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A new species of Sartidia (Graminae), endemic to ultramafic soils
Authors:K. Balkwill  G.J. Campbell-Young  L. Fish  J. Munday  M.L. Frean  M. Stalmans
Affiliation:aC.E. Moss Herbarium, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, Wits 2050, South Africa;bNational Herbarium, Pretoria (PRE), South African National Biodiversity Institute, Private Bag X101, Pretoria 0001, South Africa;cInternational Conservation Services, PO Box 19139, Nelspruit 1200, South Africa
Abstract:A species of Sartidia De Winter, first collected by P.J. Muller in 1972 in the Cythna Letty Nature Reserve in Mpumalanga, does not match existing material of Sartidia, a genus comprising four species. The new species, S. dewinteri J. Munday & L. Fish, is most similar to S. jucunda (Schweick.) De Winter but differs in the leaf sheath colour, lower leaf blade surface texture, spikelet length and upper glume length. It differs also from all other species in the genus in the shape and branching of the inflorescence, the relative length of the lateral awns to the median awn, lemma body surface texture, callus shape and hair arrangement, palea shape and distribution. Sartidia dewinteri differs anatomically from S. angolensis and S. vanderystii in that the stereome strands in the leaf blades project partly or almost completely into the first order vascular bundles rather than not at all, and from S. jucunda by having 3 rather than 5 first order vascular bundles in the leaf. Sartidia dewinteri is known only from ultramafic soils of the Barberton Greenstone Belt and is thus considered a serpentine endemic. The IUCN conservation status of S. dewinteri is considered to be Lower Risk — least concern, although some of its ultramafic habitat is under threat from afforestation and the after effects of mining.
Keywords:Anatomy   Aristida   Sartidia   Serpentinite   Taxonomy   Ultramafics
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