Research Article
Print
Research Article
Two new dioecious species of Vanguerieae (Rubiaceae) from limestone regions in Madagascar
expand article infoPetra De Block, Franck Rakotonasolo§|, Arne Mertens, Sylvain G. Razafimandimbison, Brecht Verstraete
‡ Meise Botanic Garden, Meise, Belgium
§ Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza, Antananarivo, Madagascar
| Kew Madagascar Conservation Centre, Antananarivo, Madagascar
¶ Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden
Open Access

Abstract

Background and aims – The Paleotropical tribe Vanguerieae (Rubiaceae) is centred in Africa and Madagascar. In Madagascar, many of its ca 150 species are functionally dioecious, belonging to the small genus Bullockia and two large genera, Pyrostria (~90 species) and Peponidium (~50 species). These species estimates include many undescribed species, two of which are formally described here.

Material and methods – A Bayesian inference of ITS sequence data from Vanguerieae was performed to pinpoint the generic placement of the new taxa. Morphological studies were conducted based on standard methods of herbarium taxonomy. The new species are described in detail, illustrated, and compared to morphological similar species. Distribution maps are presented and the preliminary conservation status of the new taxa was evaluated using IUCN criteria.

Key results – Two new species of Malagasy Vanguerieae are described. ITS data place one in the genus Peponidium and one in the genus Pyrostria. Peponidium calciphilum sp. nov. is endemic to the Tsingy of Ankarana in northern Madagascar, while Pyrostria multilocellata sp. nov. is restricted to the spiny thickets in dry southern and southwestern Madagascar. Both species occur on limestone and in dry vegetation types, have 4-merous, functionally dioecious flowers, and bilocular fruits. Peponidium calciphilum sp. nov. is characterized by ovate, sessile leaves with cordate bases, well-developed subulate stipules, glabrous shoots, ovaries, and calyces, distinct tufts of hairs at the tips of the calyx lobes, and vaulted corolla lobes with well-developed appendages. Pyrostria multilocellata sp. nov. is characterized by very small, strongly coriaceous to almost succulent leaves, single-flowered male and female inflorescences, minute flowers, and multilocellate anthers in the male flowers. Peponidium calciphilum sp. nov. is considered as Endangered, whereas Pyrostria multilocellata sp. nov. is estimated to be Near Threatened.

Keywords

Ankarana, functional dioecy, ITS, multilocellate anthers, new species, Peponidium, Pyrostria, Toliara

Introduction

The tribe Vanguerieae (Rubiaceae) is Paleotropical, with ca 650 species in 29 genera (Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024; Razafimandimbison and Rydin 2024a, 2024b) but centred in Africa and Madagascar, with ca 550 species in 23 genera. In Madagascar, the tribe is represented by six genera (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009) and at least 150 species, many of which remain undescribed (Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024). Members of Vanguerieae are characterized by axillary inflorescences consisting of one to many, usually small flowers, campanulate corollas, valvate aestivation, a cylindrical or knob-like stigma (Igersheim 1993; Tilney et al. 2014), a single apically attached, pendulous ovule per locule, porate pollen, secondary pollen presentation, a bilocular to plurilocular ovary, drupaceous fruits containing strongly woody pyrenes with apical preformed germination slits, and seeds with large embryos and superior radicles (Robbrecht 1988; Bridson 1998; De Block and Razafimandimbison 2022).

In Madagascar, most Vanguerieae species have functionally dioecious flowers. The large variation in flower and fruit morphology of the Malagasy dioecious Vanguerieae led to the historical description of species in several genera, notably Pyrostria Comm. ex A.Juss., Peponidium (Baill.) Arènes, Canthium Lam., and the endemic genera Leroya Cavaco, Neoleroya Cavaco, and Pseudopeponidium Homolle ex Arènes. Subsequent morphological (e.g. Bridson 1987) and molecular studies (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009) clarified the generic delimitation of the dioecious Vanguerieae group. The Malagasy species are currently accommodated in three genera: Bullockia (Bridson) Razafim., Lantz & B.Bremer (two species in Madagascar, as yet undescribed), Peponidium (ca 50 species in Madagascar, both named and undescribed), and Pyrostria (ca 90 species in Madagascar, both named and undescribed) (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009; Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024). In Madagascar, Bullockia is easily recognized because the two Malagasy species are characterized by deciduous leaves (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009). Also present on mainland Africa but there with persistent leaves, Bullockia is further characterized by the small, free bracts on the peduncle, the dioecious flowers, the well-defined ring of deflexed hairs inside the corolla tube, the pubescent (but not congested) throat, the anthers without darkly coloured connective or with only the central area of the connective darkly coloured, the stigmatic head which is hollow at its base, and, the bilocular, heart-shaped fruits (Bridson 1987). According to Razafimandimbison et al. (2009), the genera Peponidium and Pyrostria can be distinguished by the nature of the bracts at the base of the inflorescence. Peponidium has small cupular, deciduous bracts that never enclose the young inflorescence, whereas Pyrostria has persistent, basally connate, and long-acuminate, paired bracts, completely enclosing the young inflorescence (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009; De Block and Razafimandimbison 2022). Many Malagasy species of Peponidium and Pyrostria remain unnamed. However, several new dioecious species have recently been described (Lantz et al. 2007; Atalahy et al. 2021; Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024) and a revision of Pyrostria is underway (Atalahy 2022).

In this study, we investigated two new Malagasy Vanguerieae species, collected during recent field work. Although their delimitation as distinct species was clear, it was difficult to assign them to genera. We therefore tested their generic placement by adding new ITS sequence data to an existing sequence alignment of Vanguerieae (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009). The goal of this analysis was not to present new hypotheses about the phylogenetic relationships within the dioecious group or the Vanguerieae tribe, but to place both new species in a genus. The new species are described in detail, illustrated, compared to morphologically similar species, and a distribution map and preliminary IUCN conservation status are given.

