A new species of Zanthoxylum (Rutaceae) with a key to the species from Northeastern Brazil
Author
Groppo, Milton
Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Biologia, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto. Avenida dos Bandeirantes 3900, CEP 14051 - 901, Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil.
Author
Pirani, José Rubens
Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Botânica, Instituto de Biociências, Rua do Matão, Travessa 14, 321, CEP 05508 - 900, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
text
Phytotaxa
2017
2017-07-25
314
2
259
265
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.314.2.7
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.314.2.7
1179-3163
13686298
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
Groppo & Pirani
,
sp. nov.
Figures 1 A–J
&
2 A–D
.
Type:—
BRAZIL
.
Sergipe
: Nossa Senhora do Socorro, Floresta Nacional do Imbura,
10°50’34”S
,
37°08’35”W
,
3 May 2013
(pistl. pl.),
Santana & Silva 162
(
Holotype
SPFR
No. 16001!,
Isotype
ASE
!).
The new species can be readily distinguished from other species of
Zanthoxylum
from
Brazil
by the presence of unifoliolate rather than pinnate leaves (with at least three leaflets), as observed in all other Brazilian species. It shares with
Z. schrebei
(from the Caribbean islands to northern South America) the unifoliolate leaves, but is immediately distinguished mainly by its female flowers with gynocieum of four carpels united by a discoid stigma (versus female flowers with only three carpels united in a capitate, slightly lobed stigma in
Z. schrebei
).
Trees
or shrubs
1–6 m
tall, dioecious; branches with thorns up to
9 mm
diam. enlarged at their base; young branches pilose, with scarce lenticels, indumentum of simple trichomes.
Leaves
alternate, 1-foliolate, spirally arranged; stipules absent; petiole
0.8–1.5 cm
long; leaflet blade chartaceous, glabrous, with pellucid dots (spherical glands), scattered throughout the surface,
5.5–12 cm
long,
2.7–7 cm
wide, elliptic to obovate, apex acuminate, acute or rounded, sometimes emarginated, margin entire, base acute to obtuse; venation brochidodromous, midvein prominent on the abaxial surface, impressed to slightly prominent on the adaxial surface; secondary veins 7–13 pairs, prominent on the abaxial surface, impressed on the adaxial surface, uniformly diverging from midvein at angles of 52°–63°, intersecondary veins present, running in a larger angle than to major secondaries; petiole
5–15 mm
long, articulate at its apex, glabrous.
Inflorescence
terminal, a thyrsoid up to
6 cm
long, partial inflorescences ascending, up to
4 cm
long, the proximal ones longer than the distal ones, inflorescence branches puberulous, cymes 1-flowered.
Flowers
5- merous, actinomorphic, unisexual; petals whitish, buds ovoid to obovoid,
1–1.5mm
long. Staminate flowers ca.
2 mm
diam.; pedicel
1.5–2 mm
long, puberulous; sepals deltoid, ca.
0.25 mm
long, glabrous; petals oblong, apex acute, ca.
1 mm
long, glabrous; stamens 5, ca.
0.8 mm
long; filaments subulate, ca.
0.4 mm
long; anthers ovoid, ca.
0.4 mm
long, glabrous, with a glandular connective; pistillodium ca.
0.8 mm
long, with 3–4 conical styles; ovary globose at base with a small locule containing 2–3 abortive, pendulous ovules; disc annular surrounding the base of the pistillodium. Pistillate flowers
2.5–3 mm
diam.; pedicels
1–1.5 mm
long, puberulous; sepals deltoid, glabrous, ca.
0.4 mm
long; petals 2.0–
2.5 mm
long, oblong, glabrous; staminodia 5, ca.
0.2 mm
long; gynoecium of 4 carpels united only at the discoid stigma, ca.
0.8 mm
diam., glabrous, depressed-globose, glandular-punctate, lifted by a gynophore.
Fruit
an oblique, 1-seeded, subglobose follicle (only one carpel developing), brownish, stipitate, ca.
3.5–4 mm
long, surface with several rounded oil glands, glabrous; seed ca. 3.5–
2.5 mm
, subglobose to reniform, black, shiny, pendulous by the persistent funicle. Embryo not seen.
Additional specimens examined
(
paratypes
):
—
BRAZIL
,
Sergipe
:
Capela
,
Refúgio da Vida Silvestre
,
Mata do Junco
,
10°32´10”S
,
37°03´48”W
,
19 April 2012
(stam. pl.),
Gomes
et al. 390
(
ASE
,
SPFR
)
;
Carmópolis
,
Serra das Cajazeiras
,
23 April 2000
(fr.),
Teles
6
(
IPA
)
;
Maruim
,
10°43´00”S
,
37°07´38”W
,
22 May 2013
(pist. pl.),
Gomes
et al. 1091
(
ASE
,
SPFR
)
;
Nossa Senhora do Socorro
,
Floresta Nacional do Ibura
,
10°50´32”S
,
37°08´46”W
,
18 August 2013
(fr.),
Santana
&
Silva
109
(
ASE
,
SPFR
)
.
