A JOURNAL ON TAXONOMIC BOTANY, PLANT SOCIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY REINWARDTIA A JOURNAL ON TAXONOMIC BOTANY, PLANT SOCIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY Vol. 13(4): 317 — 3 8 9 , December 20, 2012 Chief Editor Kartini Kramadibrata (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Editors Dedy Darnaedi (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Tukirin Partomihardjo (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Joeni Setijo Rahajoe (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Teguh Triono (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Marlina Ardiyani (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Eizi Suzuki (Kagoshima University, Japan) Jun Wen (Smithsonian Natural History Museum, USA) Managing editor Himmah Rustiami (Herbarium Bogoriense, Indonesia) Secretary Endang Tri Utami Lay out editor Deden Sumirat Hidayat Illustrators Subari Wahyudi Santoso Anne Kusumawaty Reviewers Ed de Vogel (Netherlands), Henk van der Werff (USA), Irawati (Indonesia), Jan F. Veldkamp (Netherlands), Jens G. Rohwer (Denmark), Lauren M. Gardiner (UK), Masahiro Kato (Japan), Marshall D. Sunberg (USA), Martin Callmander (USA), Rugayah (Indonesia), Paul Forster (Australia), Peter Hovenkamp (Netherlands), Ulrich Meve (Germany). Correspondence on editorial matters and subscriptions for Reinwardtia should be addressed to: HERBARIUM BOGORIENSE, BOTANY DIVISION, RESEARCH CENTER FOR BIOLOGY-LIPI, CIBINONG 16911, INDONESIA E-mail: reinwardtia@mail.lipi.go.id REINWARDTIA Vol 13, No 4, pp: 3 3 1 - 3 3 9 HOYA (APOCYNACEAE: ASCLEPIADOIDEAE) DIVERSITY IN GUNUNG GEDE PANGRANGO NATIONAL PARK, WEST JAVA, INDONESIA Received December 1, 2011; accepted September 3, 2012 SRI RAHAYU Centre for Plant Conservation Bogor Botanical Gardens, Indonesian Institute of Sciences Jl. Ir. H. Juanda 13, Bogor, Indonesia. Tel./Fax. 62-0251-8322187. E-mail: srirahayukrb@yahoo.com ABSTRACT RAHAYU, S. 2012. Hoya (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) diversity in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park, West Java, Indonesia. Reinwardtia 13(4): 331-339. — A survey on the diversity of Hoya {Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) species was conducted in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park at different altitudes in four locations (Cibodas, Bodogol, Situgunung, and Selabintana). Ten Hoya species were found at elevations between 650 and 1500 m asl. Of these, two species were only found at elevations above 1000 m asl, while the other eight grow well below 1000 m asl. The inventory encountered Hoya imperialis Lindley and H. micrantha Wight ex Hook.f. as new records for Java. The highest diversity was found at the Bodogol Research Station. It shows that the genus is most diverse at relatively low altitudes. Keywords: Hoya, Apocynaceae, species diversity, new record, Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park. ABSTRAK RAHAYU, S. 2012. Keanekaragaman Hoya {Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) di Taman Nasional Gunung Gede Pangrango, Jawa Barat, Indonesia. Reinwardtia 13(4): 331-339. — Pencacahan keanekaragaman jenis Hoya {Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) telah dilakukan di Taman Nasional Gunung Gede Pangrango pada berbagai ketinggian di empat lokasi (Cibodas, Bodogol, Situgunung, dan Selabintana). Sepuluh jenis Hoya ditemukan pada ketinggian 650 hingga 1500 m, dua jenis diantaranya hanya ditemukan pada ketinggian di atas 1000 m dpi. Hasil pencacahan menun- jukkan Hoya imperialis Lindley dan H. micrantha Wight ex Hook.f. merupakan rekaman baru untuk Jawa. Keane- karagaman jenis tertinggi ditemukan di Bodogol. Hal ini menunjukkan bahwa Hoya lebih banyak terdapat di dataran rendah. Kata kunci: Hoya, Apocynaceae, keanekaragaman jenis, rekaman baru, Taman Nasional Gunung Gede Pangrango. INTRODUCTION The genus Hoya is widespread in mainland Asia, much of Malesia, northern Australia and some is- lands of the Western Pacific. They are mainly epi- phytic, shrubby or climbing