Abstract
In accordance with the previous reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae (Magnoliaceae) into the genus Magnolia, twenty-six new nomenclatural combinations are formally made by transferring to Magnolia some additional Chinese and Vietnamese taxa from the segregate genera of Manglietia, Michelia and Yulania. The following nine new combinations are created from Manglietia, namely Magnolia admirabilis, M. albistaminea, M. guangnanica, M. jinggangshanensis, M. maguanica, M. pubipedunculata, M. pubipetala, M. rufisyncarpa and M. sinoconifera. Also, twelve new combinations are created from Michelia, namely Magnolia caloptila, M. caudata, M. fallax, M. gelida, M. hunanensis, M. maudiae var. rubicunda, M. multitepala, M. platypetala, M. rubriflora, M. septipetala, M. sonlaensis, M. xinningia. Finally, five new combinations are created from Yulania, namely Magnolia baotaina, M. pendula, M. pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia, M. puberula and M. urceolata.
Keywords: Magnolioideae , Manglietia , Michelia , morphological features, synonyms, Yulania
Magnolia maguanica (formerly Manglietia maguanica (photo taken by SK Png at South China BG on 21.04.2017).
Introduction
Richard B. Figlar (2012), a past president and present scientific advisor of Magnolia Society International, provides a concise but thorough background to the complex generic history of subfamily Magnolioideae of family Magnoliaceae, starting with J.E. Dandy in the early part of the previous century. This pre-eminent British plant taxonomist, specialising in Magnoliaceae, recognised the family as consisting of 2 tribes, the Liriodendreae representing the single distinct genus Liriodendron, with the remainder of the family, about which Dandy (1927) acknowledges there had never been uniformity of opinion, forming the Magnolieae, comprising 9 genera, which he subsequently increased by 2.
Revisions were to follow Dandy’s death in late 1976, including the classification of the leading Chinese Magnoliaceae researcher, Liu Yu-hu (aka Law Yuh-wu). His proposed Taxonomic System of Magnoliaceae (Law 1984), republished in Magnolias of China in the year he died (Liu et al. 2004), basically added a further 4 genera to those of Dandy. Representatives of 10 of the 15 genera included in subfamily Magnolioideae in Liu’s classification occur in China.
H.P. Nooteboom, who was to succeed Dandy at the forefront of Magnoliaceae research in Europe, realised that his predecessor had been mistaken in his interpretation of certain morphological characters and thus commenced his reduction of Magnolioideae (Nooteboom 1985), to just 6 genera. Ultimately, with the advent of molecular DNA sequencing data (Azuma et al. 1999, 2000, 2001, Kim et al. 2001, Nie et al. 2008, Wang et al. 2006, Kim and Suh 2013), combined with comparative morphological research (Figlar 2000, Figlar and Nooteboom 2004), showing the remaining genera, including Manglietia Blume and Michelia Linnaeus, residing among the other sections of Magnolia, Figlar and Nooteboom proposed a new classification system in their 2004 paper. Their new system includes Magnolia at the head of a now monogeneric Magnolioideae subfamily comprising subgenus Magnolia with 8 sections and 7 subsections, subgenus Yulania with 2 sections and 6 subsections, and subgenus Gynopodium with 2 sections.
This system was not followed in the Flora of China treatment of Magnoliaceae (Xia et al. 2008), where previously recognised genera such as Manglietia and Michelia were retained, two former sections of Magnolia were given generic status as Houpoea N.H. Xia & C.Y. Wu and Oyama (Nakai) N.H. Xia & C.Y. Wu, and former genera, such as Lirianthe Spach and Yulania Spach of 1839 were reinstated. Since then, authors describing new species from China have followed this classification, a few examples being Manglietia pubipedunculata Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu (Hu et al. 2019), Michelia caudata M.X. Wu, X.H. Wu & G.Y. Li (Wu et al. 2015) and Yulania dabieshanensis T.B. Zhao, Z.X. Chen & H.T. Dai (Dai et al. 2012).
However, Figlar and Nooteboom’s (2004) classification system is now widely accepted by the scientific community, with many authors following this broad view of Magnolia, such as Arroyo et al. (2013), Ninh et al. (2020), Pérez et al. (2016) and Zou et al. (2020).
Figlar (2012) advised against the alternative classification system now operating:
In a one genus system only Manglietia, Michelia and 3 minor genera require new names in Magnolia. In a 13 genera system, it would be necessary to dismantle the largest and most well-known genus, Magnolia, and rename the constituents into 10 new genera. That would be enormously destructive to the long-established Magnolia-centric nomenclature and literature, causing unnecessary and undesirable consequences to science, conservation and horticulture.
With this in mind, 26 new combinations are created here, representing nine species of Manglietia, eleven species and one variety of Michelia, plus four species and one variety of Yulania. Most of these taxa were named and described over the past decade, but include some older previously synonymised, now reinstated taxa, that are herein transferred to Magnolia, as will be numerous other taxa in a sequel to this paper (Callaghan and Png 2019a, 2020).
Materials and methods
The new combinations proposed in this paper are made in compliance with the rules and recommendations of the 2018 International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi and plants (ICN), known as The Shenzhen Code (Turland et al. 2018), in particular ICN Article 41 and Recommendation 41A in respect of new combinations.
Where available, digital images of type specimens of newly named taxa posted to the internet at the websites of various herbaria have been sighted and these are indicated in the text by ‘online image!’ appearing after the herbarium acronyms whose representative names are listed in the appendix following the references. Additional sighted specimens are indicated by ‘!’ after the herbarium acronym.
Consultation of the relevant literature was made to determine whether a number of taxa previously determined as synonyms of earlier named taxa were, in fact, genuine independent species or varieties as they had been originally described. Differences in numerous morphological features, natural distributions and/or elevations and where appropriate, the incompatible phenology of flowering and/or fruiting periods, are tabulated and referred to in the notes under the relevant taxa to fully substantiate their independent status.
Floras and other literature dealing with the Magnoliaceae of China that have been consulted during this study are cited in the text, with some of the more important sources of information including a number of papers by Dandy (1928 a–c, 1930), The Magnoliaceae of China (Chen and Nooteboom 1993), Magnoliaceae in Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae (Law et al. 1996), Magnolias of China (Liu et al. 2004), Magnoliaceae in Flora of China Vol. 7 (Xia et al. 2008), A Taxonomic Revision of the Magnoliaceae from China (Sima 2011) and the recent Ex Situ Cultivated Flora of China : Magnoliaceae (Yang et al. 2016), which documents the diversity of Magnoliaceae plants in Chinese botanical gardens.
The Biodiversity Heritage Library website (https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org) proved indispensable in accessing a number of articles on earlier-named Magnoliaceae dating back to the early nineteenth century and beyond. A good proportion of the numerous relevant scientific and mainstream literature consulted during this research is internet accessible via the links included with the references. The links included in the 2019 unpublished version of this paper were rechecked to confirm their current accessibility.
Results
In accordance with the previous reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae (Magnoliaceae) into the genus Magnolia, twenty-six new nomenclatural combinations are formally made by transferring to Magnolia some additional Chinese and Vietnamese taxa from the segregate genera of Manglietia, Michelia and Yulania that were described during the past decade and occasionally earlier, plus a few formerly synonymised, now reinstated taxa.
The following nine new combinations are created from Manglietia, namely Magnolia admirabilis (Y.H. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex L. Fu, Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. albistaminea (Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & S.X. Qin) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. guangnanica (D.X. Li & R.Z. Zhou ex X.M. Hu, Q.W. Zeng & L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. jinggangshanensis (R.L. Liu & Z.X. Zhang) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. maguanica (H.T. Chang & B.L.Chen) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. pubipedunculata (Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. pubipetala (Q.W. Zeng) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. rufisyncarpa (Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & F.G. Wang) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png and M. sinoconifera (F.N. Wei) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png.
Also, twelve new combinations are created from Michelia, namely Magnolia caloptila (Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. caudata (M.X. Wu, X.H. Wu & G.Y. Li) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. fallax (Dandy) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. gelida (T.B. Zhao, Z.X. Chen & D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. hunanensis (C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. maudiae var. rubicunda (T.P. Yi & J.C. Fan) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. multitepala (R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. platypetala (Hand-Mazz.) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. rubriflora (Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex F.G. Wang, Q.W. Zeng, R.Z. Zhou & F.W. Xing) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. septipetala (Z.L. Nong) C.B. Callaghan & S.K.Png, M. sonlaensis (Q.N. Vu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png and M. xinningia (Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex Q.X. Ma, Q.W. Zeng, R.Z. Zhou & F.W. Xing) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png.
Finally, five new combinations are created from Yulania, namely Magnolia baotaina (D.L. Fu, Q. Zhang & M. Xu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. pendula (D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia (Z.Z. Zhao & Z.W. Xie) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, M. puberula (D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png and M. urceolata (D.L. Fu, B.H. Xiong & X. Chen) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png.
Discussion
The transfer of the above twenty-six taxa to Magnolia is necessary following the present near universal acceptance by the scientific community and horticultural industry that the Magnolioideae is one of two monogeneric subfamilies within Magnoliaceae and the fact that the majority of resulting new combinations and names arising from the relegation of Manglietia and Michelia into Magnolia have previously been made by various authors such as Figlar (2000) for the majority of the Michelia species, with Sima (2001) transferring some additional Michelia species, Kumar (2006) transferring the majority of Manglieta species, Nooteboom transferring a number of species from both the previous genera plus Yulania in Flora of China Vol. 7 (Xia et al. 2008: 49–50) and most recently Callaghan and Png (2013) transferring species from these three genera that were mainly described and named subsequent to the publication of Flora of China.
Conclusions
To maintain these twenty-six predominantly recently described taxa in limbo in segregate genera will contribute to further instability and inevitable confusion in the scientific and popular literature, as well as within the botanical world and the horticultural industry, which has resulted from having two diverse systems operating simultaneously.
