Wiki/Nepenthes/Nepenthes abgracilis

Nepenthes abgracilis

intermediateintermediate Wikipedia

Andrew Brown · CC BY 3.0

About

A striking climbing plant, *Nepenthes abgracilis*, is notable for its large, subcylindrical upper pitchers and its restricted range to Mindanao. It is part of the informal 'N. micramphora group' and is easily distinguished from related species by the size and shape of its traps.

Field notes

Morphology

The climbing stems are terete, wingless, and 6–7 mm in diameter. Leaves are coriaceous, narrowly oblanceolate-oblong, measuring up to 29 by 3.1 cm, and clasp the stem for three-quarters to four-fifths of its circumference. Upper pitchers are subcylindrical, measuring about 16.4 cm in height by 5.5 cm in width, with a distinct, slightly lobed peristome (2.5–4 mm in diameter) and an ovate-elliptic operculum (5.2 cm by 4 cm).

Distribution & habitat

Known only from the former Surigao Province on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines, specifically at altitudes around 670 m above sea level. It is said to grow on forested submontane ridges, likely over ultramafic substrates.

History & etymology

Formally described by Martin Cheek and Matthew Jebb on 6 December 2013. The specific epithet abgracilis is derived from 'gracilis', referring to an early identification of a herbarium specimen as *N. gracilis*.

Conservation

Informally assessed as Critically Endangered due to its known occurrence from a single locality. Potential threats include mining activity for metal ore in the region.

Habitat

Altitude
670–670 m
Altitude Class
intermediate
Native To
Philippines, Mindanao
IUCN Status
Critically Endangered

Taxonomy

Described
2013
Authority
Jebb & Cheek

Cultivation

Difficulty
intermediate

You don't own any Nepenthes abgracilis yet.

Crossed Nepenthes abgracilis with another species?

Register the cross — if it's not yet documented you'll be the first contributor. If someone already registered it, you'll be redirected to add your photo.