4.2 Article

Vanilla cameroniana (Orchidaceae, Vanilloideae), a new species from French Guiana and new records from the Guiana Shield

Journal

PHYTOTAXA
Volume 609, Issue 3, Pages 222-232

Publisher

MAGNOLIA PRESS
DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.609.3.5

Keywords

fragrant clade; French Guiana; Neotropics; taxonomy; Xanata

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This study describes a new species of Vanilla from French Guiana, providing detailed illustrations, photographs, and distribution information. The importance of conservation efforts for fragile ecosystems in the Guiana Shield is highlighted, as well as the morphological comparisons with similar species and new geographic range expansions for known species.
In this study, a new species of Vanilla from French Guiana is described with detailed illustrations, photographs, and distribution. Vanilla cameroniana honors Kenneth M. Cameron, a distinguished professor at the University of Wisconsin Madison, for his contributions to our understanding of the subfamily Vanilloideae. The new species is placed within Vanilla subgenus Xanata, due to its distinctive penicillate callus and lip margins connate to the column. Vanilla cameroniana can be distinguished from V. appendiculata, a morphologically similar species by the broader leaves up to 12 cm wide (vs. 5.9 cm), axillary inflorescence (vs. apical), narrow linear petals, 0.2-0.3 cm wide (vs. narrowly lanceolate, 0.5-0.8 cm), unlobed lip (vs. trilobed), and sub-quadrate apex (vs. sub-acute) with a trullate-shaped structure close to the apex made of short appendages (vs. long lombricoid appendages). Detailed morphological comparisons are provided for other superficially similar species. Additionally, based on herbarium collections V. sprucei, and V. dressleri are newly recorded from the Guiana Shield, and a geographic range expansion is proposed for Vanilla corinnae. Our findings highlight the importance of conservation efforts of fragile ecosystems such as swamps in the Guiana Shield.

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