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Research Article
Microlicia deflexa and M. johnwurdackiana (Melastomataceae), two new species from the Brazilian Cerrado
expand article infoRosana Romero, Rodrigo Valentim
‡ Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, Uberlândia, Brazil
Open Access

Abstract

Microlicia deflexa sp. nov. and M. johnwurdackiana sp. nov. are described, illustrated and an updated identification key for the species of Microlicia from Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia is provided. Microlicia deflexa occurs in Minas Gerais and Goiás States and is characterised by its linear-lanceolate and deflexed sepal on flower and immature fruit, long pedicel and indumentum of glandular trichomes, mixed with spherical, golden glands. Microlicia johnwurdackiana is endemic to Uberlândia and characterised by having indumentum of setose trichomes and spherical, golden glands, magenta petal with greenish abaxial surface at the apex and dimorphic stamens with bicolorous and tetrasporangiate anthers.

Abstract

Microlicia deflexa sp. nov. e M. johnwurdackiana sp. nov. são descritas, ilustradas e uma chave de identificação atualizada para as espécies de Microlicia do Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia é fornecida. Microlicia deflexa ocorre nos estados de Minas Gerais e Goiás, e é caracterizada pela sépala linear-lanceolada e deflexa na flor e no fruto imaturo, pedicelo longo e indumento com tricomas glandulares misturados com glândulas esféricas, douradas. Microlicia johnwurdackiana é endêmica de Uberlândia, e caracterizada pelo indumento de tricomas setosos e glândulas esféricas, douradas, pétala magenta com a face abaxial esverdeada apenas no ápice e estames dimórficos com anteras bicolores e tetraesporangiadas.

Keywords

Endemism, Microlicieae, Minas Gerais, Goiás, taxonomy

Introduction

Microlicia D.Don is a predominantly Brazilian genus composed of ca. 240 species (Versiane et al. 2021), with most species occurring in the campo rupestre from Minas Gerais, Bahia and Goiás States (Romero 2003a, b; Romero et al. 2020) and about 49 species occurring in the cerrado phytophysiognomy. The species are generally characterised by solitary flowers or, in dichasia, reduced to one flower, with five to six occasionally nine petals, a superior or semi-inferior ovary with three to six locules and capsules dehiscing longitudinally from the apex to the base (basipetal) or from the base to the apex (acropetal) (see Versiane et al. 2021).

The Cerrado domain comprises approximately 23% of the central portion of Brazil and is represented by savannah and forest vegetation (Ribeiro and Walter 2008). Despite its rich and diverse flora (Klink and Machado 2005), the Cerrado has been threatened by economic development for several decades and has been classified as a biodiversity hotspot for more than 20 years (Myers et al. 2000).

The Triângulo Mineiro in western Minas Gerais with a heterogeneous landscape due to its different vegetation types, is included within the Cerrado domain (Novais 2011). Its central portion has an important fragment of vegetation inside a private club, the Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, in Uberlândia Municipality. This area has 127 hectares of well-preserved vegetation composed of cerrado, campo sujo, vereda, forest (Apolinário and Schiavini 2002) and a considerable area of campo úmido and campo limpo (Bacci et al. 2016). The inventory of the Melastomataceae from Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia catalogued 28 species (Bacci et al. 2016); however, the authors were unable to fit some collections of Microlicia under any of the existing names in the genus. In this present study, we analysed these collections and confirm that two were undescribed species. Furthermore, from some of the collections from Serra dos Pireneus, Goiás State and Catas Altas, Minas Gerais, one was also recognised as a new species, increasing its geographic distribution. The two new species are described and morphologically compared with similar species. Information about their geographic distribution and conservation status and images of the morphological structures are provided. In addition, the identification key for the species of Microlicia in the Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia is updated.

Methods

This study was based on analysis of Microlicia specimens deposited mainly at HUFU, with duplicates at BHCB, HRCB, NY, OUPR, RB, UFG and US Herbaria (acronyms according to Thiers 2021) and on field observations in the Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia. The general morphological terminology followed Radford et al. (1986) and the indumentum followed Wurdack (1986) and Silva et al. (2018). Distribution data were plotted on a map using the application ArcMap ver. 10.5.1. in ArcGis Desktop (ESRI 2017). The area of occupancy (AOO) and extent of occurrence (EOO) were calculated using GeoCAT georeferenced data from cited collections (Bachman et al. 2011). Recommended conservation assessments were based on the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria (IUCN 2019). Images of vegetative and reproductive structures were obtained using a digital camera coupled to a Zeiss stereoscopic microscope and organised on Adobe Photoshop CS6.

