Peperomia tenuipeduncula

Peperomia trianae is a species of epiphyte in the genus Peperomia. Its Conservation Status is Not Threatened.

Description
The first specimens where collected at 750 metres elevation on Antahuacana.

Peperomia tenuipeduncula is filiform clusters adorn the stem and branches of the ternis-quaternae plant; the leaves are shortly petiolate, with a limb from the base that is acute, elliptic-obovate tip rounded or at least obtuse, and three veins; the petiole is densely hairy, while the above is glabrous. The terminal peduncle is hairy, exceeding the petiole multiple times, followed by a glabrous spike several times beyond the filiform densiflora leaf; the bracts are pelta, elliptic crenulate above the pedicellate centre, the anthers are tiny, the ovary emerges ovate-oblong, and the summon tip is stigmatiferous, while the stigma is glabrous.

It is a creeper plant. internodes 2.5 cm long, stem 0.5 mm thick. spiky branches around 20 centimetres long with a spicy tip. Dry membranous punctulate limbs measure 2.5 centimetres in length. Bracts are 0.5 millimetres long, flowering spikes are around 7 centimetres long, and they are 0.5 millimetres thick.

Taxonomy and naming
It was described in 1914 by Casimir de Candolle in "Repertorium Specierum Novarum Regni Vegetabilis.", from collected specimens by Otto August Buchtien in 1909. It gets its name from Tenui + peduncula, which means Thin stalk.

Distribution and habitat
It is endemic to Bolivia. It grows on epiphyte environment and is a vine.