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Phyllanthus chacoensis (Phyllanthaceae): new record for the Brazilian Amazon and its lectotypification

Phyllanthus chacoensis (Phyllanthaceae): novo registro para a Amazônia brasileira e sua lectotipificação

ABSTRACT

The first record of Phyllanthus chacoensis for the Brazilian Amazon is presented, based on a specimen from Rondônia state. The species can be recognized by its cauliflorous inflorescence, staminate and pistillate flowers with 4 sepals, devoid of a floral disk, 4 stamens, 2-carpellary ovary, drupaceous, ellipsoidal fruits, with one seed per locule. The species was previously known only from the central-western and northeastern regions of the Caatinga and Pantanal domains in Brazil. We provide a list of synonyms, a detailed description, an updated geographic distribution map in Brazil, data on habitat and conservation status, illustrations of its reproductive characters, and detailed photographs. We also propose a lectotype for the species.

KEYWORDS:
Neotropics; nomenclature; northern Brazil; taxonomy

RESUMO

Apresentamos o primeiro registro de Phyllanthus chacoensis para a Amazônia brasileira, baseado em um espécime encontrado em Rondônia. A espécie pode ser reconhecida pela inflorescência cauliflora, flores de ambos os sexos com 4 sépalas, desprovidas de disco floral, 4 estames, ovário 2-carpelar e frutos elipsoides, drupáceos, com uma semente por lóculo. No Brasil, a espécie era referida, até o momento, apenas para as regiões Centro-Oeste e Nordeste nos domínios Caatinga e Pantanal. Apresentamos a lista de sinônimos, descrição morfológica detalhada, um mapa atualizado da distribuição geográfica no Brasil, dados sobre habitat e status de conservação, assim como fotos em campo e ilustração dos caracteres reprodutivos. Adicionalmente, propomos um lectótipo para o nome.

PALAVRAS-CHAVE:
Neotrópicos; nomenclatura; norte do Brasil; taxonomia

INTRODUCTION

The Amazonian lowland rainforest is home to almost 190 plant families, of which Phyllanthaceae is represented by 55 species from eight genera (Amanoa Aubl., Chonocentrum Pierre ex Pax & K.Hoffm., Didymocistus Klotzsch, Hyeronima Allemão, Jablonskia G.L.Webster, Margaritaria L.f., Phyllanthus L., and Richeria Vahl) (Cardoso et al. 2017Cardoso, D.; Särkinen, T.; Alexander, S.; Amorim, A.M.; Bittrich V.; Celis, M.; et al. 2017. Amazon plant diversity revealed by a taxonomically verified species list. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 114: 10695‒10700.; Flora do Brasil 2020 [under construction]Flora do Brasil. 2020. [under construction]. ( (https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/ ). Accessed on 03 Feb 2020.
https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/...
). The Brazilian Amazon is the third biome in terms of Phyllanthus diversity, with 33 species, after the Atlantic Forest (52 species) and Cerrado (43) (Flora do Brasil 2020 [under construction]Flora do Brasil. 2020. [under construction]. ( (https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/ ). Accessed on 03 Feb 2020.
https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/...
). Phyllanthus has a cosmopolitan distribution, with 880 species globally, of which over 200 occur in the Neotropics; 90 to 110 species have been recorded for Brazil in all vegetation types (Webster 2002; Kathriarachchi et al. 2006Kathriarachchi, H.; Samuel, R.; Hoffmann, P.; Mlinarec, J.; Wurdack, K.J.; Ralimanana, H.; Stuessy, T.F.; Chase, M.W. 2006. Phylogenetics of tribe Phyllantheae (Phyllanthaceae; Euphorbiaceae sensu lato) based on nrITS and plastid matK DNA sequence data. American Journal of Botany, 93: 637-655.; Silva and Sales 2007Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2007. Phyllanthus L. (Phyllanthaceae) em Pernambuco, Brasil. Acta Botanica Brasilica, 21: 79-98. ; Bouman et al. 2018Bouman, R.W.; Keβler, P.J.A.; Telford, I.R.H.; Bruhl, J.J.; Welzen, P.C. van. 2018. Subgeneric delimitation of the plant genus Phyllanthus (Phyllanthaceae). Blumea, 63: 167‒198. ; Flora do Brasil 2020 [under construction]Flora do Brasil. 2020. [under construction]. ( (https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/ ). Accessed on 03 Feb 2020.
https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/...
).