plants, often with at- tractively marked foliage and brightly coloured flowers. Their general ease of cultivation has result- ed in Hoyas (Hoya spp.: Apocynaceae: Asclepia- doideae) being popular as ornamental plants in Eu- rope, USA and Australia (Wanntorp et at, 2006; Hodgkiss, 2007). Hoyas are also used as a source of medicines by indigenous people who live near the forest (Zachos, 1998). Many Hoyas are threatened by destruction of the habitat due to land clearing, and this together with an increase in uses by hu- mans has, or will soon result in a decrease of the occurrence of many of the species in nature. Indonesia has been predicted to have the highest Hoya species diversity in the world (Goyder, 2008; Kleijn & van Donkelaar, 2001); however, baseline inventories of the species throughout the Indonesian archipelago is still limited with most based on dated, limited data (Miquel, 1856: Indonesia (Netherland Indie), Koorders (1898: Minahasa- North Sulawesi, Backer & Brink Jr. (1965: Java Island). A recent preliminary inventory on Indonesian Hoya (Rahayu, 1999) based on the results of botani- cal exploration of the Bogor Botanical Gardens, has been expanded for Sumatera (Rahayu, 2001) and Bukit Batikap, Central Kalimantan (Rahayu, 2006). Reinventory for the island of Java is critically needed. One of the important localities to be sur- veyed is Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park in West Java. Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park is a Biosphere Reserve (Indonesian National Com- mittee for MAB Unesco Program, 2010) and the area has been extended recently to lowland areas below 1000 m above sea level (asl). As such, this large National Park encompasses a range of rain- forest habitats and presents a significant remnant of the biological diversity of Java. Previously only two Hoya species were recorded from the National 331 332 REINWARDTIA [VOL.13 Park (Sunaryo & Rugayah, 1992) at elevations above 1000 m asl. Hoya species diversity has been assumed to be higher at low elevation (Rintz, 1980; Schlechter, 1914), so the current inventory was fo- cused especially on the new extended area of low- land forest in the national park. MATERIALS AND METHODS The occurrence of Hoya species in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park was undertaken by verti- cal belt transects (Cox, 2002) at different elevations, from 650 to 2000 m asl. The sampling was done at four different sites (research stations) as follows: (i) Cibodas (1400 m asl); (ii) Bodogol (650 m asl); (hi) Situ Gunung (1000 m asl); and Cugenang/Gede ( 9 0 0 - 1500m asl). Hoya species were recorded and collected as herbarium specimens and for the living collection were planted at the Bogor Botanical Gardens. The specimens were identified by using published de- scriptions, comparison with type specimens at BO and/or consultation with Hoya experts. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Taxonomy of Hoya Hoya R.Br., Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holland. 1810. Hook, f, Fl. Brit. India 4 (1885): 52. — Type: Ho- ya carnosa R.Br. in Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holland. (1810) 460. Plants epiphytic, epilithic, rarely rooting in the ground, creeping, climbing, pendent, left-twining, rarely shrubby, latex white, rarely clear. Roots fi- brous. Stems terete, sparsely branched, glabrous to pubescent. Leaves decussate, alternate at seeding stage, rarely imbricate, petiolate; lamina lanceolate to obcordate, entire, leathery, fleshy to succulent. Inflorescence racemose, occasionally with part in- florescence, lateral or rarely terminal, 1- to many flowered, globose, flat or concave, rarely with a peduncle > 10 cm long. Flowers 5 - merous, actino- morphic. Pedicels uniform and straight or length variable within an inflorescence and bent. Corolla waxy fleshy, star shaped and spreading, campanu- late or urceolate, outside glabrous, inside rarely gla- brous, lobes revolute, recurved or reflexed. Stami- nal corona 5 - merous, fleshy and waxy, horizontal or not, sometimes