fbpx
Wikipedia

Nepenthes benstonei

Nepenthes benstonei /nɪˈpɛnθz bɛnˈstni/ is a tropical pitcher plant endemic to Peninsular Malaysia, where it grows at elevations of 150–1350 m above sea level.[3][10] The specific epithet benstonei honours botanist Benjamin Clemens Stone, who was one of the first to collect the species.[1]

Nepenthes benstonei
Upper pitchers of Nepenthes benstonei
from Bukit Bakar
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Nepenthaceae
Genus: Nepenthes
Species:
N. benstonei
Binomial name
Nepenthes benstonei
Synonyms[3]

Botanical history edit

In their 1997 monograph, "A skeletal revision of Nepenthes (Nepenthaceae)", Matthew Jebb and Martin Cheek tentatively referred specimens collected from Bukit Bakar, near Macang, Kelantan, to N. sanguinea.[7] These were Stone & Chin 15238, deposited at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia near Kuala Lumpur (KLU), and Shah & Shukor 3168, also held at KLU as well as the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong (KEP). They noted that the plants exhibited some unusual morphological features, such as larger leaves and decurrent, almost petiolate leaf bases, suggesting that they might represent an as-yet undescribed taxon.[7]

 
Bukit Bakar in 2007

Field studies confirmed that the taxon represented a separate species, and it was formally described as N. benstonei in 1999 by Charles Clarke.[1][11]

The holotype of N. benstonei, Clarke s.n., was collected by Charles Clarke on 24 July 1998, on Bukit Bakar in Kelantan at an altitude of between 450 and 550 m. It is deposited at the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong (KEP). Isotypes are held at Herbarium Bogoriense (BO), the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K), the National Herbarium of the Netherlands in Leiden (L), the Forest Department in Sandakan (SAN), and the Singapore Botanic Gardens (SING).[3][12]

Ridley 16097 edit

Although only described towards the very end of the twentieth century, N. benstonei was probably first collected in July 1911 by Henry Nicholas Ridley on Mount Tahan in Pahang. The Ridley 16097 series comprises three herbarium sheets: one deposited at the Singapore herbarium and two at Kew. The former consists of a climbing stem fragment with two upper pitchers and two female inflorescences. The two sheets at Kew are barcoded K000651565 (climbing stem with immature female inflorescence but no pitchers) and K000651564 (climbing stem with upper pitchers), and differ significantly in morphology.[3] Ridley referred the Ridley 16097 material to N. singalana.[3]

For his seminal monograph of 1928, "The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies", B. H. Danser examined the sheet of Ridley 16097 held in Singapore, lumping it with the variable N. alata from the Philippines.[2] Danser briefly mentioned this specimen in his discussion of N. alata:[2]

The specimen recorded by me from the Malay Peninsula deviates more [from N. alata], especially by the long, narrow inflorescence and 2-flowered pedicels, but also in the Philippines and Sumatra forms with 2-flowered pedicels have been found (Ramos 14650, Lörzing 11603).

Danser also treated N. eustachya from Sumatra in synonymy with N. alata, giving rise to a taxon with a puzzling geographical distribution: widespread across Sumatra and the Philippines, apparently very rare in the Malay Peninsula (Ridley 16097 being the sole record), and completely unknown from Borneo and the other major islands of the Malay Archipelago.[2][12]

In 1990, Ruth Kiew identified Ridley 16097 as belonging to N. gracillima. Kiew explained the apparent near-absence of N. alata from Peninsular Malaysia as follows:[6]

Why has this species not been recollected since 1911 in spite of several botanical expeditions to G. Tahan since then? The answer is quite simple, Ridley's specimen (16097) actually belongs to N. gracillima. Although N. alata Blanco is superficially similar to N. gracillima in its narrow leaf blade which has an attenuate base, the pitchers of these two species are distinct. Those of N. alata are broader (about 4 cm wide) and are distinctly bulbous towards the base compared with the very slender, non-bulbous pitchers of N. gracillima that are 1.5 to 3 cm wide. Nor does the G. Tahan specimen have truly petiolate leaves - its leaf base is narrow and has rolled up during drying. Ridley's specimen from G. Tahan determined by Danser as N. alata bears pitchers typical of N. gracillima and examination of the Tahan population in the field leaves no doubt that it belongs to this species.