The authors would like to take this opportunity to suggest that to further substantiate their now reaffirmed species or varietal status, comparative DNA barcoding (Caddy-Retalic and Lowe 2012), should be undertaken of these and other taxa, often with small remnant populations and/or disjunct geographic distributions, that have been previously subsumed in synonymy under earlier-named species having much larger populations of widespread occurrence. As a result of becoming virtual non-entities, this can be detrimental to their conservation and ultimate survival in nature. Consequently their potential benefits to mankind, such as the medicinal properties that some Magnoliaceae species are known to possess, including present and prospective production of anti-cancer drugs and treatments (He et al. 2017, Huang et al. 2017, Lu et al. 2017, Ma et al. 2020, Prasad and Katiyar 2018, Zhang et al. 2020), are never assessed or realised.
Taxonomic section
Magnolia admirabilis
(Y.H. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex L. Fu, Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
39B777BF-CF62-5591-B894-9D8115202518
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209515-1
Basionym.
Manglietia admirabilis Y.H. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex L. Fu, Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu, Novon 23(1): 37, fig. 1 (2014).
Chinese name.
奇异木莲 meaning “distinctive Manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Maguan County, Gulinqing, Chuntianping, ca. 1300 m, limestone montane evergreen broad-leaved forests, 12 May 1986, Zhou Ren-zhang 98 (holotype: IBSC n.v.). Guangdong Province: Guangzhou, Magnolia Garden of South China Botanical Garden, ca. 50 m, 3 May 2011, Lin Fu 20110503 (paratype: IBSC n.v.)
Note.
There is no data or images held at IBSC for the holotype (Huang Xiangxu, pers. comm., July 2019).
Magnolia albistaminea
(Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & X.S. Qin) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
7A5094BC-C6E0-556C-9CC6-76829D13BDFA
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209516-1
Basionym.
Manglietia albistaminea Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & X.S. Qin. In: X.S. Qin et al., Novon 16: 260, fig. 1 (2006).
Chinese name.
白蕊木莲 meaning “white-stamened manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Guangdong Province: South China Botanical Garden, Guangzhou (collected from plant introduced in 1982 from Mt. Jianfengling, Ledong County, Hainan), 10 May 2001, R.Z. Zhou 130 (holotype: IBSC n.v.; isotype: MO n.v.). Same locality (collected from plant introduced as above) 23 April 1999, R.Z. Zhou 9916 and R.Z. Zhou 0136 (paratypes: IBSC n.v.).
Manglietia fordiana Oliv. var. hainanensis (Dandy) N.H. Xia. In: Xia et al. (2008: 58), p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia albistaminea Y.W. Law et al.
Manglietia fordiana Oliv. In: Sima and Lu (2009: 23) and Sima (2011: 88), both p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia albistaminea Y.W. Law et al.
Note.
There are no data or images held at IBSC for the holotype (Huang Xiangxu, pers. comm., July 2019), nor could the isotype be located at MO (Jim Solomon, pers. comm., July 2019).
Magnolia baotaina
(D.L. Fu, Q. Zhang & M. Xu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
234BA9EF-EAC8-50A1-9E43-35AD768A6C6E
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209518-1
Basionym.
Yulania baotaina D.L. Fu, Q. Zhang & M. Xu. In: D.L. Fu et al., Amer. J. Agric. and Forest. 7(5): 231–232, fig. 1 (2019c).
Chinese name.
宝台山玉兰 meaning “Mount Baotai yulania”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Yongping County, Mount Baotai, 2600 m, 12 March 2017, D.L. Fu 2017031201 (holotype: CAF n.v.). Same locality, 9 September 2017, D.L. Fu 2017093001 (paratype: CAF n.v.).
Note.
The type specimens of Yulania baotaina cannot be located at the Beijing herbarium of CAF (Wang Hongbin, pers. comm., March 2020).
Magnolia caloptila
(Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
738615A7-117F-5C82-83A3-AC9881503ACC
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209519-1
Basionym.
Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu. In: Bull. Bot. Res., Harbin 4(2): 152, 154: fig. s.n. (1984).
Chinese name.
美毛含笑 meaning “beautiful-haired michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Jiangxi Province: Zixi County, Nangang, Matoushan, 450 m, in woods, 17 September 1980, Jiangxi gong-da linxue-xi (JXAU) 80069 (holotype: IBSC! + online image!; isotypes: LBG online images!).
Digital images of type specimens below accessed 19 March 2019:
holotype [IBSC: 0003281]: http://www.docin.com/p-1050989203.html (Sima 2011: 316, photo 2-58).
isotype [LBG: 00004082]: http://www.cvh.ac.cn/spm/LBG/00004082
isotype [LBG: 00004123]: http://www.cvh.ac.cn/spm/LBG/00004123
Michelia fujianensis Q.F. Zheng. In: Xia and Deng (2002: 130) and Xia et al. (2008: 83), both p.p. quoad syn. Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu.
Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu. In: Sima (2011: 234), p.p. excl. syns. Michelia concinna H. Jiang & E.D. Liu and Michelia septipetala Z.L. Nong.
Note 1.
Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu was listed as a dubious species in Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1088), in which it was noted that specimens had not been seen. It was subsequently reduced to a synonym of Michelia fujianensis as noted above. It is recognised as a genuine species by Law et al. (1996: 189), Liu et al. (2004: 228), Deng and Yang (2015: 167), Yang et al. (2016: 237) and Sima (2011: 234), wherein M. caloptila is in Michelia subsection Micheliopsis, series Micheliopsis and M. fujianensis is in Michelia subsection Velutinae. Differences between the abaxial indumentum of the 9–16 cm long leaves of M. caloptila and of the 6–11 cm long leaves of M. fujianensis are illustrated in Plate 3-2E (M. caloptila) and Plate 3-3E (M. fujianensis) of Sima (2011: 325; 326). Further substantiation of the specific status of M. caloptila is evident from a comparison of its morphological features with those of M. fujianensis, as shown in Table 1 on the following page.
Table 1.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia caloptila and Michelia fujianensis.
Plant feature | Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu | Michelia fujianensis Q.F. Zheng |
maximum dimensions | to 15 m × 30 cm dbh† | to 16 m × 100 cm dbh¶ |
bark colour | grey | greyish-brown (greyish-white¶) |
indumentum of branchlets | brown tomentose | densely cinnamon tomentose |
indumentum of buds | brown tomentose | densely cinnamon tomentose |
leaf shape | narrowly elliptic or elliptic | oblong or narrowly obovate-elliptic |
leaf dimensions | 9–16 × 2.5–5 cm | 6–11 × 2.5–4 cm |
leaf apex | acuminate or caudate-acuminate | acute |
leaf indumentum adaxially | entirely glabrous | densely short-tomentose at midrib |
leaf indumentum abaxially | minutely brown tomentose | densely ferrugineus or brownish-yellow appressed sericeous |
secondary lateral leaf veins | 7–12 pairs | 8–9 pairs (not 9–15§,¶) |
petiole length and indumentum | 5–10 mm, brown tomentose | 10–15 mm, densely cinnamon tomentose |
tepal number | 6–9‡ | 15–16 (12–17¶) |
gynophore in fruit | ca. 20 mm long | 2–2.5 mm long |
fruit aggregate length | 4–10 cm | 2–3 cm |
mature carpels | broadly ovate or suborbicular, 1–1.8 cm long with 1–4 seeds | obovoid, 1.5–2 cm × ca. 1.2 cm with 1 seed |
fruiting period | September† | October–November¶ |
The differentiating features of Michelia caloptila are cited from Law and Wu (1984) to whom the flower was unknown, Liu et al. (2004: 228)† and Yang et al. (2016: 237)‡, with those of M. fujianensis from Zheng (1981), supplemented by Law et al. (1996: 189)§ and Liu et al. (2004: 260)¶.
Note 2.
As a consequence of the above substantiation of the species status of Michelia caloptila, plus the past reduction to Magnolia of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae, Michelia caloptila is here transferred to Magnolia.
Magnolia caudata
(M.X. Wu, X.H. Wu & G.Y. Li) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
05B989BC-5C2D-5392-9ACC-EC847CB35336
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209521-1
Basionym.
Michelia caudata M.X. Wu, X.H. Wu & G.Y. Li. In: X.H. Wu et al., Acta Bot. Bor-Occid. Sin. 35(5): 1058, fig. 1 (2015).
Chinese name.
尾叶含笑 meaning “caudate-lobed michelia”, referring to shape of leaf apex.
Type.
CHINA. Zhejiang Province: Qingyuan County, Songyuan town, Jiaokeng village, Guanmenao Conservation Area, in evergreen broad-leaved forests, ravines, 460 m, 12 April 2010, Ye Qing-jiao & Wu Xia-hua 1096 (holotype: ZJFC n.v.). Zhejiang Province: Qingyuan County, Songyuan town, Jiaokeng village, 460 m, 26 September 2010, Ma Dan-dan, Li Gen-you, Wu Ming-xiang QY20100922 (paratype: ZJFC n.v.).
Magnolia fallax
(Dandy) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
9F7555EE-8C9E-522C-A75C-20539022D6ED
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209522-1
Basionym.
Michelia fallax Dandy. In: Notes, Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 16(77): 130 (1928c).
Chinese names: 灰绒含笑 meaning “grey-velvet michelia”, referring to the grey indumentum covering branchlets, buds, etc. Also: 大叶含笑 meaning “large-leaved michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Hunan Province: near Wukang-chow (=Wugang), Yunshan, ca. 950 m, in lofty shady forests, 12 July 1918, Handel-Mazzetti 12281 p.p. quoad fruiting specimen (holotype: WU online image!; isotypes: A online image!, K online image!).
Digital images of holotype and isotype specimens below accessed 19 March 2019:
holotype [WU: 0039581]: http://herbarium.univie.ac.at/database/detail.php?ID=70940
isotype [A: 00039058]: https://s3.amazonaws.com/huhwebimages/6C9726D2157D489/type/full/39058.jpg
isotype [K: K000681458]: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000681458
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. In: Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1058), Frodin and Govaerts (1996: 55), Wu and Chen (2006: 56), Sima and Lu (2009: 50), Sima (2011: 214), Deng and Yang (2015: 148), each p.p. quoad syn. Michelia fallax Dandy.
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. var. cavaleriei. In: Xia et al. (2008: 84), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia fallax Dandy.
Note 1.
