The majestic canopy-emergent genus Dinizia (Leguminosae: Caesalpinioideae), including a new species endemic to the Brazilian state of Espírito Santo
Author
G. P. Lewis
Author
G. S. Siqueira
Author
H. Banks
Author
A. Bruneau
text
Kew Bulletin
2017
2017-12-06
72
1
12
journal article
10.1007/S12225-017-9720-7
f0671b1e-4584-4ec1-9583-fae2d99e4e74
PMC6961463
32009686
1116817
Dinizia excelsa
Ducke
(1922: 76)
.
Type
:
Brazil
, Obidos, Serra do Curumú,
4 Jan. 1914
,
Ducke
s.n. (
lectotype
MG 153 04!, designated here), remaining
syntypes
:
Ducke
s.n. (MG nos. 1 5 7 7 4, 1 5 8 2 6, 1 5 9 8 9, 1 6 1 7 7, 17073).
A canopy emergent
tree
, (1 5 –) 3 0 – 6 0 m+, unarmed, trunk cylindrical, bole of larger specimens
1
5 – 22
.5 m, up to
3 m
in diam. at soil level, DBH (2 3 –) 8 0 cm –
2 m
, moderately to strongly buttressed, the buttresses to
4 – 5 m
tall (and these “continue off into the forest as raised, laterally compressed roots up to 8 0 cm high”,
Zarucchi et al.
2 9 3 6), crown spreading; bark smooth, white, breaking off in woody plates to reveal a light red-brown or brick-red under bark; heartwood brown to red, without streaks.
Stipules
subulate,
3 – 6 mm
long, caducous.
Leaves
bipinnate, eglandular, the petiole terete,
2 – 7.5 cm
long, the rachis (4 –) 6 – 2
8 cm
long, caniculate, puberulent; pinnae in 3 – 6 subopposite to strongly alternate pairs, or oddpinnate with one extra pinna on one side (i.e. total pinnae per leaf 7 to 1 1 (– 1 3)), the pinnae 6.5 – 1
2.5 cm
long, the rachis caniculate with raised ridges along each side of the channel, puberulent to pubescent;
leaflets
alternate, in 7 – 1 4 pairs per pinna, subsessile, oblong, subelliptic, to trapeziform, 12 – 25 ×
5 – 11 mm
, leaflet apex retuse to rounded, base truncate, inequilateral about the midvein, the lamina much broader on the distal side of the midvein base, the midvein otherwise subcentral to diagonal, secondary venation brochidodromous, but hardly visible, lamina discolorous, the upper surface darker, glabrous (except for a few hairs on the slightly immersed midvein) and nitid, the lower surface sparsely puberulent to glabrescent, including on the prominent midvein, the margins revolute, the pulvinule fleshy, cone-shaped, puberulent.
Inflorescence
a multi-branched, terminal compound raceme, its rachis puberulent; individual racemes over 150-flowered, the peduncle 3 – 15 (– 20) mm long, the rachis (8 –)
12.5 – 16 cm
long, the raceme 1 – 1.5 (– 2) cm wide in open flower;
flowers
mostly functionally male (the gynoecium supressed or lacking), fewer flowers in each individual raceme hermaphrodite, all flowers
4 – 5 mm
long (from base of pedicel to apex of petals), whitish green to greenish yellow, fragrant, short-pedicellate, the pedicel
0.5 – 1 mm
, a persistent to caducous, lanceolate, pubescent,
0.5 mm
bract at the base of each flower pedicel, bracteoles lacking, buds globose, the petals exposed early in development; the pedicel, hypanthium, calyx tube and its 5 equal, short, broadly triangular lobes all puberulent with white hairs, the lobe margins ciliate, the hypanthium and calyx tube together
1 – 1.25 mm
long; petals 5, free, imbricate, obovate to elliptic, lacking a distinct claw, slightly hooded to dorsally concave, 3 – 4 ×
2 – 2.25 mm
, sparsely hairy along a central vertical line on the dorsal surface, glabrescent, the margin sparsely to moderately ciliate.
Stamens
1 0, white, 3× petal length, the filaments
10 – 1
2
mm long, very shortly fused at their bases and attached as a ring to the rim of the hypanthium, anthers uniform, dorsifixed,
0.6 – 0.7 mm
, anther glands lacking, staminodes lacking.
