identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
462A87AEFF95FF9ACD11FDA8FA82F9CD.text	462A87AEFF95FF9ACD11FDA8FA82F9CD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Verbascum parsana Sotoodeh, Attar & Civeyrel 2016	<div><p>Verbascum parsana Sotoodeh, Attar &amp; Civeyrel, sp. nov.</p> <p>(Fig. 1)</p> <p>Planta verosimilter biennis, indumento cinereo e pilis stellato-ramosis, glandulosa.Folia basalia oblonga-elliptica,margine crenata,petiolata; caulina basalibus conformia sed minora, non decurrentia.Inflorescentia paniculatoramosa; bracteae lineares-acuminatae; pedicellus usque 8 mm longus; calyx 4-6 mm longus; corolla lutea, 15 mm diam., extus stellato-glandulosa; stamina 5; filamenta dense villoso-velutina violacea; filamenta antica apice nuda; stigma. Capsula elliptica, obtus, 5-7 mm longa, stellato-glandulosa. TYPUS. — Iran. Gilan, Asalem to <a href="http://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=48.767223&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=37.617966" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 48.767223/lat 37.617966)">Khalkhal</a> (Asbdavani), 1876 m, 37°37’4.68”N, 48°46’2”E, 12.VIII.2004, Moazzeni &amp; Keshvari 34941 (holo-, TUH!; iso-, P [P04022112]).</p> <p>HABITAT AND ECOLOGY. — Verbascum parsana sp. nov. is known only from the type specimen and one locality (type location) in north of Iran (Fig. 2). Based on present study it is a narrow endemic taxon. The new species grows on porous and soft sandy-clay soils at elevation of 1876 m in transition zone out of forest.</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY. — The epithet is to honor Dr Ahmad Parsa (1907- 1997), the first Iranian botanist who produced important concepts for flora of Iran.</p> <p>OTHER SPECIMENS EXAMINED. — Verbascum hervieri Degen., Spain: Le Pozo, 1500 m, 1905, Elisée Reverchon 1375 (P[P03803835, P03803836, P03803837, P03803838], images!).</p> <p>Verbascum microcarpum Benth., Mesopotamia: 1837, Aucher-Eloy 2458 (P[P03287023], image!).</p> <p>Verbascum punalense Boiss. &amp; Buhse, Iran: Tonekabon, 1085 m, 2012, Arash Sotoodeh 43467 (TUH!); Tonekabon, 250 m, 2012, Arash Sotoodeh 43464 (TUH!); Gilan, 1893, Punal Buhse – no number (K!); Mazandaran, Kujur, 1800 m, 1948, Rechinger 6543 (BM!).</p> <p>Verbascum shahsavarensis Sotoodeh, Attar &amp; Civeyrel, Iran: <a href="http://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=50.85361&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=36.46639" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 50.85361/lat 36.46639)">Tonekabon</a> (Shahsavar), road of Sehezar, 36°27’59”N, 50°51’13”E, 1570 m, 30.VI.2014, Arash Sotoodeh et al. AS 29 (holo-, TUH!; iso-, P[P04021689]!, K).</p> <p>Verbascum siculum Tod. Ex Lojac., Italy: Bosco Bauli Siracusa, 1976, Brullo 057058 (CAT, image!).</p> <p>Verbascum spectabile M. Bieb., Turkey: Giresum-Susehri, 1700 m, 1977, Max Nydegger 12948 (P[P03836032], image!); Tauria, 1875, no number (P[P03416378, P03416379], image!).</p> <p>Verbascum subnivale Boiss. &amp; Hausskn. ex Boiss., Turkey: Montis Berytdagh, 9000 ped, 1865, Haussknecht – no number (iso-, JE[JE00007237], P[P03287723], image!)</p> <p>Verbascum virgatum Stokes, India: Nilgiri, 1885, Beddome 5631 (BM!). — France. Rennes, Legris (P[P00700061], image!); Cognacle-Froid, 7.VIII.1954, H.Bouby 3190 (P[P00687503], image!). — Spain. Huelva Galarosa, 28.V.1931, E. Gros (P[P03986576], image!). Verbascum wiedemannianum Fisch. &amp; C.A.May:—Turkey. Karasar-</p> <p>Gecidi, 1650 m, 6.VI.1987, Nydegger 42651 (P [P03807346], image!); Merzifoun, 1891/92, Manissadjian 182 (P [P03287104, P03287105], images!); Paphlagonia, Wilajet KastambuliTossia Seke, Sintenis 4010 (P [P03287101, P03287103, P03287106], images!); Arac-Kastamonu, 1985, Norman 7 (K!); SE of Bayburt, 1150m, 1965, Mathew &amp; Tomlinson 4340 (K!); Keyseri-Bonyan, 1954, Davis 21793 (K!).