James E. Dandy (1928c: 130), provides background information concerning the division of the fruiting and flowering collections made under number 12281 by Handel-Mazzetti on 12 July 1918 and by his servant Wang Te-hui in April 1919 respectively. From his study of these collections, Dandy came to the realisation that they represented two distinct species, retaining Handel-Mazzetti’s name Michelia platypetala for Wang’s flowering material and publishing the name Michelia fallax for Handel-Mazzetti’s fruiting material.
Note 2.
An undated identification label in the name of J.E. Dandy, affixed to the Kew Herbarium isotype specimen of M. fallax, indicates his subsequent determination of it as M. cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. This specimen and the other above seen type specimens are all ca. 20 cm in length and 6 cm wide, roughly only about two-thirds of Dandy’s original description of the leaves of M. fallax being “usque ad ca. 30 cm longa et 8.5 cm lata” (up to about 30 cm long and 8.5 cm wide). Dandy’s dimensions are not a misprint, since there are a number of M. fallax specimens of different provenances (and provinces) posted to the Chinese Virtual Herbarium (CVH) website with leaves approaching this size, which is alluded to in one of this species two Chinese names translating as “large-leaved michelia”. The above noted dimensions must be presumed to be those of the other specimen noted in Dandy’s description, the undated specimen Dalziels.n., collected at about 900 m near Thai-yong, 97 km west of Swatow (Shantou) on Guangdong’s northeastern coast, sometime between 1895 and 1902 (this specimen was not located for the current research).
Note 3.
Subsequent to Dandy, M. fallax has been listed as a synonym of M. cavaleriei and of M. cavaleriei var. cavaleriei by the authors cited in the section preceding Note 1. However, the present authors consider that while these two species are superficially similar in the shape of their leaves, that the known comparative features recorded in Table 2 below distinguish Michelia fallax as an independent species. Also, it does not key out with the original validating descriptions for Michelia hunanensis or M. xinningia with which it shares synonymy under M. cavaleriei var. cavaleriei in Flora of China. Therefore, consistent with the past reduction to Magnolia of the remaining segregate genera of subfamily Magnolioideae, Michelia fallax is here transferred to Magnolia.
Table 2.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia fallax and Michelia cavaleriei.
Plant feature | Michelia fallax Dandy | Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. |
indumentum of branchlets | appressed grey tomentose, becoming tawny near apex | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose§ |
indumentum of buds | appressed shiny grey tomentose | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose§ |
leaf shape | elliptic-oblong, oblong or narrowly oblong | narrowly oblanceolate-oblong or narrowly oblong§ |
leaf apex | acuminate or subacuminate | acuminate or short-acute§ |
leaf base | obtuse or sub-rounded | cuneate or broadly cuneate§ |
leaf dimensions | up to ca. 30 × 8.5 cm (ca. 29 × 9 cm†) | 10–20 × 3.5–6.5 cm§ |
leaf indumentum abaxially | short appressed grey pubescent | glaucous, silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose when young§ |
secondary lateral leaf veins | ca. 14–16 pairs | 11–15 pairs‡ |
petiole length and indumentum | ca. 2.5 cm, initially appressed grey or yellow-brown tomentose, later glabrescent | 2 cm, puberulus (0.7–1.5 cm# silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose§) |
gynoecium indumentum | appressed grey tomentellous | glabrous except for few bristly hairs towards apex of carpels†† |
number of ovules | ca. 10 | 2 |
fruiting peduncle indumentum | appressed glossy grey or yellowish-brown tomentose | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose§ |
fruit aggregate length | 10–12 cm | 5–10 cm§ |
mature carpels length | up to ca. 2.5 cm | 1.5–2 cm‡ |
fruiting period | July | September–October‡,§ |
The differentiating features of Michelia fallax, whose flower is unknown, are cited from Dandy (1928c) and CVH (2017)†; those of M. cavaleriei from Finet & Gagnepain (1906), Law et al. (1996: 184)‡, Liu et al. (2004: 229)§ and Yang et al. (2016: 239)#, plus Dandy (1928c: 130)††.
Magnolia gelida
(T.B. Zhao, Z.X. Chen & D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
6157C94A-B213-55FC-AEC5-3FD3577AB80A
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209524-1
Basionym.
Michelia gelida T.B. Zhao, Z.X. Chen & D.L. Fu. In: Y.F. Hu et al., Advances Orn. Hort. China 2013: 39–40, fig. 1 (2013).
Chinese name.
耐冬含笑 meaning “winter resisting michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Henan Province: Jinling County, Changge city, cultivated (native to Zhejiang Province: Fuyang County), 24 March 2010, Zhao Tian-bang, Fu Da-li et al. 201003245 (holotype: HEAC, fol, fl. n.v.)
Magnolia guangnanica
(D.X. Li & R.Z. Zhou ex X.M. Hu, Q.W. Zeng & L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
0412A48E-1132-508C-BD23-9B64F81CAB78
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209525-1
Basionym.
Manglietia guangnanica D.X. Li & R.Z. Zhou ex X.M. Hu, Q.W. Zeng & L. Fu, Novon 23(2): 172, figs. 1, 2 (2014).
Chinese name.
广南木莲 meaning “Guangnan manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Guangnan County, Heizhiguo town and village, Mt. Gulu, in limestone montane evergreen broad-leaved forest, 1710 m, 17 October 1993, Zhou Ren-zhang & Zeng Qing-wen 93049 (holotype and isotype: IBSC n.v.). Same locality, 12 May 1992, D.X. Li & Z.Q. Ouyang 920512 (paratype: MO n.v.). Same locality 16 April 2003, R.Z. Zhou 03046 (paratype: IBSC n.v.). Yunnan Province: Guangnan County, Mount Houshan, near Zhujie village of Zhujie town, 1600 m, 4 October 1993, R.Z. Zhou 9304 (paratype: IBSC!). Yunnan Province: Kunming Botanical Garden, cultivated, 1 May 2010, X.M. Hu & Q.W. Zeng 00166 (paratype: IBSC n.v.).
Note.
The holotype and isotype specimens of Manglietia guangnanica could not be found by herbarium staff at IBSC, nor could the paratype specimen at MO be located (Jim Solomon, pers. comm., July 2019). However, the paratype that was received from IBSC, R.Z. Zhou (Zhou Ren-zhang) 9304 collected at 1600 m, inexplicably has the locality and collection date as for the holotype / isotype above and not Mount Houshan on the 4 October 1993 as is noted in the 2014 paper for this paratype.
Magnolia hunanensis
(C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
25A0FEB1-20D1-5504-B86E-7D87987D846E
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209526-1
Basionym.
Michelia hunanensis C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan. In: C.L. Peng et al., J. Hunan Forest. Tech. Coll. 1995(1): 15 (1995).
Chinese name.
湖南含笑 meaning “Hunan michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Hunan Province: Xinning County, without elevation or collection date, L.H. Yan & C.L. Peng 93018 (holotype: HFBG n.v.; isotype: HFTC n.v.).
Magnolia maudiae (Dunn) Figlar var. hunanensis (C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan) Sima (2001: 33).
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. In: Xia & Deng (2002: 132) and Sima (2011: 214), both p.p. quoad syn. Michelia hunanensis C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan—Sima & Lu (2009: 50), p.p. quoad syns. Michelia hunanensis C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan and Magnolia maudiae (Dunn) Figlar var. hunanensis (C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan) Sima.
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. var. cavaleriei. In: Xia et al. (2008: 84), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia hunanensis C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan.
Note 1.
The holotype specimen was irretrievably damaged during repeated relocations of the HFBG herbarium (Yan Lihong, pers. comm.). Photographs were sent in its place.
Note 2. The numerous known differentiating features compiled in Table 3 below confirm Michelia hunanensis as an independent species and not a variety of Magnolia maudiae, nor a synonym of Michelia cavaleriei var. cavaleriei as noted above.
Table 3.
Differentiating features of Michelia hunanensis, M. maudiae and M. cavaleriei.
Plant feature | Michelia hunanensis C.L. Peng & L.H. Yan | Michelia maudiae Dunn | Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. |
maximum height | 20 m | 31 m§ | 10 m¶¶ |
indumentum of buds | greyish-pilose | glabrous (covered with white powder††) | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose¶¶ |
leaf shape | oblong or broadly oblong | oblong-elliptic or occasionally ovate-elliptic†† | narrowly oblanceolate-oblong or narrowly oblong¶¶ |
leaf dimensions | 13–33 × 6–9 cm | 7–18 × 3.5–8.5 cm†† | 10–20 × 3.5–6.5 cm¶¶ |
leaf apex | cuspidate | obtuse acuminate (occasionally long-acuminate†) | acuminate or short-acute¶¶ |
leaf base | rounded or obtuse | acute or cuneate | cuneate or broadly cuneate¶¶ |
undersides of leaves | greyish pubescent | glabrous, as is the entire plant††, except for the silky grey pubescent stamens# | glaucous and silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose when young¶¶) |
lateral leaf veins | 8–14 pairs | 8–12 pairs | 11–15 pairs§§ |
petiole length and indumentum | 2–3.5 cm, pilose | 2.5–3 cm, glabrous (1–3 cm‡‡) | 2 cm, puberulus (0.7–1.5 cm)##, silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose¶¶ |
tepal number | 9 | 9–11‡‡ | 10–12## |
tepal shape and size (outer 3) | obovate, 6–7 cm long (width not specified) |
obovate, 5–7 × 3.5–4 cm†† |
obovate-elliptic (2.5–4 cm long¶¶) |
tepal shape and size (inner 3) | obovate-lanceolate, 4–4.8 × 1.2–1.4 cm | obovate, elliptic to broadly spathulate, 4.5–5 × 1.8–2.5 cm† | obovate-elliptic, 2.5 × 1.5 cm |
length of stamens | ca. 1cm | 1.5–2.2 cm¶ | 1.2–1.4 cm§§ |
gynoecium length, shape and indumentum | 1 cm, cylindric, pubescent | 1.5–1.8 cm (1.0–1.3 cm, subcylindric†), glabrous | 1 cm, narrowly ovate, with a few hairs only near the carpel apex |
gynophore length | 5–8 mm | ca. 10 mm | ca. 4 mm§§ |
fruit aggregate length | 8–17 cm | 10–12(–14) cm† | 5–10 cm¶¶ |
flowering period | March–April | January–March†† | March§§, ¶¶ |
fruiting period | August–September | October–November†† | September–October§§,¶¶ |
The distinguishing features of Michelia hunanensis are cited from Peng et al. (1995). Those of M. maudiae are cited from Dunn (1908), supplemented by Chen and Nooteboom (1993:1072)†, Deng and Yang (2015: 157)§, Law et al. (1996: 179)¶, Lee (1935: 487)#, Liu et al. (2004: 290)†† and Yang et al. (2016: 295)‡‡, with those of M. cavaleriei from Finet and Gagnepain (1906), supplemented by Law et al. (1996: 184)§§, Liu et al. (2004: 229)¶¶ and Yang et al. (2016: 239)##.
