Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2018-07-23
Page range: 87–96
Abstract views: 29
PDF downloaded: 1

Rediscovery of the restricted endemic Reseda balansae (Resedaceae) in Turkey

Hacettepe University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology, Botany Section, 06800, Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey
Hacettepe University, Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, 06100, Sıhhiye, Ankara, Turkey
Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemical Engineering, ctra. de Utrera km 1, ES-41013 Sevilla, Spain
conservation endangered species endemism lectotypification Mediterranean flora Eudicots

Abstract

Reseda balansae Müll. Arg. (Resedaceae) is a very restricted and endangered Turkish endemic species known only from Mersin province (South Turkey), in a hotspot of biodiversity. It was first collected in 1855, and subsequently described in 1857. Afterwards, it was only collected once again in 1896. In this study we report the rediscovery of these two populations of R. balansae in Turkey more than 120 years after its last known collection. We provide a detailed revised description of this poorly known species and comments about its taxonomy (including designation of a lectotype), distribution and ecology. We also perform the first conservation assessment of the species at a global scale under IUCN categories and criteria, resulting in the proposal of the critically endangered category for the species, which apparently persists in one single population, since the type population has recently been destroyed.