全 文 :植 物 分 类 学 报 45 (3): 337–340(2007) doi:10.1360/aps050172
Acta Phytotaxonomica Sinica http://www.plantsystematics.com
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Received: 29 November 2005 Accepted: 3 April 2007
Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant Nos. 30470128, 39899400 and 30499340; and the
Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Grant No. KSCX-SW-122.
Two newly recorded species of Acer (Aceraceae) in China
CHEN You-Sheng
(State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Beijing 100093, China)
Abstract Acer calcaratum and A. acuminatum, two poorly known and very rare species,
occurring in Southeast Asia and the Himalayas respectively, were discovered recently in
Yunnan Province and Xizang Autonomous Region (Tibet) in China. Acer calcaratum belongs
to sect. Palmata ser. Sinensia, and is characterized by its 3 basally-nerved and 3-lobed leaves,
with a rounded base, short, corymbose inflorescence and with few fruits, usually with only one
large, well-developed samara, the nutlet more or less ovoid. Acer acuminatum belongs to sect.
Arguta, and is characterized by its 3- or 5-lobed leaf blade, the lateral lobes usually as long as
central lobe, apex of the lateral lobes caudate-acuminate, and infructescence 12–20 cm long.
Key words Acer, Acer calcaratum, Acer acuminatum, Aceraceae, new record, China.
Acer L. (Aceraceae), containing at least 140 species, is the largest genus of broad-leaved
deciduous trees that dominate the broad-leaved deciduous forests of the Northern Hemisphere
today (Wolfe & Tanai, 1987). With about 75 percent of the total number of species, China is
the modern biodiversity center of the genus. During the course of preparing the draft of
Aceraceae for the Flora of China, two new records were found and are reported here.
1. Acer calcaratum Gagnep. in Notul. Syst. Paris 13: 192. 1948. Type: Vietnam. Annam,
Nhatrang, alt. 1000–1500 m, A. Chevalier 38878 (holotype, P, photo seen).
A. isolobum Kurz in J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal Pt. 2, Nat. Hist. 41: 304. 1872, non
Masslalongo (1859). Type: Myanmar. Pegu, A. Kurz 1365 (lectotype designated by Murray in
1978, K!; isotype, P).
A. wilsonii Rehder ssp. burmense A. E. Murray in Kalmia 8: 20. 1978. Type: Myanmar.
Pegu, A. Kurz 1365 (holotype, K!; isotype, P).
A. craibianum Delendick in Brittonia 30 (4): 474. 1978. Type: Myanmar. Pegu, A. Kurz
1365 (holotype, K!; isotype, P).
三裂枫 新拟
Small trees to 7 m tall, andromonoecious. Branchlets smooth, green and glabrous,
greenish brown or olive-brown in their second year; winter buds ovoid, 4-paired. Leaves
chartaceous, deciduous; petioles 1.5–4.6 cm, glabrous; blade 6–15×5–21 cm, deeply 3-lobed,
base rounded, rarely subcordate, adaxially olive green, abaxially light green, and glabrous
with exception of axillary tufts of pale hairs, tertiary venation reticulate; lobes
triangular-ovate, margin entire, apex acuminate; main nerves 3, developing from leaf base,
main nerves and veinlets distinct on both surfaces. Inflorescence corymbose, terminal on a
two-leaved branchlet. Flowers with pedicels glabrous, 1.7–2 cm long; sepals 5, purplish red;
petals 5, white; stamens 8; disc glabrous, extrastaminal; styles 2. Samaras glabrous; nutlets
brown, ovoid, ca. 5×7 mm, distinctly veined; wings spreading obtusely, 4–6 cm long with
nutlets 1.4–1.7 cm wide, reddish when young, brownish when mature. Fl. Nov.–Jan., fr. Mar.
–Jul.
Acta Phytotaxonomica Sinica Vol. 45 338
China. Yunnan (云南): Jinghong (景洪), Menglong (勐龙), Mengsong (勐宋), in rain
forest, alt. 1700 m, 1998-04, H. Wang (王洪) 6215 (PE).