Jebb and Cheek supported this interpretation in their 1997 monograph, "A skeletal revision of Nepenthes (Nepenthaceae)",[7] and in their 2001 treatment for Flora Malesiana, "Nepenthaceae".[8] They also restored N. eustachya as a separate species, making N. alata a Philippine endemic once again — a circumscription that has been accepted by subsequent authors.[12][13]

 
 
Rosette plants of N. benstonei, showing the shape of the laminae

However, in his 2001 book, Nepenthes of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia, Charles Clarke disagreed with Kiew's identification of Ridley 16097 as N. gracillima. He noted that the inflorescences of both N. gracillima and the closely related N. ramispina are very short, rarely exceeding 10 and 20 cm, respectively. Both female inflorescences of Ridley 16097 have a long peduncle and rachis, each exceeding 20 cm in length. In addition, the flowers of these species are almost always borne on pedicels, unlike those of Ridley 16097, which mostly have two-flowered partial peduncles.[14] Furthermore, the shape of the lamina is unlike that of N. gracillima or N. ramispina; despite being narrow and lanceolate, it is proportionately considerably longer and has a much narrower, almost sub-petiolate base. Kiew partly attributed the narrower leaf bases of Ridley 16097 to a preservation artefact, but Clarke stated that this explanation could not fully account for the differences. He also noted that the specimen exhibits a decurrent leaf attachment. Taking all of these morphological features into account, Clarke felt that Ridley 16097 most likely represented a specimen of N. benstonei.[12][15] At the time, he believed that Kiew had grouped both N. benstonei and N. ramispina with N. gracillima.[12] But in a 2012 revision of the Nepenthes of Mount Tahan, which included a reappraisal of the taxonomically confused N. alba and N. gracillima, Clarke and Ch'ien Lee concluded that Kiew's concept of N. gracillima had encompassed N. alba, N. benstonei, and N. gracillima.[3] Clarke and Lee also showed that Ridley 16097 represents a mixed collection and that only two of the three sheets belong to N. benstonei; the Kew specimen barcoded K000651564 is representative of N. alba.[3]

Other specimens edit

In addition to the two sheets of Ridley 16097, populations of N. benstonei from Mount Tahan are represented by the specimen Holttum 20643, held at the herbarium of the Singapore Botanic Gardens (SING).[3] A number of specimens collected from Terengganu also belong to N. benstonei. These are Shah et al. 3274, which is deposited at the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong, and Shah et al. 3283, held at the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia near Kuala Lumpur.[12][16]

Specimens from peninsular Thailand originally assigned to N. benstonei in Cheek and Jebb's 2001 monograph, "Nepenthaceae",[8] have since been identified as belonging to a new species, N. thai.[9]

Description edit

Nepenthes benstonei is a climbing plant. The stem, which may be branched, can attain a length of 10 m[10] and is up to 0.6 cm in diameter. Internodes are cylindrical and up to 15 cm long.[12]

Leaves are coriaceous and sessile to sub-petiolate. The lamina is usually broadly linear-lanceolate in shape, but may also be slightly spathulate. Its base is a broad, amplexicaul sheath with decurrent margins. The lamina can reach 60 cm in length and 9 cm in width. It has a rounded to acute apex. The margins of the lamina usually meet the tendril unequally on both sides, being up to 3 mm apart. Three to five longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib. Pinnate veins are almost indistinct. Tendrils are up to 60 cm long.[12]

 
 
Lower pitchers of two different forms of N. benstonei, showing the colour variation exhibited by this species

Rosette and lower pitchers reach 20 cm in height[16] and 5 cm in width. They are ovoid in the lower part and cylindrical above, with a pronounced hip in the middle. A pair of fringed wings (≤4 mm wide) runs the whole length of the pitcher cup. The pitcher mouth is round to ovate and oblique throughout. The peristome is up to 6 mm wide and bears very small but distinct teeth along its inner margin. The pitcher lid is ovate and lacks appendages. It bears a short but distinct keel and often has a very broad insertion. A simple or bifurcate spur (≤12 mm long) is inserted near the base of the lid.[12]

Upper pitchers are similar in most respects to their lower counterparts. They are up to 20 cm high[16] and 3 cm wide. They are infundibular in the lowermost part, narrowly ovoid in the next part, and cylindrical above. The peristome lacks teeth in upper pitchers. The lid is narrower and has a less obtuse apex. The spur is simple and much smaller, reaching only 5 mm in length.[12]

 
 
An intermediate pitcher (left) and an upper pitcher with an old infructescence (right)