Gynoecium
red, glabrous, the base short-stipitate, style terminating in a slightly flared (funnel-shaped) hollow stigma.
Fruit
wine-red coloured when fresh (
Simon et al.
1 4 5 2), laterally compressed, coriaceous, glabrous, indehiscent, 20.5 – 35 (including a
1.5 – 2 cm
stipe) ×
4.5 – 8.5 cm
, the sutures longitudinally wrinkled and appearing almost winged, the upper “wing” ±
1 cm
wide, 7 – 12-seeded.
Seeds
oblong to elliptic, sometimes slightly narrower in the middle, (10 –)14 – 15 ×
6 – 7 mm
, laterally compressed, black, hard (the texture of a pebble), the surfaces with a network of minute fracture lines, pleurogram absent, the apex narrowing to a terminal funicle attachment, <
1 mm
.
Pollen
in acalymmate tetrahedral tetrads with the individual grains 3- colporate, and ornamentation gemmate in the polar areas and clavate in mesocolpial areas (
Fig. 1C
). Root nodules lacking.
DISTRIBUTION
.
Guyana
,
Suriname
and Amazonian
Brazil
(in the northern and central-western states of
Amapá
,
Amazonas
,
Mato Grosso
,
Pará
,
Rondônia
,
Roraima
and
Tocantins
). Also recorded from the state of
Acre
by
Lorenzi (1992)
.
Map 1
.
SPECIMENS EXAMINED
.
BRAZIL
:
Amapá
,
Serra do Navio
,
Rio Amapari
, trail to
Rio Araguary
,
2 km
from camp, 6
Nov. 1
9 5 4 (fr.),
Cowan
3 8 1 2 4 (K!);
Mun. de Mazagão
,
Camaipi
, 0°
1 0'N
, 5 1°
3 7'W
, 2 3
Dec. 1
9 8 4 (fr.),
Mori
et al.
1 7 5 1 1 (K!, NY);
Camaipi
, c. 0°
1 0'N
, 5 1°
3 7'W
, 1 7
Sept
.
1 98 3
(fr.),
Mori et al.
1 6 2 3 6 (K!, NY); 1 9
Sept. 1
9 8 3 (st.),
Mori et al.
1 6 3 8 5 (K!, NY); 1 9
Sept. 1
9 8 3 (st.),
Mori et al.
1 6 4 0 1 (K!, NY); 1 9
Sept. 1
9 8 3 (st.),
Mori
et al.
1 6 4 0 8 (K!, NY);
Amazonas
, Mun. de Axinim, basin of Rio Abacaxis, lower Rio Paca
,
4°0 7'S
, 5 8°
5 8'W
, 1
July 1
9 8 3 (fr.),
Zarucchi et al.
2 9 3 6 (
INPA
, K!, NY);
Mun. de Manaus
, c. 9 0 km
N de Manaus
, 0 2°
1 9'S
, 6
0°0 5'W
, 1 9
Aug. 1
9 9 5 (fl.),
Nee & Dick
4 6 2 3 9 (K!, NY); Manaus, 8
Aug. 1
9 4 2 (fl.),
Ducke
9 7 5 (K!); Manaus, Colonia
Campos Salles
, 2 7
July 1
9 3 2 (fl. & fr.),
Ducke
2 4 2 0 1 (K, 2 sheets!, RB); Manaus, experimental station, km 6 0, 1 7
July 1
9 7 7 (seed only),
da Silva
2 9 5 (K!);
Rio dos Pombos
(a tributary of the
Yuma river
), 7
4 km
E of the
Aripuanã river
, 2 1
June 1
9 7 9 (fl.),
Calderón et al.
2 6 4 6 (
INPA
, K!);
Distrito Agropecuário
, 2°2 4'2 6" – 2°2 5'3 1"S, 5 9°4 3'4 0" – 5 9°4 5'5 0"W, 7
July 1
9 9 0 (fl.),
Mori
et al.
2 1 3 2 7 (K!, NY);
Mato Grosso
,
Rio Aripuanã
, road from
Nucleo Pioneiro de Humboldt
to
Rio Juruena
, km 8, 1 0°
1 2'S
, 5 9°
2 1'W
, 2 5
Oct
.
