Showing posts with label Balsaminaceae - Impatiens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balsaminaceae - Impatiens. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2019

[Botany • 2019] Impatiens tanyae (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Western Ghats, India


Impatiens tanyae R.Kr.Singh, Arigela & Kabeer

in Arigela, Singh & Kabeer, 2019

Impatiens tanyae, a new species from Kodaikanal Wildlife Sanctuary in Western Ghats area of Tamil Nadu, India is described and illustrated. The new species is allied with I. tomentosa B.Heyne ex Wight & Arn. but differs in its ovate leaves with a cordate base, pubescent on both surfaces, flower white, pedicels longer than leaves, pubescent throughout, spur incurved and 7 – 8 mm long, dorsal petal broadly ovate, lateral united petals with oblong claw, distal lobe white with pinkish blotch in centre.

Key Words: Endemic, Impatiens tomentosa, Kodaikanal Wildlife Sanctuary, new species, Tamil Nadu 

Fig. 2 Impatiens tanyae.
 A habitat; B habit; C front view of flower; D lateral view of flower; E leaf and dissected flower parts; F close up of lateral sepals, lower sepal with spur and dorsal petal.
photos: R. K. Arigela & R. Kr. Singh.

Impatiens tanyae R.Kr.Singh, Arigela & Kabeer sp. nov.

Etymology. The new species is named in honour of the late Tanya Balcar for her excellent contributions to conserve the Shola forests and grasslands of the Palni hills, Tamil Nadu through Vattakanal Conservation Trust and local inhabitants. She was the pioneer locator of this new species in the grassland of Kodaikanal Wildlife Sanctuary and also conserved 25 – 30 plants in her garden.


R. K. Arigela, R. Kr. Singh and K. A. A. Kabeer. 2019. Impatiens tanyae (Balsaminaceae), A New Species from Western Ghats, India. Kew Bulletin. 74:48. DOI: 10.1007/s12225-019-9831-4

Monday, June 24, 2019

[Botany • 2019] Impatiens jenjittikuliae (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Northern Thailand


Impatiens jenjittikuliae Ruchis. & Suksathan

in Ruchisansakun & Suksathan, 2019.
เทียนทยา ||  DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.124.33607
 facebook.com/SarojRuchisansakun

Abstract
Impatiens jenjittikuliae Ruchis. & Suksathan, a new species from a limestone area in Thasongyang District, Tak Province, Northern Thailand, is described and illustrated. This endemic new species is distinguished from the most similar, I. lacei Hook.f. through having pilose lateral sepals vs glabrous, and by the absence of long hairs along the lamina margin. Its pollen and seed morphology, stem anatomy, and pollination ecology are also observed. Furthermore, its conservation status as Critically Endangered is also assessed.

Keywords: Uniflorae, lithophytic, endemic, critically endangered



    

Figure 1. Impatiens jenjittikuliae. A Habit B Flower, front view C Inflorescence with flower in lateral view D Lateral sepals E Lower sepal F Dorsal petal G Lateral united petals. Drawn by Saroj Ruchisansakun.

 Figure 2. Impatiens jenjittikuliae A flower, front view B flower, lateral view C habit in situ. Photographs by Saroj Ruchisansakun.



Impatiens jenjittikuliae Ruchis. & Suksathan, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Impatiens jenjittikuliae is most similar to I. lacei Hook.f. It differs from I. lacei by its densely pilose lateral sepal (versus glabrous) and by having no long hairs along its lamina margin (versus distinct long hairs especially along the lower-half of leaf margin).
... 

Distribution: The new species is only known from the type locality in Tak Province, Thailand.

Ecology: Impatiens jenjittikuliae grows on limestone close to waterfall in a mixed deciduous forest, 520–600 m elevation (pers. obs.).

Etymology: The new species is named in honor of Dr. Thaya Jenjittikul who encouraged the first author to step in and study this lovely plant family.