Magnolia jinggangshanensis
(R.L. Liu & Z.X. Zhang) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
81146D12-2B36-5A67-B15D-EC1BB00205F5
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209527-1
Basionym.
Manglietia jinggangshanensis R.L. Liu & Z.X. Zhang. In: Fedd. Repert. 130(3): 289, 290 fig. 1, 291 fig. 2 (2019)
Chinese name.
井冈山木莲 meaning “Jinggangshan manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Jiangxi Province: Jinggangshan, in evergreen forest, 980 m, 8 May 2001 (fl.), R.L. Liu 20010012 (holotype: BJFC!; isotypes: PE n.v., K n.v.)
Note.
The isotypes at PE and K could not be located (Xiaohua Jin, PE, Beijing, pers. comm., July 2019 and Clare Drinkell, assistant curator, Kew, pers. comm., July 2019).
Magnolia maguanica
(Chang & B.L. Chen) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
0CA31536-5489-55A3-9F1A-B8874ED12525
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209528-1
Basionym.
Manglietia maguanica Chang & B.L. Chen. In: B.L. Chen, Acta Sci. Nat. Univ. Sunyatseni 1988(1): 109 (1988).
Chinese name.
马关木莲 meaning “Maguan manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Maguan County, Bazhai, near Xiaoshan, in woods, ca. 1800 m, 7 October 1986, B.L. Chen & Y.H. Su 86s-053 (holotype: SYS! + online image!; isotype: L online image!).
Digital image of specimens below accessed 19 March 2019:
holotype (SYS): http://www.docin.com/p-1050989203.html (Sima 2011: 312, photo 2-42).
isotype [L: L0204985]: http://medialib.naturalis.nl/file/id/L0204985_MLN/format/large?fpi=1
Manglietia insignis (Wall.) Blume. In: Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1044), Frodin and Govaerts (1996: 52), J. Li (1997: 132), Wu and Chen (2006: 10), and Xia et al. (2008: 56), each p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia maguanica Chang & B.L. Chen.
Magnolia insignis Wall. In: Khuraijam and Goel (2015: 109), p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia maguanica Chang & B.L. Chen.
Note.
Manglietia maguanica is listed as a synonym of M. insignis in Chen & Nooteboom (1993) and subsequently by the authors noted above. However, both are recognised as independent species in the majority of the more recent Chinese publications, including Liu et al. (2004: 164, 156), Xing et al. (2009: 198, 196), Sima and Lu (2009), Sima (2011: 98, 102), Deng and Yang (2015: 48, 54) and Yang et al. (2016: 192, 181).
Magnolia maudiae
Dunn (Figlar) var. rubicunda (T.P. Yi & J.C. Fan) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
F64F0FF6-5548-5858-AF59-384F87CA6D14
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209530-1
Basionym.
Michelia maudiae Dunn var. rubricunda T.P. Yi & J.C. Fan. In: J.C. Fan et al., J. Sichuan Forest. Sci. Tech. 30(4): 68, plate 1 (2009).
Chinese name.
红花深山含笑 meaning “red-flowered deep mountains michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Sichuan Province: Dujiangyan, cultivated at the Arboretum of Sichuan Agricultural University, 22 February 2009, T.P. Yi 09001 (holotype: SAUT=SIFS, fl. n.v.). Other specimens recorded: same locality, 13 September 2008, T.P. Yi 08005 (SAUT=SIFS, fr. n.v.). Sichuan Province: Dujiangyan Juyuan Nursery, 20 August 2008, T.P. Yi 08004 (SAUT=SIFS, fr. n.v.). [Introduced from Tongdao County, Hunan Province].
Magnolia multitepala
(R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
FB96AC13-3907-5137-84B6-B7551B076C8D
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209531-1
Basionym.
Michelia multitepala R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian. In: S.G. Jian et al., Ann. Bot. Fenn. 44: 65, fig. 1 (2007).
Chinese name.
多瓣含笑 meaning “multi-tepalled michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Xichou County, Fadou Mountain, in moist evergreen broad-leaved forest, 1300–1500 m, March 2003, R.Z. Zhou 0401 (holotype: IBSC n.v.). Same locality, July 2004, R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian 20040701 (paratype: IBSC n.v.).
Michelia macclurei Dandy. In: Xia et al. (2008: 85), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia multitepala R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian.
Michelia doltsopa Buch.-Ham. ex DC. In: Sima and Lu (2009: 53) and Sima (2011: 196), both p.p. quoad syn. Michelia multitepala R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian.
Note 1.
There is no data or images held at IBSC for the holotype (Huang Xiangxu, pers. comm., July 2019).
Note 2.
The authors of Michelia multitepala noted that it closely resembles M. ingrata B.L. Chen & S.C.Yang and M. macclurei Dandy, but recorded in their comparative diagnosis sufficient morphological differences with these species to substantiate and name Michelia multitepala as a distinct new species. M. multitepala is recorded as a synonym of M. doltsopa Buch.-Ham. ex DC. by the above noted authors. However, in Liu’s classification system of Magnoliaceae (Liu et al. 2004: 381), both M. macclurei and M. ingrata are placed in Michelia section Anisochlamys Dandy while M. doltsopa is placed in Michelia section Michelia.
Note 3.
Michelia multitepala is sufficiently distinct from M. doltsopa (Candolle 1818), to justify its species status, as shown by their known differentiating features compiled in Table 4 below. Additionally, M. multitepala is known only to occur at 1300–1500 m on Fadou Mountain in the southeast of Yunnan Province, whereas M. doltsopa occurs between 1500–2300 m throughout its widely dispersed geographical area from Yunnan to N Myanmar, NE India, Bhutan and SE Xiyang (Liu et al. 2004: 242), or 2100–2500 m from central Nepal and Burma (Myanmar) to Sichuan and Yunnan (Polunin and Stainton 1999: 19). As a consequence of the substantiation of its specific status, Michelia multitepala is here transferred to Magnolia in accordance with the past reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to the genus Magnolia.
Table 4.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia multitepala and M. doltsopa.
Plant feature | Michelia multitepala R.Z. Zhou & S.G. Jian | Michelia doltsopa Buch.-Ham. ex DC |
tree dimensions | 15 m tall, 30 cm diameter | 30 m tall†,§, 1 m diameter |
indumentum of leaf buds | rufous appressed-tomentellous | rufous or greyish-white appressed pubescent§, orange-rusty hairs on pale green scales¶ |
leaf texture | leathery | thinly leathery§ |
leaf shape and dimensions | elliptic, 14–18 × 5–6.5 cm | elliptic-oblong, 10–22 × 5–7 cm§ (10–18(–22) × 3.5–8 cm††) |
leaf apex | acuminate or short acuminate | short acute or long acute§ |
leaf base | broadly cuneate | obtuse or broadly cuneate§ |
leaf beneath | pale green | pale green and somewhat glaucous beneath#, glaucous with orange pubescent veins¶ |
lateral leaf veins | 13–15 pairs | 10–14 pairs† |
petiole length and indumentum | 1.5–3 cm, rufous appressed tomentellous | 1–2 cm‡‡, slightly silky grey pubescent‡, later glabrescent |
stipular scars | none | to ca. 1/5 of petiole length§ |
peduncle indumentum | rufous appressed-tomentellous | densely appressed-villose§ |
tepal number, shape and size | 11–12, oblong-lanceolate, 4–6.5 × 0.8–1.7 cm | (8–)12–16, narrowly obovate spoon-shaped 3.6–7.5 × 1.4–3 cm†† |
stamen length | 14–16 mm | 8–15 mm†† |
gynoecium length | 2–2.5 cm | 1.5–2 cm† |
fruit aggregate length | 8–15 cm | 4–7 cm§ (6–10 cm‡‡) |
shape of carpels | ellipsoid | globose‡ |
flowering period | February–March | March–April§ |
The differentiating features of Michelia multitepala are from Jian et al. (2007); those of Michelia doltsopa are from Candolle (1818), supplemented by Law et al. (1996: 159)†, Lee (1935: 483)‡, Liu et al. (2004: 242)§, Mitchell and Coombes (1998: 181)¶, Polunin and Stainton (1999)#, Spongberg (1998: 135)†† and Yang et al. (2016: 257)‡‡.
Magnolia pendula
(D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png, comb. nov .
5C77C847-8551-5CBE-8346-228AB6BBB9A0
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209533-1
Basionym.
Yulania pendula D.L. Fu. In: D.L. Fu et al., Amer. J. Agric. and Forest. 7(5): 220–221, figs. 5 & 6 (2019c).
Type.
CHINA. Sichuan Province: Beichuan County, Guixi town, Linfeng village, Yaowang Valley, secondary forest, 1200 m, 2 April 2012, D. L. Fu 2012040201 (holotype: CAF n.v.). Same locality, 13 September 2012, D. L. Fu 2012091308 (paratype, CAF n.v.).
Chinese name.
垂枝玉兰 meaning “weeping yulan”
Note.
The type specimens of Yulania pendula cannot be located at the Beijing herbarium of CAF (Wang Hongbin, pers. comm., March 2020).
Magnolia pilocarpa Z.Z. Zhao & Z.W. Xie var. ellipticifolia
(D.L. Fu, T.B. Zhao & J. Zhao) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
98B703D2-0EEF-5F42-B824-C5717BC53144
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209534-1
Basionym.
Yulania pilocarpa (Z.Z. Zhao & Z.W. Xie) D.L. Fu var. ellipticifolia D.L. Fu, T.B. Zhao & J. Zhao. In: D.L. Fu et al., Bull. Bot. Res., Harbin 27(5): 526; figs. 1C–D (2007).