1 9 73
(fr.),
Berg
&
Steward
P1 9 8 6 9 (K!, NY);
Pará
, near the
Rio Jaburuzinho
, 1 2
July 1
9 2 3 (buds & fr.),
Ducke
s.n. (K!,
RB No.
16810);
Gurupá
,
16 May 1916
(buds),
Ducke
s.n. (
RB No.
10240, 2 sheets, barcodes 00539872! and 00547527!,
MG No.
16177!);
Gurupá
,
25 Jan. 1916
(fr.),
Ducke
s.n. (MG 15982, two sheets!);
Rio Tapajoz
, região das cachoeiras inferiors (
PoÇão
),
26 June 1918
(buds, fr.),
Ducke
s.n. (
RB No.
10241, barcode 00539873!,
MG No.
17073);
Rio Tapajoz
,
Bella Vista
,
6 Dec. 1915
(fr. & seeds),
Ducke
s.n. (
RB No.
10239, barcode 00539874!,
MG No.
15826);
Obidos
,
Serra do Curumú
,
1 Oct. 1915
(fr.),
Ducke
s.n. (MG 15774!);
Obidos
,
Serra do Curumú
,
4 Jan. 1914
(fr.),
Ducke
s.n. (
lectotype
: MG 15304!); Mt Dourado, Água Azul
,
1°7'S
,
52°55'W
,
4 Jan. 1988
(fr.),
Pires & Silva
1907 (K!); Mun. Almeirim, Mt Dourado,
6 July 1987
(fl.),
Pires
et al.
1713 (K!)
; 0°40'S, 52°35'W,
20 Jan. 1988
(fr.),
Pires & Silva
1955 (K!);
0°47'S
,
52°42'W
,
31 May 1988
(fr.),
Pires & Silva
2172 (K!);
EstaÇão Ecol. Jarí
,
0°27'S
,
52°51'W
,
6 Jan. 1988
(fr.),
Pires & Silva
1916 (K!);
Monte Dourado
,
1°03'S
,
52°51'W
,
8 June 1988
(fr.),
Pires & Silva
2214 (K!);
Monte Dourado
, 00°52'S, 52°33'W,
14 June 1988
(st.),
Pires & Silva
2222 (K!);
1°03'S
,
52°51'W
,
14 July 1988
(buds),
Pires
2305 (K!);
Rondônia
,
Porto Velho
, ao longo da BR-364, 61 km
Leste de Jaci
Paraná
, ramal
500 m
ao
Sul
,
08°58'17"S
,
63°59'16"W
,
12 April 2012
(fr.),
Simon
et al.
1452 (
CEN
, K 2 sheets!)
;
09°14'39"S
,
64°20'56"W
,
14 April 2012
(buds),
Simon
et al.
1481 (
CEN
, K!)
;
09°15'47"S
,
64°37'02"W
,
15 Aug. 2010
(fr.),
Pereira-Silva
et al.
15634 (
CEN
, K!);
Mun. de Santa Barbara
, rodovia BR-364, km 120
,
9°10'S
,
63°07'W
,
29 May 1982
(fl.),
Teixeira
et al.
871 (
INPA
, K!);
Roraima
,
Mun. São João de Baliza
,
Rio Jatapuzinho
,
0°35'N
,
59°07'W
,
Nov. 1994
(fr.),
Milliken
2258 (K!).
GUYANA
: U.Takutu-U.
, Essequibo Region, Kamoa Mts,
1°47'22"N
,
58°44'18"W
,
25 May 1997
(fr.),
Clarke
4956 (K!,
US
);
Gunn’
s
,
Essequibo
R.,
30 Sept. 1989
(fl.),
Jansen-Jacobs
et al.
1900 (K!, U)
; Essequibo, Kuyuwini R.,
0 – 2 km
NW of camp,
02°04'N
,
59°17'W
,
18 July 1996
(fr.),
Clarke
2257 (K!,
US
);
Simuni Creek
,
Rupununi R.
, a few miles N of
Kanaku Mts
,
8 August 1931
(fl.),
Davis in Forest Department
of British Guiana
field no. D128, record no. 2119 (K, 3 sheets!)
.
