Peperomia gleicheniiformis

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Peperomia gleicheniiformis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Magnoliids
Order: Piperales
Family: Piperaceae
Genus: Peperomia
Species:
P. gleicheniiformis
Binomial name
Peperomia gleicheniiformis

Peperomia gleicheniiformis is a species of epiphyte in the genus Peperomia that is native to Costa Rica, Panama, and Colombia.[1][2] It grows on wet tropical biomes.[1] Its conservation status is Threatened.[3]

The type specimen were collected near Huancabamba, Peru.[4]

Peperomia gleicheniiformis is a small, essentially glabrous, stoloniferous herb. The stems are geniculate-flexuous, quickly becoming divaricately forking in a spreading pattern, and are barely 1 mm thick. The alternate leaves are either elliptic, measuring 10 mm long and 5 mm wide, or narrowly lanceolate, reaching 20 mm long and 8 mm wide. They are acute at both ends, 3-nerved, and firm when dry. The petiole is 2–3 mm long. The terminal spikes are 25 mm long and 1 mm thick, with conical pseudopedicels, and are borne on a slender peduncle 5 mm long. The berries are subglobose with an oblique stigma.[4]

Taxonomy and naming

It was described in 1936 by William Trelease in Publications of the Field Museum of Natural History, Botanical Series 13 [es], from specimens collected by Alexander F. Skutch.[5] The epithet gleicheniiformis means "having the form of Gleichenia", referring to the plant's resemblance to these ferns in its slender, repeatedly forking stems.[4]

Distribution and habitat

Conservation

References

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