Pollination ecology: The author observed five visitations by bees from the family Apidae (identified by an entomologist, Pornpimon Tangtorwongsakul) during the expeditions. The size of bee body fit well with the floral entrance (Fig. 6). Moreover, the floral structure of this new species is similar to other bee-pollinated species, e.g. I. psittacina (Ruchisansakun et al. 2016). Hence, we concluded that it is a bee-pollinated species.

Figure 6. Floral visitation by bee in the locality of Impatiens jenjittikuliae.

     

Discussion: 
Impatiens jenjittikuliae is similar to I. lacei and the other species closely related to I. pulchra Hook.f (= I. mengtszeana Hook.f. in Ruchisansakun et al. 2015) in its raceme inflorescence, shape of flower, and short fusiform capsule. The short fusiform capsule and the 4-colpate pollen grains of the new species support its placement in the subgenus Impatiens (Yu et al. 2015). In addition, I. jenjittikuliae has seeds coated with inflated cells with granulate walls similar to those described in species, such as I. napoensis Y. L. Chen, within the sect. Uniflorae (Janssens et al. 2012; Yu et al. 2015).

The cross sections of the stem of I. jenjittikuliae have shown that the new species is herbaceous, similar to the morphologically similar species in the sect. Uniflorae, I. pulchra, which also show in Lens et al. (2012) as I. mengtszeana Hook.f. (Lens et al. 2012; Ruchisansakun et al. 2015; Yu et al. 2015).


 Saroj Ruchisansakun and Piyakaset Suksathan. 2019. Impatiens jenjittikuliae (Balsaminaceae), A New Species from Thailand.  PhytoKeys. 124: 139-147. DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.124.33607

     

Friday, April 19, 2019

[Botany • 2019] Impatiens kamrupana (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Assam, India


Impatiens kamrupana Gogoi, J.Sarma & Borah

in Borah, Sarma & Gogoi, 2019.

Abstract
Impatiens kamrupana, a new species from Assam, northeast India is described. The new species is easily distinguished from its allied taxa by its bicoloured, white and purple flowers and sub-bucciniform lower sepal with straight to slightly curved spur.

Keywords: Balsam, Northeast India, Novelty, Eudicots

FIGURE 1. Impatiens kamrupana Gogoi, J.Sarma & Borah sp. nov.
 (a) inflorescence, (b–c) flower bud, (d) bract, (e) frontal view of flower, (f) back view of flower, (g–h) lateral view of flower, (i) lateral sepals, (j–l) different view of lower sepal, (m) lower sepal (inside with red venation), (n) dorsal petal (dorsal view), (o) dorsal petal (ventral view), (p) lateral united petals (dorsal view), (q) lateral united petals (ventral view), (r) pedicel with androecium, (s) gynoecium, (t) capsules, (u) dehiscing capsule, (v) seeds.

Impatiens kamrupana Gogoi, J.Sarma & Borah sp. nov.

 Etymology:— The species epithet is named after its type locality i.e. district Kamrup of Assam state. 

Impatiens tripetala Roxb. ex DC (1824: 687) 


Souravjyoti Borah, Jatindra Sarma and Rajib Gogoi. 2019. Impatiens kamrupana (Balsaminaceae): A New Species from Assam, India. Phytotaxa. 395(1); 35–40.  DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.395.1.4

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

[Botany • 2019] Impatiens damingensis (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Guangxi, China


Impatiens damingensis  S. X. Yu, C. Y. Xia & H. P. Deng

in Xia, Gadagkar, Li, Deng & Yu, 2019. 

Abstract 
Impatiens damingensis S. X. Yu, C. Y. Xia & H. P. Deng, (Balsaminaceae) discovered in Guangxi, China, is described and illustrated here. This species is similar to I. aquatilis Hook.f., but differs from the latter by having blades that are ovate or ovate-lanceolate vs. lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate, or ovate-oblong; apices of bracts acute vs. glandular awned; apices of lateral sepals mucronulate vs. long mucronulate; and spur slender substraight or slightly incurved vs. incurved. Furthermore, molecular data as well as micro-morphological evidence under SEM (of pollens and seeds) also support the establishment of the new species. 

