Nepenthes maximoides (Nepenthaceae) a new, critically endangered (possibly extinct) species in Sect. Alatae from Luzon, Philippines showing striking pitcher convergence with N. maxima (Sect. Regiae) of Indonesia

Nepenthes maximoides sp. nov. (Sect. Alatae) is described and assessed as Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) from Luzon, Philippines and appears unrecorded in 110 years. The spectacular, large, narrowly funnel-shaped upper pitchers, lids with recurved basal and filiform apical appendages, unlike any other species in the Philippines, closely resemble those of N. maxima (Sect. Regiae) of Sulawesi–New Guinea, likely due to convergent evolution. Following recent phylogenomic analysis, sect. Alatae is divided into two, Sect. Alatae sensu stricto of Luzon to Sibuyan (including N. maximoides), and Sect. Micramphorae, expanded and recircumscribed to encompass those species of the southern Visayas, and Mindanao. A key is provided to the six species now recognised in the newly narrowly recircumscribed Sect. Alatae. The number of Nepenthes species recorded from Luzon has increased from two in 2001, to eight in 2020, all but one of which are endemic to that island, and four of which appear to be point endemics.


INTRODUCTION
This paper is one in a series leading to a monograph of the genus Nepenthes building on a skeletal revision of the genus (Jebb & Cheek, 1997) and the account for Flora Malesiana (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). While in 2001 only 85 species were accepted for the genus, today the figure lies at 181 . In 2001 the geographic units with highest Nepenthes species diversity were Sumatra and Borneo, each with over 30 species, while just 12 species were recorded for the Philippines (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). However, since then the Philippines has dominated for discovery of new species. In 2013 alone, twelve new species were published from the Philippines (Cheek & Jebb, 2013a, 2013b, 2013c, 2013dMicheler et al., 2013), and new species continue to be added every year (Cheek & Jebb, 2014;Cheek, Tandang & Pelser, 2015;Gronemeyer et al., 2016; from Luzon when in fact the specimen appeared to be Nepenthes maxima Nees, a widespread and variable species occurring from Sulawesi to New Guinea but absent from Philippines (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). Nepenthes maxima is distinctive for its narrowly funnel-shaped upper pitchers, flattened peristome with undulate outer margin, large, ovate-elliptic lid, a usually hooked basal appendage and a filiform apical lid appendage (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). No known species in the Philippines remotely resembles it. Nepenthes maxima (Borneo-New Guinea) is placed in Sect. Regiae Danser which is entirely absent from Philippines (Cheek & Jebb, 2015). However, a second inspection of Curran s.n. showed that features of the stem and petiole, in contrast to the pitchers, are not those of sect. Regiae Danser (Danser, 1928), but instead are consistent with those of Sect. Alatae Jebb & Cheek, which as currently defined is endemic to the Philippines, occurring from Luzon to Mindanao (Cheek & Jebb, 2015). Curran s.n. has petioles with conspicuous, patent wings (T-shaped in transverse section) while those of Sect. Regiae are inconspicuous or erect (U-shaped in transverse section); the axillary buds are inconspicuous and the indumentum of stem and leaf-blades is absent or inconspicuous (in Sect. Regiae the axillary buds are conspicuous, several mm long, and spike-like; and the indumentum is robust, branched, brown and present at least at the stem apex). In Sect. Alatae moreover, the phyllotaxy is spiral and not, as in Regiae, distichous (Danser, 1928;Cheek & Jebb, 2015). It seems clear that Curran s.n. might have been correctly labelled as a Philippine species, after all.