Material and methods

Descriptions are based on dried and alcohol-preserved samples housed in the herbaria BR and P (acronyms according to Thiers 2025). Terminology follows Robbrecht (1988), except for leaf shape, which is described according to the terminology of simple symmetrical plane shapes (Systematics Association Committee for Descriptive Biological Terminology 1962). Methods follow normal practice of herbarium taxonomy (De Vogel 1987). Specimens are cited per region, alphabetically by collector, with localities as given on the specimen labels. An asterisk after the herbarium citation indicates that a duplicate for this herbarium has not yet been distributed. All specimens cited were examined unless indicated differently. Preliminary conservation status was assessed, applying the IUCN Red List Category criteria (IUCN Standards and Petitions Committee 2024) based on metrics (EOO, AOO) produced via GeoCAT (Bachman et al. 2011). The distribution maps were created using QGIS Desktop v.3.4.11 (QGIS Development Team 2025).

For scanning electron microscopy (SEM), material was washed twice in 70% ethanol for 5 minutes, transferred to a 1:1 mixture of dimethoxymethane and 70% ethanol for 5 minutes and, then placed in 100% dimethoxymethane for 20 minutes. The material was subsequently critical point dried with liquid CO2 using a Balzers CPD 030 critical point dryer (BAL-TEC, Balzers, Liechtenstein). The dried samples were mounted on aluminium stubs with Leit-C carbon adhesive tape and coated with a platinum palladium mixture using a Cressington JFC-2300/208HR sputter coater. SEM images were obtained with a JEOL JSM7100F field emission scanning electron microscope (JEOL Ltd., Tokyo, Japan).

Genomic DNA was extracted from silica-dried leaf samples of the new species using an adapted CTAB protocol (Doyle and Doyle 1987). DNA quantity and purity were assessed with a Fragment Analyzer system (Agilent Technologies, Inc.) and NanoDrop (Thermo Scientific), respectively. The ITS region was amplified using the primers mentioned in De Block et al. (2015) and sent for sequencing to Macrogen, Inc. (Amsterdam, the Netherlands). The ITS sequences of other members of the Vanguerieae tribe were retrieved from Razafimandimbison et al. (2009) and Wikström et al. (2010). Voucher information and GenBank accession numbers can be found in Supplementary material 1.

All sequences were automatically aligned with MAFFT v.7.490 (Katoh and Standley 2013), as a plugin in Geneious Prime v.2025.1.3 (https://www.geneious.com). The best-fit nucleotide substitution model was determined using the Akaike information criterion in jModelTest v.2.1.10 (Darriba et al. 2012) and the GTR+I+G model was shown to be the most optimal model. The ITS alignment was analysed with MrBayes v.3.2.7 (Ronquist and Huelsenbeck 2003), running for 1 million generations and sampling every 1000th generation. Chain convergence and ESS parameters were checked with Tracer v.1.7.2 (Rambaut et al. 2018) and the 50% majority rule consensus tree was calculated with a burn-in of 10%. The tree with the posterior probabilities was displayed using Tree v.1.4.4 (Rambaut 2018).

Results and discussion

The two new species are functionally dioecious, placing them within the dioecious Vanguerieae lineage. Generic delimitation within the dioecious Malagasy Vanguerieae has long been problematic. Important characters once used to delimit genera included the number of locules, the shape and size of the fruit, and the shape, size and deciduousness of the bracts supporting the inflorescence. However, subsequent analyses have shown that the number of locules is homoplasious within the dioecious Malagasy Vanguerieae, having evolved independently multiple times, and fruit size and shape show a continuous variation (Razafimandimbison et al. 2009). Consequently, these characters are unreliable for distinguishing the genera of the dioecious Malagasy Vanguerieae. According to Razafimandimbison et al. (2009), Peponidium and Pyrostria can be distinguished by the nature of the bracts at the base of the inflorescence: small, cupular, deciduous bracts that never enclose the young inflorescence (Peponidium) vs persistent, basally connate, long-acuminate bracts, completely enclosing the young inflorescence (Pyrostria). In addition, ongoing morphological and phylogenomic studies of Peponidium reveal that the distinct tuft of hairs at the tips of the calyx lobes are a morphological synapomorphy that unites all Peponidium species (Sylvain Razafimandimbison pers. obs.; see also Lantz et al. 2007; Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024). While the presence of persistent, connate bracts is a good field character for recognizing Pyrostria species, this salient trait is not detected in the two new species. Inflorescence bracts can be observed in both taxa when flowers are open, suggesting the bracts are not deciduous, nor can their shape and size be unambiguously classified as small and cupular or long-acuminate. The lack of plant material with inflorescences in early developmental stages is a complicating factor. Moreover, the adaptation to an extreme dry environment, i.e. the reduction of the inflorescences in Pyrostria multilocellata sp. nov., may further obscure the observation of key characters.

In the ITS analysis (Fig. 1), the two new species clearly fall within the dioecious group, which is a monophyletic clade (PP 1). Both species are shown to be monophyletic. One is nested within the genus Peponidium, while the other is part of Pyrostria.

Figure 1. 

Bayesian inference phylogram of tribe Vanguerieae based on ITS sequence data. Bayesian posterior probabilities are indicated at the nodes. Representatives of Peponidium are indicated in green, those of Pyrostria in blue. Accessions of the two new species are given in bold and indicated with an arrowhead.

Taxonomic treatment

Peponidium calciphilum De Block, sp. nov.

Figs 2D, 2E, 3

Type

MADAGASCAR – Antsiranana province, Diana region, Ambilobe District • Ankarana, road from campement des Anglais towards campement des Américains (not beyond first savanna); 82 m; 13 Jan. 2002; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Rakotonasolo & Randriamboavonjy 1182; holotype: BR [BR0000020242732]; isotypes: BR [BR0000020242749, BR0000009757653, BR0000009757554], G*, K*, MO*, P*, S*, TAN.

Figure 2. 

