Hi, Singh ji,
It is not an isolated paper and recently published. It deals with our plant found in NW Himlayas and that too by authors who have worked in this area on Impatiens substantially. In due course, it will be reflected in Online databases.
I am reproducing relevant extracts from Studies of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) of Nepal 3. Impatiens scabrida and Allied Species Shinobu Akiyama1,* and Hideaki Ohba2
(Abstract: Impatiens tricornis (Balsaminaceae), often treated to be conspecific with I. scabrida, is distinguished by the shape of the lower sepal. After checking the type of I. scabrida it became clear that most of the plants referred to as I. scabrida, or I. cristata, are not true I. scabrida, but I. tricornis. Lectotypes for I. calycina and I. tricornis are designated)
1. Impatiens tricornis Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 26: t. 7 (1840). Hook. in Bot. Mag. 70: t. 4051 (1844).
Type: Illustration, t. 7 published in Bot. Reg. 26 (1840) (lectotype, designated here).
I. praetermissa Hook.f. in J. Linn. Soc. Bot. 37: 29 (1904). Type: Wallich s.n. (not found).
I. scabrida auct. non DC.: Wight, Icon. Pl. Ind. Orient. 2: t. 323 (1840). Hook.f., Fl. Brit. India 1: 472 (1875); in Rec. Bot. Srv. Ind. 4: 7 & 10 (1904). Hara in Fl. E. Him.: 196 (1966); 2nd rep.: 75 (1971); in Hara & Williams, Enum.
Flow. Pl. Nepal 2: 80 (1979). Polunin & Stainton, Flow. Himal.: 70 (1984). Akiyama et al. in Ohba & Malla, Him. Pl. 2: 83, fig. 16, Pl. 6 a–c (1991); in J. Jap. Bot. 67: 192 (1992).
I. cristata auct. non Wall.: Hook.f. in Rec. Bot.
Srv. Ind. 4: 7 & 10 (1904); 4: 22 (1905). Grey-Wilson in Grierson & Long, Fl. Bhutan 2: 92, fig.12a–c (1991).
Herbs, annual, erect, 30–80 cm tall, pubescent. Leaves alternate, evenly distributed along the stem, petiolate or nearly sessile in upper part of stem; petiole 5–25 mm long; blade herbaceous, broadly lanceolate to ovate or elliptic, 3–11.5 cm 1.5–4.3 cm, base attenuate, margin serrate to crenate-serrate, apex acuminate or acute, scabrid on both surfaces. Inflorescences axillary, with 1–3 (or 4) flowers. Peduncle 8–15 mm long. Pedicels 10–20 mm long with a bract at the middle. Bracts narrowly ovate to linear, 3–6 mm long, apex acute. Flowers pale yellow or yellow with reddish brown dots, 2.5–3 cm long, 3–3.5 cm deep. Lateral sepals 2, nearly round, ca. 10 mm long, with an awn at apex. Lower sepal pale yellow shaded with dull orange, bucciniform, (9–)15–18 mm long, (13–)20–25 mm deep (excluding the spur), abruptly constricted into incurved spur; spur curved, (8–)15–23 mm in overall length. Dorsal petal pale yellow, 12–15(–18) mm long,14–18(–24) mm wide when flattened, cucullate, dorsally with a keel-like crest; crest 3–5 mm high. Lateral united petals pale yellow, sometimes with brownish stripes, (18–)25–30 mm long; upper lobe oblong to ovate, (7–)13–15 mm long, (6–)7–10 mm wide, apex slightly retuse to truncate; lower lobe ovate to elliptic-ovate, (11–) 13–15(–17) mm long, (5–)6–8 mm wide, apex obtuse. Stamens 5, anthers without appendage. Fruit 3–4 cm long.
2. Impatiens scabrida DC., Prodr. 1: 687 (Jan. 1824). Holotype: Nepal [Napauliâ]. Wallich s.n. (G00218814). [Figs. 2, 4a, b] I. calycina Wall. in Roxb., Fl. Ind. 2: 463 (Mar.–June 1824). Type: Nepal. Chundrugiri [Chandragiri] [Chandaghiry on the label] Wallich [4769a], Aug. 1821 (designated here). [Figs. 4e, 5] I. cristata Wall. in Roxb., Fl. Ind. 2: 456 (Mar.–June 1824). Type: not designated. No authentic specimen is found.
Similar to I. tricornis but flowers smaller. Lower sepal navicular or infundibuliform, 9–12 mm long, 5.5–8 mm deep (excluding the spur), tapering into a long upwardly or downwardly curved spur; spur 17–25 mm in overall length.
Specimens examined: Known only from the types of I. scabrida and I. calycina.
Conclusions
It is clear that the shape of the lower sepal of I. scabrida sensu DC. is navicular and tapers into a spur. In I. cristata and I. calycina it is clear that the lower sepal also gradually tapers into a spur.
In contrast, the lower sepal of I. scabrida [sensu Hara (1979) and Akiyama et al. (1991, 1992)] is bucciniform to funnel-shaped and abruptly constricted into the spur, which corresponds with the features of I. tricornis and I. praetermissa. The shape of the lower sepal of I. hamiltoniana is still uncertain. The name I. tricornis should therefore be used for I. scabrida [sensu Hara (1979) and Akiyama et al. (1991, 1992)].