In this article we key out Curran s.n., distinguishing it from all other species of Sect. Alatae in northern Philippines (Luzon and the northern Visayas) describing it as Nepenthes maximoides Cheek, diagnosing it from N. graciliflora which it had previously been identified as. We also compare it with N. copelandii Macfarl. of Mindanao which unusually also shares the narrowly funneliform upper pitcher shape. We present biographical notes on the collector and deduce the location of the geographic source of his collection, likely Mount Banahaw, and consider the likelihood of the extinction of this species. We consider the presence of terminal lid appendages in the genus and their homology; we also discuss morphological convergence with N. maxima. Finally, we discuss the division and new, narrow recircumscription of Sect. Alatae based on new phylogenomic data.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
The specimen on which this paper is centred is on loan from PH and was compared with material presently at K including that on loan from A, BISH, BRIT, CAS, GH, L, NY, US and that studied at BO by the second author.
The electronic version of this article in Portable Document Format (PDF) will represent a published work according to the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi and plants (ICN), and hence the new names contained in the electronic version are effectively published under that Code from the electronic edition alone. In addition, new names contained in this work which have been issued with identifiers by IPNI will eventually be made available to the Global Names Index. The IPNI LSIDs can be resolved and the associated information viewed through any standard web browser by appending the LSID contained in this publication to the prefix http://ipni.org/. The online version of this work is archived and available from the following digital repositories: PeerJ, PubMed Central, and CLOCKSS.
Herbarium citations follow Index Herbariorum (Thiers, 2020) and binomial authorities the International Plant Names Index (IPNI, 2020). The conservation assessment was made using the categories and criteria of IUCN (2012). Herbarium material was examined with a Leica Wild M8 dissecting binocular microscope fitted with an eyepiece graticule measuring in units of 0.025 mm at maximum magnification. The drawing was made with the same equipment using Leica 308700 camera lucida attachment. The specimen was partly unmounted to expose the characters needed to first identify and second characterise the species. It had originally been mounted with the lower surface of the lid face down, obscuring critical features. The map was made using SimpleMappr (https://www.simplemappr.net).
Information on the likely location of the collection was gathered by analysing other herbarium specimens collected by H.M. Curran recorded on JStor Global Plants (2020).  Fig. 1, Fig. 2 Differing from Nepenthes graciliflora Elmer in the upper pitchers narrowly infundibulate, widest in the distal half at the peristome (not ovoid-cylindric, widest in the proximal half), the peristome broad, flattened, and lobed on the outer edge (not narrowly cylindrical and entire on the outer edge), the lid with an asymmetrically hooked basal appendage and a filiform apical appendage (not symmetrical non-hooked, and absent, respectively). -Type: Curran s.n., Herb. Univ. Pennsylvania sheet number 70707, Academy of Natural Sciences Philadelphia sheet number 01113309 (holotype PH; isotype PNH destroyed, not seen), Philippines, Luzon, 'Tayabas Province' (deduced to be Mt Banahaw, Quezon Prov.) st. December 1911.
Etymology. Meaning that the species looks like Nepenthes maxima Nees (since it looks so similar to this species that it was confused with it).
Conservation-if our deduction is correct that the only known specimen of Nepenthes maximoides derives from Mt Banahaw (see "Discussion" below), then there is yet some hope that the species might yet have survived extinction since the mountain and its forest are regarded as sacred by the local population. It also has a high level of formal, government protection, designated as a 'Protected Landscape' since 2003. Nonetheless, although its formal protection has increased since it was designated as a forest reserve in 1921, upgraded to National Park in 1941, at each stage the area has been reducedprobably reflecting the steady clearance of its forest upslope for rice cultivation, which can be seen to this day on Google Earth (viewed Feb. 2020). Barcelona, Pelser & Cajano (2007) note that the area of Mount Banahaw has previously been affected by large-scale human disturbance, predominantly from pilgrims (it is a holy mountain), tourists and mountaineering groups. According to BirdLife International (2020), 300,000 pilgrims and hikers per annum visit the mountain, using four trails, resulting in habitat degradation. This activity which occurred for many years prior to Mount Banahaw becoming a protected landscape area in 2004, together with illegal logging, and quarrying at two sites (BirdLife International, 2020) may have significantly reduced the population of N. maximoides within this area. Should our deduction be incorrect and the location for N. maximoides be elsewhere in the province, the outlook for its survival is more negative. King and Cheek (2020) (2007) estimate extinction levels due to habitat destruction as between 9 and 28% in one representative, mainly forest genus, Psychotria L.
