A JOURNAL ON TAXONOMIC BOTANY, PLANT SOCIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY REINWARDTIA A JOURNAL ON TAXONOMIC BOTANY, PLANT SOCIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY Vol. 13(3): 221 — 3 1 5 , April 11, 2012 Chief Editor KARTINI KRAMADIBRATA Editors DEDYDARNAEDI (INDONESIA) TUKTRIN PARTOMIHARDJO (INDONESIA) JOENI SETIJO RAHAJOE (INDONESIA) TEGUHTRIONO (INDONESIA) MARLINAARDIYANI (INDONESIA) EIZI SUZUKI (JAPAN) JUN WEN (UNITED STATE OF AMERICA) Managing editor HIMMAH RUSTIAMI Secretary ENDANG TRI UTAMI Lay out DEDEN SUMIRATHIDAYAT Illustrators SUBARI WAHYUDI SANTOSO ANNE KUSUMAWAIY Reviewers BRYAN SIMON (AUSTRALIA), EVE J. LUCAS (UNITED KINGDOM), J.F.VELDKAMP (NETHERLANDS), LAUR- ENCE SKOG (USA), PIETER BAAS (NETHERLANDS), RUTH KIEW (MALAYSIA), ROBERT J. SORENG (USA), HE- LENA DUISTERMAAT (NETHERLANDS), LYN A. CRAVEN (AUSTRALIA), RUGAYAH (INDONESIA), MARK HUGHES (UNITED KINGDOM), MARTIN CALLMANDER (USA), PETER C. VAN WELZEN (NETHERLANDS), WAYNE TAKEUCHI (USA), NOBUYUKI FUKUOKA (JAPAN). 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 3, pp: 229 − 233 229 Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, 31-07-2006, Deden 800 (holo BO). Creeping herb 5–10 cm tall. Stem repent with up- right portions, rooting at the nodes, reddish brown, succulent, unbranched, slender, densely covered by red hair, internodes 2–3 cm apart; without a tuber. Stipule greenish, with scattered hair on the veins, not keeled, ovate to narrowly triangular, 5–8 × 3–4 mm, margin fringed with glandular hairs, tip pointed, persistent. Leaves distant; petiole reddish brown, hairy, 1–3 cm long; lamina slightly oblique, 3.5–8 × 1.5-3.5 cm, dark green above, yellowish green beneath with red hairs along veins, base rounded on the broader side, acute on the other side, margin sparsely minutely toothed, tip acute; venation palmate pinnate, 1 pair of veins at the base and 2–3 alternate veins along the midrib. Inflorescences terminal, monochasial cyme, peduncles brownish green, hairy, erect, shorter than the leaves; few flowered, male flowers 1–2, female flowers 2, protogynous. Bracts in pairs, sparsely hairy, margin fringed with short glandular hairs, pale green, oblong, 11–12 × 4–6 mm, persistent. Male flowers with a white pedicel 1–1.2 cm long; tepals 3, white with a pink margin toward the tip, glabrous, margin slightly serrate with thinly teeth each tipped by hair, tip rounded, outer two rotundate, 1.2–1.3 × 1.1 cm, inner one narrowly elliptic, 0.9 × 0.4 cm; androecium an obovoid cluster, ca. 4 mm across; stamens ca. 28; filaments INTRODUCTION The species-rich genus Begonia is widely distributed in the tropical and subtropical regions of the world; currently 19 sections and approximately 521 species of Begonia are recognized from South- east Asia (Doorenbos et al., 1998; Hughes, 2008). The extensive montane forests of Sumatra harbour 52 known species representing 7 sections of the genus (Tebbitt, 2005; Hughes, 2008; Hughes et al., 2009) with many taxa still to be described (Sands, 2001). Most of the montane forest habitat suitable for Begonia in Sumatra is found at the Barisan mountain range which forms the spine of the island, running behind the southeastern coast. There is also an isolated complex of rather steep ridges and valleys in the otherwise quite flat Jambi province, reaching up to 830 m above sea level, known as Bukit Tigapuluh (‗Thirty Hills‘). This area has been declared as National Park and is of vital conservation importance regarding the large mammals of Sumatra, such as tiger, elephant and orangutan (Widyatmoko & Zich, 1998). The two plant species we described here are endemic to this park, thus highlighted its conservation importance in botanical terms. Begonia triginticollium Girm., sp. nov. – Fig.1 A Begonia