Nepenthes benstonei has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle is up to 20 cm long and the rachis up to 30 cm long. The first flower is generally borne on a pedicel, sometimes with a simple, lanceolate bracteole (≤1.5 cm long). Subsequent flowers are produced on pedicels or two-flowered partial peduncles, which lack bracteoles. Sepals are ovate and around 4 mm long. Male inflorescences usually bear around twice as many flowers as female ones. N. benstonei is one of the few Nepenthes species known to produce multiple inflorescences concurrently on a single stem. Two to three are usually produced, originating from sequential nodes at the top of the stem. This unusual reproductive habit has also been observed, although much more rarely, in N. alba, N. ampullaria, N. attenboroughii, N. rigidifolia, N. sanguinea, and N. thai.[9][12][13] It is seen even more frequently in N. philippinensis.[13]

The stem and lamina have a sparse indumentum of simple white hairs. Short, branched reddish-brown hairs line the margins of the lamina. The outer surfaces of the pitchers bear a sparse covering of short, branched red hairs. The same hairs are more densely present on the margins of the lid and upper part of the pitcher directly below the peristome. Immature inflorescences have an indumentum of short white and red hairs throughout.[12]

The stem and leaves of N. benstonei bear a thick, waxy cuticle that often gives a whitish-blue sheen to the lamina and pitchers. Inflorescences are distinctly waxy throughout.[12]

No infraspecific taxa of N. benstonei have been described.[12]

Ecology edit

Nepenthes benstonei is endemic to Peninsular Malaysia. It is known with certainty only from the summits of low hills in Kelantan and northern Terengganu,[12][16] and from Mount Tahan in Taman Negara, Pahang.[3] The species has a relatively wide altitudinal range of 150[10] to 1350 m above sea level.[3]

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Location of Bukit Bakar

Nepenthes benstonei grows terrestrially among open, secondary vegetation, where it is exposed to direct sunlight. It is very abundant near the summit of Bukit Bakar, where it grows on cuttings beside a paved road leading to a Telekom Malaysia station at the summit.[12][16] There, its altitudinal distribution appears to be restricted to 450–600 m.[12]

The species is also present on Mount Tahan, which at 2187 m is the highest mountain in Peninsular Malaysia. Its altitudinal range on Mount Tahan is known to extend from 800 to 1350 m. It is common on the mountain's lower slopes and can be seen along the western summit route from Sungai Relau, particularly on the tops of steep ridges at around 800–1200 m.[nb 1] It has been recorded growing along the western trail itself and from other disturbed sites, including areas affected by landslides. Plants have also been observed in dense forest, but these bear comparatively few pitchers. Though there were no confirmed reports of N. benstonei from Mount Tahan prior to 2012, the species's presence there is attested by much older herbarium material.[3]

Although the extent of its range is uncertain, N. benstonei appears to have a secure future in the wild as the type locality lies within a protected area and the species's unremarkable appearance means over-collection does not pose a serious threat.[12]

Related species edit

In his description of N. benstonei, Charles Clarke noted two characteristics that he considered unique among Nepenthes. These were the production of multiple inflorescences and the presence of a thick, waxy cuticle on the leaves.[1] Subsequent field studies have shown that the former is not unique to N. benstonei, but also occasionally occurs in other Nepenthes. Likewise, a number of other species, such as N. hirsuta from Borneo, are known to produce a waxy cuticle, although it is less developed than in N. benstonei.[12] Otherwise, N. benstonei lacks remarkable characteristics and is distinguished from related species on the basis of its stem, leaves, peristome, lid, indumentum, and glands of the digestive zone.[1]

Nepenthes benstonei appears to be related to N. sanguinea, which is also native to Peninsular Malaysia. It can be distinguished on the basis of its significantly larger leaves, which are often sub-petiolate and differ in shape. Nepenthes benstonei also has longer tendrils and a denser indumentum. The presence of teeth on the peristome of lower pitchers and of a thick, waxy cuticle on the leaves also serve to distinguish these taxa. In addition, herbarium specimens of N. benstonei tend to dry to a lighter colour than those of N. sanguinea.[12]

The pitchers of N. benstonei also resemble those of N. smilesii from Indochina. Clarke suggests that N. benstonei may represent an evolutionary link between the Nepenthes taxa of Indochina and Peninsular Malaysia.[16] Nepenthes benstonei also superficially resembles N. macrovulgaris from Borneo. It differs in producing multiple inflorescences, which are longer than those of N. macrovulgaris and bear one- or two-flowered partial peduncles, as opposed to exclusively two-flowered in the latter. The waxy coating of its leaves also separates these species.[12] Nepenthes benstonei has also been compared to N. albomarginata, although the presence of a white band below the peristome, which gives the latter its name, makes identification easy.[12] Upper pitchers of N. benstonei could be confused with those of N. mirabilis, although all other parts of the plant have little in common.[12]