Taxonomic treatment

Microlicia deflexa R.Romero & Valentim, sp. nov.

Figs 1, 2

Type

Brazil. Minas Gerais: Uberlândia, Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, 9 June 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 20 (holotype: HUFU!; isotypes: BHCB!, HRCB!, OUPR!, UFG!).

Figure 1. 

Microlicia deflexa R.Romero & Valentim A flowering branch B leaf abaxial surface (up) and adaxial surface (down) C floral bud D larger (antesepalous) stamen (on the left) and smaller (antepetalous) stamen (on the right) E immature fruit enveloped by the hypanthium with deflexed sepals (A, E R. Romero 8690 B–D A.F.A. Versiane 20).

Diagnosis

Microlicia deflexa is recognised by the deflexed and linear-lanceolate sepals on flowers and immature fruits, long pedicels (3–5 mm long) and indumentum of glandular trichomes, glands sometimes caducous, mixed with spherical, golden glands covering branch, leaf, pedicel, hypanthium and sepal.

Figure 2. 

Microlicia deflexa R.Romero & Valentim A cerrado landscape at Uberlândia, Triângulo Mineiro, Brazil, the type locality of M. deflexa B habit C details of the deflexed sepals on the flower and immature fruits D flower bud E flower in frontal view F flower in lateral view G immature fruit. Photos: Rosana Romero.

Description

Subshrub or shrub, 0.3–0.8 m tall, erect, multi-branched. Stem terete, glabrous, brownish. Branch fastigiate, younger branch quadrangular, green, densely covered with glandular trichomes 0.4–0.8 mm long and spherical, golden glands, older branch terete, brownish, leafless with age. Leaf ascending, not imbricate; petiole up to 0.6 mm long, leaf rarely sessile; blade 3–18.5 × 1.5–10.5 mm, leaf larger in the main branch, concolorous (when dry), green, sometimes with magenta or yellow-brownish spots on both surfaces, chartaceous, oblong to ovate-oblong, sometimes elliptic, rarely lanceolate, acute at the apex, with a terminal setose trichome 0.1–0.4 mm long, base rounded, margin slightly sinuous to serrate-dentate, glandular-ciliate, both surfaces with a dense indumentum of glandular trichomes 0.4–0.8 mm long, glands sometimes caducous, mixed with spherical, golden or sometimes vinaceous glands, 3–5-veined, veins conspicuously visible on both surfaces, impressed on the adaxial surface, thickened and prominent on abaxial surface. Flower 5-merous, solitary, terminal or lateral, perianth actinomorphic; pedicel 3–5 mm long; hypanthium 1.8–2.3 × 1–2 mm, green, cylindrical, with a dense indumentum of glandular trichomes 0.1–0.8 mm long, glands sometimes caducous, mixed with spherical, golden glands, calyx tube ca. 0.2 mm long, sepal 3–3.2 × 0.5–1.2 mm, longer than the length of the hypanthium, deflexed, green, sometimes magenta at the apex (when dry), linear-lanceolate, acute at the apex, with a terminal setose trichome 0.1–0.4 mm long, with glandular trichomes 0.1–0.3 mm long, glands sometimes caducous, mixed with spherical, golden glands; petal 6–7 × 3–4.5 mm, pinkish, oblong or obovate, acute at the apex, margin entire, glabrous; stamen 10, dimorphic, anther bicolorous, tetrasporangiate; larger (antesepalous) stamen with filament 2.5–3.7 mm long, lilac, pedoconnective 1.5–2.5 mm long, lilac, ventral appendage 0.7–1.2 mm long, yellow, retuse or sometimes slightly bilobed at the apex, anther 1.8–2.2 mm long including beak, pinkish, sometimes with yellow spots, oblong, beak 0.2–0.4 mm long, white; smaller (antepetalous) stamen with filament 2.4–3.7 mm long, lilac, pedoconnective 0.7–1.2 mm long, lilac, ventral appendage 0.2–0.4 mm long, yellow, retuse at the apex, anther ca. 1.5 mm long including beak, yellow, oblong, beak 0.2–0.4 mm long, yellow; ovary 3–5-locular, sub-globose to terete, superior, glabrous; style 3.5–6.5 mm long, terete, slightly curved, pinkish, glabrous; stigma punctiform. Capsule 2.7–4.2 × 1.3–2.7 mm, brownish, globose, dehiscing into 3–5 valves from the apex, hypanthium enveloping the entire capsule and peeling off top to bottom as the fruit mature, columella deciduous; seed 0.2–0.4 × 0.1–0.3 mm, pale brown, oblong, testa foveolate.