Key words: Balsaminaceae, Impatiens, morphology, new species, phylogeny, SEM 

FIGURE 1. Impatiens damingensis S. X. Yu, C. Y. Xia & H. P. Deng.
A. plant; B. bract; C. lateral sepal; D. vexillum; E. wings; F. labellum; G. filaments and anthers; H. ovary; I. capsule. Drawn by Y. B. Sun from S. X. Yu 3227.

FIGURE 2. A–F: Impatiens damingensis S. X. Yu, C. Y. Xia & H. P. Deng. A. Habitat; B. plants; C. flower, lateral view; D. flower, front view; E. flower and capsule; F. flower branch.
G–I: Impatiens aquatilis Hook. f. G. plants; H: flower, lateral view; I: flower, front view.





Impatiens damingensis S. X. Yu, C. Y. Xia & H. P. Deng, sp. nov. 

Type. China. Guangxi: Wuming, Damingshan; shade and damp places, Alt. 1220m, 2004-09-02, S. X. Yu 3227 (Holotype, PE; Isotype, IBK), same place, 2002-07-09, Y-G Wei 0205 (IBK). 

Diagnosis. Similar to I. aquatilis Hook.f. in having racemose inflorescences, two lateral sepals and ellipsoid seeds, but is different by way of having ovate or ovate-lanceolate blades, acute apices of bracts, mucronulate apices of lateral sepals, and a slender and slightly incurved spur. SEM results also reveal distinct differences in seedcoat and pollen grain micro-morphology when compared to I. aquatilis.
....

Etymology: The specific epithet ‘damingensis’ refers to the locality of the type specimen, Daming Mountain, Wuming County, Guangxi, China.


Chang-Ying Xia, Sudhindra R. Gadagkar, Jin Li, Hong-Ping Deng and Sheng-Xiang Yu. 2019. Impatiens damingensis (Balsaminaceae), A New Species from Guangxi, China. Phytotaxa.  399(3); 239–247. DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.399.3.6


Tuesday, August 7, 2018

[Botany • 2018] Thunbergia impatienoides (Acanthaceae) • A New Species from Thailand


ชมพูไพร • Thunbergia impatienoides Suwanph. & S.Vajrodaya

in Suwanphakdee & Vajrodaya, 2018

Abstract 
A new species, Thunbergia impatienoides, was discovered from Thailand and is here described. Detailed descriptions including pollen and seed morphologies, distribution, ecology and illustration are provided.

Key words: new species, pollen, Thailand, Thunbergia 


        

Thunbergia impatienoides Suwanph. & S.Vajrodaya, sp. nov.  

Etymology: The specific epithet refers to the gross appearance of its flower which is quite similar to a common ornamental balsam, Impatiens walleriana Hook.f. (Balsaminaceae).

Fig. 1 Thunbergia impatienoides Suwanph. & S.Vajrodaya.
 a–b. Flower bud; c. flower; d. corolla tube with glandular hairs; e. stamens; f. glandular hairs on filament base; g. anther; h. calyx and ovary; i. style and stigma; j. stigma; k. fruit; l. fruit close-up (C. Suwanphakdee 523 (BK, BKF, K, KKU, L, QBG)). — Photos: C. Suwanphakdee.

Distribution: Endemic to Thailand (border of northern and western Thailand in Tak province and in western Thailand in Kanchanaburi and Ratchaburi provinces). 

Habitat & Ecology: In shaded area in dipterocarp and mixed deciduous forests.