Field photographs of Pyrostria multilocellata De Block (A–C) and Peponidium calciphilum De Block (D, E). A. Habit. BC. Flowering branch (functionally female flowers). D. Flowering branch (functionally male flowers). E. Fruiting node. Photos: Inge Groeninckx (A–C), Petra De Block (D–E).

Figure 3. 

Peponidium calciphilum De Block (functionally male specimen). A. Habit. B. Flowering node, showing stipule and axillary inflorescences. C. Inflorescence, side view. D. Pedicel, ovary, and calyx. E. Corolla, anthers, style, and stigma. F. Style and stigma. G. Stamen, adaxial view. H. Fruit. A–G from De Block et al. 1182 (BR); H from De Block et al. 997 (BR). Drawn by Hilde Orye.

Diagnosis

Peponidium calciphilum resembles P. sessile Klack. & Razafim. by the sessile, ovate leaves with cordate bases, the glabrous calyx with distinct tufts of hairs at the tips of the lobes, the vaulted corolla lobes with well-developed appendages at the tips, and the preference for growing on limestone, but differs from it by the glabrous young shoots (vs covered with ± orange-brown erect hairs), the larger size of the leaves (6–9.5 × 2.5–5 cm vs 3–5.5 × 1.5–3.5 cm) and stipules (6–9 vs 1.5–2.5 mm long), the higher number of flowers in the female inflorescences (3–8 vs 1–2), the larger flowers (functionally male flowers with corolla tube ca 2.5 mm long and lobes 3.2–3.5 mm long vs tube ca 0.7 mm long and lobes ca 1.6 mm long), and the shorter pedicels in fruiting stage (2–6 mm vs up to 16 mm long).

Description

Shrub 1–2 m tall; young internodes laterally flattened, glabrous, brown, smooth, first becoming orange to reddish brown and glossy, later pale cream or grey, flaking; branches terete, glabrous, with greyish brown bark, somewhat corky. Leaves opposite, sessile; blades ovate, 6.0–9.5 × 2.5–5.0 cm, subcoriaceous to thinly coriaceous, glabrous and glossy on both surfaces, drying brown to dark brown and not discolorous; base cordate; apex subacute to shortly acuminate, with acumen ≤ 1 cm long, its tip obtuse to rounded; margin flat to somewhat revolute; midrib raised on both surfaces when dry, 6–7 secondary nerves on each side of midrib, hardly raised on either surface; small hairy pit domatia sometimes present in axils of basal secondary nerves. Stipules caducous, 6–9 mm long, subulate, consisting of a triangular basal sheath 2.5–3.5 mm long and a robust awn 3.0–5.5 mm long, glabrous externally except for some patches of short, appressed, orange-brown hairs at the base of the sheath on both sides and sometimes with a few hairs at the tip. Species functionally dioecious; female inflorescences (only seen in fruiting stage) delicate, sessile, with 1–3 flowers, subtended by a cup-like structure consisting of fused bracts; male inflorescences pluriflorous, with short, robust, 1–2 mm long peduncle, one part of the inflorescence consisting of flower remnants such as remains of pedicels and bracteoles (Fig. 3C), the other part consisting of 3–8 flowers in different developmental stages (anthetic or immature flowers, flowers with corolla fallen, and undeveloped buds, the latter only visible in the compact inflorescence structure as orange-brown hairs), the whole inflorescence as well as the group of open/developing flowers subtended by 1 or 2 cup-like structures consisting of fused bracts; bracts fused into cup-like structures, up to 1–2 × 3–4 mm, glabrous outside, glabrous and with a continuous ring of colleters at the base inside, margins (sparsely) ciliate, hairs ± short, orange-brown, unicellular, stiff; higher order bracts and bracteoles unknown, included in the compact basal part of the inflorescence (bracteoles not present on the visible part of the pedicels or on the ovary); pedicels 2–6 mm long in both flowering and fruiting stage, glabrous. Flowers 4-merous, functionally dioecious; corolla aestivation valvate. Functionally male flowers with calyx tube 0.4–0.6 mm long, glabrous outside, glabrous and without colleters inside; calyx lobes interspaced with sinuses at least as wide as the width of the lobes, triangular, 0.3–0.5 mm long, glabrous inside, with a tuft of ± short, orange-brown, unicellular, stiff hairs at the tip outside, tips acute; corolla apiculate in bud; corolla tube broadly cylindrical to campanulate, ca 2.5 mm long, ca 2 mm wide at the base and 2.3–2.5 mm wide at the throat, glabrous outside and inside but with a dense ring of long, soft, unicellular, white hairs in the throat, conspicuous from the outside at anthesis; corolla lobes 3.2–3.5 mm long, ca 1.3 mm wide at the base, vaulted with well-developed appendages, margins thickened and papillate, tip acute to shortly acuminate, conspicuously thickened, distinctly appendiculate, topped by a single hair or a small tuft of hairs (± short, orange-brown, unicellular, stiff); stamens inserted at the throat, anthers erect and completely exserted just above the throat at anthesis, 1.0–1.3 × 0.5–0.7 mm, basifixed, tip rounded, papillate, base not sagittate but sometimes somewhat unequal, filaments 0.2–0.3 mm long, connective drying dark brown abaxially; style ca 2.5 mm long, glabrous, stigma knob-like, ca 0.5 mm long, exserted from the corolla tube at anthesis but topped by the exserted anthers; ovary ca 0.5 mm long, bilocular, glabrous, either with a single underdeveloped pendulous ovule per locule or locules empty or not formed; disc ca 1 mm high at anthesis. Functionally female flowers unknown. Fruits with persistent calyx, bilobed, wider than high, ca 11–12 × 7–8 mm, glabrous, dark or reddish pink when ripe; pyrenes ca 6 × 5 mm, thick and stony, dark brown, with apical longitudinal ridge at abaxial side and running down the abaxial side to the middle; seeds ± bean-shaped, 4.5 × 3.5 × 3.0 mm, dark brown.