</p> <p>DESCRIPTION</p> <p>Plant, probably biennial, covered by sparse gray stellate and glandular hairs on basal parts and mostly glandular on</p> <p>34941 AS 29 34941 10663 43465 29 AS 34941 10663 43465 A 43467</p> <p>.</p> <p>parsana</p> <p>V</p> <p>shahsavarensis punalense. V V punalense. punalense V. shahsavarensis parsana. V V. punalense. V punalense V punalense.</p> <p>..</p> <p>V V</p> <p>inflorescence region. Stem up to 60 cm long, terete. Basal leaves oblong-elliptic, semi-crenate at margin, with up to 5 cm long petiole, tapering toward apex, 5-8 × 2-3 cm; cauline leaves are similar to basal ones but smaller, not decurrent. Inflorescence paniculiform, lax; flowers single at the axil of each bract; bracts linear-acuminate; bracteoles absent; pedicel up to 8 mm long (Fig. 1B, C), covered with stellate and glandular hairs; calyx 4-6 mm long, divided, with elliptic segments (Fig. 1B, C); corolla yellow, 15 mm in diam (Fig. 1D), densely stellate and glandular hairy outside; stamens 5; hairs of filaments violet; 2 anterior stamens naked from the top to ¾ (blue arrows Fig. 1E), only the last quarter of the filaments close to the corolla hairy (Fig. 1E); anthers reniform, 4-5 mm long; stigma 4-5 mm (Fig. 1D). Capsule elliptic-obtuse, 5-7 mm long, covered with dense stellate and glandular hairs (Fig. 1C).</p> <p>DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION</p> <p>The new species described as V. parsana sp. nov. has a combination of characters that is uncommon within the genus Verbascum. Only a few species have both stellate and glandular hairs together such as V. punalense and V. sinuatum L. var. adenosepalum Murb.. If we consider the combination of characteristics: ebracteolate and single flowers, violet hairs on filaments, pedicel size between 3 to 10 mm and stellateglandular indumentum, the new species is closely related to V. punalense but cannot be mistaken with it because it has no decurrent anthers, the basal leaves are narrow, the corolla is smaller, its calyx lobes are acute and have sparse glandular-stellate hairs (Table 1).</p> <p>Based on Murbeck (1933), the new species belongs to the subsection II, Singuliflora, and to the group ebracteolata. Seven species have been described in this section. But they all differ from V. parsana sp. nov.</p> <p>There is no species looking like this new species in any of the recent floras published since then (Ferguson 1972; Feinbrun-Dothan 1978; Huber-Morath 1978; Huber- Morath 1981; Fedtschenko 1997; Ibn Tattou 2007; Benedi 2009; Sharifnia 2011).</p> <p>The phylogenetic dendrograms constructed using distance method on molecular data and on morphological data, confirm the difference of our new species with V. punalense and V. shahsavarensis on both analyses (Fig. 3).</p> </div>	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/462A87AEFF95FF9ACD11FDA8FA82F9CD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Sotoodeh, Arash;Attar, Farideh;Civeyrel, Laure	Sotoodeh, Arash, Attar, Farideh, Civeyrel, Laure (2016): A new species of Verbascum L. (Scrophulariaceae) from the Gilan province (Iran), based on morphological and molecular evidences. Adansonia 38 (1): 127-132, DOI: 10.5252/a2016n1a9
462A87AEFF90FF9DCEAFFF6BFE49FE51.text	462A87AEFF90FF9DCEAFFF6BFE49FE51.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Verbascum	<div><p>Verbascum: http://www.verbascum.org</p> <p>International Plant Names Index (INPI):http://www.ipni.org The plant list: http://www.theplantlist.org</p> <p>Flora of Iran: http://www.flora-iran.com</p> <p>(last consultation 7th April, 2016).</p></div> 	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/462A87AEFF90FF9DCEAFFF6BFE49FE51	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Sotoodeh, Arash;Attar, Farideh;Civeyrel, Laure	Sotoodeh, Arash, Attar, Farideh, Civeyrel, Laure (2016): A new species of Verbascum L. (Scrophulariaceae) from the Gilan province (Iran), based on morphological and molecular evidences. Adansonia 38 (1): 127-132, DOI: 10.5252/a2016n1a9
