The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka

The Daffodil Orchid, Ipsea speciosa, is a rare endemic terrestrial orchid species found in the highland grasslands of Sri Lanka. Due to the restricted distribution range, this species is considered as an endangered taxon. This study aimed to assess the present state of I. speciosa populations outsid...

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Autores principales: Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya, Liyanage, M. G. S., Karunarathne, H. K. B. M. I., Abeyweera, N. H. A. S., Kulasinghe, B. Y. M., Kahawandala, K. R. S. C. B.
Formato: Online
Idioma:eng
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 2020
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/41434
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author Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya
Liyanage, M. G. S.
Karunarathne, H. K. B. M. I.
Abeyweera, N. H. A. S.
Kulasinghe, B. Y. M.
Kahawandala, K. R. S. C. B.
spellingShingle Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya
Liyanage, M. G. S.
Karunarathne, H. K. B. M. I.
Abeyweera, N. H. A. S.
Kulasinghe, B. Y. M.
Kahawandala, K. R. S. C. B.
The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
author_facet Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya
Liyanage, M. G. S.
Karunarathne, H. K. B. M. I.
Abeyweera, N. H. A. S.
Kulasinghe, B. Y. M.
Kahawandala, K. R. S. C. B.
author_sort Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya
description The Daffodil Orchid, Ipsea speciosa, is a rare endemic terrestrial orchid species found in the highland grasslands of Sri Lanka. Due to the restricted distribution range, this species is considered as an endangered taxon. This study aimed to assess the present state of I. speciosa populations outside of protected areas. During field investigations of nine selected grasslands, the abundance of I speciosa and accompanying plant species composition was determined. The abundance of I. speciosa varied from 2 to 23 flowering plants per site. Species composition in study sites consisted of 41 plant taxa that included 12 invasive species. Habitat deterioration, intentional burning, clearing of vegetation, and spread of invasive alien plant species were found to be the most significant threats to highland grasslands and the orchid. During the survey, we observed the rapid spreading of invasive species in most of the sites which suggests that the terrestrial orchid population could shrink further. Apart from intentional burning, other serious threats to the orchids are various anthropogenic activities such as illegal collection for medicinal purposes and establishing timber plantations that negatively impact native grassland flora including terrestrial orchids. Our results suggest that a continuous monitoring program for I. speciosa should be initiated. Additionally, monitoring of potentially adverse anthropogenic activities is considered to be vital for the conservation of valuable grasslands and native flora of Sri Lanka. Key worDS: Epidendroideae, grasslands, invasive species, native flora, terrestrial orchids, threatened species
title The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
title_short The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
title_full The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
title_fullStr The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
title_sort endangered daffodil orchid ipsea speciosa (orchidaceae): population status in unprotected areas in the central highlands, sri lanka
title_alt The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2020
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/41434
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spelling LANKESTERIANA414342022-08-26T18:34:44Z The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka The endangered Daffodil Orchid Ipsea speciosa (Orchidaceae): Population status in unprotected areas in the Central Highlands, Sri Lanka Kottawa-Arachchi, J. Dananjaya Liyanage, M. G. S. Karunarathne, H. K. B. M. I. Abeyweera, N. H. A. S. Kulasinghe, B. Y. M. Kahawandala, K. R. S. C. B. The Daffodil Orchid, Ipsea speciosa, is a rare endemic terrestrial orchid species found in the highland grasslands of Sri Lanka. Due to the restricted distribution range, this species is considered as an endangered taxon. This study aimed to assess the present state of I. speciosa populations outside of protected areas. During field investigations of nine selected grasslands, the abundance of I speciosa and accompanying plant species composition was determined. The abundance of I. speciosa varied from 2 to 23 flowering plants per site. Species composition in study sites consisted of 41 plant taxa that included 12 invasive species. Habitat deterioration, intentional burning, clearing of vegetation, and spread of invasive alien plant species were found to be the most significant threats to highland grasslands and the orchid. During the survey, we observed the rapid spreading of invasive species in most of the sites which suggests that the terrestrial orchid population could shrink further. Apart from intentional burning, other serious threats to the orchids are various anthropogenic activities such as illegal collection for medicinal purposes and establishing timber plantations that negatively impact native grassland flora including terrestrial orchids. Our results suggest that a continuous monitoring program for I. speciosa should be initiated. Additionally, monitoring of potentially adverse anthropogenic activities is considered to be vital for the conservation of valuable grasslands and native flora of Sri Lanka. Key worDS: Epidendroideae, grasslands, invasive species, native flora, terrestrial orchids, threatened species The Daffodil Orchid, Ipsea speciosa, is a rare endemic terrestrial orchid species found in the highland grasslands of Sri Lanka. Due to the restricted distribution range, this species is considered as an endangered taxon. This study aimed to assess the present state of I. speciosa populations outside of protected areas. During field investigations of nine selected grasslands, the abundance of I speciosa and accompanying plant species composition was determined. The abundance of I. speciosa varied from 2 to 23 flowering plants per site. Species composition in study sites consisted of 41 plant taxa that included 12 invasive species. Habitat deterioration, intentional burning, clearing of vegetation, and spread of invasive alien plant species were found to be the most significant threats to highland grasslands and the orchid. During the survey, we observed the rapid spreading of invasive species in most of the sites which suggests that the terrestrial orchid population could shrink further. Apart from intentional burning, other serious threats to the orchids are various anthropogenic activities such as illegal collection for medicinal purposes and establishing timber plantations that negatively impact native grassland flora including terrestrial orchids. Our results suggest that a continuous monitoring program for I. speciosa should be initiated. Additionally, monitoring of potentially adverse anthropogenic activities is considered to be vital for the conservation of valuable grasslands and native flora of Sri Lanka. Key worDS: Epidendroideae, grasslands, invasive species, native flora, terrestrial orchids, threatened species Universidad de Costa Rica 2020-04-18 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/41434 10.15517/lank.v20i1.41434 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2020: Lankesteriana: Volumen 20, Número 1 (January–April); 79–90 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2020: Lankesteriana: Volumen 20, Número 1 (Enero–Abril); 79–90 2215-2067 1409-3871 eng https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/41434/41895 Copyright (c) 2020 Lankester Botanical Garden, University of Costa Rica