In 2001, Charles Clarke performed a cladistic analysis of the Nepenthes species of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia using 70 morphological characteristics of each taxon. The resultant cladogram placed N. benstonei in an unresolved polytomy at the base of the Montanae/Nobiles clade, together with N. rhombicaulis.[12]

Natural hybrids edit

 
 
A rosette plant of the natural hybrid N. benstonei × N. mirabilis

Only one natural hybrid involving N. benstonei is known.[13] A single example of N. benstonei × N. mirabilis was discovered by Andrew Hurrell at the foot of Bukit Bakar, where the two species occur sympatrically.[12][16]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The species was observed by Charles Clarke and Ch'ien Lee on 30 March 2011 at 4°39′09″N 102°11′15″E / 4.6524°N 102.1875°E / 4.6524; 102.1875 and adjacent areas, where it grew at 895 m altitude.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Clarke, C.M. 1999. Nepenthes benstonei (Nepenthaceae), a new pitcher plant from Peninsular Malaysia. Sandakania 13: 79–87.
  2. ^ a b c d Danser, B.H. 1928. 1. Nepenthes alata Blanco. [pp. 258–262] In: The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies. Bulletin du Jardin Botanique de Buitenzorg, Série III, 9(3–4): 249–438.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Clarke, C. & C.C. Lee 2012. A revision of Nepenthes (Nepenthaceae) from Gunung Tahan, Peninsular Malaysia. 2013-10-07 at the Wayback Machine Gardens' Bulletin Singapore 64(1): 33–49.
  4. ^ Cheek, M. & M. Jebb 2013. Typification and redelimitation of Nepenthes alata with notes on the N. alata group, and N. negros sp. nov. from the Philippines. Nordic Journal of Botany 31(5): 616–622. doi:10.1111/j.1756-1051.2012.00099.x
  5. ^ Schlauer, J. N.d. Nepenthes alata. Carnivorous Plant Database.
  6. ^ a b Kiew, R.G. 1990. Pitcher plants of Gunung Tahan. Journal of Wildlife and National Parks (Malaysia) 10: 34–37.
  7. ^ a b c d e Jebb, M.H.P. & M.R. Cheek 1997. A skeletal revision of Nepenthes (Nepenthaceae). Blumea 42(1): 1–106.
  8. ^ a b c d Cheek, M.R. & M.H.P. Jebb 2001. Nepenthaceae. Flora Malesiana 15: 1–157.
  9. ^ a b c Cheek, M.R. & M.H.P. Jebb 2009. Nepenthes group Montanae (Nepenthaceae) in Indo-China, with N. thai and N. bokor described as new. Kew Bulletin 64(2): 319–325. doi:10.1007/s12225-009-9117-3
  10. ^ a b c McPherson, S.R. & A. Robinson 2012. Field Guide to the Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia and Indochina. Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole.
  11. ^ Schlauer, J. 2000. Literature reviews. Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 29(2): 53.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Clarke, C.M. 2001. Nepenthes of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia. Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu.
  13. ^ a b c d McPherson, S.R. 2009. Pitcher Plants of the Old World. 2 volumes. Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole.
  14. ^ Shivas, R.G. 1984. Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia & Singapore. Maruzen Asia, Kuala Lumpur.
  15. ^ Clarke, C.M. 2006. Introduction. In: Danser, B.H. The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies. Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu. pp. 1–15.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Clarke, C.M. 2002. A Guide to the Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia. Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu.
  • (in German) Meimberg, H. 2002. Molekular-systematische Untersuchungen an den Familien Nepenthaceae und Ancistrocladaceae sowie verwandter Taxa aus der Unterklasse Caryophyllidae s. l.. Ph.D. thesis, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich.
  • Meimberg, H. & G. Heubl 2006. Introduction of a nuclear marker for phylogenetic analysis of Nepenthaceae. Plant Biology 8(6): 831–840. doi:10.1055/s-2006-924676
  • Meimberg, H., S. Thalhammer, A. Brachmann & G. Heubl 2006. Comparative analysis of a translocated copy of the trnK intron in carnivorous family Nepenthaceae. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 39(2): 478–490. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.11.023
  • Thorogood, C. 2010. The Malaysian Nepenthes: Evolutionary and Taxonomic Perspectives. Nova Science Publishers, New York.