Thailand. Loei: Mt. Phu Krading, C. F. van Beusekom & C. Phengklai 3145 (K);
Phukrading, L. B. Abbe et al. 9453 (K); Poo Kradeng, F. Flot 7505 (K). Chiangmai: Doi
Khun Huai Pong, B. Hansen & T. Smitinand 12861 (K).
Distribution: China (Yunnan), Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam. Scattered near streams in
the rain forest at elevations between alt. 1200 to 2400 m.
Acer calcaratum is a poorly known species distributed in Myanmar, Thailand and
Vietnam (Shimizu et al., 1981; Santisuk, 1998). Gagnepain (1948) described this species
based on A. Chevalier 38878 (P) from Vietnam and noted that it is easily confused with A.
isolobum Kurz and A. tonkinense Lecomte. Acer isolobum was described from Myanmar and
is in fact a later homonym of A. isolobum Masslalongo (Murray, 1978; Delendick, 1978; van
Gelderen, 1994). Murray (1978) and Delendick (1978) provided two new names for A.
isolobum Kurz respectively: A. wilsonii Rehder ssp. burmense A. E. Murray and A.
craibianum Delendick, but these two taxa are in fact synonyms of Acer calcaratum (Shimizu
et al., 1981).
The 3-lobed leaf shape of Acer calcaratum is somewhat similar to that of A. wilsonii
Rehder, A. tonkinense, A. fenzelianum Hand.-Mazz., A. osmastoni Gamble, and A. chapaense
Gagnep. Acer calcaratum differs from A. wilsonii by its short corymbose inflorescences,
sepals purplish red, samaras much larger and usually with only one well-developed in each
inflorescence, while A. wilsonii is characterized by its long drooping paniculate
inflorescences, sepals greenish yellow, samaras much smaller and numerous (Santisuk, 1998),
and leaves occasionally with two additional basal lobes (van Gelderen, 1994).
Murray (1970) treated A. calcaratum as a synonym of A. tonkinense ssp. fenzelianum
(Hand.-Mazz.) E. Murray, but more recently Acer calcaratum, A. tonkinense, and A.
fenzelianum have all been treated as good species (Shimizu et al., 1981). Valder (1975) once
mistook a tree of A. calcaratum from Thailand as A. tonkinense because of its 3-lobed leaves
(Shimizu et al., 1981). Acer tonkinense is characterized by its long paniculate inflorescences
and leaves being ovate, shallowly 3-lobed or sometimes with two additional basal lobes, the
base usually cordate, petioles stout, 2–2.5 cm long, glabrous, samaras small, 3–3.5 cm long,
glabrous. Acer fenzelianum is characterized by its leaves being oblong, 10–13×6–10 cm,
very shallowly 3-lobed, lateral lobes smaller and slightly divergent, base obtuse, petioles
stout, 2–3 cm long, tomentose, inflorescences corymbose, pedicels tomentose, and samaras
pubescent, 3.5–3.8 cm long.
Acer osmastoni Gamble was described from the Sikkim Himalayas in India, it differs
from A. calcaratum by its paniculate inflorescence, leaves being sometimes unlobed, and
samaras smaller. Van Gelderen’s (1994) treatment of this taxon as a synonym of A.
calcaratum is not accepted here.
Acer chapaense was described from northern Vietnam based on Pételot 5824 (P). Its
leaves are very similar to those of A. calcaratum. Rushforth (1994) found A. chapaense has
milky sap and greenish bark and is closest to A. amplum Rehder and belongs to sect.
Platanoidea Pax. After examination of type specimens, I found A. chapaense to be the same
with A. amplum var. jianshuiense W. P. Fang, which is characterized by its leaves being
broadly 3-lobed, basally 5-nerved, base rounded, lobes entire, inflorescences corymbose,
nutlets compressed, and branchlets bark green.
The systematic position of Acer calcaratum has seldom been discussed, but van
Gelderen (1994) placed it under sect. Palmata Pax ser. Sinensia Pojárkova.
To date, in China, Acer calcaratum has been found in only one locality of the
No. 3 CHEN: Two newly recorded species of Acer (Aceraceae) in China 339
southernmost part of Yunnan Province bordering Myanmar. Thus, it is a critically endangered
species in China.