Distribution and habitat

Microlicia deflexa is found in Minas Gerais, in Uberlândia, occurring in campo sujo near vereda, at ca. 860 m elevation and in Catas Altas, in a shaded area of cerrado, at 1085 m elevation. It also occurs in Goiás, in Cocalzinho de Goiás, in campo sujo near vereda, at 1220 m elevation (Fig. 3).

Figure 3. 

Geographical distribution of Microlicia deflexa and Microlicia johnwurdackiana in Minas Gerais and Goiás States, Brazil.

Conservation status

Microlicia deflexa has a restricted area of occupancy (AOO = 12 km2) and should be preliminarily assessed as Endangered [(EN) B2ab (iii)], following the IUCN (2019) guidelines. Only the populations in Cata Altas are protected since it occurs inside the Reserva Patrimônio Natural Santuário do Caraça.

Phenology

Flowers have been collected in April and from July to September and fruits from July to October.

Etymology

The specific epithet “deflexa” refers to the sepal characteristically deflexed on flower and immature fruit i.e. turned abruptly downwards.

Discussion

Microlicia deflexa is morphologically similar to M. serpyllifolia D.Don, which occurs in Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Bahia and Distrito Federal (Silva and Romero 2008, as M. fulva; Romero and Woodgyer 2015; Romero et al. 2020) in campo rupestre, campo limpo and cerrado. Both species have long pedicel and sepal, dimorphic stamen with bicolorous and tetrasporangiate anther. Microlicia serpyllifolia differs in having a very peculiar velutinous indumentum composed of thin, short and soft trichomes covering branch, leaf, pedicel, hypanthium and sepal mixed with spherical glands (vs. glandular indumentum mixed with spherical, golden glands in M. deflexa). The sepal in M. serpyllifolia is triangular and ascending (vs. linear-lanceolate and deflexed). Microlicia deflexa also bears some resemblance to Microlicia helvola (Spreng.) Triana, which occurs in Goiás, Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso and Minas Gerais States (Romero et al. 2020; Versiane et al. 2020) in campo limpo, campo sujo and the edges of vereda and swamp areas (Bacci et al. 2016; Versiane et al. 2016) and less frequently in cerrado rupestre (Machado and Romero 2020). Microlicia deflexa and M. helvola are subshrub or shrub with sessile leaf or with a short petiole, acute at the apex, rounded at the base and 3–5-veined. Furthermore, both species have pinkish petal and dimorphic stamens with bicolorous anthers. However, M. helvola differs in having an indumentum of setose trichomes mixed with spherical glands (vs. glandular trichomes mixed with spherical glands in M. deflexa), urceolate and 10-striate hypanthium (vs. cylindrical and not striate), sepal shorter than the hypanthium length (vs. sepal longer than the hypanthium length) and polysporangiate anther (vs. tetraesporangiate). Microlicia deflexa also resembles M. phlogiformis (DC.) Versiane & R.Romero, which also occurs in the Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, in campo úmido or inside the vereda on waterlogged soil (Bacci et al. 2016). The indumentum, the sepals and the long pedicel of both species are similar; however, M. phlogiformis differs in having flowers in dichasia (vs. solitary) and ascending sepals (vs. deflexed). Table 1 includes additional features comparing M. helvola, M. phlogiformis and M. serpyllifolia to M. deflexa.

Table 1.

Comparative features between Microlicia deflexa and relatives.