External links edit

  • Photographs of N. benstonei at the Carnivorous Plant Photofinder

nepenthes, benstonei, tropical, pitcher, plant, endemic, peninsular, malaysia, where, grows, elevations, 1350, above, level, specific, epithet, benstonei, honours, botanist, benjamin, clemens, stone, first, collect, species, upper, pitchers, from, bukit, bakar. Nepenthes benstonei n ɪ ˈ p ɛ n 8 iː z b ɛ n ˈ s t oʊ n i aɪ is a tropical pitcher plant endemic to Peninsular Malaysia where it grows at elevations of 150 1350 m above sea level 3 10 The specific epithet benstonei honours botanist Benjamin Clemens Stone who was one of the first to collect the species 1 Nepenthes benstoneiUpper pitchers of Nepenthes benstoneifrom Bukit BakarScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsOrder CaryophyllalesFamily NepenthaceaeGenus NepenthesSpecies N benstoneiBinomial nameNepenthes benstoneiC Clarke 1999 1 Synonyms 3 Synonyms Nepenthes alataauct non Blanco Danser 1928 2 N abalata N alata N benstonei N copelandii N eustachya N graciliflora N mindanaoensis N mirabilis N negros N philippinensis 3 4 5 Nepenthes gracillimaauct non Ridl Kiew 1990 6 Jebb amp Cheek 1997 7 Cheek amp Jebb 2001 8 N alba N benstonei N gracillima Nepenthes sanguineaauct non Lindl Jebb amp Cheek 1997 7 N benstonei N sanguinea Heterochresonyms Nepenthes benstoneiauct non C Clarke Cheek amp Jebb 2001 8 N benstonei N thai 9 Contents 1 Botanical history 1 1 Ridley 16097 1 2 Other specimens 2 Description 3 Ecology 4 Related species 5 Natural hybrids 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBotanical history editIn their 1997 monograph A skeletal revision of Nepenthes Nepenthaceae Matthew Jebb and Martin Cheek tentatively referred specimens collected from Bukit Bakar near Macang Kelantan to N sanguinea 7 These were Stone amp Chin 15238 deposited at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia near Kuala Lumpur KLU and Shah amp Shukor 3168 also held at KLU as well as the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong KEP They noted that the plants exhibited some unusual morphological features such as larger leaves and decurrent almost petiolate leaf bases suggesting that they might represent an as yet undescribed taxon 7 nbsp Bukit Bakar in 2007Field studies confirmed that the taxon represented a separate species and it was formally described as N benstonei in 1999 by Charles Clarke 1 11 The holotype of N benstonei Clarke s n was collected by Charles Clarke on 24 July 1998 on Bukit Bakar in Kelantan at an altitude of between 450 and 550 m It is deposited at the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong KEP Isotypes are held at Herbarium Bogoriense BO the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew K the National Herbarium of the Netherlands in Leiden L the Forest Department in Sandakan SAN and the Singapore Botanic Gardens SING 3 12 Ridley 16097 edit Although only described towards the very end of the twentieth century N benstonei was probably first collected in July 1911 by Henry Nicholas Ridley on Mount Tahan in Pahang The Ridley 16097 series comprises three herbarium sheets one deposited at the Singapore herbarium and two at Kew The former consists of a climbing stem fragment with two upper pitchers and two female inflorescences The two sheets at Kew are barcoded K000651565 climbing stem with immature female inflorescence but no pitchers and K000651564 climbing stem with upper pitchers and differ significantly in morphology 3 Ridley referred the Ridley 16097 material to N singalana 3 For his seminal monograph of 1928 The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies B H Danser examined the sheet of Ridley 16097 held in Singapore lumping it with the variable N alata from the Philippines 2 Danser briefly mentioned this specimen in his discussion of N alata 2 The specimen recorded by me from the Malay Peninsula deviates more from N alata especially by the long narrow inflorescence and 2 flowered pedicels but also in the Philippines and Sumatra forms with 2 flowered pedicels have been found Ramos 14650 Lorzing 11603 Danser also treated N eustachya from Sumatra in synonymy with N alata giving rise to a taxon with a puzzling geographical distribution widespread across Sumatra and the Philippines apparently very rare in the Malay Peninsula Ridley 16097 being the sole record and completely unknown from Borneo and the other major islands of the Malay Archipelago 2 12 In 1990 Ruth Kiew identified Ridley 16097 as belonging to N gracillima Kiew explained the apparent near absence of N alata from Peninsular Malaysia as follows 6 Why has this species not been recollected since 1911 in spite of several botanical expeditions to G Tahan since then The answer is quite simple Ridley s specimen 16097 actually belongs to N gracillima Although N alata Blanco is superficially similar to N gracillima in its narrow leaf blade which has an attenuate base the pitchers of