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Type: Article
Published: 2020-08-17
Page range: 245–261
Abstract views: 32
PDF downloaded: 2

Thismia: the rarest of the rare? Ranges of some Bornean species are much larger than previously believed

Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Palacký University, Šlechtitelů 27, Olomouc, CZ-78371, Czech Republic. Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Mendel University, Zemědělská 3, Brno CZ-61300, Czech Republic.
Department of Botany, Palacký University, Šlechtitelů 27, Olomouc, CZ-78371, Czech Republic.
Centre of the Region Haná for Biotechnological and Agricultural Research, Crop Research Institute, Šlechtitelů 29, Olomouc, CZ-78371, Czech Republic.
conservation status Dioscoreales distribution Malesia tropical forest Monocots

Abstract

Fairy lanterns (Thismia; Thismiaceae, Dioscoreales) are believed to be extremely rare and narrowly endemic plants. Despite that, many new Thismia populations have been recently discovered in Borneo. These are summarized and discussed here and all twelve Bornean Thismia species with multiple localities are reviewed. New localities of T. brunneomitra, T. hexagona, T. neptunis, T. pallida and T. viridistriata are reported which considerably enlarge ranges of these species. New conservational statuses are proposed for T. brunneomitra, T. goodii, T. hexagona and T. neptunis. New or unpublished localities are also reported for T. cornuta and T. goodii. Although the known within-species morphological variability is extended only little or not at all by these finds, geographically distant populations often exhibit relatively large genetic differences, in some cases similar to those among distinct species (namely T. brunneomitra and T. minutissima). The new data show that, at least in some tropical species of Thismia, we can expect quite normal type of distribution with multiple localities over relatively large geographical areas.