bicoloured. Pollinaria 5 pairs, each comprising a pair of pollinia on a corpuscu- lum; pollinia elliptic to oblong. Fruits a follicle, terete, acuminate, smooth. Seeds comose, ovate or linear oblong; coma 1-3 cm long, white or fawn- white. Note. According to Forster (1991), the first pub- lished name for Hoya carnosa (L.) R. Br. as type species for the genus was in Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holland (Brown, 1810), not in Mem. Wern. Soc. (Brown, 1811) which incorrectly cited in 1809. Hoya Species found in the Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park Key to ten species of Hoya in Gede Pangrango Na- tional Park (GPNP) 1. a. Stem twining 2 b. Stem not twining 8. H. multiflora 2. a. Leaves thin and chartaceous 3 b. Leaves thick or fleshy 4 3. a. Upper surface of leaves glossy; corolla star shaped 2.H. coriacea b. Upper surface of leaves dull; corolla campa- nulate \.H. campanulata 4. a. Leaves hard, pubescens at below 3. H. imperialis b. Leaves fleshy, glabrous 5 5. a. Leaves narrow (1-3 cm width); corolla lobes revolute 6 b. Leaves wide (3-10 cm width); corolla star shaped, lobes spreading 8 6. a. Leaf margin revolute; pedicels 0.2-5 cm long l.H. micrantha b. Leaf margin entire or ridged; pedicels 0.5-2 cm long 7 7. a. Leaf venation invisible; corolla dark light brown 4. H. kuhlii b. Leaf venation visible; corolla creamy white .... 5.H. lacunosa 8. a. Leaves oblong with prominent reticulate vena- tion 10. H vitellinoides b. Leaves almost cordate with prominent palmate venation 9 9. a. Inflorescence multipeduncled, corolla 0.8 cm in diam 6. H latifolia b. Inflorescence single peduncled, corolla 1.5 cm in diam 9. H purpureofusca Species descriptions 1. HOYA CAMPANULATA Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 16:1064. 1826. Syn: Physostelma campanulatum (Blume) Decne., DC. Prod. VIII, 633. — Type: Java, Blume sn. (L!) . — Fig. 1A. Stem glabrous with floriferous branches, ca. 30 cm long. Leaves thin and chartaceous; lamina ellip- tical, up to 12 cm long by 6 cm wide, upper surface dull (not glossy). Peduncle reflexed, rigid, 1-6 cm long. Umbel convex, 1-30 flowered, open 8 days. Pedicels flexuous, uniform, 4-5 cm long. Corolla campanulate, nearly glabrous inside, up to 2.5 cm 2012] RAHAYU: Hoya diversity in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park 333 diameter by 1.5 cm deep, creamy white. Corona white or cream, occasionally with a deep red stripe at the base. Follicles ca. 16 cm long by 7 mm diam.; dark green striped. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. India, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Ja- va, Borneo. Habitat and Ecology. Along riverside at 650 m asl. Notes. Hoya campanulata is characterized by the thin leaves and campanulate corollas. 2. HOYA CORIACEA Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 16 (1926):1061.— Type: not seen. —Fig. IB. Stem glabrous. Leaves coriaceous; lamina ellipti- cal, up to 12 cm long by 6 cm wide, glossy on upper surface. Peduncle reflexed, rigid, up to 8 cm long. Umbel convex, 1-40 flowered, open 4 days. Pedi- cels uniform, 4-5 cm long. Corolla lobes densely tomentose with long yellow hairs inside, star shaped, ca. 1.5 cm diam. Corona lobes acute at apex, red or purple at the base otherwise white. Fol- licles ca. 12 cm long by 1.5 cm diam. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Java, Thailand, India. Habitat and Ecology. Slopes, open areas, below 1000 m. Notes. Easily confused with H. campanulata vege- tatively, but more robust and without short, florifer- ous branches. Hoya coriacea is characterized by the thick, not fleshy, coriaceous leaves. 3. HOYA IMPERIALIS Lindley, Bot. Reg. 32t. 68 (1846). —Type: Borneo, Blume sn. (K!). —Fig. 1C. Stems very thick and smooth, ca. 8 mm diam. Fig. 1. A. H. campanulata Blume; B. H. coriacea Blume; C. H. imperialis Lindley; D. H. kuhlii Blume. (Bar length = 1 cm) 334 REINWARDTIA [VOL.13 Leaves thick, lamina oblong with obtuse or shallow- ly cordate bases, up to 16 cm long by 5-6 cm wide. Peduncle pendant, 10-12 cm long. Umbel convex, 1 -10 flowered. Pedicels flexuous, uniform, ca. 8 cm long. Corolla lobes spreading, fleshy, campanulate shaped, very finely pubescent inside, 3-5 cm diam., deep red. Corona lobes massive with blunt tips and conical process at the base; entirely yellow or creamy. Corpusculum wide, clavate. Follicles ca. 23 cm long by 2.5 cm diam. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Philippines. Habitat and Ecology. Slopes, semi open areas. Notes. Hoya imperialis is characterized by its large flowers (3-5 cm diam.). This species is new record for Java. 4. HOYA KUHLII (Blume) Korders, Exkurs. Fl. Java 3 (1912) 103. Basionym: Acanthostemma kuhlii Blume, Rumphia 4 (1848) 29. — Type: Java, Blume s.n. (L!). —Fig. ID. Leaves fleshy; lamina elliptical with long attenu- ate bases and rigid margins up to 8 cm long by 4 cm wide. Peduncle reflexed, rigid, 5-10 cm long. Um- bel concave with 1-25 flowers. Pedicels rigid and curved, 5- 30 mm long. Corolla lobes revolute out- ward, pubescent inside ca. 8 mm diam., pale or dark brown. Corona lobes upcurved, red at center. Locality. Cibodas. Distribution. Java. Habitat and Ecology. Mountain forest, above 1000 m. Notes. Hoya kuhlii is characterized by the small size and brownish revolute corollas. 5. HOYA LACUNOSA Blume, Bijdr. Fl. Ned. Ind. 16 (1926) 1063. — Type: Java, Blume sn. (L!). — Fig. 2A. Stems thin. Leaves fleshy; lamina of two forms, one form ovate, thick, up to 3 cm long by 2.5 cm wide the other form oblanceolate up to 7 cm long by 3 cm wide, margin ridged. Peduncle reflexed, rigid, up to 5 cm long. Umbel concave, 1-30 flowered, open 4 days. Pedicels rigid and curved, 5-25 mm long. Corolla lobes revolute outward, pubescent inside with long thick hairs, ca. 8 mm diam., white. Corona base upcurved, solid, entirely white. Folli- cles 5-6 cm long by 5 mm diam. Locality. Gedeh Cugenang, Bodogol Research Sta- tion. Distribution. Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Thailand, Java. Habitat and Ecology. Common in lowland and hill forest especially along rivers. Notes. Hoya lacunosa is characterized by the small leaves and small white revolute flowers. 6. HOYA LATIFOLIA G. Don, Gen. Hist. PI. IV (1838) 127. — Type: not seen. — Fig. IF. Syn: H. macrophylla Wight, Contr. 38 (1834); H. poly- stachya Blume, Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat.I (1849) 45,T.9. Fig. 2B. Stem deep red when young. Leaves fleshy; lami- na ovate, bases cordate with a pair of veins parallel to the midrib; up to 25 cm long by 15 cm wide; up- per surface glossy green, lower surface pale green or red. Inflorescences multipedunculate. Peduncle produced successively on paired racemes, 3-6 cm long. Umbel convex, 1-40 flowered. Pedicels rigid, uniform, ca. 2 cm long. Corolla lobes spreading, star shaped, finely pubescent inside, ca. 8 mm di- am., pale pink or brown outside, creamy inside. Co- rona lobes acute at apex, white with pink at centre. Locality. Gedeh Cugenang, Bodogol Research Sta- tion. Distribution. Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Java, S Thailand. Habitat and Ecology. Twining on large tree espe- cially along the river. Notes. Hoya latifolia is characterized by the multi- peduncled inflorecences. 7. HOYA MICRANTHA Wight ex Hooker fil. * Fl. Brit. Ind 4 (1889): 55. — Type: Malaysia, Malacca, Maingay 1127 (K!). — Fig. 2C. Stem twining, terete, thin, glabrous. Leaves fleshy; petiole ca. 4 mm long; lamina elliptic, 8 x 4 cm, glabrous, acuminate, base acuminate, margin strongly revolute. Peduncle up to 10 cm long, pen- dent. Umbel 1-30 flowered, concave. Pedicels 0.2 -5 cm, strongly bent. Corolla lobes strong revolute outward, button (round) shaped, 5 mm diam., pale 2012] RAHAYU: Hoya diversity in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park 335 pink, inside finely weakly pubescent. Corona lobes elliptic, ascending, base acuminate, tips bifid, white or pale pink with pink at centre. