Banksia rosserae

Banksia rosserae

taxobox
name = "Banksia rosserae"


regnum = Plantae
unranked_divisio = Angiosperms
unranked_classis = Eudicots
ordo = Proteales
familia = Proteaceae
genus = "Banksia"
species = "B. rosserae"
binomial = "Banksia rosserae"
binomial_authority = Olde & Marriott|

"Banksia rosserae" is a recently described species of "Banksia". Endemic to inland Western Australia, it is the only "Banksia" species to occur solely within the arid zone.

Description

"B. rosserae" grows as a multi-stemmed shrub 2½ to three metres high, and three to four metres wide. The trunks are from ten to fifteen centimetres in diameter. Unusually for "Banksia" species, the grey bark is papery and flaky. The leaves are dark green, five to twelve centimetres long and five to twelve millimetres wide, with serrated margins. Flowers are yellow and occur in "Banksia"'s distinctive flower spikes; these are approximately spherical, with a diameter of about five centimetres. The "cones" have a hairy appearance due to the retention of old flower parts. They typically contain from twelve to twenty follicles, most of which do not open until stimulated to do so by fire.

Taxonomy

Taxonomic history

Reports of who first discovered "B. rosserae" are somewhat contradictory. Peter Olde and Neil Marriott acknowledge Ann Pilkington of Kirkalocka, "who discovered "Banksia rosserae" and who drew it to our attention through various third parties."cite journal | author=Olde, Peter M. and Marriott, Neil R. | year = 2002 | title = One new "Banksia" and two new "Grevillea" species (Proteaceae: Grevilleoideae) from Western Australia | journal = Nuytsia | volume = 15 | issue = 1 | pages = 85–99 | url = http://users.bigpond.net.au/macarthuraps/new%20grevilleas.pdf | accessdate = 2007-01-10] However, Kevin Collins states that it was first discovered in September 2000 by a "Grevillea" enthusiast named John Cullen. According to Collins, Cullen had visited Kirkalocka in search of an undescribed "Grevillea" species mentioned in the writings of Charles Gardner (now published as "G. kirkalocka"); in addition to finding the "Grevillea", he also found two "B. rosserae" plants growing on the top of an orange sand dune.cite journal | author = Collins, Kevin | year = 2003 | title = B. rosserae - a significant new discovery | journal = ASGAP Banksia Study Group Newsletter | volume = 4 | issue = 3 | pages = 2–4 | url = http://asgap.org.au/banksSG/banksiasg-4-3.pdf | accessdate = 2007-01-10]

Irrespective of who first discovered it, its presence in the area was reported to Peter Olde and Neil Marriott. In 2001, Olde, Marriott and Keith Alcock visited the area in search of the undescribed "Grevillea" species. While there, they also searched for the "Banksia", and eventually Alcock located two specimens growing on top of a dune. The plants were clearly an undescribed species, so specimens were collected so that a formal description of the species could be published.cite journal | author = Marriott, Neil | year = 2004 | title = Further notes on Banksia rosserae (Olde and Marriott) | journal = ASGAP Banksia Study Group Newsletter | volume = 6 | issue = 1 | url = http://asgap.org.au/banksSG/banksiasg-6-1.pdf | accessdate = 2007-01-11] The following year it was published as "Banksia rosserae" Olde & Marriott.APNI | name = Banksia rosserae Olde & Marriott | id = 244119] . The name honours Celia Rosser, an illustrator, whose three-volume monograph "The Banksias" has been acclaimed as one of 20th century's great works of botanical illustration.cite news | author = O'Neill, Graeme | date = 2006-07-03 | title = It's love at first sight | url = http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/its-love-at-first-sight/2006/07/02/1151778811487.html | work = The Age | accessdate = 2007-01-10]

In January 2002, Kevin Collins and John Cullen undertook a search for more plants, locating a clump of six plants about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from the original two, and a further 18 plants on crown land adjacent to Kirkalocka. No flowering specimen was seen during these visits; indeed, no-one knew what the flower looked like until 2006. In March of that year, storms associated with Cyclone Glenda dumped a year's worth of rain in the area in a single day, and shortly afterwards, flowers began to form. Two months later, a party of botanists and "Banksia" enthusiasts visited the area, and observed the flowers for the first time.

Infrageneric placement

"B. rosserae"'s relationship to other "Banksia" species is uncertain. Its leaves are virtually indistinguishable from narrow-leaved forms of "B. laevigata" (Tennis Ball Banksia), and like that species it has condensed, roughly spherical inflorescences, and slender styles. However, unlike "B. laevigata" it has a lignotuber, and terminal inflorescences that hang down instead of being held erect. The lignotuber suggests an affinity with "B. lullfitzii", while the pendulous inflorescences suggest a relationship with the "Banksia" ser. "Tetragonae" series.

Olde and Marriott provisionally placed it in subgenus "Banksia" because its inflorescences take the form of "Banksia"'s characteristic flower spikes; "Banksia" sect. "Banksia" because of its straight styles; and "Banksia" ser. "Cyrtostylis" because it has slender flowers. It was placed alongside "B. laevigata", but with the proviso that "we have perceived a close relationship between "Banksia laevigata" and "Banksia rosserae" which a more informed study may find superficial."