We here assess N. maximoides as Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct) CR B2ab(iii), since only a single location, represented by a single specimen, is known, with threats, namely habitat degradation and destruction as reported. The area of occupancy is designated as 4 km 2 to comply with IUCN (2012) directions. The threats referred to above are ongoing: even at Mt Banahaw a forest fire was recently reported to have destroyed 50 Ha of the mountain's forest (Ranada, 2014). While one can hope that this species is simply under collected and will be refound at Banahaw and other sites where the required habitat survives (as was the case in Mindanao with Nepenthes robcantleyi Cheek (2011)), this seem unlikely. Nepenthes are among the most charismatic plant groups in the Philippines and numerous citizen scientists and botanists have targeted them for study, resulting in numerous exciting new discoveries in the last two decades. Given this, it seems improbable that N. maximoides, the largest and most spectacular Nepenthes in Luzon, the most heavily populated island of the Philippines should not have been refound in 110 years if it actually survives. Should the species be refound, measures should be taken to determine the size of the population and the state of regeneration, and seed collected as a priority to enable mass in vitro propagation for the Nepenthes collector market in order to reduce the certain pressure of poaching that would otherwise result from rediscovery.

DISCUSSION
The top set of this collection was probably deposited at PNH but, with the entire herbarium, destroyed there with much of the city in February 1945 during the battle of Manila between the forces of Japan and USA (Scott, 2019). Studies of specimens either requested on loan from or studied during visits at USA herbaria known to have Philippine specimens, namely AA, BISH, BRIT, CAS, GH, NY, PH, US, have failed to find either additional duplicates, or additional collections of this species. Curran s.n. had been determined (undated) as Nepenthes alata Blanco by Macfarlane, the last monographer of the genus. He had a broad concept of this species and included within it N. graciliflora, and other species, which are now widely recognised (Macfarlane, 1908). Macfarlane's determination was adopted by Sutton in 1995. However, both those botanists seem to have only looked at this specimen superficially because the original mountings had remained in place. Because the pitchers are mounted face down, it is only by demounting the specimen that most of the diagnostic characters, such as the lid appendages, can be seen.
With the description in this paper of Nepenthes maximoides, the number of Nepenthes species accepted from Luzon has increased to eight, from two in 2001 (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). All but one of these species are endemic to that island, and four, including Nepenthes maximoides, appear to be point endemics on current evidence.
Within the Philippines, Nepenthes maximoides is most similar in pitcher shape to N. copelandii of Mt Apo, Mindanao. This is because both species have narrowly infundibulate upper pitchers, an unusual character in the Philippines. However, N. copelandii has dimorphic nectar glands on the lower surface of the lid, 2-flowered partial-peduncles and hairy stems (not monomorphic and glabrous respectively), also the basal lid appendage of the upper pitchers is only obtuse and is not hooked, and not asymmetric, nor is there an apical appendage. Finally, the peristome of the upper pitcher in N. copelandii is not flattened, and lobed on its outer edge as in N. maximoides, and the inner edge is minutely toothed, not with teeth inconspicuous as in N. maximoides.  (Cheek & Jebb, 1999). While his Palawan collections often had notes giving written descriptions of the specimens with altitudes and locations (e.g. Curran 3473) those collected in subsequent years tended to lack these details and to consist of only printed labels, often only with the province, month and year: as for the specimen of N. maximoides. However, sometimes the name of a mountain or settlement might be given. It is unusual that no Forest Bureau number is assigned to a specimen as in the case of this type specimen. We speculate that this might be because the specimen is sterile. Even today, in the 21st century, collecting sterile specimens for herbaria is often considered dubious practice and such specimens, collected because they excite interest in the collector, are often sadly left unnumbered (M. Cheek pers. obs. 1991Cheek pers. obs. -2020. Such sterile specimens are often collected only as unicates, when the collector might otherwise have a system of collecting large sets. This would help explain why only a single sheet is known of this specimen. However, in any case, Curran usually appeared to collect only small sets-inspection of the JStor Global Plants data (continuously updated), which details herbaria at which duplicates of type specimens collected by him are known, suggests it is rare that more than two duplicates are known of any of his specimens outside of the Philippines. Tayabas Province, given as location of the type specimen collected by Curran (no further details are given), has been renamed and divided into two: Aurora Province to the north, along the eastern coast of Luzon comprising the narrow coastal plain and the seaward edge of the N-S Sierra Madre range, and in the south Quezon Province-the S.E. corner of Luzon and an adjoining part of the Bicol Peninsula. We can only deduce where within this range the type specimen of N. maximoides might have been collected. We can be moderately certain that is was in forest on a mountain above 1000 m. alt., since all but one of the other seven species of Nepenthes on Luzon occur in such habitats (Cheek & Jebb, 2013a, 2013c, 2013dCheek, Tandang & Pelser, 2015). The exception is Nepenthes ultra Jebb & Cheek, restricted to ultramafic habitat just above sea-level (Cheek & Jebb, 2013h).
Eight mountains in Quezon and Aurora (former Tayabas) meet this specification (see Table 1, Fig. 3). Most of these (six of the eight) are clustered in two of four areas (Fig. 3). However, we contend that the most likely of these to have furnished the type specimen is the Mt Banahaw complex which apart from Mt Banahaw itself include the mountains of San Cristobal and Banahao de Lucuban.
Mt Banahaw is also spelled as Banhao, Banàhao, or as Banajao, and in the Spanish colonial period was known as as Monte de Majayjay or Monte San Cristobal. Of the 13  (2020), 12 are also from Mt Banahaw. Therefore, on the basis of the JStor data, Mt Banahaw is the only collection location in former Tayabas Province that was a Curran location where Nepenthes might have been expected to be found (above 1000 m alt.). There is no evidence that any other mountain in Tayabas Province where Nepenthes might be found was visited by Curran, although this is possible. Moreover, Mt Banahaw was clearly a target for Curran since he collected there also while in Laguna Province. On the balance of probability, it seems likely, though not certain that the type and only specimen of N. maximoides derives from Mt Banahaw.
At the time the specimen was collected in 1911, the then provincial capital, Tayabas, was still a major administrative centre, giving its name to the former province. It is situated on the SE slopes of Mount Banahaw. The possible reasons for H.M. Curran selecting Banahaw are that it would then have been (1)  (Global Volcano Program, 2020 continuously updated). Hot springs are present at several sites. The slopes of the mountain are completely forested apart from the lower altitudes which have largely been cleared from sea-level upwards to about 700 m alt. (see Conservation above). This complex contains c. 100 km 2 of forest above c. 500 m alt.
There is no checklist of the plant species, but trees above 10 cm diameter at breast height have been characterised from 25 20 m × 20 m plots placed along a transect from 700 m alt. to the summit, which recorded 455 stems and 92 species (Gascon et al., 2013). Rainfall varies from 2350-2400 mm p.a. on the NW slope to 4470 m p.a. on the NE slope spread evenly over the year with 262 rainy days p.a. (Gascon et al., 2013). Details of the history of the protected status of the mountain are given under conservation (above).
Currently it is part of the 10, 900 ha Mounts Banahaw-San Cristobal Protected Landscape.
