Showing posts with label Bamboo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bamboo. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 December 2018

Merostachys mexicana: A new species of Bamboo from Mexico.

Bamboos, Bambusoideae, are evergreen woody plants within the Grass Family, Poaceae. They are large for Grasses. with most species being shrubby, and some rainforest species forming tree-sized plants reaching over 30 m in height. This is particularly remarkable, as each Bamboo stem will reach this size in a single growing season (usually less than four months), with new shoots being produced from an underground rhizome (root-like stem) each growing season, and persisting for several years. In order to do this Bamboos have become the fastest growing plants on Earth, with speeds of up to a milimetre every 90 seconds recorded (which comes out at 4 cm per hour) over a meter in a day. Bamboos flower unfrequently, with many species able to go through many years of vegetative growth, before suddenly going through a flowering episode, co-ordinated over a wide area, to enable sexual reproduction; the most extreme example of this being a Chinese species, Phyllostachys bambusoides, which flowers only once every 130 years.

The genus Merostachys comprises 52 species of woody, rhizomatous Bamboos from Central and South America. The genus reaches its maximum diversity in the Atlantic rainforests of Brazil, where 41 of the known species are found, with nine described species from the rest of South America, and two from Central America, found in the montane cloud forests and rainforests of Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.

In a paper published in the journal Phytotaxa on 13 March 2018, Eduado Ruiz-Sanchez of the Departamento de Botánica y Zoología at the Universidad de Guadalajara, Lynn Clark of the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology at Iowa State University, Teresa Mejía-Saulés of the Red de Biología Evolutiva at the Instituto de Ecología, and Francisco Lorea-Hernández of the Red de Biodiversidad y Sistemática at the Instituto de Ecología, describe a new species of Merostachys from southern Mexico.

The new species is named Merostachys mexicana, in reference to the country where it was discovered. It is a rhizomatous Bamboo, with visible stems growing at intervals from the underground rhizome. These erect stems reach 6-10 m in height, with a basal diameter of 1-2 cm. They grow erect originally, then adopting a climbing habit. Nodes are 30-45 cm apart, and produce leaves 25-35 cm in length or 10-25 flowering branches 20-56 cm long.

Merostachys mexicana. (A) Culm segment showing a culm leaf with its reflexed blade. (B) Internode showing two nodes and bud. (C) Detail of the apsidate (fan-shaped) early bud development. (D) Culm fragment showing the node and hollow culm with thin walls. (E) Culm fragment showing flowering branches. (F) Foliage leaf complement. (G) Inflorescence showing paired spikelets. (H) Spikelet lateral view showing the lower and upper glumes and lemma. Daniel Barba in Ruiz-Sanchez et al. (2018).

Merostachys mexicana was found growing at two locations, one in Tabasco State, and one in Chiapas, within the El Triunfo National Reserve, in montane cloud forests at altitudes of 1000 and 2080 m above sealevel, respectively. The montane cloud forests of Mexico are an important biodiversity hotspot, but are also a threatened environment, now covering less than half of their original extent. Due to the very small known population of the species, and its being found in a threatened environment, Ruiz-Sanchez et al. recommend that the species be treated as Critically Endangered under the terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species.

Merostachys mexicana. (A) New erect shoots, showing culm leaves. (B) Foliage leaves. (C) Abaxial side of the foliage leaf complement showing the marginal stripe (white arrow). (D) Foliage leaf complement showing the fimbriae (white arrow). (E) Old inflorescences. (F). Remnant new inflorescence showing spikelets and stamen. (G) Nucoid caryopsis (white arrow). Ruiz-Sanchez in Ruiz-Sanchez et al. (2018).

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/08/kinosternon-vogti-new-species-of-mud.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/04/govenia-polychroma-new-species-of.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/01/laccaria-squarrosa-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/09/gelidocalamus-xunwuensis-new-species-of.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/07/caliothrips-chiapas-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/05/neopalpa-donaldtrumpi-new-species-of.html
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Sunday, 3 September 2017

Gelidocalamus xunwuensis: A new species of Bamboo from Jiangxi Province, China.

Bamboos, Bambusoideae, are evergreen woody plants within the Grass Family, Poaceae. They are large for Grasses. with most species being shrubby, and some rainforest species forming tree-sized plants reaching over 30 m in height. This is particularly remarkable, as each Bamboo stem will reach this size in a single growing season (usually less than four months), with new shoots being produced from an underground rhizome (root-like stem) each growing season, and persisting for several years. In order to do this Bamboos have become the fastest growing plants on Earth, with speeds of up to a milimetre every 90 seconds recorded (which comes out at 4 cm per hour) over a meter in a day. Bamboos flower unfrequently, with many species able to go through many years of vegetative growth, before suddenly going through a flowering episode, co-ordinated over a wide area, to enable sexual reproduction; the most extreme example of this being a Chinese species, Phyllostachys bambusoides, which flowers only once every 130 years.