The species richness of the genus in Brazil is almost certainly underestimated, since the last major revision was published in the Flora Brasiliensis by Müller Argoviensis in 1873Müller, J. 1873. Euphorbiaceae, Phyllantheae. In: Von Martius, C.F.P. (Ed.). Flora Brasiliensis 11. Oldenbourg, Munich & Leipzig, p.7-80. and included 71 species. More recently, floristic studies by Webster (2002Webster, G.L. 2002. A Synopsis of the Brazilian taxa of Phyllanthus section Phyllanthus (Euphorbiaceae). Lundellia, 5: 1-26.) and Silva and Sales (2007Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2007. Phyllanthus L. (Phyllanthaceae) em Pernambuco, Brasil. Acta Botanica Brasilica, 21: 79-98. ) made important contributions to the understanding of the morphology of several taxa. The floristic knowledge of the Amazon basin is even more precarious, as pointed out by Hopkins (2005Hopkins, M.J.G. 2005. Flora da Reserva Duke, Amazonas, Brasil. Rodriguésia, 56: 9‒25.) and Ter Steege et al. (2013Ter Steege, H.; Pitman, N.C.A.; Daniel, S.; Baraloto, C.; Salomão, R.P.; Andino, J.E.G.; et al. 2013. Hyperdominance in the Amazonian tree flora. Science, 342: 1243092.) and, consequently, the diversity of Phyllanthus in the region is probably underestimated, as exemplified here with the recognition of a new record of a Phyllanthus tree species in the Brazilian Amazon, Phyllanthus chacoensis Morong.

Taxonomic advances in the Amazon region are hampered by low numbers of herbaria and deposited specimens, low collection rates, and relatively few specialized taxonomists (Barbosa et al. 2003Barbosa, M.R.V.; Peixoto, A.L. 2003. Coleções botânicas brasileiras: situação atual e perspectivas. In: Peixoto, A.L. (Org.). Coleções Biológicas de Apoio ao Inventário, Uso Sustentável e Conservação da Biodiversidade. Instituto de Pesquisas Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, p.113‒125.), which helps explain the relatively few studies and the low capacity for determining the real diversity of Phyllanthus (e.g.,Rodrigues 1971Rodrigues, W.A. 1971. Novo Phyllanthus (Euphorbiaceae) da Amazônia Brasileira. Acta Amazonica, 2: 17‒18.; Webster 2004Webster, G.L. 2004. A revision of Phyllanthus section Hylaeanthus (Euphorbiaceae). Lundellia, 7: 11‒27.; Secco 2013Secco, R.S. 2013. A new infraspecific taxon of Phyllanthus myrsinites (Phyllanthaceae) from the Brazilian Amazon. Phytotaxa, 142: 51-54.; Secco and Rosário 2015Secco, R.S.; Rosário, A.S. 2015. A new species of Phyllanthus (Phyllanthaceae) endemic to Amazonas state, Brazil. Novon, 24: 209-211.; Secco and Silveira 2016Secco, R.S.; Silveira, J.B. 2016. Flora das cangas da Serra dos Carajás, Pará, Brasil: Phyllanthaceae. Rodriguésia, 67: 1437‒1442. ). Additionally, Phyllanthus is one of the most morphologically complex groups of Phyllanthaceae due to its variable habits (herbs to trees), phyllanthoid or non-phyllanthoid branching, and tiny gamosepalous pistillate flowers with disks commonly entire, and disks segmented and alternisepalous in staminate flowers (Silva and Sales 2004Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2004. O gênero Phyllanthus L. (Phyllantheae - Euphorbiaceae Juss.) no bioma Caatinga do estado de Pernambuco - Brasil. Rodriguésia, 55: 101‒126., 2007).

