Wiki/Nepenthes/Nepenthes calcicola

Nepenthes calcicola

lowlandintermediate Wikipedia
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About

A notable endemic species, *Nepenthes calcicola* is distinguished from related species by its unique growth habit, featuring rosettes of leaves and erect, sometimes half-buried pitchers. It is found exclusively on limestone karsts in Papua New Guinea.

Field notes

Morphology

The species has a stem that grows beneath the leaf litter, forming rosettes of leaves that produce erect pitchers sometimes half-buried in the litter. It also features a much shorter stem, a terete and recurved spur, and a female inflorescence peduncle measuring 160–190 mm by 3–4 mm, with obovate to broadly obovate tepals.

Distribution & habitat

Endemic to the limestone karsts on the tributary of Purari River, the Mua River, located in the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea, at an elevation of 250–270 meters.

Ecology

The species traps various invertebrates, including species of ants, cockroaches, snails and slugs, and katydids, within its terrestrial and intermediate pitchers. It prefers humus-rich clay loam soil with a well-developed leaf litter layer up to 20 cm deep.

History & etymology

The specific epithet refers to the calcareous habitat in which the species grows.

Conservation

Assessed as Vulnerable by IUCN criteria, with populations known only from two sites, 1 km apart, containing fewer than 1000 individuals.

Habitat

Altitude
250–270 m
Altitude Class
lowland
Native To
Papua New Guinea
IUCN Status
Vulnerable

Taxonomy

Described
2023
Authority
Gary W.Wilson, S.Venter & Damas

Cultivation

Difficulty
intermediate

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