Etymology—
The epithet
“
unifoliolatum
” is a reference to the unifoliolate leaves of the species.
Vernacular name
—
The species is locally known as “laranjinha-do-mato” (meaning a small wild orange;
Teles
6
).
FIGURE 1.
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
. A. Habit of male plant; B. Detail of branch with thorns; C. Staminate flower bud; D. Staminate flower, petals and one stamen removed (based on
Gomes et al. 390
). E. Detail of pistillate inflorescence; F. Pistillate flower, petals removed, st: staminodium; G. Petal from pistillate flower (based on
Gomes et al. 1091
); H. Fruit with pendulous seed; I. Open fruit. J. Seed (based on
Santana & Silva 162
). Illustrated by Bruno Simões Favaretto.
FIGURE 2
.
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
. A. Thorns on trunk; B. Vegetation in Serra das Cajazeiras Carmópolis (Sergipe, Brazil), one of the places the new species was collected. C and D. Branches with pistillate inflorescences.
Notes and taxonomic affinities—
The most remarkable trait in
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
is the presence of unifoliolate leaves, a characteristic that is unique within
Brazil
and very rare worldwide. Species of
Zanthoxylum
usually have imparipinnate (sometimes paripinnate) leaves, with some species reaching up to 65 leaflets per leaf [(as
Z. foliolosum
Donn.Sm. (1893:1)
, from Central America)]. Very rarely scattered 1-to 3-foliolate leaves may occur on a plant [(e.g.,
Z. monogynum
A.Saint-Hilaire (1824:150)
, from
Bolivia
and
Brazil
, usually with 3–5(–7) foliolate leaves], while some species are characterized by bearing only bifoliolate leaves (
Z. bifoliolatum
Leonard (1924:413)
from the Greater Antilles).
Z. schreberi
(J.F.
Gmelin 1791:498
) Reynel
in
Bernal
et al.
(2015:6)
, an species from the Caribbean islands to northern South America, also bear only unifoliolate leaves and format and foliar dimensions are similar to those of
Z. unifoliolatum
. However, besides the evident allopatry,
Z. unifoliolatum
is distinguished by
Z. schreberi
mainly by its gynoecium of 4 carpels united by a discoid stigma (vs. 3 carpels with a capitate, slightly 3-lobed stigma). Characteristics of staminate flowers (as usual in
Zanthoxylum
) as pistillodium format or shape of stamens are virtually identical in both species, but this is a common trait among the species of the genus. Other species that is morphologically similar to the new species is the partially sympatric
Z. monogynum
, with leaves 1(rarely) to 3–5(–7) foliolate leaves occurring on the same plant as seen above. The new species differs mainly in bearing all leaves with one leaflet [vs. (1–)3–5(7) leaflets in
Z. monogynum
], smaller inflorescences reaching up to
6 cm
long (vs. up to
12 cm
), petals ca.
1 mm
long (vs.
2–2.5 mm
), staminate flowers with stamens shorter than the petals with filaments ca.
0.8 mm
long (vs. exserted stamens with filaments up to
3 mm
in
Z. monogynum
), and also in its gynoecium, with four carpels in female flowers (vs. only one carpel, seldom 2, in female flowers of
Z. monogynum
).
Distribution and habitat, phenology—
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
is known so far from a few collections made in the state of
Sergipe
, northeastern
Brazil
(
Fig. 3
). The species is found in forested areas on sandy or sandy-clay soils in the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest biome in the vicinities of Capela, Maruim, Nossa Senhora do Socorro and Carmópolis. In Carmópolis, the species is found on forested hills of the Serra das Cajazeiras. It has been collected with flowers from April to May and with fruits from April to August.
FIGURE 3
. Geographic distribution of
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
.
Uses—
Local people use the leaves as an infusion for treating conjunctivitis and an ethanol solution is employed as a yellow dye. The wood was used in the past in carpentry (Dr. Aristônio
Teles
, pers. comm.).
Conservation status—
Zanthoxylum unifoliolatum
can be referred to as an Endangered Species (EN) according to the IUCN Redlist Categories and Criteria (
IUCN 2012
). This species is known from only three localities in forests of the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest biome, which has been suffering from a rapid process of deforestation (
Morellato & Haddad 2000
,
Ribeiro
et al.
2009
) with an estimated area of occurrence of less than
5000 km
2
, which is projected to decrease (criteria IUCN B1a, B1bi, B1bii, B1biii). Fortunately, the species is found in protected areas such as Floresta Nacional do Imbura and Refúgio da Vida Silvestre Mata do Junco, in the municipalities of Nossa Senhora do Socorro and Capela.