Chinese name.
椭圆叶罗田玉兰 meaning “elliptical-leaved Luotian yulan”
Type.
CHINA. Henan Province: Xinzheng City, 23 March 2002, T.B. Zhao et al. 200203231 (holotype: HEAC, flos. n.v.). Same locality, 21 September 2002, T.B. Zhao et al. 200209211 (paratype: HEAC, folia, ramulus et peruli-alabastrum; n.v.).
Yulania pilocarpa (Z.Z. Zhao & Z.W. Xie) D.L. Fu. In: Xia et al. (2008: 76), p.p. quoad syn. Yulania pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia D.L. Fu et al.
Yulania denudata var. pilocarpa (Z.Z. Zhou & Z.W. Xie) Sima & S.G. Lu. In: Sima (2011: 163), p.p. quoad syn. Yulania pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia D.L. Fu et al.
Note 1.
The genus Yulania Spach (Spach 1839) was resurrected in Flora of China (Xia et al. 2008), but there has not been universal acceptance of this in China, with Yulania again recognised as a subgenus under Magnolia (Ying et al. 2009, Yang et al. 2016).
Note 2.
Yulania pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia is sufficiently distinguished from Y. pilocarpa to maintain its varietal status by the following features: indumentum of the branchlets (densely pubescent, later glabrous vs. glabrous [Law et al. 2004: 93]); the leaf shape (elliptical, rarely inverted-triangular vs. obovate to broadly obovate [Law et al. 2004]) and the shape and size of the inner 6 tepals (petaloid, 5–7 × 2–3.2 cm vs. nearly spathulate, 7–10 × 3–5 cm [Law et al. 2004]). Additionally, the two taxa are geographically isolated (central Henan Province vs. SE Hubei Province). The illustration of the leaves accompanying the original description of Yulania pilocarpa var. ellipticifolia (Fu et al. 2007: fig.1D) shows them to be in stark contrast to the leaves of Magnolia pilocarpa illustrated in Liu et al. (2004: 93).
Magnolia platypetala
(Hand.-Mazz.) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
62C12D86-680F-54E6-ADB3-39717BAEA48A
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209535-1
Basionym.
Michelia platypetala Hand.-Mazz. In: Handel-Mazzetti, Anz. Akad. Wiss. Wien, Math.-Naturwiss. Kl. 58(12): 89 (1921).
Chinese name.
阔瓣含笑 meaning “broad-petalled (tepalled) michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Hunan Province: Yunshan, near Wukang-chow (= Wugang), ca. 950 m, lofty shady forests, April 1919, Wang Te-Hui (De-Hui Wang) 12281 (p.p. quoad flowering material only, in Handel-Mazzetti, 1921) (holotype: W (possibly destroyed in WWII); isotypes: A online image!, K online image!, SYS!, WU online image!).
Digital images of isotype specimens below accessed 19 March 2019:
isotype [A: 00039059]: http://kiki.huh.harvard.edu/databases/image.php?id=304833
isotype [K: K000681459]: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000681459
isotype [WU: 0039591]: http://herbarium.univie.ac.at/database/detail.php?ID=71255
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. In: Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1058), Frodin and Govaerts (1996: 55), Wu and Chen (2006: 56), each p.p. quoad syn. Michelia platypetala Hand.-Mazz.
Magnolia maudiae var. platypetala (Hand.-Mazz.) Sima (2001: 33).
Magnolia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Hand.-Mazz.) Noot. In: Xia et al. (2008: 49).
Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Hand.-Mazz.) N. H. Xia. In: Xia et al. (2008: 85).
Note 1.
Dandy (1928c: 130) provides relevant background information concerning the type collections of Michelia platypetala and M. fallax from the same general locality in Hunan Province in consecutive years and how they were both initially confused as the former species.
Note 2.
As recorded in the synonymy section preceding Note 1, Michelia platypetala is noted as a synonym of M. cavaleriei and has been made a variety of both Magnolia maudiae and Michelia cavaleriei, the 2001 and 2008 publications with a noted elevational range of 1200–1500 m despite Handel-Mazzetti’s type collection being made at ca. 950 metres. However, M. platypetala retains its species status in Law et al. (1996: 177), Liu et al. (2004: 306), Sima (2011: 219), Deng and Yang (2015: 144) and Yang et al. (2016: 306).
Note 3.
Grimshaw and Bayton (2009: 500) record a personal communication received from Richard Figlar in 2007 advising that “this taxon (Magnolia maudiae var. platypetala) probably ought to be recognised at the specific level, as Magnolia platypetala, as it differs considerably from M. maudiae both in its hairiness and its later bud-break”. Sima (2011: 327), illustrates the contrasting difference between the indumentum of the undersurfaces of the leaves of M. platypetala (Plate 3-4H) and that of the leaves of M. maudiae (Plate 3-4C). Additionally, in a study by Zhang and Xia (2007) on leaf architecture and its taxonomic significance in respect of subtribe Micheliinae of Magnoliaceae, the pronounced contrast in the leaves of Michelia platypetala and M. cavaleriei as revealed by stereoscopic magnified imaging (shown at figs. 36 and 37 in their paper), resulted in these authors concluding that these two taxa should be recognised as independent species”. It is apparent that there is now an almost unanimous consensus of the species status of Michelia platypetala, which is confirmed by the comparison of its morphological features with those of M. cavaleriei compiled in Table 5 below. In view of its distinctive characteristics and accepting the majority recognition by the above-mentioned Chinese authors of Michelia platypetala as a genuine species, it is here transferred to Magnolia as a consequence of the past reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to the genus Magnolia.
Table 5.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia platypetala and M. cavaleriei.
Plant feature | Michelia platypetala Hand-Mazz. | Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. |
life form | medium-sized tree to 20 m | small-sized tree 7–10 metres |
indumentum of branchlets | rufous sericeous | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose¶ |
indumentum of buds | rufous sericeous | silver-grey or rufous appressed pilose¶ |
leaf shape | oblong or elliptic-oblong | narrowly oblong or narrowly oblanceolate-oblong¶ |
leaf dimensions | 11–18(–20) × 4–6(–7) cm (12–17 × 4.5–6.5 cm†) | 10–20 × 3.5–6.5 cm¶ (8–21 × 2.5–5 cm#) |
leaf apex | acuminate or abruptly narrowed short-acuminate | acuminate or short-acute¶ |
leaf base | broadly cuneate or obtuse | cuneate or broadly cuneate¶ |
leaf indumentum abaxially | greyish-white appressed puberulent or rufous appressed hairs | silver-grey or rufous pilose, appressed when young¶ |
lateral leaf veins | 8–14 pairs | 11–15 pairs§ |
petiole length | 2–3 cm† | 2 cm (0.7–1.5 cm#) |
pedicel (peduncle) length | 0.5–2 cm | 1.5–2.5 cm§ |
bract scar number | 2 | 2–3 |
tepal number and shape | 9 (9–11†), obovate-elliptic or elliptic | ca. 12 (10–12#): obovate-elliptic¶ |
tepal length (outer 3) | 5–7 cm | 2.5 cm (2.5–4 cm¶) |
stamen / anther length | ca. 1 cm / ca. 6 mm | 1.2–1.4 cm / ca. 8 mm§ |
gynoecium shape, length and indumentum | cylindric, 6–8 mm, grey or golden puberulent | narrowly ovoid, ca.10 mm, glabrous except for few bristly hairs towards apex of the carpels‡ |
gynophore length | ca. 5 mm | ca. 4 mm§ |
number of ovules | ca. 8 in each immature carpel | 2 in each immature carpel |
fruit aggregate length | 5–15 cm | 5–10 cm¶ |
mature carpels shape and size | ellipsoid, rarely globose or ovoid, 1.5–2(–2.5) × 1–1.5 cm | obovoid or ellipsoid, 1.5–2 cm long§ |
flowering period | March–April | March§ |
The distinguishing features of Michelia platypetala are mainly cited from Law et al. (1996: 177), Liu et al. (2004: 306) and Yang et al. (2016: 306)†, because the description of M. platypetala Hand.-Mazz. (1921) includes the composite description of 2 species, including for the fruit of the subsequently named M. fallax. The features of M. cavaleriei are from Finet and Gagnepain (1906), supplemented by Dandy (1928c: 130)‡, Law et al. (1996: 184)§, Liu et al. (2004: 229)¶ and Yang et al. (2016: 239)#.
Magnolia puberula
(D.L. Fu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
B16DCB25-85E5-5B4A-AC3D-B97CEA28256D
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209537-1
Basionym.
Yulania puberula D.L. Fu. In: D.L. Fu et al., Amer. J. Agric. and Forest. 7(5): 208–209, fig. 3 (2019a).
Chinese name.
短毛玉兰 meaning “short-haired yulan”
Type.
CHINA. Hubei Province, Wudang Mountain, ca. 970 m, 26 March 2018, D.L. Fu 2018032601 (holotype: CAF, fl. n.v.). Same locality, 8 October 2017, D.L. Fu 2017100801 (paratype: CAF, fr. n.v.).
Note.
The type specimens of Yulania puberula cannot be located at the Beijing herbarium of CAF (Wang Hongbin, pers. comm., March 2020).
Magnolia pubipedunculata
(Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
E3D31149-61BA-55B0-A2B9-79B7935429CB
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209538-1
Basionym.
Manglietia pubipedunculata Q.W. Zeng & X.M. Hu. In: X.M. Hu et al., PloS ONE l4 (3): 4–5, fig. 1 (e0210254: 2019). [13 March 2019 – epublished]
Chinese name.
柔毛花梗木莲 meaning “pubescent-peduncled manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Wenshan Prefecture, Maguan County, Miechang Town, Daxinzhai Village, Donggualin, Huashikeng, evergreen broad-leaved forests, 1453 m, 104°05'21"E; 22°54'50"N, 14 May 2004, Q.W. Zeng 89 (holotype: IBSC n.v.). Same locality, 9 September 2003, Q.W. Zeng 80 (paratype: IBSC n.v.).
Note.
There are no data or images held at IBSC for the holotype (Huang Xiangxu, pers. comm., July 2019).
Magnolia pubipetala
(Q.W. Zeng) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
E7658C72-C0F5-5F42-9741-B974CA3E53A0
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209539-1
Basionym.