    



Chalermpol Suwanphakdee and Srunya Vajrodaya. 2018. Thunbergia impatienoides (Acanthaceae), A New Species from Thailand. Blumea. 63; 20-25.  DOI: 10.3767/blumea.2018.63.01.03 


Thursday, June 7, 2018

[Botany • 2017] Impatiens zironiana (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, Northeastern India


Impatiens zironiana Gogoi, Hareesh & W.Adamowski

in Gogoi, Hareesh & Adamowski, 2017. 

Abstract
Impatiens zironiana, a new species of Impatiens from Lower Subansiri district of Arunachal Pradesh, northeast India is described and illustrated. Detailed descriptions, distribution and ecology along with colour photographs are provided.

Keywords: Arunachal Pradesh, Lower Subansiri, Ziro, Impatiens, new species


Figure 1. Impatiens zironiana: Frontal view of flower.

Impatiens zironiana Gogoi, Hareesh & W.Adamowski sp. nov.

Etymology: The specific epithet refers to the type locality called ‘Ziro’, the district headquarter of Lower Subansiri District, Arunachal Pradesh.

....


Rajib Gogoi, Hareesh V. S. and Wojciech Adamowski. 2017. Impatiens zironiana (Balsaminaceae), A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, Northeastern India. Webbia. 72(1); 83-86.  DOI: 10.1080/00837792.2017.1286773 

Thursday, March 8, 2018

[Botany • 2018] Three New Species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from Myanmar; Impatiens decurva, I hartnolliae & I. oblongata


[left]  Impatiens decurva Ruchis. & S.B. Janssens  &
   
[right] I. oblongata Ruchis. & Van der Niet 

in Ruchisansakun, Suksathan, van der Niet, et al., 2018.

Abstract

Three new species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from Myanmar are here described: Impatiens decurva Ruchis. & S.B. Janssens, I. hartnolliae Hook. f. ex Ruchis. & Suksathan, and I. oblongata Ruchis. &Van der Niet. The 5-lobed short fusiform fruit of all three species suggests that they are members of subgen. Impatiens sect. Uniflorae Hook. f. & Thomson. For I. decurva and I. oblongata, subgenus membership was corroborated by phylogenetic analyses of a combined dataset of nuclear ITS and plastid atpB-rbcL intergenic spacer DNA sequences. This was not possible for I. hartnolliae, which is only known from a single herbarium specimen.

Keywords: Impatiens, Myanmar, Southeast Asia, taxonomy, Uniflorae, Eudicots

FIGURE 2. Impatiens decurva.  A. Lateral view of flower; B. Front view of flower; C. Habit in situ.
Photographs by Saroj Ruchisansakun


1. Impatiens decurva Ruchis. & S.B. Janssens, sp. nov.
Impatiens decurva Ruchis. & S.B. Janssens is similar to I. pendula B. Heyne ex Wight & Arn. (1834: 136) but differs in having congested leaves towards the stem apex, a pilose midrib on the dorsal petal, pink lateral united petals with a white base, an unequally bilobed apex of the lower lateral united petals, and a strongly decurved pedicel in fruiting stage. 

Distribution:— Endemic to Myanmar (Shan State).
 Ecology:— Growing in limestone soils on a mountain summit in open, fragmented evergreen forest, 1500–1600 m elevation.

Etymology:— The specific epithet refers to the decurved pedicel at the early fruiting stage.

Note:— Impatiens decurva Ruchis. & S.B. Janssens is the only spurless species in Myanmar with solitary flowers and spirally arranged leaves. Although it morphologically resembles I. pendula, I. decurva possesses a distinct characters: the leaves clustered towards the stem apex, a pilose midrib on the dorsal petal, the apex of the lower lateral united petals unequally bilobed, and a pedicel that is strongly decurved from the middle in the early fruiting stage. Impatiens decurva resembles I. muscicola Craib (1926: 162) in morphology. Impatiens muscicola is a species endemic to northern Thailand, and differs from I. decurva in having lower lateral petals with an unequally bilobed apex and a pedicel that is strongly decurved in the middle during the fruiting stage.


