Bulbophyllum lanterna, a new species in Dendrobiinae (Orchidaceae) from Madagascar

A new species from Madagascar, Bulbophyllum lanterna Hermans, is described and illustrated. It is compared with similar species from section Lichenophylax. A preliminary conservation assessment is provided.


Introduction
Bulbophyllum Thouars is one of the largest genera in the Orchidaceae (subfamily Epidendroideae: tribe Malaxideae: subtribe Dendrobiinae) (Chase et al. 2015), comprising just over 2000 species (Vermeulen et al. 2018: 31) and has a pantropical distribution (WCSP 2020). One of the main centres of diversity is in the Madagascan region with a total of 210 species, five subspecies, and 15 varieties currently recognised. Around 10% of these also occur on surrounding archipelagos and just 1.5% have a broader distribution (Hermans 2021, in press).
The new species belongs in section Lichenophylax, a section of 17 recognised taxa first established by Schlechter (1924: 175), subsequently reviewed by Perrier de la Bâthie (1937: 45 -50) and Bosser (1965). Section Lichenophylax consists of a group of very small plants, largely endemic to Madagascar with a single species in Réunion, forming dense masses on rocks and trees. The section is more or less homogenous and the most consistent characteristics for species identification are in the morphology of the lip.

Materials and Methods
As part of ongoing research and fieldwork on the orchid flora of Madagascar at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, the University of Vienna and PBZT Antananarivo, specimens of putative new taxa were compared with descriptions, herbarium material and drawings of all the type specimens of the genus to ascertain their novelty. This has resulted in the recognition of the new species.
The conservation status of the new species given in this paper is a summary of the full IUCN Red List assessment which will be completed and submitted for review and publication by IUCN once the species name is validly published and therefore available for assessment. The assessment has been compiled based on current knowledge of these taxa, by one of the authors (Landy Rajaovelona), who is an IUCN Red List assessor, using the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria (2012).
RECOGNITION. Bulbophyllum lanterna is typical in section Lichenophylax, being a tiny plant with a branching rhizome, small ovoid bifoliate pseudobulbs, a setiform single-flowered inflorescence, and flowers with a fleshy lip and short stelidia. It differs from allied species in its linear leaves, long needle-like peduncle, and small 5 × 4 mm flowers, with the dorsal sepal and petals shortly cuspidate at the apex, and a narrow lingulate lip which is narrowly winged in the basal half and roundly thickened at the apical half. The colour of the flower is also distinct.
DISTRIBUTION. Endemic to Toamasina province, E Madagascar. Known from the type only and subsequent sight records in the same locality (Hermans 2019). HABITAT. Epiphyte amongst bryophytes in medium elevation moist evergreen forest, at 1000 -1150 m. CONSERVATION STATUS. Bulbophyllum lanterna is endemic to Madagascar, restricted to Alaotra-Mangoro (Toamasina) and Sava (Antsiranana) regions. One subpopulation is protected in the Ankeniheny Zahamena Corridor (CAZ). The type specimen and the two observations represent a total of 03 'locations' (sensu IUCN 2012) with respect to the main threats, which are shifting agriculture and small-scale logging and wood harvesting. With the one observation and the type specimen outside protected areas, we infer that habitat destruction will induce a strong continuous decline in the Area of Occupancy (AOO), habitat extent and quality, the number of subpopulations and mature individuals in the next ten years. B. lanterna is therefore assessed as Endangered (EN) under criterion B2ab (ii, iii, iv, v). PHENOLOGY. December to January. ETYMOLOGY. In reference to the lantern-like flowers, papery white on the outside and glowing yellow-red on the inside. NOTES. Bulbophyllum lanterna is similar to a few species with short caudate sepals and a more or less glabrous lip in section Lichenophylax, including the equally diminutive B. afzelii Schltr. and B. afzelii var. microdoron (Schltr.) Bosser; but both have flowers almost twice the size with a lip that is broadly and long-winged with a bicarinate longitudinal ridge (vs narrow, short-winged with an entire ridge). Bulbophyllum percorniculatum H.Perrier has only slightly larger flowers but its pseudobulbs are discoid (vs ovoid) the leaves narrowly elliptic (vs linear), the sepals longer caudate and the lip more broadly winged at the base. Bulbophyllum neglectum Bosser from the same area is similar in shape but the flowers are twice the size with a much broader, triangular lip. In B. debile Bosser the overall flower size and shape are similar but the pseudobulbs are contiguous (vs distant), the leaves much shorter and the flower has a verrucose (vs glabrous) lip. Bulbophyllum rudolphus Hermans, also from the same area, has shorter and broader leaves and a larger flower with a similar lip, red anther cap and elliptic petals, roundly retuse at the apex (vs obovate, cuspidate). The flower colour of the new species is also very different from all the above species.
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