Manglietia pubipetala Q.W. Zeng. In: Q.W. Zeng et al., Pakistan J. Bot.(6): 1917, 1919 + 1918, fig. 1 (2007).
Chinese name.
毛瓣木莲 meaning “hairy-tepals manglietia” (this Chinese name is often erroneously applied to Manglietia rufibarbata which has glabrous tepals)
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Maguan County, Bazhai, evergreen broad-leaved forests, ca. 1500 m, 14 May 2002, Ren-zhang Zhou 0256 (holotype: IBSC online image!). Yunnan Province: Xichou County, Fadu, Hemawan, evergreen broad-leaved forests, ca. 1600 m, 2 May 1979, Gao Ting-xiang & Zhu Dai-qing 05 (paratype: IBSC n.v.). Yunnan Province: Kunming Botanical Garden, introduced 1987 from Yunnan Province’s Malipo County, Jingchang, evergreen broad-leaved forests, 1400 m, 3 May 2003, Zheng Qing-wen 67 (paratype: IBSC!).
holotype (IBSC): http://www.docin.com/p-1050989203.html (Sima 2011: 313, photo 2-48).
Manglietia rufibarbata Dandy. In: Xia et al. (2008: 60), Sima and Lu (2009: 30) and Sima (2011: 68), each p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia pubipetala Q.W. Zeng.
Note.
Manglietia pubipetala Q.W. Zeng is considered as conspecific with M. rufibarbata Dandy by the above authors. However, M. pubipetala can be sufficiently differentiated from M. rufibarbata Dandy to justify its species status, as shown by the comparative morphological features included in Table 6 on the following page (adapted from Table 1, Zeng et al. 2007). M. pubipetala is therefore transferred to Magnolia consistent with the past reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to the genus Magnolia.
Table 6.
Differentiating features of species Manglietia pubipetala and M. rufibarbata.
Plant feature | Manglietia pubipetala Q.W. Zeng | Manglietia rufibarbata Dandy |
indumentum of branchlets | brown villose | densely rufous villose |
leaf shape | narrowly obovate-elliptic | oblanceolate or oblanceolate-oblong or obovate-oblong |
leaf apex | caudate-acuminate | acuminate or subacuminate |
leaf base | cuneate | cuneate or obtuse or occasionally rounded |
leaf dimensions | 13–17.5 × 4.5–6 cm | 10–25 × 4–9 cm† |
leaf indumentum abaxially | glaucous, densely brown villose | rufous pubescent, especially near midrib |
leaf texture | papery | thinly leathery |
secondary lateral leaf veins | ca. 10–12 pairs | ca. 12–18 pairs |
petiole length / indumentum | 1.2–1.5 cm, brown villose | up to 3 cm, rufous villose or tomentose |
stipules | brown villose, adnate to petiole | stipules externally densely rufous villose, adnate to petiole only lower 1/3 |
tepal number | 9 | 11 (9–12†) |
tepal size (outer 3) and indumentum | 3.8–4.0 × 2.5–2.7 cm, pale brown pubescent | ca. 3 × 2 cm† , glabrous‡ |
stamen scars length | 6–7 mm | ca. 10–12 mm |
gynoecium shape | narrowly obovoid-ellipsoid | ovoid-oblong |
The differentiating features of Manglietia pubipetala are from Zeng et al. (2007) and those of M. rufibarbata are from Dandy (1928), supplemented by Liu et al. (2004: 190)†, Zeng et al. (2007)‡.
Magnolia rubriflora
(Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex F.G. Wang, Q.W. Zeng, R.Z. Zhou & F.W. Xing) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
3EFD0C24-9C04-51FB-9163-F392A616D1DE
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209540-1
Basionym.
Michelia rubriflora Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex F.G. Wang et al., Pakistan J. Bot. 37(3): 559, fig. 1 (2005).
Chinese name.
红花含笑 meaning “red-flowered michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Hainan: Mount Jianfengling, 500–600 m, 31 October 2001, Zhou Ren-zhang 0265 (holotype: IBSC n.v.). Guangdong Province: Guangzhou, Magnolia Garden of Guangdong Forest Research Institute, 8 October 2001, Zhou Ren-zhang 0265b (paratypes: IBSC!; P online image!).
Digital image of paratype specimen below accessed 19 March 2019:
paratype [P: P00852399]: http://mediaphoto.mnhn.fr/media/1445779250360OrFutLDauT0PI7UU
Michelia mediocris Dandy. In: Xia et al. (2008: 85), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia rubriflora Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou.
Note.
While Michelia rubriflora is noted as a synonym of M. mediocris in Flora of China (Xia et al. 2008), the present authors agree with Wang and co-authors that Michelia rubriflora can be more than sufficiently differentiated from M. mediocris by the diagnostic features of these two species included in Table 1 of their paper (Wang et al. 2005), to substantiate its species status. A more comprehensive analysis of their differentiating features is compiled in Table 7 below. Michelia rubriflora also does not key out with the original validating description for M. subulifera (Dandy 1930:212), with which it shares synonymy under M. mediocris in Flora of China. Evidently an independent species, Michelia rubriflora is transferred in the present paper to the genus Magnolia by reason of the past reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to that genus.
Table 7.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia rubriflora and M. mediocris.
Plant feature | Michelia rubriflora Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou | Michelia mediocris Dandy |
tree dimensions | to 15 m × 25 cm dbh | 35 m x 90 cm dbh† (30 m x 190 cm dbh)‡ |
indumentum of buds | greyish-white or pale brown appressed pilose | rufous appressed puberulent¶ |
indumentum of branchlets | greyish-white or pale brown appressed pilose | appressed grey or yellowish-brown tomentose |
leaf shape | ovate-elliptic | elliptic or elliptic-oblong |
leaf dimensions | 5–9 × 2.5–3.5 cm | 6–13 × 3–5 cm§ |
leaf indumentum abaxially | greyish-white or pale brown appressed pilose | initially appressed greyish pubescent (greyish-white appressed puberulent)¶ |
leaf texture | leathery | thinly leathery¶ |
lateral leaf veins | 9–11 either side of midrib | 12–15 either side of midrib |
stipular scars | 1–2 mm long | none¶ |
petiole length and indumentum | 1–2.5 cm, greyish-white or pale brown appressed pilose | 1.5–3 cm§, initially appressed grey tomentellous, then glabrescent |
tepal number /colour | 9, red | 9–10#, white¶ |
tepal size and shape | 2.5–3.5 × 1.0–1.2 cm, lanceolate | 1.8–2.2 × 0.5–0.8 cm, spathulate§ |
stamen length /colour | 1.5–1.7 cm, red | 1.0–1.5 cm§, yellowish-green |
gynophore | not exserted above androecium | extended well above androecium (illustration)¶ |
flowering period | October–November | December–January¶ [China] February–March # [Vietnam] |
fruiting period | October–November of the next year | August–September ¶ [China] September–October# [Vietnam] of the same year |
The differentiating features of Michelia rubriflora are from F.G. Wang et al. (2005) and those of M. mediocris are from Dandy (1928a), supplemented by Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1073)†, Deng and Yang (2015: 142)‡, Law et al. (1996: 180)§, Liu et al. (2004: 292)¶, Sam et al. (2004)#.
Magnolia rufisyncarpa
(Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & F.G. Wang) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
F5F53223-24AF-510E-8AF7-A7CC31563508
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209541-1
Basionym.
Manglietia rufisyncarpa Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & F.G. Wang. In: F.G. Wang et al., Nordic J. Bot. 24(5): 519, fig. 1 (2004).
Chinese name.
红雌蕊木莲 meaning “red gynoecium manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Yunnan Province: Wenshan, Mount Laojun, 1600 m, 12 May 2001, Zhou Ren-zhang 008 (holotype IBSC!; isotype: IBSC n.v.). Same locality, 1800 m, 26 April 2001, Zhou Ren-zhang 0134 (paratype: IBSC n.v.). Guangdong Province: South China Botanical Garden, 30 April 1997, Zhou Ren-zhang 134 (paratypes: IBSC n.v.; P online image!). Digital image of paratype specimen below accessed 15 March 2020:
paratype [P: P00634914]: http://mediaphoto.mnhn.fr/media/1443127138308WwtO3rNrsfBvSzZP
Manglietia insignis (Wall.) Blume. In: Xia et al. (2008: 56), Sima and Lu (2009: 26) and Sima (2011: 102), each p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia rufisyncarpa Y.W. Law et al.
Magnolia insignis Wall. In: Khuraijam and Goel (2015: 109), p.p. quoad syn. Manglietia rufisyncarpa Y.W. Law, R.Z. Zhou & F.G. Wang.
Note.
Manglietia rufisyncarpa is listed as a synonym of M. insignis in Flora of China (Xia et al. 2008), by Sima and Lu (2009) and by Sima (2011). However, the present authors agree with Wang and co-authors that M. rufisyncarpa can be more than sufficiently differentiated from M. insignis (Wall.) Bl. by the diagnostic characters of these two species compiled by Wang et al. (2004: Table 1), to substantiate its independent species status. Additionally, M. rufisyncarpa flowers from April–May whereas M. insignis flowers from May–June (Liu et al. 2004: 156). Also, among the many Manglietia photos in Magnolias of China, the bright red gynoecium of this species, alluded to in its Chinese name, is particularly noticeable as one of only a few exhibiting this colour, with M. insignis displaying a green gynoecium. Manglietia rufisyncarpa also does not key out with the original validating descriptions for M. maguanica Chang & B.L. Chen, M. yunnanensis Hu or Magnolia shangpaensis Hu, with which it shares synonymy under Manglietia insignis in Flora of China. In view of the above, M. rufisyncarpa is transferred in the present paper to Magnolia, consistent with the past reduction of the remaining genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to the genus Magnolia.
Magnolia septipetala
(Z.L. Nong) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
885FC7B5-A2CA-50D0-A86C-41BD71B231A0
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209542-1
Basionym.
Michelia septipetala Z.L. Nong. In: Guihaia 13(3): 220–221, fig. 1 (1993).
Chinese name.
七瓣含笑 meaning “seven-petals (tepals) michelia” (the tepals in fact are recorded as 7–9)
Type.