In describing Rafflesia banahaw Barcelona, Pelser & Cajano which is now considered a synonym of R. philippensis Blanco (Barcelona et al., 2009), Barcelona, Pelser & Cajano (2007) document nine botanists who made collections at Mount Banahaw, some who visited on more than one occasion. To these can be added the collector Azaola who obtained at this location on 22 April 1840 original material of Rafflesia lagascae Blanco (Blanco, 1845;Pelser et al., 2013) and who appears to have been the first collector of plant specimens at Mount Banahaw. Additional to these ten, Van Steenis-Kruseman & Van Steenis (1950) also list: W. Kerr (1805), C. Wilkes (1842), N.J. Andersson (1853), A. Marche (1880) and E. Langlassé (1895) as having visited Mt. Banahaw. So, it might be that Kerr rather than Azaola was the first western botanist to collect on the mountain. In this paper we add Curran (see above). Mount Banahaw is therefore one of the most botanically visited of locations in the Philippines. However, it is possible that important parts of the mountain, with intact vegetation, have yet to be thoroughly surveyed for plant species, and perhaps Nepenthes maximoides might be found in one of these places.
To the best of our knowledge, no other Nepenthes species is known from Mt. Banahaw.

Recircumscription of Sect. Alatae
The Nepenthes alata group was first designated (Cheek & Jebb, 2013a) to include all species occurring from Luzon to Mindanao (excluding Palawan) excepting those of Sect. Insignes Danser, and also excluding the only Philippine non-endemic species, N. mirabilis (Lour.) Druce.
Subsequently the N. micramphora group was designated (Cheek & Jebb, 2013b) for three species from Mindanao that lacked key attributes of the N. alata group as then definedparticularly the basal lid appendage and a distinct petiole. These two groups were later formalised as Sect. Alatae Cheek & Jebb and Sect. Micramphorae Cheek & Jebb respectively (Cheek & Jebb, 2015).
However, a recent near-comprehensive species-level phylogenomic study of Nepenthes revealed that Sect. Alatae was not monophyletic . The northern Sect.
Alatae species, that is of Luzon and Sibuyan, are sister to the species of Palawan, previously not considered to be closely related. Unexpectedly, the southern Alatae species that is of the southern Visayas (Negros, Leyte and Mindanao (excluding N. graciliflora Elmer which extends from Luzon)), including the Micramphorae, are sister to the Palawan clade & the northern Alatae. The division of the northern from the southern Alatae revealed by phylogenomic analysis is supported by morphology as seen in the primary division in the most recent key to the group (Cheek & Jebb, 2014). The species of the north have monomorphic, uniformly small, moderately crater-like nectar glands evenly spread on the lower surface of the lid. In contrast, the species of the south usually have dimorphic glands in different size-classes and always have at least some glands very much larger than those seen in the northern species. While the northern species have 1-flowered partial-peduncles, those of the south have 2-flowered partial peduncles (where known).
The separation between the two redelimited sections can be summarised in key form as follows:  (Cheek & Jebb, 2001). Due to the shortly cylindrical pitchers, a broad peristome extending as a column to the lower lid surface and with blade-like peristome ridges it has similarities with species of the Palawan group. But it is embedded in the northern Alatae clade on phylogenomic data . This unexpected placement is morphologically supported by its lid nectar gland and inflorescence morphology: it has uniform, minute nectar glands on the lower surface of the lid and 1-flowered partial-peduncles.
Since the type species of Sect. Alatae is N. alata Blanco of Luzon, the northern species must retain this sectional name. The only available sectional name for the southern species of Sect. Alatae is Sect. Micramphorae, so this name must perforce now be adopted for the 'southern Alatae' which comprise the most species-diverse of the Nepenthes clades of the Philippines. A key to Sect. Alatae sensu stricto (as here recircumscribed), informally referred to as the 'northern Alatae' above, is presented in the results (above). It now consists of six species, all but one of which occur on Luzon, with N. graciliflora extending from Luzon to Mindanao, and N. armin being restricted to Sibuyan.