verecunda tepalorum marginibus serratis, floribus masculis 3- (non 4-) tepalis et petiolis longioribus differt. – Typus: Sumatra, Riau Province, TWO NEW SPECIES OF BEGONIA (BEGONIACEAE) FROM BUKIT TIGA- PULUH NATIONAL PARK, RIAU, SUMATRA Received September 16, 2010; accepted June 14, 2011 DEDEN GIRMANSYAH Herbarium Bogoriense, Botany Division, Research Center for Biology-LIPI, Cibinong Science Center, Jl. Raya Bogor−Jakarta Km. 46, Cibinong 16911, Bogor, Indonesia. Email: deden_bo@yahoo.com ABSTRACT GIRMANSYAH, D. 2012. Two new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Sumatra, Indonesia. Reinwardtia 13(3): 229–233. Two new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Sumatra, Indonesia are described. Those are Begonia triginticollium Girm. belongs to Begonia section Bracteibegonia and Begonia dolichocarpa Girm. belongs to Begonia section Petermannia. Key words: Begonia, Bukit Tigapuluh, Sumatra. ABSTRAK GIRMANSYAH, D. 2012. Dua jenis baru Begonia (Begoniaceae) dari Taman Nasional Bukit Tigapuluh, Sumatera, Indonesia. Reinwardtia 13(3): 229–233. Telah dipertelakan dua jenis baru Begonia (Begoniaceae) dari Taman Nasional Bukit Tigapuluh, Sumatera, Indonesia. Kedua jenis tersebut adalah Begonia triginticollium Girm. termasuk ke dalam seksi Bracteibegonia dan Begonia dolichocarpa Girm. termasuk ke dalam seksi Petermannia. Kata kunci: Begonia, Bukit Tigapuluh, Sumatera. REINWARDTIA 230 [VOL.13 Fig. 1. Begonia triginticollium Girm. a. Habit; b. Male flower; c. Stamens; d. Female flower; e. Style; f. Fruit; g. Fruit in cross-section; h. Seeds. (Based on type specimen, Deden 800). Drawn by Wahyudi Santoso (BO). 0.2 cm 1 cm 3 cm 0.2 cm 1 cm 0.5 cm 0.25 cm 0.02 cm a b c d e f g h 2012] 231 GIRMANSYAH: Two new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Sumatra, Indonesia free, 1–2 mm; anthers golden yellow, narrowly obovate, ca. 1 mm long, tip slightly notched, opening by slits as long as the length of the anther, on one face of the anther. Female flowers with a reddish pedicel ca. 3 mm long; ovary reddish green, hairy, 1.3–0.7 × 0.5–0.9 cm, wings 3, equal, ca. 3 mm wide, locules 3, placentas 2 per locule; tepals 5, white with pink along the margin, with hairs, margin serrate toward the tip, tip pointed, outermost 10–9 × 4–5 mm, innermost narrowly elliptic, slightly smaller ca. 9 × 3 mm; styles 3, styles and stigmas pale yellow, ca. 0.4 cm long, Y-shaped, stigmas spiral. Fruit with a reddish-green hairy pedicel, 0.4–0.5 cm long, capsule obconical, 1.1– 1.2 × 0.5–1 cm, sparsely hairy, locules 3, wings 3 equal, thinly fibrous, 2–3 mm wide, splitting between the locules and wings. Seeds barrel-shaped, 0.3–0.32 × 0.2–0.25 mm long, collar cells a quarter of the seed length. Distribution. Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Rengat, Riau Province, Sumatra. Habitat & Ecology. Lowland rain forest at ca. 100 m altitude. Terrestrial along the banks of streams, in wet and shaded areas. Etymology. The epithet is derived from the Latin for ‗Thirty Hills‘, which is the meaning of the Indonesian name ‗Bukit Tigapuluh‘. Notes. Known only from the type locality, it is a rare and obviously endemic Begonia being known from a scattered small population along a river bank. It mostly resembles Begonia verecunda but it is different in having creeping stems, tepals with toothed margins and three male flower tepals, and oblong fruits. This species has very attractive female flowers with a light red colour along the margin of tepals. It has ornamental potential, especially for indoor use. Specimens examined. Sumatra, West of Talanglakat on Rengat to Jambi Road, Bukit Karampal area, 04-10- 1988, J.S. Burley et al. 1146. Begonia dolichocarpa Girm., sp.nov. – Fig.2 A Begonia padangensis omnino glaberrima et fructibus axillaribus solitariis