Five new species of Huberia (Melastomataceae) from the eastern Brazilian mountainsAuthorBochorny, Thuane0000-0003-4278-4520Instituto de Pesquisas Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilAuthorGonella, Paulo M.0000-0001-8332-5326Universidade Estadual Paulista – UNESP, Faculdade de Ciências, Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Bauru, São Paulo, BrazilAuthorGonçalves, Lucas N.Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Instituto de Biologia, Campinas, São Paulo, BrazilAuthorVöltz, Rafael R.0000-0001-8084-4251Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Instituto de Biologia, Campinas, São Paulo, BrazilAuthorGoldenberg, Renato0000-0002-7047-6720Universidade Federal do Paraná, Departamento de Botânica, Curitiba, Paraná, BraziltextPlant Ecology and Evolution20252025-01-2215812342journal article10.5091/plecevo.1343753.Huberia mayarae
Bochorny & R. Goldenb.
sp. nov.Figs 3
,
6
,
7Type
.
BRAZIL
–
Minas Gerais
• Marmelópolis,
Pico dos Marins
;
22 ° 29 ’ 47.68 ” S
,
45 ° 7 ’ 38.33 ” W
;
2100 m
;
28 Nov. 2020
;
Gonçalves
L
.
N
. 635
;
holotype
:
UPCB
;
isotype
:
RB
.
Photos of
Huberia mayarae
in the field (by Lucas N. Gonçalves).
A
. Frontal view of a flower.
B
. Detail of the stamens and style.
C
. Fruits.
D
. Habit.
E
. Leaf (adaxial view).
F
. Habitat.
G
. Branch with an inflorescence.
Diagnosis.Huberia mayarae
differs from
Huberia organensis
(Saldanha & Cogn.) Bochorny & R. Goldenb.
due to the leaves with a rounded apex, subcordate base, and adaxial and abaxial surfaces glabrous (vs an acute apex, obtuse or rounded base, and abaxial surface covered with dendritic trichomes), 5–6 - merous flowers, on pedicels
5–10 mm
long (vs 6 - merous, on pedicels
2–3.5 mm
long); hypanthium 4–7 ×
3.5–5 mm
, densely covered with stalked glands (vs 2–3 ×
2–3.5 mm
, glabrous); sepals ca 1 ×
0.5 mm
, ciliolate margin (vs 0.3–0.5 × ca
0.2 mm
, not ciliolate); petals with an apiculate apex (vs not apiculate).
Images from the holotype of
Huberia mayarae
(
Gonçalves L. N. 635
, UPCB).
A
. Branch with inflorescences.
B
. Detail of the stem indumentum.
C
. Leaf (adaxial surface).
D
. Leaf (abaxial surface).
E
,
F
. Detail of the leaf glabrous surfaces.
G
. Detail of the leaf margin.
H
. Flower.
I
. Flower bud.
J
. Petal (adaxial surface).
K
,
L
. Stamens.
M
. Style.
N
. Fruit.
Description.Shrubs0.2–0.5 m
tall; branches, petioles, inflorescences, bracts, and bracteoles densely covered with both short and stalked glands (these up to
2 mm
long, the heads sometimes caducous).
Branches
terete, striate.
Leaves
opposite; petiole
0.4–1.7 cm
long; blade 2.3–5 ×
1.6–3 cm
, ovate or broadly elliptic, apex acute, base subcordate, margin serrulate and eciliolate, papyraceous, adaxial and abaxial surfaces glabrous, acrodromous veins 3, with an additional faint submarginal pair, basal, main veins impressed adaxially and raised abaxially, transverse veins and reticulation visible on both surfaces.
Inflorescences
thyrsoids or compound dichasia
4.5–6 cm
long, terminal, with 10 flowers; bracts two, persistent, leafy, petiole ca
6 mm
long, blade ca 30 ×
15 mm
, ovate or broadly elliptic; bracteoles two, persistent, ca
1 mm
long, ovate.
Flowers
5–6 - merous, on pedicels
5–10 mm
long.
Hypanthium
4–7 ×
3.5–5 mm
, campanulate, densely covered with stalked glands
0.5–1 mm
long; torus glabrous.