Characters/species M. deflexa M. helvola M. phlogiformis M. serpyllifolia
Petiole (mm) Absent or up to 0.6 Absent or up to 0.5 Absent or 2–5 Absent or ca. 0.4
Pedicel (mm) 3–5 0.7–1 2–9 1.3–3
Leaf trichomes Glandular trichomes, and spherical glands Setose and spherical glands Glandular trichomes Setose and spherical glands
Hypanthium shape Cylindrical Urceolate Urceolate Campanulate
Sepal length (mm) 3–3.2 1–2 3.5–4 1.3–4
Sepal Deflexed Ascending Ascending Ascending
Anther sporangia Tetrasporangiate Polysporangiate Tetrasporangiate Tetrasporangiate
Distribution Minas Gerais, Goiás Goiás, Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais Paraná, Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Goiás, Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso, Bahia, Distrito Federal Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Bahia, Distrito Federal

Additional specimens examined (paratypes)

Brazil. Goiás: Cocalzinho de Goiás, estrada para plantação de eucalipto final da estrada, 26 April 2012 (fl), J.N. Nakajima et al. 5083 (BHCB!, HRCB!, HUFU!, NY!, RB!, UFG!, US!). Minas Gerais: Catas Altas, Reserva Patrimônio Natural Santuário do Caraça, trilha para a cascatinha, 18 October 2016 (fr), M. Castro et al. 180 (BHCB!, HUFU!); Uberlândia, Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, 21 March 2011, A.F.A. Versiane et al. 2 (HUFU!, SP!, UEC!); idem, 6 April 2011 (fl), A.F.A. Versiane 10 (HUFU!, NY!, OUPR!, RB!); idem, 12 July 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 29 (HUFU!, HRCB!); idem, 12 July 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 30 (HUFU!, K!, P!); idem, 12 July 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 32 (HUFU!); idem, 26 August 2015 (fl, fr), R. Romero et al. 8690 (HUFU!, OUPR!); idem, 9 September 2015 (fl, fr), R. Romero et al. 8693 and 8695 (HUFU!); idem, 4 February 2017 (fl), A.P.S. Caetano 52 (HUFU!); idem, 10 May 2018 (fl, fr), R.V. Brito et al. 37 (HUFU!).

Microlicia johnwurdackiana R.Romero & Valentim, sp. nov.

Figs 4, 5

Type

Brazil. Minas Gerais: Uberlândia, 26 August 2015 (fl, fr), R. Romero et al. 8687 (holotype: HUFU!; isotypes: BHCB!, K!, OUPR!, P!, RB!, UEC!).

Figure 4. 

Microlicia johnwurdackiana R.Romero & Valentim A flowering branch B leaf abaxial surface (up) and adaxial surface (down) C floral bud D larger (antesepalous) stamen (on the left) and smaller (antepetalous) stamen (on the right) E capsule in two stages: immature enveloped by the hypanthium (on the right) and mature with hypanthium peeling off (on the left) (A, E A.F.A. Versiane et al. 57 B–D M.L. Viana 4).

Diagnosis

Microlicia johnwurdackiana is recognised by its dense indumentum of setose trichomes and spherical, golden glands covering branch, leaf, pedicel, hypanthium and sepal, magenta petal with greenish apex on the abaxial surface and bicolorous and tetraesporangiate anther.

Figure 5. 

Microlicia johnwurdackiana R.Romero & Valentim A cerrado landscape at Uberlândia, Triângulo Mineiro, Brazil, the type locality of M. johnwurdackiana B habit C flowering branches D flower in lateral view E flower in front view, detail of a greenish apex in the petals in the flower bud F immature fruits. Photos: Rosana Romero.

