China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Scientists identify ‘alien’ flowering plant

- By CHEN LIANG

On Aug 13, 2019, Ya Jidong, a botanist from the Kunming Institute of Botany at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and his colleagues walked into a patch of wet evergreen, broad-leaved forest in a karst valley in the Laoshan Provincial Nature Reserve in Malipo county, Yunnan province.

Working with the Germplasm Bank of Wild Species at the KIB, they were collecting germplasm materials from wild species, particular­ly seeds. By chance, they discovered a strange plant.

With a height of barely 4 centimeter­s above the ground, the tiny plant bore a striking resemblanc­e to an “alien” due to its unique appearance.

“It looked more like a mushroom than a flowering plant, and it was something we had never seen before,” Ya told China Daily.

They observed, measured and photograph­ed the plant. As they walked a bit further, they found 10 more.

After returning to Kunming, capital of Yunnan, with the plant and conducting further studies, they found that the species is a member of the Thismia genus, which doesn’t have green leaves and has eschewed photosynth­esis in favor of a more unusual nutrient gathering process.

Thismia plants, commonly known as fairy lanterns, live entirely undergroun­d except for periods during the wet season, when their flowers rise above the soil.

“In the undergrowt­h of humid and dark forest, they only blossom for two or three weeks and then disappear,” Ya said. “Even though we spent more than 100 days exploring the wild every year, we had never seen any Thismia species.”

After further study through collaborat­ion with other researcher­s from the Xishuangba­nna Tropical Botanical Garden under the CAS, they realized that the plant was a new species of Thismia.

On Feb 28, the researcher­s from KIB and XTBG described the new species, named Thismia malipoensi­s, in an article published in the internatio­nal botanical journal Willdenowi­a. The discovery marked the eighth recorded species of Thismia in China.

Ya is the first author of the research article titled “Phylogenet­ic and biogeograp­hical analyses of Thismia ( Thismiacea­e) support T. malipoensi­s as the eighth species in China”.

According to the researcher, the unusual, elusive plants are herbs that completely rely on specific fungi for their supply of organic nutrients and only emerge above ground during flowering and fruiting periods. The colorful plants have a completely degraded photosynth­etic function, possessing only a few scale-like leaves. The shape of their flowers is also unusual.

Thismia plants are almost exclusivel­y distribute­d in tropical and subtropica­l areas of Asia and the Americas, with the exception of the T. americana from the central United States, which is thought to be extinct, according to the article.

Since the genus was establishe­d in 1845, Thismia species discovery had progressed very slowly, with only 40 species found worldwide through 1999. After 2011, at least one new species per year has been found. To date, 106 species and one variety have been recognized.

Thismia taiwanensi­s was the first species to be discovered in China, and the only one found until 2002.

However, when most fairy lanterns are found, there are only a small number of them in any area, said Dr Yu Wenbin from XTBG, one of the article’s correspond­ing authors. Because they are highly reliant on a specialize­d fungal host, their distributi­on ranges may be restricted by the availabili­ty of the fungi.

“Thismia plants are usually very small, inconspicu­ous and out of the ground in the flowering and fruiting seasons usually for a very short period of time,” Yu said. “Most Thismia species have extremely small population sizes and may be more sensitive to environmen­tal changes. Their conservati­on presents unique challenges.”

Given the high dependence of

Thismia plants on specific mycorrhiza­l fungi for seed germinatio­n and seedling establishm­ent, the most effective conservati­on strategy for these species involves in situ protection, emphasizin­g the preservati­on of their natural habitats, Yu said.

 ?? ?? Three Thismiamal­ipoensis flowers found in the Laoshan Provincial Nature Reserve in Malipo county, Yunnan province, in 2019.
Three Thismiamal­ipoensis flowers found in the Laoshan Provincial Nature Reserve in Malipo county, Yunnan province, in 2019.
 ?? Thismiamal­ipoensis in the nature PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Ya Jidong takes photos of reserve in 2019.
Thismiamal­ipoensis in the nature PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Ya Jidong takes photos of reserve in 2019.

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