CHINA. Jiangxi Province: Xinfeng County, Jinpen Shan, in woods, 21 May 1986, Nong Zhi-lin 086067 (holotype: IBK, fl. white n.v.). Other specimens recorded: Same locality? Nong Z.L. 086167. Jiangxi Province: Shangyou County, Wuzhifeng, Guangu Shan, 670 m, 23 November 1976, Nong Z.L. 760347 (JXAU online images!). Digital images of specimen 760347 with collector noted as Shi Xinghua, accessed 19 March 2019:
[JXAU: 0001182]: http://www.cvh.ac.cn/spm/JXAU/JXAU0001182
[JXAU: 0001183]: http://www.cvh.ac.cn/spm/JXAU/JXAU0001183
[JXAU: 0001184]: http://www.cvh.ac.cn/spm/JXAU/JXAU0001184
Michelia fujianensis Q.F. Zheng. In: Xia and Deng (2002: 130) and Xia et al. (2008: 83), both p.p. quoad syn. Michelia septipetala Z.L. Nong.
Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu. In: Sima (2011: 234), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia septipetala Z.L. Nong.
Note.
The holotype specimen of Michelia septipetala cannot be found at IBK (Xu Wei-bin, pers. comm., July 2019). However, M. septipetala can be easily differentiated from both M. fujianensis and M. caloptila, the 2 species under which it is noted in synonymy above, by the comparison of their morphological and phenological characteristics summarised in Table 8 below.
Table 8.
Differentiating features of Michelia septipetala, M. fujianensis and M. caloptila.
Plant feature | Michelia septipetala Z.L. Nong | Michelia fujianensis Q.F. Zheng | Michelia caloptila Y.W. Law & Y.F. Wu |
maximum height | 28 m (30 m†) | to 16 m§ | ca. 15 m¶ |
bark colour | greyish-white | greyish-brown | grey |
indumentum of buds | densely ferrugineus-tomentose | densely cinnamon-coloured tomentose | brown tomentose |
indumentum of branchlets | densely ferrugineus-tomentose | densely cinnamon-coloured tomentose | brown tomentose |
leaf shape | oblong-elliptic | oblong or narrowly obovate-elliptic | narrowly elliptic or elliptic |
leaf dimensions | 8–16 × 2.8–5.5 cm | 6–11 × 2.5–4 cm | 9–16 × 2.5–5 cm |
leaf apex / base | short acuminate / broadly cuneate |
acute / rounded | acuminate or caudate-acuminate / cuneate |
leaf indumentum adaxially | almost glabrous | densely short-tomentose at midrib | glabrous |
leaf indumentum abaxially | ferrugineus-pubescent, denser at midrib | densely ferrugineus or brownish-yellow appressed sericeous | minutely brown tomentose |
lateral leaf veins | 11–13 pairs | 8–9 pairs | 7–12 pairs |
petiole length / indumentum | 5–7 mm, densely ferrugineus pubescent | 10–15 mm, densely cinnamon tomentose | 5–10 mm, brown tomentose |
peduncle indumentum | densely ferrugineus-tomentose | densely cinnamon-coloured tomentose | not known |
tepal number and shape | 7–9: external 3 tepals obovate, internal tepals narrowly obovate | 15–16: spathulate-oblong (12–17, outer 3 tepals narrowly obovate, inner tepals obovate, or narrowly ovate§) | 6–9: obovate-oblong# |
stamen number and length | ca. 20, 10–15 mm | number not known, 4–5.5 mm |
ca. 35 (photo#), length not known |
filament length | 4–5 mm | 1–1.5 mm | not known |
gynoecium length | narrowly cylindric, ca. 20 mm | cylindric, ca. 5 mm | not known |
gynophore length | ca. 8 mm | ca. 1 mm | not known |
immature carpels | ca. 20, densely yellow-brown sericeous, with 2–3 ovules each carpel | pubescent, most aborted | not known |
gynophore in fruit | yellow-brown tomentose, 18–25 mm long | pilose, 2–2.5 mm long | ca. 20 mm long |
fruit aggregates | 7–13 cm long | 2–3 cm | 4–10 cm long |
mature carpels | sessile, oblong or rounded, 1–1.8 × 0.9–1.3 cm with 1–3 seeds | obovoid, 1.5–2 cm × ca. 1.2 cm with 1 seed | broadly ovate or suborbicular, 1–1.8 cm long with 1–4 seeds. |
flowering period | May (–June?) | January–February‡ December–January§ | not known |
fruiting period | November | October–November§ | September¶ |
The differentiating features of Michelia septipetala are cited from Nong (1993) and Liao and Guo (2010)†; those of Michelia fujianensis from Zheng (1981)‡, supplemented by Liu et al. (2004: 260)§, with those of Michelia caloptila from Law and Wu (1984) and Liu et al. (2004: 228)¶, who each note the flowers as then unknown, plus Yang et al. (2016: 237)#.
Magnolia sinoconifera
(F.N. Wei) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
7317065E-D56E-5FB7-A88F-8CDC7576048E
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209543-1
Basionym.
Manglietia sinoconifera F.N. Wei. In: Guihaia 13(1): 5, fig. s.n. (1993).
Chinese name.
那坡木莲 meaning “Napo manglietia”
Type.
CHINA. Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region: Guilin Botanical Garden (cultivated; introduced from Napo County, W Guangxi), 3 June 1991, Wei Fa-nan 1910 (holotype: IBK n.v.).
Manglietia dandyi (Gagnep.) Dandy. In: Xia et al. (2008: 54), p.p. quoad syn. ?Manglietia sinoconifera F.N. Wei.
Note 1.
The holotype specimen of Manglietia sinoconifera cannot be found at IBK (Xu Wei-bin, pers. comm., July 2019).
Note 2.
Some of the features distinguishing Manglietia sinoconifera from M. dandyi, under which it is questionably placed as conspecific in Flora of China due to uncertainty over its status (because the holotype could not be sighted), are listed in Table 9 below. M. sinoconifera (to 10 m) also does not key out with the description for the large-leaved M. megaphylla Hu & W.C. Cheng (1951), a tree to 40m (Liu et al 2004), with which it shares synonymy under M. dandyi in Flora of China. Manglietia sinoconifera is recognised as a genuine species in Yang et al. (2016: 213–214), wherein its introduction to Guilin Botanical Garden from Napo County is recorded as 1973 (18 years earlier than stated in the protologue).
Table 9.
Differentiating features of the species Manglietia sinoconifera and M. dandyi.
Plant feature | Manglietia sinoconifera F.N. Wei | Manglietia dandyi (Gagnep.) Dandy |
life form | ca. 10 m | to 15 m‡ |
indumentum of branchlets | densely light reddish-brown | initially soft red pilose, finally ash-grey and almost glabrous |
leaf shape | oblanceolate | ovate or broadly lanceolate |
leaf dimensions | 15–24 × 5.5–8 cm | 16–17 × 7–8 cm (16–24 × 5–8.5 cm‡) |
leaf apex | cuspidate | short acuminate |
leaf base | cuneate | obtuse |
leaf indumentum abaxially | appressed brown pubescent | red pilose |
petiole length and indumentum | 2.2–3 cm, appressed brown pubescent | 3 cm (1.2–2.3 cm‡), red pilose |
lateral leaf vein pairs | 14–19 | 8–13‡ |
tepal number and shape | 11: outer 3 oblong, inner 8 generally obovate and spathulate | 9–11: outer 3 obovate-oblong‡, intermediate obovate, innermost oblanceolate |
tepal dimensions and indumentum (outer 3) | 6.5 × 3.5 cm, glabrous | 2–2.2 × 1.5–1.7 cm, pubescent externally at base‡ |
stamen length | 10–13 mm | 5.5–7 mm‡ |
gynoecium length | ca. 25 mm | 10–13 mm‡ |
ovules in each carpel | 12 | 2–10‡ |
flowering period | May† | April‡ |
The distinguishing features of Manglietia sinoconifera are cited from Wei (1993) supplemented by Yang et al. (2016: 214)† and those of M. dandyi from Gagnepain (1939 as Magnolia dandyi) supplemented by Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1037)‡.
Magnolia sonlaensis
(Q.N. Vu) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
6ED0B152-D1A3-57DB-A4C3-33479FCC5C38
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209544-1
Basionym.
Michelia sonlaensis Q.N. Vu. In: Q.N. Vu et al., Nordic J. Bot. 37(9): 2–3, figs. 1,2 (2019).
Vietnamese name: Giổi sơn la, meaning “Son La michelia”
Type.
VIETNAM. Son La Province: Yen Chau District, Muong Lum Municipality, Lum village, degraded secondary vegetation, 2270 m, 104°28'44.25"E, 21°00'56.53"N, 1 May 2018, Nam 152018.2 (holotype: VNF!). Same locality, 2275 m, 104°29'30"E, 21°00'47"N, 2 March 2001, D.K. Harder et al. 7092 (paratypes: HN!, MO n.v.). Same locality, 2270 m, 104°28'44"E, 21°00'56"N, 19 May 2017, Nam 1952017 (paratype: VNF n.v.). Same locality, 2272 m, 04°28'44.30"E, 21°00'60"N, 13 April 2019, Nam 1342019 (paratype: VNF n.v.). Same region, 915 m, 104°28'?"E, 21°00'59"N, 29 December 2010, Nam 291210.5; Nam 291210.6; Nam 291210.7 (paratypes: VNF n.v.).
Magnolia urceolata
(D.L. Fu, B.H. Xiong & X. Chen) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
6B6D0A6B-61BF-5D33-91F3-FF9D705A6896
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209546-1
Basionym.
Yulania urceolata D.L. Fu, B.H. Xiong & X. Chen. In: D.L. Fu et al., Amer. J. Agric. and Forest. 7(5): 219–220, fig. 4 (2019b).
Chinese name.
宽瓣玉兰 meaning “wide-capsuled yulan”
Type.
CHINA. Lectotype: Liu Yuhu in Zheng W.J. (Ed) Flora of Trees of China 1: 459; fig. 139 (1983). Guizhou Province: Weining County, 2300 m, 30 September 2017, D.L. Fu 2017093001 (paratype: CAF, fr. n.v.). D.L. Fu 2009052401 (paratype: CAF, young fr.). Henan Province: Zhengzhou City (cultivated), D.L. Fu 2012032001 (paratype: CAF, fl. n.v.).
