Four new species of Eugenia (Myrtaceae) from the Caatinga and Atlantic Forest of northeastern Brazil
Author
Coutinho, Karoline
Author
Oliveira, Marla Ibrahim Uehbe De
Author
Funch, Lígia Silveira
text
Phytotaxa
2015
2015-11-18
234
3
215
226
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.234.3.2
journal article
302079
10.11646/phytotaxa.234.3.2
92c68aec-df05-46cc-90fc-718bea47f260
1179-3163
13633042
3.
Eugenia coccinea
Coutinho & M.Ibrahim
sp. nov
.
(
Figures 3
and
5
)
This species is similar to
Eugenia duarteana
Cambessèdes (1832: 348)
differing by having membranous leaves; calyx lobes with tuft of hairs on the apex, and hypanthium glabrous.
Type:—
BRASIL
.
Bahia
: Maracás, 13°26’28’S 40°25’51’W.
10 October 1983
.
A.M. de Carvalho 1983
(
holotype
CEPEC!,
isotype
SP!, MBM!, RB).
Tree
or shrub
2–3 m
high, young twigs brownish, pilose, hair brownish; adult branches whitish, glabrous.
Leaf blades
2–64 ×
9–34 mm
, membranaceous, obovate, elliptic or lanceolate, flat, reticulate; apex rounded, obtuse or rarely acute, with a tuft of reddish trichomes; base acute or cuneate; margin ciliate or undulate or little revolute; pilose on both sides; glandular dots on both sides, 0.6–
0.1 mm
diam., 2–5 per square millimeter; venation brochidodromous; midvein sulcate above, prominent below, tomentose with whitish trichomes on the adaxial side and brown on abaxial side; lateral veins 5–9, erect, leaving the mid vein at 35°–40°, tomentose; marginal vein absent; petiole 2–6 ×
0.1 mm
, channeled, pubescent.
Inflorescences
terminal, 2–flowered; rachis
2–3 m
; pedicels
30–35 mm
, channeled, with glandular dots; bracts linear
0.7–0.9 mm
, apex acute, pubescent, with brownish trichomes, bracteoles not seen; buds not seen; calyx lobes four, 5–7 ×
3–5 mm
, unequal, deltoid or oblong, ciliate, apex rounded, cuneate, pubescent on both sides, glandular dots present; petals four, 8–11 ×
5–8 mm
, clavate, ciliate, apex rounded, glabrescent abaxially, glandular dots present; hypanthium 1.7–2.1 ×
1.5–1.7 mm
, not costate, glabrous or with scattered trichomes, glandular dots present; staminal ring ca.
4 mm
diam., pilose, square; stamens
3.5–6 mm
long, anthers
0.5–0.8 mm
long, elliptic; style ca.
5 mm
long, glabrous, glandular dots absent; ovary bilocular, with 2 ovules per locule, glabrous.
Fruit
not seen.
Etymology:
—The specific epithet alludes to the tuft of reddish trichomes found on the apex of leaves in this species.
Phenology:
—Flowers in October.
Distribution and habitat:
—
Eugenia coccinea
was encountered on a rock outcrop in the central-southern region of
Bahia State
, in the municipality of Maracás, at
964 m
a.s.l. The region is semiarid, with two rainy periods during the year, with an average annual temperature of 22 °C (
Velloso
et al.
2002
). The caatinga vegetation there is arboreal and shrubby, although other
types
of vegetation such as Matas de Cipó (liana forests) are found in the region, with many areas of native vegetation being substituted by pasture, monocultures, and the cultivation of ornamental plants (IBGE 2015).
Morphological comments:—
Eugenia coccinea
is similar to
E. duarteana
as both have obovate leaves with tomentose central veins, and calyx lobes with indument. They can be differentiated, however, by
E. coccinea
having membranous leaves and hypanthium glabrous, while
E
.
duarteana
has coriaceous leaves and hypanthium tomentose. Additionally,
E. coccinea
has a tuft of reddish trichomes on the apex of the central nerve on the abaxial face of the leaf, and leaf margins ciliate.
FIGURE 3.
Eugenia coccinea
Coutinho & M.Ibrahim.
A
. Habit.
B
. Detail
of leaf and inflorescence (scale 1 cm).
Conservation status:
—According to
species
Link website (
CRIA 2015
), 5682 specimens have been collected in the municipality of Maracás, which covers 2253 Km² (IBGE 2015), representing an average of 2.6 specimens/km². However, as the rarity of this species may be attributed to few collections, it seems more appropriate to adopt the IUCN category DD (deficient data; IUCN 2015).