magis elongatis recedit – Typus: Sumatra, Riau Province, Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, 30-07-2006, Deden 793 (holo BO; iso E, ANDA). Erect herb to ca. 100 cm tall. Stem erect, rhizoma- tous at the base, reddish brown and pale green at the nodes, succulent, little branched, terete, glabrous, internodes in the erect stem 2–15 cm apart, without a tuber. Stipules reddish green, ovate to narrowly triangular, glabrous, ca. 1.4 × 0.3 cm, tip pointed, caducous. Leaves distant; petiole reddish brown to dark red, 1–2 cm long; lamina elliptic to oblong, dark green above, pale green to dark red beneath, base rounded on the broader side, acute on the other side, margin sparsely minutely toothed, apex acuminate, 5–11 × 11–15 cm; venation palmate pinnate, 1 pair of veins at the base and 2–3 pairs along the midrib. Inflorescences of male and female axillary, male inflorescence cymose, erect, shorter than the leaves, peduncles reddish, glabrous, male flowers many, female flower solitary, axillary, ovary and tepal unknown. Male flowers with a white pedicel 0.5–0.7 cm long; tepals 2, white, greenish near the apex, glabrous, margin serrate, tip acute to acuminate, 0.8–0.9 × 0.4–0.5 cm; androecium with 20 stamens, cluster connate, yellow, filaments 0.1–0.3 cm; anthers golden yellow, broadly triangular to narrowly obovate, 0.3– 0.4 mm long, tip slightly notched, opening by slits the full length of the anther, slits unifacial. Female flowers unknown. Fruit with pedicel 1.5 cm long, capsular, green when young, becoming brown when ripe, conical, ca. 4 × 0.5 cm locular part without wings and the total fruit ca. 4 × 2 cm including the wings. Seeds barrel-shaped, 0.3–0.32 × 0.2–0.25 mm long, collar cells a quarter of the seed length. Distribution. Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Rengat, Riau Province, Sumatra. Habitat and Ecology. Growing in wet areas along small stream margins and river banks 100–1300 m altitude. Found only from the type locality. Etymology. From the Greek dolicho, meaning long; referring to the long fruit. Notes. This is a very distinct lowland forest Begonia species bearing single large fruits. The fruits are similar in size to those of Begonia atricha but differ in the shape of capsule and length of the pedicel; B. atricha has longer pedicel and pendant bell-shaped fruit, whilst B. dolichocarpa has a more straight-sided fruit with a shorter, stouter pedicel. In habit, this species resembles Begonia isoptera in Java and B. padangensis in Sumatra, and can be distinguished from both by its larger solitary fruits up to 5 cm long. This species is also endemic to Bukit Tigapuluh National Park. It is very local Begonia being known from scattered individuals along the small stream margin and river bank. The female flowers remain unknown. REINWARDTIA 232 [VOL.13 Fig. 2. Begonia dolichocarpa Girm. a. Habit; b. Stipule; c. Male flower; d. Stamen; e. Fruit; f. Fruit in cross-section; g. Seed. (Based on type specimen, Deden 793). Drawn by Anne Kusumawaty (BO). e a g f b c d 1 cm 1 cm 0.02 cm 0.5 cm 0.5 cm 0.2 cm 2012] 233 GIRMANSYAH: Two new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Sumatra, Indonesia Specimen examined. Sumatra, West of Talanglakat on Rengat to Jambi Road, Bukit Karampal area, 02-12- 1988, J.S. Burley et al. 1796. ACNOWLEDGMENTS I am grateful to the Director of Herbarium Bogoriense for making available the specimens studied, Dr. Axel Dalberg Poulsen who encouraged me to collect Begonia during his 2004 ginger expedition to Sumatra sponsored by the Carlsberg Foundation (ANS-0596/20), Dr. Mark Hughes at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and Dr. Laurence Skog at Smithsonian Institution‘s National Museum of Natural History for their comments to an earlier version of the