In a paper published in the journal Phytokeys on 31 Augusr 2017, Wen-Gen Zhang, Xue-Nan Ji and Yu-Guang Liu of the Jiangxi Provincial Key Laboratory for Bamboo Germplasm Resources and Utilization at Jiangxi Agricultural University and the Collaborative Innovation Center of Jiangxi Typical Trees Cultivation and Utilization, Wei-Jian Li, also of the Collaborative Innovation Center of Jiangxi Typical Trees Cultivation and Utilization, and Guang-Yao Yang. of the Jiangxi Provincial Key Laboratory for Bamboo Germplasm Resources and Utilization at Jiangxi Agricultural University and the Collaborative Innovation Center of Jiangxi Typical Trees Cultivation and Utilization, describe a new species of Bamboo from Xunwu County, in southeastern Jiangxi Province, China.

The new species is placed in the genus Gelidocalamus, and given the specific name xunwuensis, meaning 'from Xumwu'. It is a small Bamboo, reaching 2.5 m in height, with stems up to 5.6 mm wide and leaves up to 10 cm lomg. The internodes (spaces between leaf stems) are up to 20 cm long, with branching from the fourth node upwards. The species was found growing in an evergreen broadleafed forest at an altitude of between 400 and 600 m above sea level.

Gelidocalamus xunwuensis, growing plant. Zhang et al. (2017).

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2016/12/understanding-worlds-highest-vascular.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2016/08/ceratocaryum-argenteum-plant-producing.html
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2016/08/atherigona-reversura-bermudagrass-stem.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/10/how-invasive-grass-species-makes.html
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Tuesday, 6 September 2016

Trichia macrospora: A new species of Slime Mold from Jiangxi Province, China.

Slime Molds are Eukaryotic organisms (organisms with cell nuclii) formerly classified as Fungi, but now regarded as not just unrelated to Fungi but paraphyletic (i.e. not all Slime Molds are related to oneanother). They spend most of their life-cycles as single-celled organisms, but when resources become sparce can coagulate to form a multi-cellular body which ranges from a few grams to a few tens of grams in size, which migrate in search of a suitable site then enter a spore-producing stage.

In a paper published in the journal Phytotaxa on 28 April 2016, Zhang Bo and Li Yu of the Engineering Research Center of Chinese Ministry of Education for Edible and Medicinal Fungi at Jilin Agricultural University describe a new species of Slime Mould from Jiangxi Province in China.

The new species is a Myxogastrian (Plasmodial or Acellular) Slime Mould, a group noted for producing large and conspicuous fruiting bodies, with the largest capable of producing single-celled fruit-bodies a meter across and weighing in excess of 20 kg. It is placed in the genus Trichia and given the specific name macrospora, meaning 'large-spores', the spores being larger than any other member of the genus.

Sporocarps of Trichia macrospora, many showing irregular dehiscence. Zhang & Li (2016).

The species was discovered living on a leaf of a Bamboo plant in the Junfeng Mountains of Jiangxi Province in July 2013. The species produces dark purplish-brown or brown sporangia on stipes (stems) 1-1.2 mm in length, which release rust-brown spores.

 Trichia macrospora, Portion of the capillitium and spores, showing the ornamentation. Zhang & Li (2016).

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2016/08/chrysosporium-guizhouense-chrysosporium.htmlChrysosporium guizhouense & Chrysosporium hubeiense: Two new species of Onygenal Fungi from China.                 Fungi of the Order Onygenales are Ascomycete Fungi capable of breaking down keratin, the protein that forms skin, scales, hair and feathers in terrestrial...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/cryptosporidium-discovery-at-water.htmlCryptosporidium discovery at water treatment plant leaves around 300 000 without drinkable water in Lancashire, England.                                                   Around 300 000 homes were left without drinkable...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/pathogenic-oomycete-chromists-from-new.html Pathogenic Oomycete Chromists from New Zealand, Hawaii and Côte d’Ivoire.      Oomycete Chromists are Fungus-like micro-organisms which cause a wide variety of infections in plants, such as Potato Blight and occasionally animals, such as White Rots in aquarium Fish. It is also likely that...
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