"B. rosserae"'s current placement within "Banksia" may be summarised as follows::"Banksia"::"B." subg. "Banksia":::"B." sect. "Banksia"::::"B." ser. "Salicinae" (11 species, 7 subspecies)::::"B." ser. "Grandes" (2 species)::::"B." ser. "Banksia" (8 species)::::"B." ser. "Crocinae" (4 species)::::"B." ser. "Prostratae" (6 species, 3 varieties)::::"B." ser. "Cyrtostylis":::::"B. media":::::"B. praemorsa":::::"B. epica":::::"B. pilostylis":::::"B. attenuata":::::"B. ashbyi":::::"B. benthamiana":::::"B. audax":::::"B. lullfitzii":::::"B. rosserae":::::"B. elderiana":::::"B. laevigata" (2 subspecies):::::"B. elegans":::::"B. lindleyana"::::"B." ser. "Tetragonae" (3 species)::::"B." ser. "Bauerinae" (1 species)::::"B." ser. "Quercinae" (2 species):::"B." sect. "Coccinea" (1 species):::"B." sect. "Oncostylis" (4 series, 22 species, 4 subspecies, 11 varieties)::"B." subg. "Isostylis" (3 species)

Distribution

"Banksia rosserae" is known only from an area south-south-east of Mount Magnet in inland Western Australia. There are 27 plants known, all occurring within a radius of about 20 kilometres (12 mi). The area is around 200 kilometres (125 mi) from where other "Banksia" species are known to occur, representing "a significant extension of range into the arid zone and a significant geographic disjunction for the genus."

Although most of the land around Mount Magnet has the heavy clay soil and "Acacia aneura" (Mulga) scrub common throughout semi-arid Western Australia, the area on which "B. rosserae" occurs is unusual in having deep yellow sand and laterite. It occurs there with mallee "Eucalyptus" species, over open heath of "Grevillea", "Hakea", "Leptospermum", "Melaleuca", "Cryptandra" and "Triodia" species. Thus the flora is more like that found on the Swan Coastal Plain than the arid zone in which it occurs.

Ecology

Very little is known of the ecology of "B. rosserae". Its massive lignotuber is clearly an adaptation to desert conditions, providing a store of water during extended periods of drought, and a store of energy from which it can resprout after bushfire. Marriott also considers its papery bark to be an adaptation to desert conditions, although he does not elaborate on how the plant benefits from it.

Flowering apparently occurs only after rain, and hence may be separated by periods of many years. Pollinators have not been recorded for the species, but extensive data from other "Banksia" species suggests that insects, birds and nectariferous mammals would all play a role.Fact|date=February 2007 There is clearly no shortage of pollinators, as most "cones" contain plenty of follicles. Although most follicles observed are closed, a few open ones have been found, suggesting that the species is weakly serotinous: that is, a few follicles open spontaneously or in response to rain, but most remain closed until burnt.

Seedlings would have little change of surviving in a normal dry season; establishment probably requires several consecutive seasons of good rain. The combination of a bushfire followed by several seasons of cyclonic storms probably only occurs every few hundred years, suggesting that opportunities for seedling recruitment are extremely rare. This would explain why the entire population appears to be over two hundred years old.

There is little information on threats to the species. All known plants appear to be in very good health and free of pests; it seems they are not eaten or damaged by the area's kangaroos, goats and sheep. Bushfire clearly poses no threat; and the area is free from "Phytophthora cinnamomi" dieback, a scourge of most other western "Banksia" species.cite web | title = 5.5 Phytophthora dieback | work = State of the Environment Report 2007 | publisher = Environmental Protection Authority, Government of Western Australia | url = http://www.soe.wa.gov.au/report/biodiversity/phytophthora-dieback.html | accessdate = 2008-02-18] Any concerns about future land use are abated by the fact that the largest population occurs on crown land, which is now being considered for a conservation reserve. In fact, the only perceived threat is the rarity of conditions conducive to seedling recruitment: "it may well be that this banksia has become so adapted to its harsh environment that its long-term future in the wild is in doubt."

Because of the absence of any specific threat to the species, it has not been declared rare or threatened. However, Olde and Marriott declared it to merit Priority One listing on the Department of Environment and Conservation's Declared Rare and Priority Flora List. Consequently they withheld the precise location of their specimens "for conservation reasons".

Cultivation

"Banksia rosserae" is poorly known in cultivation as yet. In 2003, Kevin Collins reported that "early trials have proven good seed viability and rapid young seedling development". The following year Neil Marriott reported that "seedlings germinate well with smoked water during spring, and young plants establishing here in deep granite sands and sandy loams at Stawell are growing slowly but steadily." It was his view that the species was likely to be of value to the cut flower industry, and as a garden plant in hot dry climates.

References

External links

*FloraBase | name = "Banksia rosserae" Olde & Marriott | id = 20231
*APNI | name = "Banksia rosserae" Olde & Marriott | id = 244119


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