manuscript and for providing the Latin diagnose. I also thank the Director of Bukit Tigapuluh National Park and all of the staff for helping during the field trip and Forestry Department for the research permit to work in Bukit Tigapuluh National Park. I would like to thank Wahyudi Santoso and Anne Kusumawaty for their excellent line drawings. REFERENCES DOORENBOS, J., SOSEF, M. S. M., & De WILDE J. J. F. E. 1998. The sections of Begonia including descriptions, keys and species lists (Studies in Bego- niaceae VI). Wageningen Agricultural University Papers 98 (2): 1-266. HUGHES, M. 2008. An annotated checklist of Southeast Asian Begonia. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, UK. HUGHES, M., GIRMANSYAH, D., ARDI, W. H. & NURAINAS. 2009. Seven new species of Begonia from Sumatra. Gardens’ Bulletin Singapore 61 (1): 29-44. SANDS, M. J. S. 2001. Begoniaceae in the Flora Malesiana region. In Saw, L.G., Chua, L.S.L. & Khoo, K. C. eds, Taxonomy: the cornerstone of biodi- versity. Proceedings of the Fourth International Flora Malesiana Symposium 1998. Forest Research Insti- tute Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur. Pp. 161-168. TEBBITT, M. C. 2005. A new species of fleshy-fruited Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Sumatra. Blumea 50 (1): 153-156. WIDYATMOKO, D. & ZICH, F. 1998. The flora of Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Kerumutan Sanctuary and Mahato Protective Reserve, Riau, Indonesia. Indonesian Botanic Gardens & Yayasan Sosial Chevron dan Texaco, Indonesia. REINWARDTIA 234 [VOL.13 314 REINWARDTIA [VOL.13 ERRATUM REINWARDTIA Vol. 13, Part 2, 2010 1. Please change the existing word in p. 213, LINE 7 on ABSTRAK (written in Bahasa Indonesia version) with the following: Keberadaan dua jenis terakhir melampaui distribusi yang sebelumnya hanya diketahui di barat garis Wallace. 2. Please change the existing epithet name in p, 214, COLUMN 1, LINE 40 on Key to the species of Marantaceae in Sulawesi number 5.a. after Phrynium: longispicum INSTRUCTION TO AUTHORS Reinwardtia is a scientific 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 authors 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. Latin description for new taxon proposed should be provided and the herbaria where the type specimens area deposited should be presented in the long form that is name of taxon, authors 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. 3. 2012 CONTENTS Page W.J.J.O. DE WILDE & BRIGITTA E.E. DUYFJES. Trichosanthes (Cucurbitaceae) in Malesia: additions and corrections, including a new species and a new variety 221 DEDEN GIRMANSYAH. Two new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Bukit Tiga-puluh National Park, Riau, Sumatra 229 PUDJI WIDODO. New nomenclature in Syzygium (Myrtaceae) from Indonesia and its vicinities 235 ALEX SUMADIJAYA & JAN FRITS VELDKAMP. Non-Bambusoid Grasses (Gramineae) from Raja Ampat Archipelago, Papua Barat Province, Indonesia 241 ARY PRIHARDYANTO KEIM. New variety, records & discoveries of some species of Pandanus (Pandanaceae) in Sumatra and Kalimantan, Indonesia 255 HARRY WIRIADINATA. A new species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Sagea Lagoon, Weda Bay, Halmahera Island, North Moluccas, Indonesia 263 ARY PRIHARDYANTO KEIM. The Pandan flora of Foja-Mamberamo Game Reserve and Baliem Valley, Papua-Indonesia 271 JAN FRITS VELDKAMP. Koordersiochloa Merr. (Gramineae), the correct name for Streblochaete Hochst. exPilg. 299 SRI ENDARTI RAHAYU, KUSWATA KARTAWINATA, TATIEK CHIKMAWATI & ALEX HARTANA. Leaf anatomy of Pandanus species (Pandanaceae) from Java 305 Reinwardtia is a LIPI acredited Journal (258/AU 1/P2MBI/05/2010) Herbarium Bogoriense Botany Division Research Center for Biology- LIPI Cibinong, Indonesia dpn 444-651-2-PB blkng