Description

Subshrub or shrub, 0.3–1 m tall, erect, multi-branched. Stem terete, brownish. Branch fastigiate, younger branch quadrangular, green, densely covered of setose, pale trichomes 0.2–0.3 mm long mixed with spherical, golden glands, older branch sub-quadrangular, brownish, leafless with age. Leaf ascending, not imbricate; petiole ca. 0.3 mm long, leaf rarely sessile; blade 3.5–9.5 × 1.7–7 mm, leaf with the same size in the main and lateral branches, concolorous (when dry), green-brownish, chartaceous, ovate, acute at the apex, base rounded, margin crenulate, setose-ciliate, both surfaces with a dense indumentum of setose, pale trichomes 0.2–0.3 mm long mixed with spherical, golden glands, 3-veined, rarely 5-veined. Flower 5-merous, solitary, terminal or lateral, perianth actinomorphic; pedicel 0.8–1.2 mm long; hypanthium 2.3–3 × ca. 1.5 mm, light green, cylindrical, with a dense indumentum of setose, pale trichomes 0.2–0.3 mm long mixed with spherical, golden glands; calyx tube ca. 0.3 mm long; sepal 1.5–2 × 1–1.5 mm, vinaceous, triangular, with a dense indumentum of setose, pale trichomes 0.2–0.3 mm long mixed with spherical, golden glands, acute at the apex, with a terminal setose trichome ca. 0.2 mm long; petal 4.5–8 × 3.5–5 mm, magenta, greenish at the apex on the abaxial surface, obovate, acute or asymmetrically acuminate at the apex, margin entire, with sparse, spherical, golden glands at the apex; stamen 10, dimorphic, anther bicolorous, tetraesporangiate; larger (antesepalous) stamen, with filament 2.5–3 mm long, vinaceous, pedoconnective 1.8–2.5 mm long, vinaceous, ventral appendage ca. 1 mm long, with proximal half magenta, distal half yellow, obtuse at the apex, anther 2–2.5 mm long including beak, vinaceous, ovate-oblong, beak 0.4–0.6 mm long, white; smaller (antepetalous) stamen with filament 2–3 mm long, vinaceous, pedoconnective ca. 0.8 mm long, yellow, ventral appendage ca. 0.1 mm long, yellow, retuse at the apex, anther 1.5–1.8 mm long including beak, yellow, ovate-oblong, beak 0.3–0.5 mm long, yellow; ovary 3-locular, ovate to ovate-elliptic, superior, glabrous; style 4–4.5 mm long, magenta, terete, slightly curved, glabrous; stigma punctiform. Capsule 4–4.5 × 2–2.5 mm brownish to reddish, globose, dehiscing into 3-valves from the apex, hypanthium and sepals enveloping the entire capsule and peeling off top to bottom as the fruit mature, columella deciduous; seed 0.3–0.5 × 0.2–0.3 mm, brownish or reddish, oblong, testa foveolate.

Distribution and habitat

Microlicia johnwurdackiana is endemic to Uberlândia, city of the Triângulo Mineiro, western Minas Gerais, Brazil. It occurs at Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia in campo sujo near to vereda, on sandy soil, and in a private area in campo úmido with murundus (see Paulino et al. 2015) in the upper course of the Bacia do Rio Uberabinha, about 850 m elevation (Fig. 3).

Conservation status

Microlicia johnwurdackiana has a restricted area of occupancy (AOO = 12 km2) and, according to the IUCN Categories and Criteria (IUCN 2019), we recommend a conservation status of Critically Endangered [CR B1ab (iii) + 2ab (iii)]. According to the Brazilian Forest Code (Law 12.651/2012), the vereda in rural or urban areas are permanent preservation areas (APP). However, both localities, where M. johnwurdackiana occurs, are not protected by any conservation unit. Large populations occur at Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, a well-preserved vegetation fragment, located in the urban area of Uberlândia, recognised in 1992 as Reserva Particular de Patrimônio Natural (RPPN) (IBAMA 1992). However, the ordinance was revoked by the same Institute (IBAMA 2000) for lack of proper documentation, making this area vulnerable, except for the vereda and its surroundings, which is a permanent preservation area. Nevertheless, in recent years, this area has been heavily impacted by periodic fires, predatory collections, real estate speculation and the opening of trails for cyclists in the interior of the cerrado. The other area of occurrence is private property that has been seriously affected by the expansion of agriculture, invasion of exotic Pinus species, removal of refractory clay and frequent burning caused by farmers. As a result of so many threats, the civil society from Uberlândia has made an effort, through the non-governmental organisation Angá (Associação para a Gestão Socioambiental do Triângulo Mineiro), for part of this area to become a permanent preservation area (P.K.B. Hemsing, pers. comm.).

Phenology

Flowers and fruits have been collected from March to May and from July to December.

