A revision of Spondias L. (Anacardiaceae) in the Neotropics
Author
Mitchell, John D.
Institute of Systematic Botany, The New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, NY 10458 - 5126
johndanmitchell@gmail.com
Author
Daly, Douglas C.
Institute of Systematic Botany, The New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, NY 10458 - 5126
text
PhytoKeys
2015
2015-08-05
55
1
92
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.55.8489
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.55.8489
1314-2003-55-1
FF8CFFB4FFD52937FFDFFFB2FF93FC06
576322
Spondias venulosa (Mart. ex Engl.) Engl. in A. DC. & C. DC., Monogr. phan. 4: 245. 1883
Figs 2
, 6
, 15
, 16
, 24
Spondias purpurea var. venulosa
Mart. ex Engl. in Mart., Fl. bras. 12(2): 373. 1876.
Spondias venulosa
Type. Based on Spondias venulosa (Mart. Ex Engl.) Engl.
Spondias myrobalanus
sensu Vell., non L., Fl. flumin. 4: 197, t. 185. 1825[1829].
Type.
BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Rio de Janeiro (cultivated), November (w/o year), Martius Obs. 274 (lectotype: M, n.v., here designated; F-photo!; G-photo!; NY-photo!).
Description.
Hermaphroditic trees
, reproductive height 5-30 m.
Trunk
11-92 cm diam.,
outer bark
(brownish) gray, rough, sparsely to densely fissured, the fissures broad,
deep
and wavy, shed in long, thick, irregular plates;
inner bark
soft and whitish with beige to pale red striations.
Trichomes
white to yellowish, erect to flexuous, 0.4-0.6 (0.8) mm long.
Leaves
3-5jugate, 12.3-23 cm long, the petiole, rachis and midvein often red when young; petiole 5.3-7 cm long, petiole and rachis glabrous; lateral leaflets subsessile or the petiolules to 3 mm long, the terminal one 7-15 mm long, petiolules pubescent; basal leaflets 2.2-7
x
1-3.5 cm, ovate to broadly elliptic, other laterals 3-8
x
1.2-4.2 cm, usually (broadly) elliptic or ovate or less often lanceolate, terminal leaflet 2.8-8.7
x
1.1-4.2 cm, elliptic to obovate; leaflet apex abruptly and narrowly acuminate, the acumen 3-16 mm long, the apex tip sharply acuminate; lateral lamina often medially strongly asymmetrical and then the acroscopic side ovate and basiscopic side elliptic, base subsymmetric or asymmetric, the acroscopic side cuneate to cordate, the basiscopic side acute to rounded, basal insertion often slightly asymmetric, often decurrent; leaflet margin usually revolute, strongly so at base, entire or occasionally serrulate, with blunt convex-convex teeth; leaflets chartaceous to coriaceous, often both surfaces glossy (mature leaflets); intramarginal vein submarginal.
Inflorescences
subterminal and terminal, developing with leaf flush, (3.5) 7-19.5 long, 1.3-2.3 mm diam near base, broadly branched, secondary axes 0.5-5 cm long; bracts on primary and secondary axes 0.6-2.4 mm long, lanceolate to lorate and acuminate, bracteoles 0.4-0.6 mm long, ovate to subulate and often semi-clasping; pedicel 1.8-3.5 mm long overall, portion distal to the articulation 1.5-2.7 mm long.
Calyx
0.7-1.4 mm long overall, aestivation apert, lobes 0.4-0.8 mm long, deltate to triangular, the margin erose; petals 1.8-2
x
0.7-1 mm, lanceolate to deltate, slightly acuminate, white to yellowish, reflexed at anthesis; stamens inflexed, antesepalous and antepetalous ones 1.2-1.3 and 0.9-1.1 mm long, respectively, the anthers 0.4-0.5 mm long, elliptic in both dorsiventral and lateral views; disk 0.35-0.4 mm tall, 0.3 mm thick, summit undulate and outer margin sulcate, yellow; pistil 1-1.2 mm long, thickly subcylindrical overall, divided nearly to base into subulate, apically connivent styles 0.5-0.7 mm long, the stigmas extrorse, obovate.
Fruits
3.6-6
x
1.9-3.6 cm (dry; when fresh 4-8
x
3.2-3.8 cm), (slightly) oblong(-obovoid) to slightly (ob)ovoid, often lumpy, apex rounded, truncate, or sometimes acuminate, base obtuse to truncate, maturing yellow and glossy, surface shallowly pitted and very sparsely lenticellate, the lenticels flat; endocarp usually slightly obovoid and usually acuminate.
Leaflet venation
: Secondary veins 10-20, straight, spacing uniform, angle slightly acute and decreasing toward apex, insertion decurrent; intercostal tertiaries few per pair of successive secondaries, usually arising from near intramarginal vein, with (usually composite) admedial branching; areolation at tertiary rank, quaternaries freely ramified; FEVs 4+-branched, dendritic, terminating in tracheoid idioblasts; marginal ultimate venation mostly looped; on abaxial side all venation narrowly prominent, pubescent on revolute base (sometimes extending onto midvein), usually glabrescent; on adaxial side all venation flat or more often broadly prominulous but fluted, veins often discolorous (drying blackish).
Distribution.
Spondias venulosa
ranges from eastcentral Bahia to southern Rio de Janeiro and extreme southeastern Minas Gerais; cultivated as far south as Campinas and
Sao
Paulo city in
Sao
Paulo state.
Ecology
.
This species occurs in moist upland forests of the Mata
Atlantica
Complex, also also in the
tabuleiro
forests that occur on red-yellow dystrophic podzols in the low, flat, subcoastal tablelands of
Espirito
Santo.
