Ribes contumazensis is a species of currant, named after Peruvian botanist Isidoro Sánchez Vega of Cajamarca.[1] It is completely glabrous apart from the stalked glands, differentiating it from R. colandina (same region).

Ribes contumazensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Grossulariaceae
Genus: Ribes
Species:
R. contumazensis
Binomial name
Ribes contumazensis
Weigend

Description edit

It is a dioecious shrub approximately 12 metres (39 ft) tall, its shoots and adaxial leaf surfaces covered with scattered stalked glands less than half a millimetre long. Its petiole is 1,015 millimetres (40.0 in) long and 1 millimetre (0.039 in) wide, with its stipules well differentiated, united with the petiole for 34 millimetres (1.3 in). Its adaxial surface is subglabrous, eglandular, while the abaxial surface has scattered stalked glands especially on its primary and secondary veins. Inflorescences are terminal on short lateral shoots (brachyblasts); racemes are pendent, and the peduncle is 510 millimetres (20 in) long, with scattered stalked glands. Flowers are narrowly cyathiform and a brownish yellow colour, covered with scattered glandular trichomes. The hypanthium is 12 millimetres (0.47 in) long; calyx lobes are ovate and acuminate.[1]

Distribution edit

Cajamarca Department.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Weigend, Maximiliam; Cano, Asunción; Rodríguez, Eric F. (August 2005). "New species and new records of the flora in Amotape-Huancabamba Zone: Endemics and biogeographic limits". Revista Peruana de Biología. 12 (2): 249–274.

External links edit