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. S Burma to Thailand, Malay Peninsu- la. Habitat and Ecology. Slopes, semi open area. Notes. Hoya micrantha is characterized by the small and orange revolute corollas. This species is new record for Java. 8. HOYA MULTIFLORA Blume, Cat. Gew. Buitenzorg 49 (1823) — Type: Java, Blume s.n. (L!). — Fig.2D. Stem non twining with branches only at the base, up to 2 m long. Leaves chartaceous, elliptical, apically cuspidate, up to 18 cm long by 3-7 cm wide. Peduncle reflexed, rigid, up to 5 cm long. Umbel convex, 1-40 flowered, open 5-7 days. Pedi- cels flexuous, uniform, 4-7 cm long. Corolla star shaped, lobes finely pubescent inside, strongly re- flexed, ca. 2 cm diam., white with pale orange tips and occasionally with scattered pale purple spots. Corona stalked, with long reflexed lobes, both lobes white. Follicles ca. 20 cm long by 6 mm diam. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Phillipine. Habitat and Ecology. Common but not abundant, many encountered on ridges between 700-900 m asl. Fig. 2. A. H. lacunosa Blume; B. H. latifolia G. Don.; C. H. micrantha Wight; D. H. multiflora Blume. (Bar length = 1 cm) 336 REINWARDTIA [VOL.13 Fig. 3. A. H. purpureofusca Hook.f. B. H. vitellinoides Bakh.f. (Bar length = 1 cm). Notes. Hoya multiflora is characterized by the arrowhead shaped flowers. There was morphological variation according to various habitat types in Bodogol (Rahayu et ah, 2010a). 9. HOYA PURPUREO-FUSCA Hooker, Compa- nion Bot.Mog. 76 (1850): t. 4520. —Type: Java. Lobb s.n. (K!). —Fig. 3A. Stems terete, glabrous. Leaves fleshy; petiole ca. 15 mm long, very thick, brownish; lamina ovate, 10 -12.5 x 7.5-10 cm, acute to acuminate, base rounded. Peduncle up to 8 cm long, pendent. Umbel many flowered, semi globose (covex). Pedicels thin and uniform, ca. 2 cm long. Corolla star shaped, ca. 1.5 cm diam., dark pink to dark purple, inside gla- brous or pubescent to villose, margin slightly invo- lute. Corona flat, lobes ovate, acute, dark pink to strongly purple-brown, upper surface keeled and depressed in the middle, lower face convex. Locality. Cibodas, Situgunung. Distribution. Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Phillipine. Habitat and Ecology. Wet and shaded area. Notes. Hoya purpureo-fusca is characterized by the purple color of the corolla and corona. 10. HOYA VITELLINOIDES Bakh.f, Blumea 6 (1950): 381. —Type: Java, West, Ciampea, Mt. Tjiputih, alt. 800 m, Bakhuizen van den Brink 4181 (holotype: L, isotype: BO!). —Fig. 3B. Stem terete, glabrous. Leaves thick and fleshy; lamina broadly oblong up to 16 cm long by 6.5 cm wide, venation reticulate darker than the back- ground at the upper surface. Peduncle horizontal, rigid, 2-5 cm long. Umbel convex, 1-20 flowers. Pedicel uniform, ca. 2 cm long. Corolla spreading, finely and sparsley pubescent inside and out, ca. 1 cm diam., pale green or yellow. Corona entirely white. Locality. Bodogol Research Station. Distribution. Java (rare), Sumatra at high elevation. Habitat and Ecology. River bank, humid and shad- ed area. Notes. Hoya vitellinoides is characterized by the darker venation at the upper surface of leaves. Altitudinal distribution and habitat diversity Rintz (1980) and Schlechter (1914) considered that most Hoya species occur on lower altitudes and this is also reflected here. Out of the ten species from this study are found below 1000 m. Only two spe- cies, i.e. Hoya purpureo-fusca Hook. f. and H. kuhlii Blume were found at elevations of above 1000 m (Table 1). Beside altitudinal distribution, the occurrence of the species depends on specific habitat types and is especially influenced by areas of high humidity such as along rives banks, steep slopes, or hill tops (Table 1). 