Etymology

The specific epithet honours John Julius Wurdack (1921–1998), an American botanist who dedicated part of his life to studying the Melastomataceae family and described more than 900 species (see IPNI 2021). About 20 years ago, Wurdack examined the first collections of Microlicia made at Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia (Romero et al. 535 at US) and indicated that it was likely a new species.

Discussion

Microlicia johnwurdackiana is similar to M. hirticalyx Romero & Woodgyer, which is endemic to the south of the Espinhaço Range, Minas Gerais State, occurring in campo rupestre (Romero and Woodgyer 2011). Both species have a dense indumentum of setose trichomes mixed with spherical, golden glands covering branch, leaf, hypanthium and sepal, 5-merous flower, solitary, terminal and lateral, dimorphic stamens with bicolorous and tetrasporangiate anthers. Microlicia hirticalyx differs in having oblong-campanulate hypanthium with patent trichomes 0.5–1.5 mm long (vs. cylindrical, ascending trichomes 0.2–0.3 mm long in M. johnwurdackiana), sepal 2–3.5 mm long (vs. 1.5–2 mm long) and petal apiculate at the apex (vs. acute or asymmetrically acuminate, not apiculate). Microlicia johnwurdackiana also bears some resemblance to M. fasciculata Martius ex Naudin and M. polystemma Naudin. Microlicia fasciculata occurs in São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Bahia and Distrito Federal (Silva and Romero 2008; Romero et al. 2020) in campo rupestre, cerrado, campo limpo, campo sujo and campo úmido, while M. polystemma occurs in São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Goiás and Distrito Federal (Silva and Romero 2008; Romero and Woodgyer 2015; Bacci et al. 2016; Romero et al. 2020) in campo rupestre and campo úmido. Both species are similar to M. johnwurdackiana in having setose trichomes and spherical glands covering the branch, leaf, pedicel, hypanthium and sepal. However, M. fasciculata has a villous indumentum with white trichomes that give a glaucous tonality to the plant (vs. setose indumentum with pale trichomes in M. johnwurdackiana), campanulate hypanthium (vs. cylindrical), petal entirely pink (vs. magenta, greenish at the apex on the abaxial surface), rounded at the apex (vs. acute or asymmetrically acuminate), ciliate-glandular margin (vs. with sparse, spherical, golden glands only at the apex) and polysporangiate anther (vs. tetrasporangiate). Microlicia polystemma differs in having campanulate hypanthium (vs. cylindrical in M. johnwurdackiana), yellow stamens, sometimes with pink spots in the anther (vs. vinaceous anther in the antesepalous whorl and yellow in the antepetalous one) and ovate-triangular sepal with a conspicuous setose trichome ca. 0.8 mm long at the apex (vs. triangular, trichome ca. 0.2 mm long). Table 2 includes additional features comparing M. hirticalyx, M. fasciculata and M. polystemma to M. johnwurdackiana.

Table 2.

Comparative features between Microlicia johnwurdackiana and relatives.

Characters/species M. fasciculata M. hirticalyx M. johnwurdackiana M. polystemma
Hypanthium shape Campanulate Oblong-campanulate Cylindrical Campanulate
Sepal length (mm) 1.6–2.3 2–4 1.5–2 2.5–4.4
Sepal shape Triangular Narrowly triangular Triangular Ovate-triangular
Petal apex Acute, asymmetrically acute, or rounded Apiculate Acute or asymmetrically acuminate Rounded
Anther, numbers of sporangia Polysporangiate Tetrasporangiate Tetrasporangiate Tetrasporangiate
Anthers colours Bicolorous, rarely concolorous Bicolorous Bicolorous Concolorous
Distribution São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Bahia, Distrito Federal Minas Gerais Minas Gerais São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Distrito Federal

Additional specimens examined (paratypes)