As a result of increased collection efforts and extensive analyses of herbarium specimens as part of a revision of Phyllanthus conducted by the first author, an indeterminate specimen (with duplicates deposited at INPA, NY and RB herbaria) that had been collected 58 years ago in what is now Rondônia state (northern Brazil) was encountered. We identified the collection as P. chacoensis, representing a new record for the Amazonian flora. In addition to the description of the new record, we propose its lectotypification and discuss its conservation status.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

Specimens of Phyllanthus chacoensis deposited in collections at the INPA, NY and RB herbaria were identified based on the types stored at CORD, F, G, GH, K, MICH, MO, MPU, NDG, NY, P, PH, UC and US (acronyms according to Thiers 2020Thiers, B. 2020. [continuously updated] Index Herbariorum: A global directory of public herbaria and associated staff. New York Botanical Garden’s Virtual Herbarium. ( (http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/ ). Accessed on 29 Feb 2020.
http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/...
, updated continuously) and compared with information published by Silva and Sales (2007Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2007. Phyllanthus L. (Phyllanthaceae) em Pernambuco, Brasil. Acta Botanica Brasilica, 21: 79-98. , 2008Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2008. Sinopse do gênero Phyllanthus (Phyllanthaceae) no Nordeste do Brasil. Rodriguésia, 59: 407‒422. ) and Melo et al. (2013Melo, A.L.; Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2013. Sebastiania singularis (Euphorbiaceae): um novo sinônimo para Phyllanthus chacoensis (Phyllanthaceae). Rodriguésia, 64: 665‒666.). Data concerning their geographic distributions were obtained from herbarium labels and from the aforementioned literature. The descriptive terminology follows Silva and Sales (2007), complemented by Radford et al. (1974Radford, A.E.; Dicknson, W.C.; Massey, J.R.; Bell, C.R. 1974. Vascular Plant Systematics. Harper & Row Publishers, New York, 891p.). The typification was based on the rules of International Nomenclature (Turland et al. 2018Turland, N.J.; Wiersema, J.H.; Barrie, F.R.; Greuter, W.; Hawksworth, D.L.; Herendeen, P.S.; et al. 2018. International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Shenzhen Code) adopted by the Nineteenth International Botanical Congress Shenzhen, China, July 2017. Regnum Vegetabile 159. Koeltz Botanical Books, Glashütten, 254p.). Maps were prepared using QGIS 2.3 software, based on data from geographic coordinates from herbarium labels, or estimated from locality data. The conservation status of the species was reevaluated according to the IUCN methodology and the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria (IUCN 2012IUCN. 2012. The IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: Version 3.1. 2nd ed. Gland and Cambridge, 32p.), using the Geocat web tool (http://geocat.kew.org/), following Bachman et al. (2011Bachman, S.; Moat, J.; Hill, A.W.; Torre, J.; Scott, B. 2011. Supporting red list threat assessments with GeoCAT: Geospatial conservation assessment tool. ZooKeys, 150: 117-126. ).

RESULTS

Phyllanthus chacoensis Morong, Ann. New York Acad. Sci.7: 218. 1892. Aporosella chacoensis (Morong) Speg., Cat. Descr. Maderas 349. 1910. Type: PARAGUAY. Gran Chaco, Asunción, T. Morong 355 (lectotype designated here NY00273054!; isolectotypes CORD00003196!, F0057015F!, G00307040!, GH00048576!, K000573219!, MICH1104948!, NDG29188!, NY00579396!, NY00273055!, NY00273056!, PH00031117!, US00109220!, US00997721!).