FIGURE 5. The type specimen of Impatiens hartnolliae.

2. Impatiens hartnolliae Hook. f. ex Ruchis. & Suksathan, sp. nov.

Impatiens hartnolliae Hook. f. ex Ruchis. & Suksathan is most similar to I. allanii Hook. f. (Ridley 1914: 325) but can be distinguished by its possession of a large orbicular sepal and large upper lateral petals.

Distribution:— Endemic to Myanmar (Rakhine state).
Ecology:— Growing in limestone soils.

 Etymology:— The specific epithet is derived from the collector name, H.S. Hartnoll.

Notes:— Impatiens hartnolliae was written by J.D. Hooker on a single specimen sheet kept at Kew but was not validly published as according to Art. 30.1 (McNeill et al. 2012). To recognize Hooker’s work on Impatiens, we used the initial name provided by him to name this new species. The species can be easily distinguished from other species in having a racemose inflorescence, truncate lateral united petals, an emarginate dorsal petal, and a fusiform fruit.




FIGURE 7. Impatiens oblongata. A. Lateral view of flower; B. Front view of flower; C. Habit in situ.
Photographs by Saroj Ruchisansakun

3. Impatiens oblongata Ruchis. & Van der Niet, sp. nov.
Impatiens oblongata Ruchis. & Van der Niet is most similar to I. patula Craib (1926: 164) but can be distinguished by a distinctly shorter spur, broadly oblong upper lateral united petals with a truncate to slightly emarginated apex, and the apex of the lower lateral united petals truncate to slightly bilobed.

Distribution:— Endemic to northeastern Myanmar (Shan State), where it is known only from the type locality.
 Ecology:— Growing in shady areas on a mountain summit in open fragmented evergreen forest, 1500–1600 m elevation.  

 Etymology:— The specific epithet is derived from its broadly oblong upper lateral petals.

 Note:— This species usually has four lateral sepals, rarely two, in contrast to other similar species which have only two sepals, e.g., I. patula, I. violiflora Hook. f. (Hooker 1875: 457), I. curvipes Hook. f. (Hooker 1905: 25 & 32), and I. florulenta.




Saroj Ruchisansakun, Piyakaset Suksathan, Timotheüs van der Niet, Erik F. Smets, Saw Lwin and Steven B. Janssens. 2018. Three New Species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from Myanmar. Phytotaxa. 388(1); 63–74.  DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.338.1.5

     

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

[Botany • 2018] Phylogeny, Historical Biogeography, and Diversification of Angiosperm Order Ericales suggest Ancient Neotropical and East Asian Connections


Order Ericales
Rose, Kleist, Löfstrand, et al. 2018.  

  Highlights
• A supermatrix phylogeny of the angiosperm order Ericales is proposed.
• Holoparasitic Mitrastemonaceae is sister to Lecythidaceae.
• Crown Ericales originated during the Albiuan and rapidly radiated thereafter.
• Ericales originated in the Neotropics and Indo-Malaysia.
• Diversification analyses suggest 70 shifts in speciation rate.