2012] RAHAYU: Hoya diversity in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park 337 DISCUSSION Ten species of Hoya were found in the Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park. Two of them were new records for Java (Backer & Brink Jr., 1965), i.e. Hoya imperialis Lindley and H. micrantha Hook. f. Hoya imperialis was formerly known in Sumatra, Borneo, Malay Peninsula and the Philip- pines (Rintz, 1978). This is an interesting species with large red flowers. Hoya micrantha was for- merly known from Burma, Thailand and Malay Peninsula (Rintz, 1978; Thaitong, 1996). Accord- ing to specimen observation in BO shows that this species is also found in Sumatra. There are several reasons that can be argued for these new records. The species may have dispersed from Sumatra by seed dispersal. Hoya species have plumed parachute like seeds and mainly dispersed by wind or anemo- chory (Armstrong, 1999) and ants (Rahayu & Su- trisno, 2007). Rahayu et al. (2010b) concluded that there are two main modes for the seed dispersal in Hoya multiflora in Gede Pangrango National Park, i.e. long distance and short distance dispersal. In long distance dispersal (more than 10 km) the seeds are transported over long distances via wind disper- sal and establish new populations, as part of a great- er metapopulation. In short distance dispersal means the seeds are transported only a small distance from their mother plant and within the same population. This kind of dispersal is via wind and ants. The increased number of species to be found in Java was not unexpected. Most of the new findings were from the newly extended area of conservation areas, i.e. at Bodogol resort at elevations of 650-800 m. The Bodogol resort is the only area of the Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park which is situated at low elevation (below 1000 m). The dis- tribution of epiphytes depends on dispersal model and available habitats (Lobel & Rydin, 2009). There was separation in species distribution according to elevation. Two species, H. purpureofusca and H. kuhlii were only found at elevation of above 1000 m in Cibodas, Situgunung and Gunung Putri. This may be the result of plant adaptation to the tempera- ture zone as mentioned by van Steenis (2006) in his thermo-ecology schematic concept. In this concept, plants were divided into three groups i.e. mega- therm, mesotherm and microtherm. Megatherm plants are adapted to warm tropical conditions and are concentrated at the Equator line/zone at low ele- vations (below 1000 m; colline zone). Mesotherm plants are adapted to cool tropical conditions and are concentrated at higher altitudes (1000-2400 m; submontane and montane zones) in mountainous areas. Microtherm plants occur at high elevations (above 2400 m; subalpine and alpine zones) in the tropics where they may adaptive to cold tempera- tures, even snow. Habitat heterogeneity presumably influences the distribution of epiphytes, whether it is seedling ger- mination percentage or recruitment success (Winkler et al., 2005). The major factors which lim- it epiphytic distribution and thus may become stressors are light, water and mineral nutrition (Benzing, 2008; Luttge, 2008). In general Hoya species occur in areas of high humidity, but often in niches that are quite dry for extended periods. Ac- cording to Zotz & Heitz (2001) water is the main factor affecting growth of epiphytes. H. campanula- ta, H. lacunosa, H. latifolia, H. forbesii, H kuhlii and H. purpureofusca are invariably found in the most humid places while H. coriacea, H. imperialis Table 1. Hoya species distribution at Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park at different altitude and habitat No. 1. 2 J 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Species H campanulata Blume H. coriacea Blume H. imperialis Lindle H. kuhlii Blume H. lacunosa Blume H. latifolia G. Don H. micrantha Wight ex Hook.f. H. multiflora Blume H. purpureo-fusca Hook.f. H. vitellinoides Bakh.f. Alt 1< 1000 m asl RiverBank + + - - + + - - - + Slope + + + - + + + + - + TopHill - - + - + + - + - - Alt 1000-1500 m asl RiverBank - - - + - - - - + - Slope - - - + - - - - + - TopHill - - - + - - - - + - 338 REINWARDTIA [VOL.13 and H. micrantha are found in more open and semi open areas. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT This research was partly supported by PKPP DIKTI-LIPI (2009-2011). My thanks go to Dr. Joeni Setijo Rahajoe & Dr. Laode Alhamd and team of BO, Dr. Rika Raffiudin (IPB), The Head and management team of Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park and The Head of Herbarium Bogoriense-LIPI. 