Distribution

Restricted to the Antsiranana Province, the Diana Region, the Ambilobe District; only known from the Tsingy of the Ankarana Special Reserve (Fig. 4).

Figure 4. 

Distribution map of Peponidium calciphilum De Block (▲) and Pyrostria multilocellata De Block (●).

Habitat

Dry semi-deciduous or deciduous forest, on limestone covered by red sand; elevation 50–200 m.

Phenology

Flowers in December–January and fruits in February–May.

Etymology

The specific epithet means “limestone loving” and is chosen because the species only grows in the Tsingy of Ankarana on limestone.

Preliminary IUCN conservation assessment

Peponidium calciphilum is only known from the Ankarana Special Reserve. Detailed coordinates are not available for all specimens, so we choose the surface of the reserve as the maximum AOO, notably ca 240 km2. With five known specimens, the AOO is at most 20 km2. Both AOO and EOO comply with the Endangered category under, respectively, criterion B1 and B2. The species is collected from less than five locations in the Ankarana Special Reserve, which again complies with the Endangered category under subcriterion ‘a’ of criterion B2. The Ankarana Special Reserve is protected legally, which would suggest the absence of any threat. In reality, however, infringements into the Ankarana Special Reserve are common: bushfires, clearing for slash-and-burn agriculture, illegal logging for hardwood, firewood, and the production of charcoal, hunting, collection of plant species for medicinal or subsistence use, and illegal mining for sapphires all occur within its boundaries (De Block 2022). Because of these facts, a reduction in the extent and quality of the habitat of P. calciphilum is inferred. This threat, in combination with the AOO, EOO, and the low number of locations, qualifies the species for Endangered status: EN B1ab(iii)+2ab(iii).

Additional material examined

MADAGASCAR – Antsiranana Province, Diana region, Ambilobe District • Réserve Spéciale d’Ankarana, piste vers le lac Vert, à partir de la plaque de Tsingy; 180 m; 19 Feb. 1994; fr.; Andrianarisata, Lewis, McDonagh, Andriatsiferana, Randriambololona & Andrianantoanina 33; MO n.v., P [P00274292] • Matsaborimanga, Réserve d’Ankarana, piste Grim à proximité du camp des Anglais; 9 Dec. 1997; fl. (functionally male); Bardot-Vaucoulon & Toly 1036; K*, MO*, P (unmounted) • Ankarana, close to campement des Anglais, 82 m; 25 May 1999; fr.; De Block, Rapanarivo & Randriamboavonjy 997; BR [BR0000009758025, BR0000009757929], G*, MO*, P*, TAN • Ankarana, road from campement des Anglais towards campement des Américains (not beyond first savanna); 82 m; 13 Jan. 2002; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Rakotonasolo & Randriamboavonjy 1182; BR [BR0000020242732, BR0000020242749, BR0000009757653, BR0000009757554], G*, K*, MO*, P*, S*, TAN • Réserve Spéciale d’Ankarana, sur le Tsingy, piste vers le village Matsaborimanga; 180 m; 19 Feb. 1994; fr.; Rahajasoa, Lewis, McDonagh, Andrianantoanina, Ravelonarivo & Rasoavimbahoaka 176; MO n.v., P [P00274293].

Notes

In living plants with functionally male inflorescences, the leaves are dark green above. The bracts, bracteoles, pedicels, ovaries and calyces are pale green. The corolla tubes and lobes are greenish white outside and the lobes white inside. The anthers and filaments, style and stigma are white. Ripe fruits are dark to reddish pink in colour.

Peponidium calciphilum and P. sessile (Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024) share most of their salient characters, notably the sessile, ovate leaves with cordate bases, the glabrous calyx, the distinct tufts of hairs at the tips of the calyx lobes, and the vaulted corolla lobes with well-developed appendages. Furthermore, both occur in dry semi-caducous or caducous forest on limestone. They differ in quantitative or minor characters such as leaf size (6–9.5 × 2.5–5 cm in P. calciphilum vs 3–5.5 × 1.5–3.5 cm in P. sessile), stipule size (6–9 vs 1.5–2.5 mm long), flower size (corolla tube ca 2.5 mm and lobes 3.2–3.5 mm long vs tube ca 0.7 mm and lobes ca 1.6 mm long in functionally male flowers), the higher number of flowers in the male inflorescences (3–8 vs 1–2), the shorter pedicels in fruiting stage (2–6 vs up to 16 mm long), the higher number of fertile nodes on functionally male flowering branches (up to 5 vs 1–2) and by the absence/presence of pubescence on the young shoots (absent in P. calciphilum, present in P. sessile). These quantitative differences raise the question whether to consider the two taxa as subspecies or as species. However, P. calciphilum is only known from the Tsingy d’Ankarana in the north, while P. sessile is restricted to the Tsingy de Bemaraha in the west. The distance between these two locations is at least ca 750 km as the crow flies. We therefore hypothesize that the two taxa are reproductively isolated and treat them here as separate species.

Three hair types occur in the reproductive structures of this species. The hairs on the tip of the calyx lobes, the tip of the corolla lobes, and the cilia on the bracts are orange-brown, unicellular, relatively short, and stiff. The hairs forming the dense ring in the throat are also unicellular, but much longer than the first type, translucent, and soft. This is in contrast to P. sessile for which the hairs at the throat are described as moniliform (Klackenberg and Razafimandimbison 2024). However, within the compact base of the male inflorescences, next to hairs of the first type (cilia on bracts and hairs at the tip of corolla lobes of undeveloped flowers), a third hair type was observed, consisting of long, translucent, soft, moniliform hairs.

Pyrostria multilocellata De Block, sp. nov.

Figs 2A–C, 5, 6

Type

MADAGASCAR – Toliara Province, Atsimo-Andrefana Region, Toliara II District • La Table, 15 km from Toliara on Route Nationale 7; 4 Jan. 1999; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Leyman, Dessein, Rakotonasolo & Randriamboavonjy 544; holotype: BR [BR0000009125025]; isotypes: MO*, P*, S*, TAN.

