Abstract

Artabotrys R. Br. is one of the larger genera of Annonaceae with over 100 species distributed throughout the palaeotropics plus northern Australia. Although the genus is morphologically very well circumscribed, species delimitation is quite problematic owing to overlapping morphological characteristics. In Thailand, 20 species of Artabotrys have been reported, including A. multiflorus C. E. C. Fisch. Detailed comparisons with the type specimen from Myanmar revealed that A. multiflorus occurring in Kanchanaburi Province of Thailand represents a new species herein described as A. angustipetalus Photikwan & Chaowasku. The new species differs from A. multiflorus by having fewer flowers per hook, linear (vs oblong to oblong-lanceolate) petals, acute (vs obtuse) petal apex, longer and narrower petals and fewer carpels per flower. A multi-locus plastid phylogeny including an accession of A. angustipetalus and 30 accessions of other species of Artabotrys has been reconstructed. The results uncover a well-supported clade consisting of thorn-bearing species of Artabotrys, with A. angustipetalus recovered outside this clade. To understand the evolution of thorns in Artabotrys, ancestral character-state reconstructions were carried out; this trait is inferred to have evolved only once in Artabotrys. The benefits of thorns in Artabotrys species are discussed and hypothesized.Citation: Photikwan E., Damthongdee A., Jongsook H. & Chaowasku T. 2021: Artabotrys angustipetalus (Annonaceae), a new species from Thailand, including a plastid phylogeny and character evolutionary analyses of thorn occurrence in Artabotrys. – Willdenowia 51: 69–82.Version of record first published online on 23 March 2021 ahead of inclusion in April 2021 issue.

Highlights

  • Artabotrys is one of the larger genera of Annonaceae, a pantropical family of flowering plants consisting of c. 2430 species (Couvreur & al. 2019) in 108 genera (Guo & al. 2017; Chaowasku & al. 2018a, 2018b; Xue & al. 2018; note that Friesodielsia Steenis and Scheffero­ mitra Diels are synonymous, see Saunders & al. 2020; and Melodorum Lour. has been synonymized with Uva­ ria L., see Turner 2018)

  • On the basis of plastid DNA data, both genera have been consistently retrieved as sister genera with strong support (e.g. Chatrou & al. 2012; Guo & al. 2017), this relationship was not supported based on some nuclear DNA data (Couvreur & al. 2019)

  • Artabotrys and Xylopia were each recovered as a maximally supported sister clades. In the former genus, a maximally supported clade composed of two accessions of A. thom­ sonii Oliv., both from Africa, was retrieved as the sister group of a large maximally supported clade consisting of the remaining accessions of Artabotrys

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Summary

Introduction

Artabotrys is one of the larger genera of Annonaceae, a pantropical family of flowering plants consisting of c. 2430 species (Couvreur & al. 2019) in 108 genera (Guo & al. 2017; Chaowasku & al. 2018a, 2018b; Xue & al. 2018; note that Friesodielsia Steenis and Scheffero­ mitra Diels are synonymous, see Saunders & al. 2020; and Melodorum Lour. has been synonymized with Uva­ ria L., see Turner 2018). Artabotrys, with over 100 species distributed in tropical forests of Africa-Madagascar, Asia, New Guinea and Australia, has been classified in the tribe Xylopieae of the subfamily Annonoideae Artabotrys is mainly characterized by (1) hooked peduncles and inflorescence axes, (2) inner petals that are generally constricted over the reproductive. Species of Artabotrys develop a climbing habit with the help of hooked peduncles and inflorescence axes, but sometimes appear as straggling shrubs (e.g. in A. spinosus Craib; Chalermglin 2001; personal observations). The majority of species diversity is in Asia-Australasia instead of Africa-Madagascar, with c. The majority of species diversity is in Asia-Australasia instead of Africa-Madagascar, with c. 75 species vs c. 30 species, respectively (Chen & al. 2018)

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