2. Acer acuminatum Wall. ex D. Don, Prod. Fl. Nepal 279. 1825; Pax in Engl. Pflanzenr. 163
(8): 15. 1902; Kitamura in Kihara Fauna Fl. Nepal Himalaya 1744. 1955; Banerji & S. Das in
Indian Forester 97 (5): 248. 1971; van Gelderen et al., Maples of the World 165. 1994; van
Gelderen & D. M. van Gelderen, Maples for Gardens 29. 1999. Type: India. Srinagar, Wallich
1225, pro parte (lectotype here designated, K!)
长裂枫 新拟
Multi-stemmed small trees, to 10 m tall, dioecious. Branches often reddish green,
smooth, glabrous; trunk green. Bud scales in pairs. Petioles often reddish, 5–10 cm,
pubescent; leaf blade 6–12 cm long and about as wide, base subcordate-truncate, margin
sharply serrate, often doubly toothed, apex caudate-acuminate, acumen 1–2 cm, abaxially
glabrescent except hirsute in axils of secondary veins, secondary veins 5, 3–5-lobed, basal
lobes insignificant, lobes triangular, apex acuminate. Flowers greenish, dioecious, 4-merous.
Male inflorescence corymbose, axillary from leafless buds, female inflorescence racemose,
terminal or axillary from mixed buds. Sepals 4, oblong, 3–4 mm long. Petals 4, ovate, shorter
than sepals. Stamens 4–6, inserted outside disc. Ovary glabrous; style long, connate to about
halfway. Infructescence 12–20 cm long; samaras 3–4 cm long; wings spreading at right
angles; nutlets rugose. Fl. Mar.–Apr., fr. Sept.
China. Xizang (西藏): Yadong (亚东), Xigou (西沟), alt. 3100 m, 1975-10-23, Xizang Exped. (西藏
队) 56 (PE); Jilong (吉隆): alt. 2750 m, 1981-09-14, Z. C. Ni (倪志诚) 2227 (PE).
Acer acuminatum is endemic to the Himalayas, distributed in northern India, Kashmir,
Nepal and northern Pakistan. The specimens from Xizang represent the first record of this
species in China.
Acer acuminatum belongs to sect. Arguta Rehder. The only species in the Himalayan
flora similar to this species is A. stachyophyllum Hiern, but our species differs by its leaf
blades being 3- or 5-lobed, lateral lobes usually as long as central lobe, apex of lateral lobes
caudate-acuminate, and infructescence much longer, 12–20 cm.
Acknowledgements The author is grateful to the curators of the herbaria (K, P, PE) for
their help to access to the herbarium collections and/or the loan of type specimens.
References
Delendick T J. 1978. Acer craibianum (Aceraceae), a new name for a maple of southeast Asia. Brittonia 30:
473–476.
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Murray A E. 1970. A Monograph of the Aceraceae. Ph.D. Dissertation. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania State
University.
Murray A E. 1978. Acer notes no. 8. Kalmia 8: 17–20.
Rushforth K. 1994. Acer chapaense and its systematic position. International Dendrology Society Year Book.
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H J eds. Maples of the World. Portland, Oregon: Timber Press. 105–239.
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Acta Phytotaxonomica Sinica Vol. 45 340
Mineralogy 22 (1): 1–246.
中国槭树科二新记录种
陈又生
(系统与进化植物学国家重点实验室, 中国科学院植物研究所 北京 100093)
摘要 三裂枫Acer calcaratum Gagnep.和长裂枫Acer acuminatum Wall. ex D. Don两种分布于东南亚和
喜马拉雅地区的珍稀树种, 最近分别发现在我国云南和西藏有分布, 属于我国新记录种。三裂枫属于广
义鸡爪槭组sect. Palmata中华槭系ser. Sinensia, 主要形态特点为叶片三裂, 叶片基部圆形, 伞房花序,
通常只有一个发育完全的果实, 坚果近卵球形。长裂枫属于尖齿槭组sect. Arguta, 主要特点为叶片3裂
和5裂, 侧裂片和中央裂片近等长, 裂片先端长渐尖, 花序长达12–20 cm。
关键词 槭属; 槭树科; 新记录; 中国