Nepenthes viridis
Nepenthes viridis is a tropical pitcher plant endemic to the Philippines. It is known only from coastal areas at low altitude and has been recorded from Dinagat, Samar, and a number of surrounding islets. It is closely allied to the N. alata group of species.
The specific epithet viridis is Latin for "green" and refers to the plant's typical yellowish-green pitcher colouration, which is maintained irrespective of sun exposure.
Botanical History
Discovery
Nepenthes viridis was discovered in 2007 by Thomas Gronemeyer and Volker Heinrich. An account of this and other discoveries appeared in a 2008 issue of the German-language periodical, Das Taublatt, where the plant was treated as a green form of N. alata.The recognition of this taxon as a new species—under the placeholder name "Nepenthes species 2"—was announced online in September 2012, together with that of four other putative new species from Mindanao and surrounding areas. This followed field work by a team comprising Tobias Gieray, Thomas Gronemeyer, Marius Micheler, David Marwinski, and Andreas Wistuba, though only the last three studied N. viridis ''in situ'' that year.
Formal description
Nepenthes viridis was formally described in a 2013 issue of Das Taublatt, the magazine of the German carnivorous plant society, Gesellschaft für fleischfressende Pflanzen im deutschsprachigen Raum. Among the six describing authors were Marius Micheler, Thomas Gronemeyer, Andreas Wistuba, and David Marwinski, from Germany, and Wally Suarez and Victor B. Amoroso from the Philippines. The botanical description and subsequent discussion were in German and the diagnosis in English.The holotype was collected by Micheler and Wistuba on 23 August 2012 from Dinagat Island. The specimen is deposited at the Central Mindanao University Herbarium, Musuan, Bukidnon, the Philippines.
Prior use of name
Though this species was only scientifically described in 2013, the binomen Nepenthes viridis first appeared in print more than 150 years earlier. Johannes Elias Teijsmann used this name in 1859 to describe a cultivated plant of indeterminate identity, possibly N. mirabilis. Teijsmann's name is considered a nomen nudum and was therefore available for describing the present species.Description
Nepenthes viridis is a climbing plant growing to a height of around 4 m. The stem is roughly circular in cross section and in mature plants reaches 9 mm in diameter, with internodes up to 10 cm long.Leaves
Young plants have fimbriate laminae up to 10 cm long.Laminae borne on older rosette plants are lanceolate to elliptic and up to 25 cm long by 3.5–4 cm wide. They differ from those of younger plants in lacking fimbriae. One to two longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib. The laminar apex is acute. The petiole is canaliculate, semi-amplexicaul, and slightly decurrent down the stem. Tendrils reach 15 cm in length and bear numerous extrafloral nectaries.
The leaves of climbing stems are similar, but are separated by longer internodes. They are long and narrow, sometimes reaching almost three times the pitcher height, at least in plants from Samar.
Pitchers
In young plants with fimbriate leaves, the pitchers reach 10 cm in height. They have well-developed fringed wings up to 2 mm wide, which run the length of the pitcher cup and bear filaments 2–3 mm long. The peristome is up to 1–2 mm wide. The pitcher lid or operculum is almost perfectly round and reaches 1.5 cm in width. It has a basal keel about 1.5 mm wide.Rosette and lower pitchers are bulbous in the basal third, becoming cylindrical above and having a slight constriction in the middle. They are up to 16.5 cm high by 4 cm wide. The pitcher opening is up to 3 cm wide. The peristome is cylindrical and up to 5–7 mm wide. The fringed wings are restricted to the upper half of the pitcher cup, the lower parts being reduced to a pair of ribs. The fringe elements are spaced several millimetres apart and the longest are found in the upper third of the pitcher, near the peristome. The lid is round to slightly cordate. It is distinctly domed and has a diameter of up to 3.5 cm. On the underside of the lid, the basal keel is 7–8 mm long and 3 mm high. A branched spur 2–3 mm long is inserted near the base of the lid.
Upper pitchers are ovoid in the basal third and cylindrical above, expanding rapidly just below the peristome. They are similar in size to their terrestrial counterparts, reaching 18 cm in length by 2.4 cm in width. The peristome is cylindrical to slightly flattened and around 5 mm wide. It is often raised at the front, where it is notched or wavy. The pitcher opening is up to 3.6 cm in diameter. The wings are reduced to ribs and lack filaments altogether. The lid is oval to cordate and, as in lower pitchers, heavily domed. It measures around 3.8 by 3.2 cm and has a basal keel on its lower surface. The keel is similarly sized to that of lower pitchers: 7–8 mm long by 3 mm high. The spur is up to 4 mm long.
In the wild, both lower and upper pitchers are predominantly yellowish-green, even when growing exposed to direct sunlight, though in some plants the wing vestiges of the upper pitchers may be slightly reddish. The inner surface visible through the pitcher opening is near-white.
Inflorescence
Nepenthes viridis has a racemose inflorescence up to 60 cm long, of which the rachis constitutes up to 50 cm, the remainder being a short peduncle. The flowers are mostly borne on two-flowered partial peduncles, which are up to 2.5 cm long.Ecology
Distribution and habitat
Nepenthes viridis is endemic to the Philippines. It has been recorded from coastal areas of Dinagat and Samar, and from a number of surrounding micro-islands. Plants generally grow terrestrially on humic and rocky soils, often in direct sunlight.The tiny islets this species inhabits around Dinagat provide striking micro-habitats, often having near-vertical rock walls and highly vegetated tops. Here, N. viridis plants occasionally grow lithophytically, their roots anchored in fissures. Where present, surrounding vegetation provides support for the plants' scrambling vines, though these may overhang the sheer rock faces, dangling only a few metres from the water. Exposed to direct sunlight, the dark rock walls can get very hot, and during particularly dry periods any N. viridis plants in close proximity will largely wither, leaving only a few green shoots.