjbot/ 10.30848/PJB2020-3(21)
spellingShingle Besi, Edward Entalai
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title_full A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title_short A new species of Bromheadia sect. aporodes (Orchidaceae) from Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
title_sort new species of bromheadia sect aporodes orchidaceae from terengganu peninsular malaysia
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/87617/1/ABSTRACT.pdf
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