Calyx
tube
0.5–1 mm
long, densely covered with stalked glands ca
1 mm
long; sepals ca 1 ×
0.5 mm
, triangular, apex apiculate, margin ciliolate ca
0.5 mm
long (the purple cilia sometimes caducous); external teeth absent.
Petals
7.5–15 ×
4.5–7 mm
, white, obovate and asymmetric, apex acuminate and apiculate, margin entire, adaxial and abaxial surfaces glabrous.
Stamens
10–12, subisomorphic, glabrous; filaments
8.5–10.5 mm
long (antesepalous) or
8.5–9.5 mm
long (antepetalous), greenish; connective not prolonged below the thecae, dorsal appendages ca
3 mm
long, yellow, linear-subulate; anthers
4–4.5 mm
long in both cycles, yellow, oblong-linear, the thecae prolonged up to
0.2 mm
below the insertion of the filament, with a single, apical (but ventrally inclined) pore.
Ovary
ca
3 mm
long, 2 / 3 basally adhered to the hypanthium, 4 - locular, apex without lobes, glabrous; style ca
9.5 mm
long, slightly curved or sigmoidal, glabrous.
Capsules
ca 8.5 ×
6.5 mm
, the carpels exceeding the hypanthium length by ca
1 mm
; seeds not seen.
Distribution and habitat.Huberia mayarae
has been found growing in small crevices or directly on the surface of rock walls near the summit of the Pico dos Marins, in the Serra da Mantiqueira mountains, located on the border between the states of
Minas Gerais
,
Rio de Janeiro
, and
São Paulo
(Fig.
3 C
). The plants were collected at
2100 m
elevation (while the summit is at
2420 m
), right on the border between
Minas Gerais
and
São Paulo
but just a few meters on the
Minas Gerais
side. It also occurs in
São Paulo
(Lucas
N
. Gonçalves pers. obs.), but it has not been collected there. The rock outcrops are surrounded by Montane Atlantic Rainforest (Fig.
3 A
).
Phenology.Collected with flowers and fruits in November.Etymology.
The epithet honours the botanist Dr Mayara Krasinski Caddah, now at Universidade Federal de
Santa Catarina
. Dr Caddah has contributed to the knowledge of
Melastomataceae
in
Brazil
, mostly on taxonomy, morphology, and phylogeny of
Miconia
Ruiz & Pav.
in the Brazilian Amazon and the Atlantic Forest.
Preliminary
IUCN
conservation assessment.
Data Deficient:
DD
.
Huberia mayarae
has an
AOO
of
4 km2
(
EOO
cannot be calculated as there are only two records) and was only recorded outside the Monumento Natural Estadual da Mantiqueira Paulista, a full protection conservation area. Despite the restricted range, no threat was observed affecting the known population of the species. The region is visited by many tourists yearly, yet the plants were observed away from the trail. Given the lack of information on population size and uncertainty about its entire distribution, we preliminarily assess this species as Data Deficient.
Additional material studied (
paratype
).
BRAZIL
–
Minas Gerais
• Marmelópolis,
Pico dos Marins
, 2 ° maciço;
22 ° 29 ’ 48 ” S
,
45 ° 07 ’ 44 ” W
;
2100 m
;
19 Oct. 2020
;
Gonçalves
L
.
N
. 472
;
CESJ
.
Notes.Huberia mayarae
is morphologically similar to
H. organensis
since both have papyraceous leaves, thyrsoids
4.5–6 cm
long, petals with both surfaces glabrous, and glabrous torus. Apart from the differences pointed out in the diagnosis, the trichomes are dendritic in
H. organensis
, while the stalked glands in
H. mayarae
are unbranched, larger (both short and stalked glands, these up to
2 mm
long), with globular gland heads (the heads sometimes caducous).
Huberia organensis
occurs at Reserva Biológica de Araras, in Petrópolis,
Rio de Janeiro
, which is about
200 km
in a straight line from where
H. mayarae
was collected.
Huberia mayarae
is also similar to
H. rubricalyx
. For a comparative overview, see Table
2
.