Zamia cunaria


Zamia cunaria is a species of plant in the family Zamiaceae. It is endemic to the area of Comarca Guna Yala, Panama.

Etymology

The epithet cunaria refers to the Guna people, who make necklaces from the seeds of the plant, and in whose territory the species is endemic. The Guna call the plant obset.

Description

Zamia cunaria was described in 1993 by Dennis Stevenson based on a type found in 1989 in Guna Yala, Panama.
The stem of Zamia cunaria is subterranean, sub-globose, and up to in diameter. There is usually one, but sometimes up to three, compound leaves on the stem apex. The leaves are long, with a long petiole. The petiole is sparsely to densely covered by prickles. There are three to twelve pairs of leaflets on the rachis of the leaf. The leaflets are lanceolate or oblanceolate, wedge-shaped at the base and tapering to a point. The edges are toothed on the outer third of the leaflets. Larger leaflets are long and wide.
Like all cycads, Zamia cunaria is dioecious, with individual plants being either male or female. Male strobili are cream to tan in color, cylindrical to ovoid-cylindrical in shape, long and in diameter, standing on a peduncle tall. Female strobili are wine-red to dark red-brown in color, ovoid to ovoid-cylindrical in shape, long and in diameter. Seeds are pink to light-red, long and in diameter.

Distribution and habitat

Zamia cunaria usually is found on clay soils in secondary vegetation in hilly country between above sea level.

Karyology

Zamia cunaria plants have chromosome numbers of either 2n=23 or 2n=24. Similar to other Zamia species with high chromosome numbers, the chromosomes in Z. cunaria appear to be more fragile than those of species with a chromosome number of 2n=18. Caputo et al. suggest that odd chromosome numbers may result from Robertsonian translocation, from chromosome fusion or fission, or from crossover breeding between plants of the same species with different chromosome numbers.

Phylogeny

Caputo et al. placed Zamia cunaria in the Manicata clade in 1996, along with Z. manicata, Z. obliqua, and Z. iepetiensis. Later molecular phylogenic studies, however, have defined a Manicata clade which does not include Z. cunaria, Z. obliqua, or Z. iepetensis. Calonje et al. placed Z. cunaria, Z. iepetiensis, both endemic to Panama, and Z. pyrophylla, in South America, in a "Cunaria clade" that is part of the South American clade rather than the Isthmus clade. Lindstrom et al. placed Z. cunaria, Z. iepetiensis, Z. pyrophylla, and Z. paucifoliolata, also in South America, in a clade that is part of the West of the Andes clade.