Figure 5. 

Pyrostria multilocellata De Block. A. Habit. B. Brachyblast, showing stipules and terminal leaf pairs. C. Brachyblast, detail. D. Leaf, showing lower surface with domatia. E. Domatium. F, H, J, L, M. Functionally female flower. G, I, K. Functionally male flower. G, H. Pedicel, bracteolar cone, ovary, and calyx. I, J. Corolla, anthers, style, and stigma. K. Stamen, adaxial view, showing multilocellate anther. L. Style and stigma. M. Longitudinally opened corolla. N. Fruit. A–E, G, I, K from De Block et al. 2307 (BR), F, H, J, L, M from Groeninckx et al. 323 (BR); N from Groeninckx et al. 325 (BR). Drawn by Hilde Orye.

Figure 6. 

SEM micrographs of flowers of Pyrostria multilocellata. A, C, D. Functionally female flower. B, E, F. Functionally male flower. A, B. Fused bracteoles, ovary, and calyx. C. Inner surface of corolla lobe. D. Stigma. E. Corolla tube and lobe, stamen and ring of deflexed hairs at the level of insertion of the stamens. F. Detail of anther. A, D from Groeninckx et al. 323 (BR); B, C, E, F from De Block et al. 2307 (BR). Scale bars: 100 µm

Diagnosis

The species resembles Pyrostria serpentina Lantz, Klack. & Razafim. by the habit (densely branched shrub), the very small coriaceous to somewhat succulent leaves, the extremely pauciflorous inflorescences (both male and female), and the small flowers and fruits, but differs from it by the following characters: branches erect (vs tortuously twisting), ovary (if developed) densely pubescent (vs glabrous), calyx lobes triangular with acute tips and bases not overlapping (vs calyx lobes low and rounded, overlapping at the base), or, calyx with an uneven, ± truncate, ciliate margin (vs margin glabrous), and the multilocellate anthers in the functionally male flowers (vs anthers non-multilocellate).

Description

Subshrub or shrub, 0.5–2(–3) m tall, creeping to erect, hard-wooded, densely branched, each branch with many brachyblasts up to 2–3 cm long; young internodes laterally flattened, pale straw-coloured and densely covered with short erect to spreading hairs, rapidly flaking and then glabrous; branches terete, older branches with greyish bark, younger branches with smooth, dark reddish brown or blackish bark. Leaves opposite, usually grouped terminally on brachyblasts, the lower parts of the brachyblasts with leaves fallen and only stipules remaining (stipules densely positioned without any stem surface visible), more rarely on longer shoots with extended internodes; blades elliptic to obovate, 3–8 × 1.5–3.5(–4.0) mm, thickly coriaceous to succulent, glabrous on both surfaces or sparsely to densely covered with short erect to appressed hairs on the upper surface and with somewhat longer appressed hairs on the lower surface, drying brown and dull above, somewhat paler below; base cuneate to acute; apex mucronulate, blunt with a short point or rounded; margin flat to somewhat revolute, sometimes sparsely ciliate; only midrib visible, faintly impressed on upper surface, faintly raised on lower surface; rarely (1–)2–4 hairy pit domatia present on lower leaf surface, either opposite or alternately positioned. Petioles articulate, 0.5–1.0 mm long, canaliculate above, glabrous or sparsely to densely covered with erect or appressed hairs. Stipules triangular, ca 1 mm long, keeled, tip acute to obtuse, glabrous or sparsely to densely covered with erect or appressed hairs outside. Species functionally dioecious; female and male inflorescences uniflorous, sessile; pedicels 0–1 mm long in both flowering and fruiting stage, glabrous or pubescent; bracteoles fused into a cup-like structure 0.5–0.6 mm long, glabrous outside, glabrous but with a dense ring of large colleters at the base inside, margins ciliate with ± long hairs. Flowers 4-merous, functionally dioecious; corolla aestivation valvate and somewhat induplicate; calyx tube 0.3–0.5 mm long, glabrous outside, glabrous and without colleters inside, unevenly truncate with ciliate margin or calyx lobes triangular, 0.2–0.4 mm long, glabrous outside, glabrous or with appressed hairs inside, margins ciliate, bases not overlapping, tips acute; corolla tube glabrous outside, with a ring of long deflexed white hairs at the level of insertion of the anthers but otherwise glabrous inside, hairs not visible from outside; corolla lobes rounded triangular, glabrous inside and outside but margins thickened and papillate, tip acute to shortly acuminate and hood-like, with one or a few short hairs at the tip; stamens inserted at the throat, anthers erect, partly exserted from the corolla tube at anthesis, medifixed, filaments 0.2–0.3 mm long, base sagittate, tip rounded, papillate; style glabrous, stigma completely exserted from the corolla tube at anthesis, 0.3–0.5 × 0.3–0.65 mm long; ovary densely covered with ± long whitish appressed hairs, bilocular. Functionally male flowers with corolla tube cylindrical, 1.2–1.5 mm long, ca 0.8 mm wide at base and ca 1 mm wide at throat; corolla lobes 1.2–1.5 mm long, ca 1 mm wide at base; anthers 0.6–0.8 × 0.3–0.5 mm, exserted from the corolla tube for 4/5ths of their length at anthesis, multilocellate; style ca 1.5 mm long, stigma knob-like, reaching the same height as the anthers or somewhat topped by them at anthesis; ovary 0.5–0.6 × ca 0.3 mm, either with a single underdeveloped pendulous ovule per locule or locules empty or not formed. Functionally female flowers with corolla tube campanulate, ca 1 mm long, ca 0.9 mm wide at base and ca 1.4 mm wide at throat; corolla lobes 0.8–1 mm long, ca 0.8 mm wide at base; anthers 0.5–0.8 × ca 0.3 mm, upper half exserted from the corolla tube at anthesis, not producing viable pollen; style 1.3–1.5 mm long, stigma positioned above the level of the anthers at anthesis, knob-like when young, opening into two broad lobes, much wider than long, curved and folded, with papillae present on the adaxial surface and in a broad band on the margins of the lobes (Fig. 6D); ovary 0.8–1.2 × ca 1 mm, with a single pendulous ovule per locule. Fruits with persistent calyx, bilobed, wider than high, somewhat laterally flattened, 6–7 × 4.0–4.5 mm, moderately covered with short appressed hairs all over, normally bilocular but ca half the fruits on all specimens seen unilocular because of abortion of one locule; pyrenes ca 4.0 × 3.5 mm, thick and stony, brown, with unexplicit apical longitudinal ridge in upper half at adaxial surface and running down ca 1/4th on abaxial surface, functioning as preformed germination slit; seeds ± bean-shaped, 3.5 × 2.5 × 2.5 mm, brown, with apical longitudinal ridge in upper half at adaxial surface and running down ca 1/4th on abaxial surface; abaxial side convex, adaxial side convex in upper half, flat in lower half.