= Aporosella hassleriana Chodat, Bull. Herb. Boissier, II. 5: 489. 1905. Type: PARAGUAY. Concepción, E. Hassler 7161 (lectotype G00229904!, designated by Ramella & Zuloaga 2017Ramella, L.; Zuloaga, F.O. 2017. Typification of Aporosella hassleriana Chodat (Phyllanthaceae) of the flora of Paraguay. Candollea, 72: 403‒404. : 404; isolectotypes [negative F0BN005009!], G00229906!, G00229907!, G00229911!, G00229912!, MO260328!, MPU014790!, MICH1107950!, NY00246237!, P00608946!, P00608947!, P00608948!, P00608949!, UC941632!).

= Sebastiania singularis Rizzini, Leandra 3-4(4-5): 7. 1974. Type: BRAZIL. Bahia. Casa Nova: crescit in caatinga ad Casa Nova, F.B. Ramalho 190 (holotype RB00549688!, isotypes HST4106!, HUCPE611!, PEUFR37471!).

Tree 2-6 m high (Figure 1a), monoecious. Branching phyllanthoid, glabrous, reddish; branches 6-20 cm long, angular, lenticellate, brown. Cataphylls ca. 2 mm long, widely triangular, membranous; cataphyllary stipules, triangular-ovate, ca. 1.5 mm long, with fimbriate margins. Stipules 1-1.5 mm long, triangular, margins fimbriate. Petiole ca. 2 mm long, glabrous. Leaf blade 1.5‒2.5 × 1‒2.5 cm (Figure 1b), green-opaque, chartaceous, widely elliptic to orbicular or obovate; base obtuse; apex rounded to retuse; glabrous; margins slightly denticulate, with the presence of glands in the indentations; venation brochidodromous. Inflorescences cauliflorous, 3‒4 cm long, thyrseform (Figure 1c, d), unisexual, peduncle ca. 4 mm long, glabrous; staminate thyrse 9 to 12-cymules, each cymule with 3 flowers; pistillate thyrse with 8‒10 cymules, each cymule with 1 to 2-flowers; staminate and pistillate cymules each subtended by a bract, oval-deltoid, acuminate, each flower surrounded by a lanceolate bracteole. Staminate flowers (Figure 1f), ca. 2 mm long, pinkish or green; pedicel 1-2 mm long, glabrous; sepals 4, 1‒1.5 mm long, oblong-spatulate, rounded at the apex, margins entire to slightly fimbriate; disk absent; stamens 4, subsessile, free, anthers oblong, vertically dehiscent. Pistillate flowers (Figure 1g), 1‒2 mm long, pinkish or green: pedicel ca. 3 mm long, glabrous; sepals 4, 0.8‒1.5 mm long, oblong-spatulate, rounded at the apex, margins entire to slightly fimbriate; disk absent; ovary ca. 0.6‒0.8 mm long, ellipsoidal, reddish; 2-locular, with 1 ovule per locule; styles connate at the base, deeply bifid, curved downward. Fruits drupaceous, 6‒8 × 4‒5.2 mm (Figure 1e, h), green, ellipsoidal, with sepals and styles persistent; fruit pedicel 4‒6 mm long. Seeds 3‒5 × ca. 4 mm, subglobose, grayish-brown, smooth to slightly wrinkled.

Figure 1
Phyllanthus chacoensis. A − Habit; B − Leaf blade; C and D − Cauliflorous inflorescence (with details of the flowers in D); E − Fruits; F − Staminate flower; G − Pistillate flower; H − Drupaceous fruit, ellipsoidal, with persistent sepals and styles. A, B, D and E: images provided by Paraguay Biodiversity; C: E. Hassler (7161); F, G and H: drawing by Regina Carvalho. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