There is no literature or herbarium label data that shed light on the pollination or dispersers of this species. It is known to flower in Aug-Feb and fruit Jan-Sep.
Common names.
Brazil,
Espirito
Santo:
taipa
(
Spada 51
, NY),
caja
(
Folli 1608
, NY).
Economic botany.
The fruits of
Spondias venulosa
are edible and occasionally used to make juices; most fruits are wild-collected (
Lorenzi et al. 2006
). The species is not widely planted in home gardens; it is found in some Brazilian parks, botanical gardens and arboreta, e.g., Belo Horizonte (
Macedo 5451
, US), Rio de Janeiro (pers. obs. and
Kuhlmann s.n. (GUA 11051)
, GUA), Itabuna (Bahia,
Hage 230
, NY), and
Sao
Paulo (
Gehrt [Hatschbach] s.n. (SP 39886)
, NY, SP).
Selected specimens examined.
BRAZIL. Bahia
: Mun. Senhor do Bonfim, Povoado de Estiva, Serra de Santana,
10°21'57"S
,
40°11'51"W
, 689 m, 13 July 2005, Cardoso et al. 716 (NY); Anguera, Fazenda Retiro, ca. 18 km from Feira de Santana, on
Feijao-Ipira
road,
12°09'42"S
,
39°11'02"W
, elev. 300-600 m, 22 May 2007, Cardoso & Santos 1935 (NY); Mun. Mairi, km 41 Capim Grosso-Mairi road,
11°39'S
,
40°08'W
, elev. 460 m, 21 Sep 1996, Pereira-Silva et al. 3638 (NY); Mun. Feira de Santana, Campus of Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana,
12°15'S
,
38°58'W
, 31 Jan 1992, Queiroz 2604 (NY); Mun.
Itaju
da
Colonia
, 7.5 km SE of
Itaju
do
Colonia
on road to Palmira, 15°09'13.1"S, 39°39'27.6"W, elev. 250 m, 19 Mar 2001, Thomas et al. 12363 (MO, NY);
Espirito
Santo
: Mun. Brejal, 15 km N of Colatina, dirt path along left bank of rio Pancas, approx.
19°23'S
,
40°41'W
, 28 Jan 1997, Arbo et al. 7777 (CEPEC, GH);
Aguas
Claras, Escola
Agroecologica
,
18°53'32"S
,
40°43'48"W
, elev. 300-500 m, 6 Jun 2006, Demuner et al. 2382 (NY); Rio Bananal, Alto Bananal, property of Jonas Graci,
19°14'56"S
,
40°24'59"W
, elev. 300-600 m, 25 Apr 2007, Demuner et al. 3783 (NY); Reserva Vale (BR-101 Norte, km 122), Estrada Flamengo,
19°07'14"N
,
30°54'59"W
, 1 Mar 2011, Stefano et al. 201 (NY, RB);
Minas Gerais
:
Aimores
, km 15.5 of BR-259 highway, in pasture, 18 Oct 2004, Luz 248 (CVRD, NY); Belo Horizonte,
Praca
Benjamin
Guimaraes
, no cruzamento com avenidas
Getulio
Vargas, e Afonso Pena, 15 Sep 1988, Macedo 5451 (US)(cultivated); Parque Florestal Rio Doce, 2 Nov 1992, Stehmann s.n. (BHCB 20855) (BHCB, NY);
Rio de Janeiro
: Quinta da Boa Vista, 22 Oct 1930, Brade s.n. (R 73762)(R); Mun.
Armacao
dos
Buzios
, Fazenda Caravelas, S slope between
Pero
and Caravelas beaches, 4 May 2000, Farney et al. 4083 (NY, RB); Rio de Janeiro, w/o date, Gaudichaud 826 (P; syntype of S. venulosa); Rio de Janeiro, Morro do Inglez [
Ingles
], Corcovado, 22 Aug 1886, Glaziou 827 (K, P; syntype of S. venulosa); Mun.
Sao
Pedro
d'Aldeia
, Morro de Sapiatiba [Serra de Sepetiba], elev. 200-400 m, 10 Sep 1987, Leitman et al. 284 (NY, RB); Mun. Cabo Frio, new road to
Buzios
, Baia Formosa, entrance to
Capao
da Pedra, Fazenda of Sr. Henrique Massala, 6 May 1987, Lima 2883 (NY, RB); Mun.
Niteroi
, road to Itaipu, near entrance to Itacoatiara, base of slope of Serra da Tiririca, 25 Sep 1990, Lima et al. 3988 (NY, RB); Sete Pontes, 9 Feb 1876, Rohan 43 (R 73728)(R); Rio de Janeiro, 1816-1821, St.-Hilaire 1026 (K, P);
Niteroi
, Pico do Alto
Mourao
[
Moirao
], between
Niteroi
and
Marica
, 6 Aug 1991, Santim [Santin?] et al. s.n. (RB 300478) (NY, RB); Mun.
Niteroi
, between Campos and Morro do
Coco
, 8 Sep 1964, Trinta & Fromm 1050 (NY);
Sao
Paulo
:
Sao
Paulo, 29
Nov
1938, Gehrt [Hatschbach] s.n. (SP 39886) (NY, SP) (cultivated); Campinas, 18 Nov 1936, Hoehne & Gehrt [Hatschbach] s.n. (SP 36835)(NY) (cultivated).
Conservation status.
We consider this species to be of Least Concern. It is rather widespread in the Atlantic Coastal Forest of Brazil, and despite severe fragmentation of that
region's
lowland forests, it appears to thrive in even rather small forest fragments.
Discussion.
The similarities and differences between this species and
Spondias admirabilis
are discussed under the latter species.