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Hoya (Marsdenieae, Apocynaceae) inferred from ZACHOS, E. 2005. Practical uses of various Hoya nuclear and chloroplast DNA sequences. species. Ashlepios 93: 10. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 39: 722- ZOTZ, G. & HIETZ, P. 2001. Vascular epiphytes in 733. the temperate zones: a review. Plant Ecology 176: WINKLER, M., HULBER, K. & HIETZ, P. 2005. 173-183. Contributions of Flora Malesiana to the Welfare of People in Asia http://www.fm9.biologi.lipi.go.id LIPI Freycinetia minahassae Koord. (Photo: Theo Lasut) Designed by Deden S. Hidayat INSTRUCTION TO AUTHORS Reinwardtia is a scientific irregular journal on plant taxonomy, plant ecology, and ethnobotany. Manuscript intended for a publication should be written in English represent an article which has not been published in any other journal or proceedings. Every manuscript will be sent to two blind reviewers. Two printed copies (on A4 paper) of the manuscript of not more than 200 pages together with an electronic copy prepared on Word Processor computer program using Time New Romance letter type and saved in Rich Text File must be submitted. For the style of presentation, authors should follow the latest issue of Reinwardtia very closely. Title of the article should be followed by author's name and mailing address in one-paragraphed English abstract of not more than 250 words. Keywords should be given below each abstract. On a separated paper, author(s) should send the preferred running title of the article submitted. Taxonomic identification key should be prepared using the aligned couplet type. Strict adherence to the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature is observed, so that taxonomic and nomenclatural novelties should be clearly shown. English description for new taxon proposed should be provided and the herbaria where the type specimens area deposited should be presented. Name of taxon in taxonomic treatment should be presented in the long form that is name of taxon, author's name, year of publication, abbreviated journal or book title, volume, number and page. Map, line drawing illustration, or photograph preferably should be prepared in landscape presentation to occupy two columns. Illustration must be submitted as original art accompanying, but separated from the manuscript. On electronic copy, the illustration should be saved in jpg or gif format at least 350 pixels. Legends or illustration must be submitted separately at the end of the manuscript. Bibliography, list of literature cited or references follow the Harvard system. REINWARDTIA Vol. 13. No. 4. 2012 CONTENTS Page SRI ENDARTI RAHAYU, TATIK CHIKMAWATI, KUSWATA KARTAWINATA & ALEX HARTANA. Morphology vs. taxonomy in the family Pandanaceae: a case study in the Javanese species 317 SRI RAHAYU. Hoya (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) diversity in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park, West Java, Indonesia 331 DEBY ARIFIANI, ADI BASUKRIADI & TATIK CHIKMAWATI. Newly described species of Endiandra (Lauraceae) from New Guinea 341 ALEX SUMADIJAYA. Six years experience on plant identification services: case study in Herbarium Bogoriense 347 BAYU ADJIE, AGUNG KURNIAWAN, NORIO SAHASHI & YASUYUKI WATANO. Dicksonia timorense (Diksoniaceae), a hemi-epiphytic new species of tree fern endemic on Timor Island, Indonesia ... 3 5 7 IAN M. TURNER. Nomenclatural notes relevant to the flora of Indonesia 363 WITA WARDANI, ARIEF HIDAYAT & DEDY DARNAEDI. The new pteridophyte classification and se- quence employed in The Herbarium Bogoriense (BO) for Malesian ferns 367 DIAH SULISTIARTNI. The orchids genus Dilochia in Indonesia 379 DEDY DARNAEDI. Book review 389 Reinwardtia is a LIPI acredited Journal (258/AU 1/P2MBI/05/2010) Herbarium Bogoriense Botany Division Research Center for Biology - LIPI Cibinong, Indonesia depan img576_Page_3_Page_1 img576_Page_3_Page_2 436-637-1-SM_Page_03 belakang