these two species are distinct Those of N alata are broader about 4 cm wide and are distinctly bulbous towards the base compared with the very slender non bulbous pitchers of N gracillima that are 1 5 to 3 cm wide Nor does the G Tahan specimen have truly petiolate leaves its leaf base is narrow and has rolled up during drying Ridley s specimen from G Tahan determined by Danser as N alata bears pitchers typical of N gracillima and examination of the Tahan population in the field leaves no doubt that it belongs to this species Jebb and Cheek supported this interpretation in their 1997 monograph A skeletal revision of Nepenthes Nepenthaceae 7 and in their 2001 treatment for Flora Malesiana Nepenthaceae 8 They also restored N eustachya as a separate species making N alata a Philippine endemic once again a circumscription that has been accepted by subsequent authors 12 13 nbsp nbsp Rosette plants of N benstonei showing the shape of the laminae However in his 2001 book Nepenthes of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia Charles Clarke disagreed with Kiew s identification of Ridley 16097 as N gracillima He noted that the inflorescences of both N gracillima and the closely related N ramispina are very short rarely exceeding 10 and 20 cm respectively Both female inflorescences of Ridley 16097 have a long peduncle and rachis each exceeding 20 cm in length In addition the flowers of these species are almost always borne on pedicels unlike those of Ridley 16097 which mostly have two flowered partial peduncles 14 Furthermore the shape of the lamina is unlike that of N gracillima or N ramispina despite being narrow and lanceolate it is proportionately considerably longer and has a much narrower almost sub petiolate base Kiew partly attributed the narrower leaf bases of Ridley 16097 to a preservation artefact but Clarke stated that this explanation could not fully account for the differences He also noted that the specimen exhibits a decurrent leaf attachment Taking all of these morphological features into account Clarke felt that Ridley 16097 most likely represented a specimen of N benstonei 12 15 At the time he believed that Kiew had grouped both N benstonei and N ramispina with N gracillima 12 But in a 2012 revision of the Nepenthes of Mount Tahan which included a reappraisal of the taxonomically confused N alba and N gracillima Clarke and Ch ien Lee concluded that Kiew s concept of N gracillima had encompassed N alba N benstonei and N gracillima 3 Clarke and Lee also showed that Ridley 16097 represents a mixed collection and that only two of the three sheets belong to N benstonei the Kew specimen barcoded K000651564 is representative of N alba 3 Other specimens edit In addition to the two sheets of Ridley 16097 populations of N benstonei from Mount Tahan are represented by the specimen Holttum 20643 held at the herbarium of the Singapore Botanic Gardens SING 3 A number of specimens collected from Terengganu also belong to N benstonei These are Shah et al 3274 which is deposited at the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia in Kepong and Shah et al 3283 held at the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia near Kuala Lumpur 12 16 Specimens from peninsular Thailand originally assigned to N benstonei in Cheek and Jebb s 2001 monograph Nepenthaceae 8 have since been identified as belonging to a new species N thai 9 Description editNepenthes benstonei is a climbing plant The stem which may be branched can attain a length of 10 m 10 and is up to 0 6 cm in diameter Internodes are cylindrical and up to 15 cm long 12 Leaves are coriaceous and sessile to sub petiolate The lamina is usually broadly linear lanceolate in shape but may also be slightly spathulate Its base is a broad amplexicaul sheath with decurrent margins The lamina can reach 60 cm in length and 9 cm in width It has a rounded to acute apex The margins of the lamina usually meet the tendril unequally on both sides being up to 3 mm apart Three to five longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib Pinnate veins are almost indistinct Tendrils are up to 60 cm long 12 nbsp nbsp Lower pitchers of two different forms of N benstonei showing the colour variation exhibited by this species Rosette and lower pitchers reach 20 cm in height 16 and 5 cm in width They are ovoid in the lower part and cylindrical above with a pronounced hip in the middle A pair of fringed wings 4 mm wide runs the whole length of the pitcher cup The pitcher mouth is round to ovate and oblique throughout The peristome is up to 6 mm wide and bears very small but distinct teeth along its inner margin The pitcher lid is ovate and lacks appendages It bears a short but distinct keel and often has a very broad insertion A simple or bifurcate spur 12 mm long is inserted near the base of the lid 12 Upper pitchers are similar in most respects to their lower counterparts They are up to 20 cm high 16 and 3 