SURINAME
:
Sipaliwini
,
3 km
S (190°) from
Kwamalasamutu village
centre
,
2°19'30"N
,
56°47'20"W
,
22 Feb. 2006
(fr.),
Hoffman
6691 (K!,
US
).
HABITAT
.
The
species clearly prefers non-flooded environments and is recorded from non-inundated moist forest, non-flooded upland mixed forest, “floresta ombrofila mista”, tropical forest on terra firme, tropical upland evergreen forest and tropical dry forest, at elevations from
50 –
490 m
.
Fig. 1.
Dinizia
jueirana-facao
. A two individual pollen grains; B cluster of pollen in monads. C
Dinizia excelsa
, pollen a tetrahedral tetrad. Scale bars all 20 μm. SEM IMAGES: HANNAH BANKS.
CONSERVATION STATUS
.
Dinizia excelsa
is geographically widely dispersed in seven Brazilian states,
Guyana
and
Suriname
and has a tendency to be gregarious (
Forest Dept. of
British Guiana
field no. D1 2 8, record no. 2 1 1 9; and da Silva
et al.
1 9 7 7). The estimated extent of occurrence (EOO) exceeds the thresholds for a threatened category according to IUCN criteria version 3.1 (IUCN 2 0 1 2) and it is suspected that the area of occupancy (AOO) also exceeds these thresholds. It is therefore assessed as being of Least Concern, although it is not known how frequently encountered the tree is today across its distribution range, and it is evident from the literature that its wood has been widely used (see under notes). The species is not protected under CITES regulations.
Map 1.
Distribution of
Dinizia excelsa
(black circles) and
D. jueirana-facao
(black triangle) in Brazil and the Guianas.
PHENOLOGY
. Collected in flower in
Brazil
from April to August, and in fruit throughout the year (no fruiting collections seen from February or March); in
Brazil
the main flowering period in most states is July and August; collected in flower in
Guyana
in August and September and in fruit in May and July, and in
Suriname
a single fruiting specimen (in K) was collected in February.
COMMON NAMES
. “Angelim”, “angelim pedra”, “angelim vermelho”, “paricá” (Brazil); “Awaraimë” (Trio, Suriname); “parakwa” (Wapisiana, Guyana).
Lorenzi (1992: 176)
also includes the popular names: “angelim falso”, “faveira”, “faveira-dura”, faveira-ferro” and “faveiro-do-grande”.
NOTES
. The species is notable for the hardness of its wood and its bark breaking off in woody plates which accumulate in piles at the base of the tree. Usually the most terminal raceme in the compound inflorescence flowers first, then the basal racemes open, followed by those above; the flowers in each raceme open somewhat irregularly, but generally from the base to the apex of the raceme; freshly opened flowers are strongly fragrant (
Nee & Dick
46239).
Dinizia excelsa
is reported to be pollinated by bees (
Ribeiro
et al.
1999
). The wood is very resistant and difficult to work, but has been widely used for railway sleepers, in civil and naval construction, cabinetwork and joinery (da Silva
et al.
19 77), and for battens, props, beams, girders, posts, stakes, door and window frames, floor boards, carts, wagons and bridges (
Lorenzi 1992
). The wood density of
D. excelsa
is recorded as between
0.83 – 0.91 g
/cm3 by Fearnside (19 97) and as
0.9 – 1.2 g
/cm3 by Richter & Dallwitz (online version 200 9), who also describe the wood odour as distinct, very unpleasant and persistent.
In the protologue of
Dinizia excelsa
,
Ducke (1922)
cited six specimens that he had collected in Pará between
1914 and 1918
(MG herbarium numbers:
15 30 4
, 15 774, 158 26, 1 59 89, 1 617 7 and 1 707 3) without choosing a holotype. The six collections should thus be considered as syntypes; all are still housed in the Museu Goeldi (MG) herbarium, with some duplicated in the herbarium of the Rio de Janeiro Botanic Gardens (RB). A number of the specimens in MG carry original field labels in Ducke’ s handwriting, but no one specimen bears both flower and fruit material. The specimen in the best condition, which fits the description of foliage and fruits presented in the original description, and which includes an original label in Ducke’ s hand, is MG15304 from the Serra do Curumú collected on the 4th of
January 1914
. This specimen is thus designated as the lectotype of
D. excelsa
. The other specimens cited in the species
ʼ
protologue become remaining syntypes.