Representative specimens examined: Brazil. Alagoas: Traipu, 18.II.2014 (fr.), E. Melo et al. 12421 (HUEFS, P). Bahia: Morpará, 15.XII.2007 (fl., fr.), A.A. Conceição et al. 2638 (HUEFS). Mato Grosso do Sul: Corumbá, 15.IX.1989 (fl., fr.), A. Pott et al. 4936 (SP, CPAP). Pernambuco: Petrolina, 15.III.1983 (fl., fr.), Fotius 3652 (IPA). Rondônia [new record]: Forte Príncipe da Beira, 6.I.1962 (fl.), W.A. Rodrigues & B.W.P. Albuquerque 4256 (INPA10822, NY01461186, NY01461187). Sergipe: Neópolis, 19.II.2014 (fr.), E. Melo et al. 12458 (HUEFS, P).

Distribution and habitat: Exclusive to South America, recorded in Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil. In Brazil, it was previously known from northeastern (Alagoas, Bahia, Pernambuco, Sergipe) and midwestern (Mato Grosso do Sul) states (Lourteig and O’Donell 1942Lourteig, A.; O’Donell, C.A. 1942. Euphorbiaceae Argentinae-Phyllantheae, Dalechampieae, Cluytieae e Manihotieae. Lilloa, 9: 77‒173.; Silva and Sales 2007Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2007. Phyllanthus L. (Phyllanthaceae) em Pernambuco, Brasil. Acta Botanica Brasilica, 21: 79-98. ; Secco et al. 2018Secco, R.S.; Bigio, N.C.; Cordeiro, I.; Pscheidt, A.C.; Marques, O.; Caruzo, M.B.R. 2018. Check-list de Euphorbiaceaes. str., Phyllanthaceae e Peraceae de Mato Grosso do Sul, Brasil. Iheringia, Série Botânica, 73: 207‒215., Flora do Brasil 2020 [under construction]). The distribution of P. chacoensis is expanded here to the northern region of that country (the Brazilian Amazon; Figure 2). The new record was found along the margins of an igapó (seasonally inundated forest), which confirms the species’ preference for swampy or riparian environments.

Figure 2
Geographic distribution of Phyllanthus chacoensis in Brazil, including the new record. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

Conservation status: According to IUCN (2012IUCN. 2012. The IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria: Version 3.1. 2nd ed. Gland and Cambridge, 32p.) criteria, the species is classified as endangered (EN) - ENB1ac (iii), as it has an extent of occurrence (EEO) of 204,000 km2 (including the new record). Phyllanthus chacoensis should therefore be the target of collection efforts to assist in the selection of priority areas for its conservation. Most of the collected specimens in Brazil were encountered in riparian vegetation, such as along the banks of the São Francisco River (northeastern region), the Paraguay River (midwestern region), and Guaporé River (northern region), which suffer from constant anthropic impacts, including dense urban occupation and the discharge of untreated domestic sewage, resulting in biodiversity loss.

Taxonomic notes: Thomas Morong (1892) described Phyllanthus chacoensis based on syntypes “In the Gran Chaco, opposite Asuncion (355)”. = Balansa 1712, Fendler Panama 140, Fendler 323”. The collection Morong 355 is the most likely to have been used by the author in the description. However, four specimens were found in the author’s main herbarium (NY). The material selected as a lectotype is deposited under registration (NY00273054; Figure 3), as it is the best conserved and has flowers of both sexes.

Figure 3
Lectotype of Phyllanthus chacoensis at NY (NY00273054). Reproduced with the permission of the curator of The New York Botanical Garden. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