Distribution

Occurring in the Toliara Province, in the Atsimo-Andrefana, Androy, and Anosy Regions; seemingly widespread in the southern part of Madagascar from Taolagnaro in the east, to Cap Sainte Marie in the south, and Manombo (north of Toliara) in the west. Occurring in the Tsimanampetsotse National Park and Cap Sainte Marie Special Reserve (Fig. 4).

Habitat

Dry deciduous forest, spiny forest, dry scrub sometimes as low as 0.5 m, on limestone covered by white sand; elevation 20–200 m.

Phenology

Flowers in November–April and fruits in January–April.

Etymology

The species is named for the multilocellate anthers in the male flowers, a feature hitherto not known in the genus Pyrostria nor in the tribe Vanguerieae.

Preliminary IUCN conservation assessment

This assessment is based on 14 herbarium specimens collected between 1955 and 2010. The EOO of Pyrostria multilocellata is estimated to be 33240 km2, exceeding the upper limit of the Vulnerable category under criterion B1. The AOO is 44 km2, which complies with the Endangered category under criterion B2. The species occurs in 11 locations, which exceeds the Vulnerable category under subcriterion ‘a’ of criterion B2. Pyrostria multilocellata occurs in two protected areas: Tsimanampetsotse National Park and Cap Sainte Marie Special Reserve but both are threatened to a certain extent by human activities, notably an overexploitation of natural resources by local populations (Waeber et al. 2020; Protected Areas of Madagascar 2025). According to the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems, a global reference framework to assess the vulnerability of ecosystems, the southern and southwestern Malagasy dry woody vegetation on limestone is considered endangered because of a very strong observed (between 1975 and 2025) and future estimated decline in geographic distribution (Carré et al. 2022). The dry forests in western and southern Madagascar have suffered high deforestation rates (Harper et al. 2007) as a result of subsistence farming, charcoal production, pastoral land use, and over-exploitation of essential resources. Furthermore, potential mining, oil and agribusiness concessions threaten the dry forest region (Waeber et al. 2015). Because of these facts, a reduction in the extent and quality of the habitat of P. multilocellata is inferred. This threat, in combination with the AOO and the number of locations, qualifies the species for Near Threatened status: NT.

Additional material examined

MADAGASCAR – Toliara province, Atsimo-Andrefana region • près d’Ambatry, S de Betioky; 14 Jan. 1962; fl. (functionally male); Capuron 20692-SF; BR [BR0000009311268], P • La Table, 15 km from Toliara on Route Nationale 7; 4 Jan. 1999; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Leyman, Dessein, Rakotonasolo & Randriamboavonjy 544; BR [BR0000009125025], MO*, P*, S*, TAN • La Table, 15 km from Toliara on Route Nationale 7; 4 Jan. 1999; fl. (functionally female), fr.; De Block, Leyman, Dessein, Rakotonasolo & Randriamboavonjy 545; BR [BR0000009125018], MO*, TAN • Road from La Table to Sept Lacs; 2 Feb. 2007; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Groeninckx & Rakotonasolo 2307; BR [BR0000006745622], MO*, P*, TAN • Lac Tsimanampetsotsa; 5 Feb. 2007; fl. (functionally female); Groeninckx, De Block & Rakotonasolo 217; BR [BR0000005272235], MO*, P*, TAN • Route Nationale 10, km 111, entre Betioky & Ejeda; 190 m; 4 Feb. 1990; fl. (functionally male), fr. (separate branches); Labat, Du Puy & Phillipson 2066; BR [BR0000017834490], MO n.v., P online • 9 km N of Manombo along coast near Fiserenamasay; 20 m; 23 Feb. 1993; fl. (functionally female); Phillipson & Raharilala 4124; BR [BR0000009139244], MO n.v. – Toliara province, Androy region • Sur les pentes du massif de l’Angavo, E d’Antanimora; Nov. 1955; fl. (functionally male); Capuron 11731-SF; BR [BR0000009222373], P • 43 km from Ambovombe on road to Betroka; 2 Feb. 2007; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Groeninckx & Rakotonasolo 2330; BR [BR0000006745325], MO*, P*, TAN • Sakamasy forest, route de Tsihombe à Ambovombe, ca 8 km de Tsihombe; 4 Apr. 2010; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Groeninckx & Rakotonasolo 2439; BR [BR0000005444724], K*, MO*, TAN • Fort-Dauphin, Ambovombe district, commune Ambohimalaza, N of fokotany Mahatomotsy; 29 Mar. 2010; fr.; Groeninckx, De Block & Rakotonasolo 301; BR [BR0000005512096], MO*, P*, TAN • Fort-Dauphin, close to Cap Sainte Marie National Park; 3 Apr. 2010; fl. (functionally female); Groeninckx, De Block & Rakotonasolo 323; BR [BR0000005561933, BR0000020242756], MO*, TAN • Fort-Dauphin, Cap Sainte Marie National Park; 3 Apr. 2010; fl. (functionally female), fr.; Groeninckx, De Block & Rakotonasolo 325; BR [BR0000005561735], TAN. – Toliara province, Anosy region • On Route Nationale 13 from Fort-Dauphin to Ambovombe, pk 40 from Fort Dauphin; 26 Mar. 2010; fl. (functionally male); De Block, Groeninckx & Rakotonasolo 2381; BR [BR0000005518845], TAN.