Note.
The type specimens of Yulania urceolata cannot be located at the Beijing herbarium of CAF (Wang Hongbin, pers. comm., March 2020).
Magnolia xinningia
(Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex Q.X. Ma, Q.W. Zeng, R.Z. Zhou & F.W. Xing) C.B. Callaghan & S.K. Png comb. nov.
2E97DEB1-18B5-5B34-9570-BB259C58AA7B
urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77209547-1
Basionym.
Michelia xinningia Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou ex Q.X. Ma et al., Pakistan J. Bot. 37(1): 37, fig. 1 (2005).
Chinese name.
新宁含笑 meaning “Xinning michelia”
Type.
CHINA. Hunan Province: Xinning County, Ziyunshan, in evergreen broad-leaved forests, 1500 m, 20 September 1992, R.Z. Zhou 197 (holotype: IBSC n.v.; isotype: IBSC n.v.).
Michelia cavaleriei Finet & Gagnep. var. cavaleriei. In: Xia et al. (2008: 84), p.p. quoad syn. Michelia xinningia Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou.
Michelia foveolata Merr. ex Dandy. In: Sima & Lu (2009: 55) and Sima (2011: 216), both p.p. quoad syn. Michelia xinningia Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou.
Note 1.
Digital images of R.Z. Zhou 197 and 0197 were received from IBSC in 2019, but with the collection dates in April 1988 and April 1996 (Ziyunshan, 800 m) respectively, so probably represent paratypes not mentioned in the 2005 protologue.
Note 2.
In Flora of China (Xia et al. 2008), the 9-tepalled Michelia xinningia from Hunan, with a published height by the naming authors of 20 m, appears incongruously as a synonym of the ca. 12-tepalled M. cavaleriei var. cavaleriei with a height to 10 m (Liu et al. 2004: 229; Xia et al. 2008: 8; Deng and Yang 2015: 148). This would indicate that this remains about the maximum height of M. cavaleriei since being described as a small tree of 4–7 metres more than a century earlier (Finet and Gagnepain 1906: 573), based on a collection from Guizhou ca. 400 km distance from the type locality of Michelia xinningia in Hunan. This discrepancy in their heights indicates that M. xinningia was evidently meant to appear in Flora of China as a synonym of the then new combination M. cavaleriei var. platypetala (Hand.-Mazz.) N.H. Xia of the same height. However, the present authors agree with the abstract and Latin diagnosis of the authors of M. xinningia which indicate it to be sufficiently distinguished from M. cavaleriei var. platypetala (Ma et al. 2005: Table 1), to warrant species status, as has been recognised in Xing et al. (2009: 212) and Yang et al. (2016: 331). Also, Michelia xinningia can easily be differentiated from M. foveolata, under which it is made a synonym by Sima and Lu (2009) and included as such in Sima (2011: 216), by the comparative features compiled in Table 10.
Table 10.
Differentiating features of the species Michelia xinningia and M. foveolata.
Plant feature | Michelia xinningia Y.W. Law & R.Z. Zhou | Michelia foveolata Merr. ex Dandy |
maximum height | 20 m | 30+ m |
bark colour | greyish-brown | pale grey or dark grey# |
indumentum of buds | golden villose | densely rufous tomentellous# |
indumentum of branchlets | golden villose | densely rufous tomentellous# |
leaf shape | narrowly elliptic | oblong-elliptic, elliptic ovate or broadly lanceolate# |
leaf dimensions | 12–18 × 4.5–5.5 cm | 17–23 × 6–11 cm# |
leaf texture | Leathery | thickly leathery# |
lateral leaf veins | 8–9 pairs | 16–20 pairs (16–26 pairs§) |
leaf abaxially | golden villose with brown pilose midrib | densely coppery-red tomentellous# |
petiole length and indumentum | 1–1.5 cm (1.5–2 cm†), golden villose | 1.5–4 cm††, silky brown pubescent¶ |
tepal number, colour, with shape and size of outer 3 | 9, white, obovate, 4–5 × ca. 2 cm (7–9 tepals in photo Xing et al. 2009: 213) | 9–12, pale yellow with purplish base, broadly ovate, 6–7 cm long# |
staminal complex length | ca. 15 mm | ca. 22–25 mm‡ |
stamen number | 30–35 | ca. 50§ |
filament colour | Red | dark purple# |
anther length | ca. 0.8 cm | 1.5–2 cm§ |
gynoecium length | ca. 1.6 cm | 2–3 cm§ |
gynophore length | 15–20 mm | 12–15 mm‡ |
flowering period | April–May | March–May# |
elevation and distribution | 900–1500 m, Xinning, Hunan# | 500–1800 m, Guangdong, S Guangxi, SE Guizhou, W Hubei, S Hunan, Jiangxi, SE Yunnan# |
Footnote: The distinguishing features of Michelia xinningia are cited from Ma et al. (2005) and Yang et al. (2016)†, with those of M. foveolata from Dandy (1928b), supplemented by Chen and Nooteboom (1993: 1066)‡, Law et al. (1996: 181)§, Lee (1935: 485)¶, Liu et al. (2004: 256)# and Yang et al. (2016: 272)††.
Note 3.
Bearing in mind the above discussion and comparative features, Michelia xinningia is an obviously distinct species. Therefore it is here transferred to Magnolia due to the past reduction of the previous segregate genera of subfamily Magnolioideae to the genus Magnolia.
Note 4.
A search of the literature has found that Michelia xinningia is in cultivation at 4 Chinese botanical gardens, each in which M. platypetala and M. foveolata are also cultivated (Callaghan and Png 2019b).
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance received from Miguel Garcia, Research Librarian at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia. Also from William Hastie, Research Librarian at the CSIRO Black Mountain Library, Canberra, Australia and Dr Kang Wang at Beijing Botanical Gardens during our search for relevant literature.
Thanks are expressed to the following herbaria curators or research staff who sent the authors requested type specimens: Prof. Zhang Zhixiang and Dr Wang Ao at BJFC, Dr Chen Zhihui and Dr Huang Xiangxu at IBSC, Dr Fan Qiang and Mrs. Luo at SYS, all in China plus Dr Do Van Hai at HN and Assoc. Prof. Vu Quang Nam at VNF, both in Vietnam.
Also our thanks to Dr Yan Lihong at HFBG in China who sent photos when the requested specimen of Michelia hunanensis was no longer available. We are grateful to Waiyin Wee in Sydney, Australia, for translating a perplexing Chinese name of one of the Manglietia species
We would like to express our gratitude to Assoc. Prof. Priscilla Muriel (Ecuador) and an anonymous reviewer for their reviews of the final version of the manuscript. Also to the 2 anonymous reviewers of the original manuscript when submitted to another journal in 2019 and subsequently rejected by the editor because “ it does not fit within the scope or focus” of the journal.
Appendix 1
List of the acronyms of institutional herbaria appearing in this paper.
A Arnold Arboretum Herbarium (of Harvard University Herbaria), Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
BJFC Forestry Herbarium, Beijing Forestry University, Xiaozhuang, Beijing, China
CAF Dendrological Herbarium, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Haidian, Beijing, China
HEAC Henan Agricultural University Herbarium, Zhengzhou, Henan, China
HFBG Herbarium, Forestry Botanical Garden of Heilongjiang, Dongliqu, Harbin, Heilongjiang, China
HFTC Herbarium, Hunan Forestry Technical College, Hengyang, Hunan, China
HN Herbarium, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, Hanoi, Vietnam
IBK Herbarium, Guangxi Institute of Botany, Yanshan, Guilin, Guangxi, China
IBSC Department of Taxonomy Herbarium, South China Institute of Botany, (SCBI) Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wushan, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
JXAU Dendrological Herbarium, Department of Forestry, Jiangxi Agricultural University, Meiling, Nanchang, Jiangxi, China
K Royal Botanic Gardens Herbarium, Kew, Surrey, London, UK
L Leiden University Branch (Rijksherbarium), National Herbarium of the Netherlands, Leiden, the Netherlands
LBG Herbarium, Lushan Botanical Garden, Lushan, Jiangxi, China
MO Herbarium, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
P Herbarium National de Paris, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France
PE Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Herbarium, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xiang Shan, Beijing, China
SIF Dendrological Herbarium, Forestry School of Sichuan, Dujiangyan, Sichuan, China
SYS Biology Department, Botanical Division Herbarium, Zhongshan University (Sun Yat-sen University), Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
VNF Vietnam Forestry Herbarium, Hanoi, Vietnam
W Herbarium, Natural History Museum, Wien, Austria
WU Herbarium, Institute of Botany, University of Vienna, Austria
ZJFC Dendrological Herbarium, Department of Forestry, Zhejiang Forestry University, Linan, Zhejiang, China
Herbaria references
The above herbarium acronyms and their institutes were located in the following publications:
Chen SC, Li JL, Zhu XY, Zhang ZY (1990) Bibliography of Chinese Systematic Botany (1949–1990). Guangdong Science & Technology Press, Guangzhou. iv + 810 pp. [In Chinese and English] [Chinese Herbaria, pp. 667–684; Herbarium Abbreviations, pp. 685–698]
Fu LK, Zhang XC, Qin HN, Ma JS (Eds) (1993) Index Herbariorum Sinicorum. China Science and Technology Press, Beijing. vii + 458 pp. [In Chinese and English]
Holmgren PK, Holmgren NH, Barnett LC (Eds) (1990) Index Herbariorum. Part 1. The Herbaria of the World. Eighth Edition. Regnum Vegetabile Vol. 120, New York Botanical Garden (on behalf of the International Association for Plant Taxonomy), The Bronx, New York, x + 693 pp.
Herbaria acronyms may now be searched at: http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/ [acc: 27.04.2020]
Jin SY, Chen YL (1994) A Catalogue of Type Specimens (Cormophyta) in the Herbaria of China. Science Press, Beijing. xi + 716 pp. [In Chinese] [Magnoliaceae: pp. 453–457; Herbaria acronyms: pp.696–708]
Citation
Callaghan CB, Png SK (2020) Title, Twenty-six additional new combinations in the Magnolia (Magnoliaceae) of China and Vietnam. PhytoKeys 146: 1–35. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.146.52114
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