Abstract
Inferring interfamilial relationships within the eudicot order Ericales has remained one of the more recalcitrant problems in angiosperm phylogenetics, likely due to a rapid, ancient radiation. As a result, no comprehensive time-calibrated tree or biogeographical analysis of the order has been published. Here, we elucidate phylogenetic relationships within the order and then conduct time-dependent biogeographical and diversification analyses by using a taxon and locus-rich supermatrix approach on one third of the extant species diversity calibrated with 23 macrofossils and two secondary calibration points. Our results corroborate previous studies and also suggest several new but poorly supported relationships. Newly suggested relationships are: (1) holoparasitic Mitrastemonaceae is sister to Lecythidaceae, (2) the clade formed by Mitrastemonaceae + Lecythidaceae is sister to Ericales excluding balsaminoids, (3) Theaceae is sister to the styracoids + sarracenioids + ericoids, and (4) subfamilial relationships with Ericaceae suggest that Arbutoideae is sister to Monotropoideae and Pyroloideae is sister to all subfamilies excluding Arbutoideae, Enkianthoideae, and Monotropoideae. Our results indicate Ericales began to diversify 110 Mya, within Indo-Malaysia and the Neotropics, with exchange between the two areas and expansion out of Indo-Malaysia becoming an important area in shaping the extant diversity of many families. Rapid cladogenesis occurred along the backbone of the order between 104-106 Mya. Jump dispersal is important within the order in the last 30 My, but vicariance is the most important cladogenetic driver of disjunctions at deeper levels of the phylogeny. We detect between 69 and 81 shifts in speciation rate throughout the order, the vast majority of which occurred within the last 30 My. We propose that range shifting may be responsible for older shifts in speciation rate, but more recent shifts may be better explained by morphological innovation.

Keywords: Ericales; Ericaceae; Theaceae; supermatrix; vicariance; long distance dispersal


Jeffrey P. Rose, Thomas J. Kleist, Stefan D. Löfstrand, Bryan T. Drew, Jürg Schönenberger and Kenneth J. Sytsma. 2018. Phylogeny, Historical Biogeography, and Diversification of Angiosperm Order Ericales suggest Ancient Neotropical and East Asian Connections. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. In Press.   DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.01.014


Monday, January 22, 2018

[Botany • 2017] Impatiens nilalohitae • A New Species (Balsaminaceae) from Northeastern India


Impatiens nilalohitae  Hareesh & M.Sabu

in Hareesh & Sabu. 2017.  
  
Abstract

Impatiens nilalohitae is described from Arunachal Pradesh, Northeastern India. The new species shows similarities with I. adamowskiana and I. rugosipetala, but differs by having a 10–15-flowered inflorescence, dark purple flowers, and four lateral sepals, among other characters. A detailed description and colour photographs, as well as remarks on geographic distribution and ecology, are provided.

Keywords: Arunachal Pradesh, Balsaminaceae, Impatiens, new species, Monocots


Impatiens nilalohitae Hareesh & M.Sabu sp. nov.



Impatiens nilalohitae Hareesh & M.Sabu sp. nov. 

Impatiens nilalohitae is phenotypically similar to I. adamowskiana but differs by having a non-winged stem, setaceous stipular gland, 10– 15-flowered inflorescence, dark purple flower, four lateral sepals, and spur with a notched apex. It is also similar to I. rugosipetala but differs by having 10–15-flowered inflorescence, dark purple flower with non-rugose petals, four lateral sepals, lower sepal with an acute apex, and a spur with a notched apex.

Etymology—The specific epithet refers to the purple colour (nilalohita in Sanskrit) of the flower and the abaxial leaf blade surface.


Vadakkoot Sankaran Hareesh and Mamiyil Sabu. 2017. Impatiens nilalohitae (Balsaminaceae): A New Species from Northeastern India. Phytotaxa. 323(2); 189–193.  DOI:  10.11646/phytotaxa.323.2.7

Thursday, November 30, 2017

[Botany • 2016] Floral Specialization for Different Pollinators and Divergent Use of the Same Pollinator Among Co-occurring Impatiens Species (Balsaminaceae) from Southeast Asia


Researchers have presented their results on specialization in pollination techniques in flowers of the genus Impatiens. For two months in 2014, they have studied 7 co-occurring species of the genus Impatiens in the Chiang Dao Wildlife Sanctuary in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

 Ruchisansakun, Tangtorwongsakul, Cozien, et al. 2016.