cm wide They are infundibular in the lowermost part narrowly ovoid in the next part and cylindrical above The peristome lacks teeth in upper pitchers The lid is narrower and has a less obtuse apex The spur is simple and much smaller reaching only 5 mm in length 12 nbsp nbsp An intermediate pitcher left and an upper pitcher with an old infructescence right Nepenthes benstonei has a racemose inflorescence The peduncle is up to 20 cm long and the rachis up to 30 cm long The first flower is generally borne on a pedicel sometimes with a simple lanceolate bracteole 1 5 cm long Subsequent flowers are produced on pedicels or two flowered partial peduncles which lack bracteoles Sepals are ovate and around 4 mm long Male inflorescences usually bear around twice as many flowers as female ones N benstonei is one of the few Nepenthes species known to produce multiple inflorescences concurrently on a single stem Two to three are usually produced originating from sequential nodes at the top of the stem This unusual reproductive habit has also been observed although much more rarely in N alba N ampullaria N attenboroughii N rigidifolia N sanguinea and N thai 9 12 13 It is seen even more frequently in N philippinensis 13 The stem and lamina have a sparse indumentum of simple white hairs Short branched reddish brown hairs line the margins of the lamina The outer surfaces of the pitchers bear a sparse covering of short branched red hairs The same hairs are more densely present on the margins of the lid and upper part of the pitcher directly below the peristome Immature inflorescences have an indumentum of short white and red hairs throughout 12 The stem and leaves of N benstonei bear a thick waxy cuticle that often gives a whitish blue sheen to the lamina and pitchers Inflorescences are distinctly waxy throughout 12 No infraspecific taxa of N benstonei have been described 12 Ecology editNepenthes benstonei is endemic to Peninsular Malaysia It is known with certainty only from the summits of low hills in Kelantan and northern Terengganu 12 16 and from Mount Tahan in Taman Negara Pahang 3 The species has a relatively wide altitudinal range of 150 10 to 1350 m above sea level 3 nbsp nbsp class notpageimage Location of Bukit Bakar Nepenthes benstonei grows terrestrially among open secondary vegetation where it is exposed to direct sunlight It is very abundant near the summit of Bukit Bakar where it grows on cuttings beside a paved road leading to a Telekom Malaysia station at the summit 12 16 There its altitudinal distribution appears to be restricted to 450 600 m 12 The species is also present on Mount Tahan which at 2187 m is the highest mountain in Peninsular Malaysia Its altitudinal range on Mount Tahan is known to extend from 800 to 1350 m It is common on the mountain s lower slopes and can be seen along the western summit route from Sungai Relau particularly on the tops of steep ridges at around 800 1200 m nb 1 It has been recorded growing along the western trail itself and from other disturbed sites including areas affected by landslides Plants have also been observed in dense forest but these bear comparatively few pitchers Though there were no confirmed reports of N benstonei from Mount Tahan prior to 2012 the species s presence there is attested by much older herbarium material 3 Although the extent of its range is uncertain N benstonei appears to have a secure future in the wild as the type locality lies within a protected area and the species s unremarkable appearance means over collection does not pose a serious threat 12 Related species editIn his description of N benstonei Charles Clarke noted two characteristics that he considered unique among Nepenthes These were the production of multiple inflorescences and the presence of a thick waxy cuticle on the leaves 1 Subsequent field studies have shown that the former is not unique to N benstonei but also occasionally occurs in other Nepenthes Likewise a number of other species such as N hirsuta from Borneo are known to produce a waxy cuticle although it is less developed than in N benstonei 12 Otherwise N benstonei lacks remarkable characteristics and is distinguished from related species on the basis of its stem leaves peristome lid indumentum and glands of the digestive zone 1 Nepenthes benstonei appears to be related to N sanguinea which is also native to Peninsular Malaysia It can be distinguished on the basis of its significantly larger leaves which are often sub petiolate and differ in shape Nepenthes benstonei also has longer tendrils and a denser indumentum The presence of teeth on the peristome of lower pitchers and of a thick waxy cuticle on the leaves also serve to distinguish these taxa In addition herbarium specimens of N benstonei tend to dry to a lighter colour than those of N sanguinea 12 The pitchers of N benstonei also resemble those of N smilesii from Indochina Clarke suggests that N benstonei may represent