DISCUSSION

The Amazon region represents a distinct phytogeographic province characterized by a humid tropical forest of enormous biomass, heterogeneity, and diversity (Braga 1979Braga, P.I.S. 1979. Subdivisão fitogeográfica, tipos de vegetação, conservação e inventário florístico da floresta amazônica. Acta Amazonica, 9: 53‒80. ). Collection efforts such as the “Projeto Flora Amazônica (CNPq/NSF)”, initiated in 1976 (Secco 2018Secco, R.S. 2018. A Coordenação de Botânica do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi no decorrer de 150 anos da instituição. Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Ciências Naturais, 13: 261‒269.), have made significant progress in increasing our knowledge of the flora of the Brazilian Amazon, with many expeditions and a large number of plant specimens deposited in regional herbaria (with duplicates distributed among national and international herbaria). However, considering the extent of the region, the collection rate in the region is still the lowest in Brazil (Hopkins 2019Hopkins, M.J.G. 2019. Are we close to knowing the plant diversity of the Amazon? Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências (online), 91: e20190396.). The new record of P. chacoensis for the Brazilian Amazon reinforces the importance of these botanical collections, as the species had not been collected in the region since 1962. We have not found any more recent collection in the region. However, collections of P. chacoensis are much more numerous in northeastern and central-western Brazil (ca. 33 and six specimens respectively), collected since 1984.

Phyllanthus chacoensis is the only species in the subsection Aporosella (Chodat) G.L. Webster (P. sect. Cicca (L.) Müll.Arg. and P. subg. Kirganelia (A.Juss.) Kurz) (Webster 1957Webster, G.L. 1957. A monographic study of the West Indian species of Phyllanthus. Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, 38: 51-80,170-198, 295-373. , 2001Webster, G.L. 2001. Synopsis of Croton and Phyllanthus (Euphorbiaceae) in western tropical Mexico. Contributions from the University of Michigan Herbarium, 23: 353‒388.; Bouman et al. 2018Bouman, R.W.; Keβler, P.J.A.; Telford, I.R.H.; Bruhl, J.J.; Welzen, P.C. van. 2018. Subgeneric delimitation of the plant genus Phyllanthus (Phyllanthaceae). Blumea, 63: 167‒198. ), and can be differentiated from other Brazilian species by the absence of a floral disk in staminate and pistillate flowers, and by having four sepals and stamens, cauliflorous inflorescences, a 2-carpellar ovary, and fruits with one seed per locule (Silva and Sales 2007Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2007. Phyllanthus L. (Phyllanthaceae) em Pernambuco, Brasil. Acta Botanica Brasilica, 21: 79-98. ; Melo et al. 2013Melo, A.L.; Silva, M.J.; Sales, M.F. 2013. Sebastiania singularis (Euphorbiaceae): um novo sinônimo para Phyllanthus chacoensis (Phyllanthaceae). Rodriguésia, 64: 665‒666.). Phyllanthus chacoensis is morphologically similar to P. elsiae Urb., which is found in Argentina (Silva and Sales 2007), although the former can be distinguished by being monoecious (vs dioecious in P. elsiae), by having a 2-locular ovary (vs 3-locular), styles deeply 2-fid, curved downwards (vs joined in a column and descending) and ellipsoidal fruits (vs oblate-spheroidal).

CONCLUSIONS

A new record of Phyllanthus chacoensis in the Brazilian Amazon expands the distribution of the species in Brazil and confirms its preference for swampy habitats close to water bodies. It also reinforces the need for investments in botanical collections in northern Brazil, especially in the Amazon region, as well as the training of specialized human resources, as the specimen examined here had lain for more than 50 years in a herbarium without being identified. The conservation status of P. chacoensis, associated with its occurrence in highly threatened sites, indicates the need to protect this species.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors thank the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) for the grant to the first author and for the productivity grant to Margareth Sales; Wesley Cordeiro for making the map; and the organization Paraguay Biodiversity for the images

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  • CITE AS:

    Mendes, J.C.R.; Secco, R.S.; Athiê-Souza, S.M.; Sales, M.F. 2021. Phyllanthus chacoensis (Phyllanthaceae): new record for the Brazilian Amazon and its lectotypification. Acta Amazonica 51: 52-57.

Edited by

ASSOCIATE EDITOR:

Ricarda Riina

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    03 Mar 2021
  • Date of issue
    Jan-Mar 2021

History

  • Received
    20 June 2020
  • Accepted
    26 Sept 2020
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