Floral variation among closely related species is thought to often reflect differences in pollination systems. Flowers of the large genus Impatiens are characterized by extensive variation in colour, shape and size and in anther and stigma positioning, but studies of their pollination ecology are scarce and most lack a comparative context. Consequently, the function of floral diversity in Impatiens remains enigmatic. This study documents floral variation and pollination of seven co-occurring Impatiens spp. in the Southeast Asian diversity hotspot. To assess whether floral trait variation reflects specialization for different pollination systems, we tested whether species depend on pollinators for reproduction, identified animals that visit flowers, determined whether these visitors play a role in pollination and quantified and compared key floral traits, including floral dimensions and nectar characteristics. Experimental exclusion of insects decreased fruit and seed set significantly for all species except I. muscicola, which also received almost no visits from animals. Most species received visits from several animals, including bees, birds, butterflies and hawkmoths, only a subset of which were effective pollinators. Impatiens psittacina, I. kerriae, I. racemosa and I. daraneenae were pollinated by bees, primarily Bombus haemorrhoidalis. Impatiens chiangdaoensis and I. santisukii had bimodal pollination systems which combined bee and lepidopteran pollination. Floral traits differed significantly among species with different pollination systems. Autogamous flowers were small and spurless, and did not produce nectar; bee-pollinated flowers had short spurs and large floral chambers with a wide entrance; and bimodally bee- and lepidopteran-pollinated species had long spurs and a small floral chamber with a narrow entrance. Nectar-producing species with different pollination systems did not differ in nectar volume and sugar concentration. Despite the high frequency of bee pollination in co-occurring species, individuals with a morphology suggestive of hybrid origin were rare. Variation in floral architecture, including various forms of corolla asymmetry, facilitates distinct, species-specific pollen-placement on visiting bees. Our results show that floral morphological diversity among Impatiens spp. is associated with both differences in functional pollinator groups and divergent use of the same pollinator. Non-homologous mechanisms of floral asymmetry are consistent with repeated independent evolution, suggesting that competitive interactions among species with the same pollination system have been an important driver of floral variation among Impatiens spp.

Keywords: autogamy; bee pollination; butterfly pollination; floral asymmetry; nectar robbing; nectar spur; pollen placement; sympatry; tropics



Figure 3. Impatiens flowers, showing variation in colour and shape and floral visitors:
 I. muscicola (A); 
I. santisukii pollinated by Polytremis lubricans lubricans (B) and Bombus haemorrhoidalis (C);
I. racemosa pollinated by B. haemorrhoidalis (D);
I. chiangdaoensis pollinated by Notocrypta curvifascia (E) and visited by a nectar-robbing B. haemorrhoidalis (F);
 I. psittacina pollinated by B. haemorrhoidalis (G);
  
I. kerriae pollinated by B. haemorrhoidalis (H) and visited by Apis cerana (I), Macroglossum belis (J), and Aethopyga gouldiae (K).
  I. daraneenae pollinated by an unknown bee species (Apidae) (L).



Black arrow in (A) indicates the typical position of the shed anthers onto the lower lateral united petals, facilitating autonomous self-pollination. All other arrows indicate pollen placement sites on visiting bee species (C, D, G, H, L). Scale bar in (A) represents 1 mm, all other scale bars represent 10 mm.


Saroj Ruchisansakun, Pornpimon Tangtorwongsakul, Ruth J. Cozien, Erik F. Smets FMLS and Timotheüs van der Niet. 2016. Floral Specialization for Different Pollinators and Divergent Use of the Same Pollinator Among Co-occurring Impatiens Species (Balsaminaceae) from Southeast Asia. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 181(4); 651–666.  DOI: 10.1111/boj.12427


In a study in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, researchers (including 4  from Naturalis) have presented their results on specialization in pollination techniques in flowers of the genus Impatiens. For two months in 2014, they have studied 7 co-occurring species of the genus Impatiens (see video) in the Chiang Dao Wildlife Sanctuary in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Impatiens develops diff. floral shapes to specialize in pollination techniques + avoid competition! Blog+video https://science.naturalis.nl/en/about-us/news/onderzoek/flowers-impatiens-genus-and-their-specialization-pollination-techniques/?platform=hootsuite