Notes

In living plants, the leaves are dark green or green above and somewhat paler below. Fruits were only observed when green, even though seeds seem mature when dissecting these green fruits. Ovary, calyx tube and calyx lobes are green, the ovary with whitish appressed pubescence. The corolla is pale green, white or yellowish at anthesis. Anthers and filaments are described as white, with anthers turning brownish with age. Style and stigma are described as white or pale green.

Functionally male and female flowers differ in the shape and size of the corolla tube (cylindrical, 1.2–1.5 mm long in functionally male flowers vs campanulate, ca 1 mm long in functionally female flowers), the length of the corolla lobes (1.2–1.5 vs 0.8–1.0 mm long), and the position of the stigma (at the level of the anthers or somewhat topped by them vs stigma positioned above the anthers). Anthers of functionally male flowers are somewhat more exserted from the corolla tube than those of functionally female flowers. Furthermore, the anthers are multilocellate vs not producing viable pollen. Also, the ovary is larger (0.8–1.2 × ca 1.0 mm vs 0.5–0.6 × ca 0.3 mm) with normal-sized ovules developing in functionally female flowers (vs ovules underdeveloped or locules empty or not formed). There are no differences between male and female inflorescences; they are both uniflorous.

Multilocellate anthers have hitherto not been reported from Pyrostria nor from the tribe Vanguerieae. They are known to occur sporadically in scattered genera of Rubiaceae, such as Aidia Lour. (Gardenieae), Calycosiphonia Pierre ex Robbr. (Coffeeae), Isertia Schreb. (Judkevich et al. 2021) and Kerianthera J.H.Kirkbr. (Oliveira et al. 2011) (Isertieae), Leptactina Hook.f. and Pavetta L. (Pavetteae), Sherbournia G.Don (Sherbournieae) (Robbrecht 1988). The function of the septa occurring in multilocellate anthers is not yet known. Historically, a nutritive function was suggested, with the septa conveying nutrients to large pollen masses (Lersten 1971). However, Lersten (1971) suggested an alternative function, notably the reduction of the number of sporogeneous cells. This would take place “In species with very effective pollination mechanisms, and particularly where the entire plant has undergone a general reduction in size ... under selective pressure for the anther to contribute to the general reduction.” This last hypothesis seems to be the correct one for P. multilocellata, which has effectively undergone a considerable reduction in size of all plant organs as an adaptation to drought. The need for additional nutrition secreting tissues to reach all pollen inside the minute anthers of the species seems untenable.

Conflict of interest

BV is the editor in chief of Plant Ecology and Evolution but was not involved in the editorial process of the manuscript and had no influence on the final decision.

Acknowledgements

We thank the curators of the P herbarium for arranging a loan of unmounted material and those of MO for sending duplicates of relevant material. We are grateful to Ms Hilde Orye for the excellent illustrations. Ms Iris Van der Beeten is thanked for critical point drying and photographing the SEM samples. We thank the Missouri Botanical Garden, Madagascar Program, for logistical support and for help with arranging collecting permits; the Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza for help with arranging exportation permits and the DGF (Direction Générale des Forêts) of Madagascar for issuing these permits. Financial support for fieldwork was provided by the Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO).