an evolutionary link between the Nepenthes taxa of Indochina and Peninsular Malaysia 16 Nepenthes benstonei also superficially resembles N macrovulgaris from Borneo It differs in producing multiple inflorescences which are longer than those of N macrovulgaris and bear one or two flowered partial peduncles as opposed to exclusively two flowered in the latter The waxy coating of its leaves also separates these species 12 Nepenthes benstonei has also been compared to N albomarginata although the presence of a white band below the peristome which gives the latter its name makes identification easy 12 Upper pitchers of N benstonei could be confused with those of N mirabilis although all other parts of the plant have little in common 12 In 2001 Charles Clarke performed a cladistic analysis of the Nepenthes species of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia using 70 morphological characteristics of each taxon The resultant cladogram placed N benstonei in an unresolved polytomy at the base of the Montanae Nobiles clade together with N rhombicaulis 12 Natural hybrids edit nbsp nbsp A rosette plant of the natural hybrid N benstonei N mirabilis Only one natural hybrid involving N benstonei is known 13 A single example of N benstonei N mirabilis was discovered by Andrew Hurrell at the foot of Bukit Bakar where the two species occur sympatrically 12 16 Notes edit The species was observed by Charles Clarke and Ch ien Lee on 30 March 2011 at 4 39 09 N 102 11 15 E 4 6524 N 102 1875 E 4 6524 102 1875 and adjacent areas where it grew at 895 m altitude 3 References edit a b c d e Clarke C M 1999 Nepenthes benstonei Nepenthaceae a new pitcher plant from Peninsular Malaysia Sandakania 13 79 87 a b c d Danser B H 1928 1 Nepenthes alata Blanco pp 258 262 In The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies Bulletin du Jardin Botanique de Buitenzorg Serie III 9 3 4 249 438 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Clarke C amp C C Lee 2012 A revision of Nepenthes Nepenthaceae from Gunung Tahan Peninsular Malaysia Archived 2013 10 07 at the Wayback Machine Gardens Bulletin Singapore 64 1 33 49 Cheek M amp M Jebb 2013 Typification and redelimitation of Nepenthes alata with notes on the N alata group and N negros sp nov from the Philippines Nordic Journal of Botany 31 5 616 622 doi 10 1111 j 1756 1051 2012 00099 x Schlauer J N d Nepenthes alata Carnivorous Plant Database a b Kiew R G 1990 Pitcher plants of Gunung Tahan Journal of Wildlife and National Parks Malaysia 10 34 37 a b c d e Jebb M H P amp M R Cheek 1997 A skeletal revision of Nepenthes Nepenthaceae Blumea 42 1 1 106 a b c d Cheek M R amp M H P Jebb 2001 Nepenthaceae Flora Malesiana 15 1 157 a b c Cheek M R amp M H P Jebb 2009 Nepenthes group Montanae Nepenthaceae in Indo China with N thai and N bokor described as new Kew Bulletin 64 2 319 325 doi 10 1007 s12225 009 9117 3 a b c McPherson S R amp A Robinson 2012 Field Guide to the Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia and Indochina Redfern Natural History Productions Poole Schlauer J 2000 Literature reviews Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 29 2 53 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Clarke C M 2001 Nepenthes of Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia Natural History Publications Borneo Kota Kinabalu a b c d McPherson S R 2009 Pitcher Plants of the Old World 2 volumes Redfern Natural History Productions Poole Shivas R G 1984 Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia amp Singapore Maruzen Asia Kuala Lumpur Clarke C M 2006 Introduction In Danser B H The Nepenthaceae of the Netherlands Indies Natural History Publications Borneo Kota Kinabalu pp 1 15 a b c d e f g Clarke C M 2002 A Guide to the Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia Natural History Publications Borneo Kota Kinabalu in German Meimberg H 2002 Molekular systematische Untersuchungen an den Familien Nepenthaceae und Ancistrocladaceae sowie verwandter Taxa aus der Unterklasse Caryophyllidae s l Ph D thesis Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Munich Meimberg H amp G Heubl 2006 Introduction of a nuclear marker for phylogenetic analysis of Nepenthaceae Plant Biology 8 6 831 840 doi 10 1055 s 2006 924676 Meimberg H S Thalhammer A Brachmann amp G Heubl 2006 Comparative analysis of a translocated copy of the trnK intron in carnivorous family Nepenthaceae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 39 2 478 490 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 11 023 Thorogood C 2010 The Malaysian Nepenthes Evolutionary and Taxonomic Perspectives Nova Science Publishers New York External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nepenthes benstonei Photographs of N benstonei at the Carnivorous Plant Photofinder Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nepenthes benstonei amp oldid 1118574516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.