The apical lid appendage in Nepenthes Nepenthes maximoides is highly remarkable and among all the known species of the genus in the Philippines unique, in its filiform apical appendage (Fig. 2G). This structure also occurs in several species of sect. Regiae (Borneo to New Guinea), where it appears homologous-the appendage appears to be a continuation of the distal terminus of the midline of the lid. This midline is thickened, raised above the adjoining tissue as a low ridge, and appears to be highly vascularised. In Sect. Regiae the apical appendage often carries the largest nectar glands present on the lower surface of the lid (Cheek & Jebb, 2001), and is also often raised above the surface as a ridge for part of its length: see for example Nepenthes minima Cheek & Jebb (2016b) Lid appendages also occur in some species of sect. Montanae Danser, but these appear likely to be non-homologous, arising differently, as lobes from the midline far before its distal terminus for example N. lingulata Chi C. Lee, Hernawati & Akhriadi (2006).
The earliest clade in the most comprehensive phylogenetic tree of Nepenthes  in which an apical lid appendage is developed is in the Nepenthes danseri group, as seen in N. weda Cheek (Cheek, 2015). In this species all stages of the pitchers were available for study and there appears to be stage dependent heteromorphy of the distal lid appendage. In rosette pitchers the appendage is a transversely crescent-shaped ridge, while in upper pitchers it protrudes further from the surface and is more elaborate but not filiform (Cheek, 2015: 225). While potentially proto-filiform appendages such as these are unknown in Sect. Alatae as now delimited, they do occur in Sect. Micramphorae in N. robcantleyi Cheek (Cheek, 2011) and in N. tboli Cheek & Jebb (2014).

Convergence of pitcher morphology
The shared pitcher morphology of Nepenthes maximoides with that of Nepenthes maxima appears due to convergence, not due to phylogenetic proximity. Convergence of pitcher morphology is recorded in other cases in the genus (Thorogood, Bauer & Hiscock, 2018).
Recently, 12 functional pitcher types have been recognised, each postulated to target capture of nutrients from animals (sometimes plants) in a different manner . Nepenthes maxima and Nepenthes maximoides fall under pitcher type 2 ('narrow-funnel .

CONCLUSIONS
The dramatic rise in the numbers of Philippine species of Nepenthes in the 21st century (see "Introduction") is mirrored in other plant groups such as Rafflesia R.Br. (Rafflesiaceae). Before 2002 only two species of Rafflesia were thought to be known from the Philippines (subsequently two additional, long-overlooked species came to light), and, as in Nepenthes, the genus was thought to be most diverse in Borneo and Sumatra.
Intensive fieldwork in remaining patches of forest in the Philippines, however, has raised species numbers steadily from two species in 2002 to 13 species in 2019, and Philippines now is the most species-diverse country for Rafflesia globally (Barcelona, Pelser & Cajano, 2007;Barcelona et al., 2009;Pelser et al., 2013Pelser et al., , 2019. The number of flowering plant species known to science is disputed (Nic Lughadha, Bachman & Govaerts, 2017), but a reasonable estimate is 369,000 (Nic Lughadha et al., 2016), while the number of species described as new to science has been at about 2,000 per annum for at least 10 years . The conservation status of 21-26% of plant species has been established using evidence-based assessments, and 30-44% of these rate the species assessed as threatened, while only c. 5% of plant species have been assessed using the IUCN (2012) standard (Bachman, Nic Lughadha & Rivers, 2018).
Newly discovered species such as Nepenthes maximoides, are likely to be threatened, since widespread species tend to have been already discovered and it is the more localised, rarer species that remain to be found although there are exceptions such as Gouania longipedunculata Cahen, Stenn & Utteridge (2020) which is widespread. This makes it urgent to discover and protect such localised species before they become extinct due to habitat clearance as was the case with Nepenthes extincta Cheek & Jebb (2013a). However, it may be too late for Nepenthes maximoides, which may be extinct already, although efforts to rediscover it should be made in case not.