References

  • Atalahy AM (2022) Révision taxonomique du genre Pyrostria Comm. ex Juss. (Rubiaceae) à Madagascar. PhD Thesis, Université de Mahajanga, Madagascar.
  • Atalahy AM, Rakotonasolo F, Rabarimanarivo M, Ranarijaona HLT, Razafimandimbison SG (2021) Nouvelles espèces du genre Pyrostria (Rubiaceae, Vanguerieae) de Madagascar. Candollea 76: 1–12. https://doi.org/10.15553/c2021v761a1
  • Bachman S, Moat J, Hill AW, de la Torre J, Scott B (2011) Supporting Red List threat assessments with GeoCAT: geospatial conservation assessment tool. ZooKeys 150: 117–126. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.150.2109
  • Bridson DM (1987) Studies in African RubiaceaeVanguerieae: a new circumscription of Pyrostria and a new subgenus, Canthium subgen. Bullockia. Kew Bulletin 42: 611–639. https://doi.org/10.2307/4110068
  • Bridson DM (1998) Rubiaceae. Tribe Vanguerieae. In: Pope GV (Ed.) Flora Zambesiaca. Volume 5, Part 2. Flora Zambesiaca Managing Committee, London, 211–377.
  • Carré A, Razafindrainibe H, Rabarison H, Randrianasolo H, Ruiz V, Zarasoa (2022) Assessing the risk of ecosystem collapse on Madagascar using the IUCN red list of ecosystems. In: Goodman SM, Andrianarimisa A, Armstrong AH, Cooke A, De Wit M, Ganzhorn JU, Gautier L, Goodman SM, Jones JPG, Jungers WL, Krause DW, Langrand O, Lowry PP, Racey PA, Raselimanana AP, Safford RJ, Sparks JS, Stiassny MLJ, Tortosa P, Vences M (Eds) The New Natural History of Madagascar. Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2119–2130. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2ks6tbb.303
  • Darriba D, Taboada GL, Doallo R, Posada D (2012) jModelTest 2: more models, new heuristics and parallel computing. Nature Methods 9: 772. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.2109
  • De Block P (2022) Monograph of the western Indian Ocean genus Paracephaelis (Rubiaceae – Pavetteae), with description of thirteen new species. European Journal of Taxonomy 801: 1–99. https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.801.1685
  • De Block P, Razafimandimbison SG (2022) Rubiaceae, Vanguerieae alliance, subfamily Ixoroideae. In: Goodman SM, Andrianarimisa A, Armstrong AH, Cooke A, De Wit M, Ganzhorn JU, Gautier L, Goodman SM, Jones JPG, Jungers WL, Krause DW, Langrand O, Lowry PP, Racey PA, Raselimanana AP, Safford RJ, Sparks JS, Stiassny MLJ, Tortosa P, Vences M (Eds) The New Natural History of Madagascar. Princeton University Press, Princeton, 762–765. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2ks6tbb.98
  • De Block P, Razafimandimbison SG, Janssens S, Ochoterena H, Robbrecht E, Bremer B (2015) Molecular phylogenetics and generic assessment in the tribe Pavetteae (Rubiaceae). Taxon 64: 79–95. https://doi.org/10.12705/641.19
  • De Vogel EF (1987) Manual of Herbarium Taxonomy: Theory and Practice. UNESCO, Indonesia.
  • Doyle JJ, Doyle JL (1987) A rapid DNA isolation procedure for small quantities of fresh leaf tissue. Phytochemistry Bulletin 19: 11–15.
  • Harper GJ, Steininger MK, Tucker CJ, Juhn D, Hawkins F (2007) Fifty years of deforestation and forest fragmentation in Madagascar. Environmental Conservation 34: 325–333. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892907004262
  • Igersheim A (1993) Gynoecium development in Rubiaceae-Vanguerieae, with particular reference to the ‘‘stylar head’’-complex and secondary pollen presentation. Plant Systematics and Evolution 187: 175–190. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00994098
  • Katoh K, Standley DM (2013) MAFFT Multiple sequence alignment software version 7: improvements in performance and usability. Molecular Biology and Evolution 30: 772–780. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/mst010
  • Klackenberg J, Razafimandimbison SG (2024) New rare and threatened species of Peponidium and Pyrostria (Rubiaceae, Vanguerieae) from the drylands of Madagascar. Candollea 79: 53–62. https://doi.org/10.15553/c2024v791a3
  • Lantz H, Klackenberg J, Razafimandimbison SG, Mouly A (2007) Three new species of Vanguerieae (Rubiaceae) from Madagascar. Adansonia 29: 129–136.
  • Lersten NR (1971) A review of septate microsporangia in vascular plants. Iowa State College Journal of Science 45: 487–497.
  • Oliveira CT, Giacomin LL, Zappi DC (2011) Kerianthera longiflora (Rubiaceae), a remarkable new species from eastern Brazil, with some observations on K. preclara. Kew Bulletin 66: 143–148. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12225-011-9258-z
  • Protected Areas of Madagascar (2025) Tsimanampesotse Site #97; Cap Sainte Marie Site #98. https://protectedareas.mg [accessed 01.09.2025]
  • QGIS Development Team (2025) QGIS Geographic Information System. Version 3.4.11. Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project. https://qgis.osgeo.org [accessed 01.09.2025]
  • Rambaut A, Drummond AJ, Xie D, Baele G, Suchard MA (2018) Posterior summarisation in Bayesian phylogenetics using Tracer 1.7. Systematic Biology 67: 901–904. https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syy032
  • Razafimandimbison SG, Rydin C (2024a) Phylogeny and classification of the coffee family (Rubiaceae, Gentianales): overview and outlook. Taxon 73: 673–717. https://doi.org/10.1002/tax.13167
  • Razafimandimbison SG, Rydin C (2024b) Addendum and corrigendum to: Phylogeny and classification of the coffee family (Rubiaceae, Gentianales): overview and outlook [in Taxon 73(3): 673–717. 2024]. Taxon 73: 1556–1557. https://doi.org/10.1002/tax.13293
  • Razafimandimbison SG, Lantz H, Mouly A, Bremer B (2009) Evolutionary trends, major lineages, and new generic limits in the dioecious group of the tribe Vanguerieae (Rubiaceae): insights into the evolution of functional dioecy. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 96: 161–181. https://doi.org/10.3417/2006191
  • Robbrecht E (1988) Tropical woody Rubiaceae. Opera Botanica Belgica 1: 1–271.
  • Systematics Association Committee for Descriptive Biological Terminology (1962) II. Terminology of simple symmetrical plane shapes (chart 1). Taxon 11: 145–156. https://doi.org/10.2307/1216718
  • Thiers B (2025) Index Herbariorum: a global directory of public herbaria and associated staff. New York Botanical Garden’s Virtual Herbarium. https://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/ [accessed 01.09.2025]
  • Tilney PM, van Wyk AE, van der Merwe CF (2014) The epidermal cell structure of the secondary pollen presenter in Vangueria infausta (Rubiaceae: Vanguerieae) suggests a functional association with protruding onci in pollen grains. PLoS ONE 9: e96405. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096405
  • Waeber PO, Wilmé L, Ramamonjisoa B, Garcia C, Rakotomalala D, Rabemananjara ZH, Kull CA, Ganzhorn JU, Sorg J-P (2015) Dry forests in Madagascar: neglected and under pressure. International Forestry Review 17: 127–148. https://doi.org/10.1505/146554815815834822
  • Waeber PO, Rafanoharana S, Rasamuel HA, Wilmé L (2020) Parks and reserves in Madagascar: managing biodiversity for a sustainable future. In: Bakar AN, Suratman MN (Eds) Protected Areas, National Parks and Sustainable Future. Intechopen, London, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.85348
  • Wikström N, Avino M, Razafimandimbison SG, Bremer B (2010) Historical biogeography of the coffee family (Rubiaceae, Gentianales) in Madagascar: case studies from the tribes Knoxieae, Naucleeae, Paederieae and Vanguerieae. Journal of Biogeography 37: 1094–1113. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2009.02258.x

Supplementary material

Supplementary material 1 

List of GenBank accession numbers for sequences used in the analysis and information on voucher specimens.

Download file (17.69 kb)
login to comment