Brazil. Minas Gerais: Uberlândia, Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, 22 October 1993 (fl, fr), R. Romero et al. 535 (HUFU!, US!); idem, 30 November 1993 (fl, fr), R. Romero & A.A. Arantes 553 (HUFU!); idem, 1 December 1993 (fl, fr), R .Romero & J.N. Nakajima 559 (HUFU!); idem, 22 March 1994 (fl, fr), R. Romero 780 (HUFU!, K!); idem, 17 May 1994 (fl), R. Romero et al. 1004 (HUFU!); idem, 24 May 1994 (fr), R. Romero & A.A. Arantes 1013 (BHCB!, HUFU!); idem, 9 October 1998 (fl, fr), G.M. Araújo s.n. (HUFU 17845!); idem, 4 December 1998 (fl), A.F. Amaral et al 1419 (HUFU!); idem, 5 March 1999, A.A.A. Barbosa 1912 (HUFU!, SP!); idem, 29 November 2002 (fl), A.A.A. Barbosa s.n. (HUFU 31783!); idem, 14 April 2009 (fl, fr), R. Romero et al. 8212 (HUFU!, UEC!); idem, 26 May 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane & L.F. Bacci 17 (HUFU!, P!, US!); idem, 27 July 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane & L.F. Bacci 34 (HUFU!, RB!); idem, 1 September 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 39 (HUFU!, K!, P!, SP!, US!); idem, 1 November 2011 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 57 (HUFU!, SP!, UEC!, UFG!); idem, 22 August 2012 (fl, fr), A.F.A. Versiane et al. 243 (HUFU!); idem, 26 October 2015, R. Romero 8687 (HUFU!); idem, 6 November 2015 (fl, fr), F.L. Contro et al. 169 (HUFU!); idem, 6 November 2015 (fl, fr), J.N. Nakajima 5100 (HUFU!); idem, 9 May 2016 (fl, fr), R. Romero 8825 (HUFU!, RB!); idem, 16 March 2017 (fl, fr), P.K.B. Hemsing et al. 564 (HUFU!) and 571 (HUFU!); idem, 30 October 2017 (fl, fr), J. Santiago et al. s.n. (HUFU 75665!); idem, 30 October 2017 (fl, fr), R.G. Clemente et al. s.n. (HUFU 75682!); idem, 9 March 2018 (fr), M.L. Viana 4 (HUFU!); idem, 7 May 2018 (fl, fr), F. L. Jesus et al. s.n. (HUFU 76820!); idem, 7 May 2018 (fl, fr), T. R. Leal & V. R. Teixeira s.n. (HUFU 76818!); idem, 10 May 2018 (fl, fr), R.V. Brito et al. 42 (HUFU!); Bacia do Rio Uberabinha, 19°22'33"S, 47°54'44"W, 9 October 2014 (fl, fr), P.K.B. Hemsing & J.C. Aguilar 328 (BHCB!, HUFU!, OUPR!).

Key to the species of Microlicia from Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia, Minas Gerais State, Brazil

1 Flower 6-merous; capsule dehiscing from the base Microlicia macrantha
Flower 5-merous; capsule dehiscing from the apex 2
2 Anther polysporangiate 3
Anther tetrasporangiate 4
3 Leaf blade with glaucous, villous indumentum; hypanthium campanulate Microlicia fasciculata
Leaf blade with greenish to yellowish, setose indumentum; hypanthium urceolate Microlicia helvola
4 Petal white to pinkish-white or cream to white with pink vein 5
Petal pinkish or magenta 6
5 Leaf discolorous (darker adaxial surface), revolute at the margin; petiole 6–10 mm long; flower with a short pedicel (1–2 mm long) Microlicia parviflora
Leaf concolorous (green), flat at the margin; petiole 2–3 mm long; flower with a long pedicel (6–9 mm long) Microlicia phlogiformis
6 Main branch with leaf larger than in the lateral branches 7
Main and lateral branches with the same size leaf 8
7 Leaf blade cordate; hypanthium campanulate; sepal positioned horizontally on flower and immature fruit Microlicia cordata
Leaf blade oblong to ovate-oblong, sometimes elliptic, rare lanceolate; hypanthium cylindrical; sepal deflexed on flower and immature fruit Microlicia deflexa
8 Stamen with concolorous anther (yellow), sometimes with vinaceous spots; petal longer than 8.5 mm Microlicia polystemma
Stamen with bicolorous anther (vinaceous and yellow); petal less than 8 mm 9
9 Leafblade with dense indumentum of setose trichomes and spherical glands; hypanthium cylindrical; petal with greenish abaxial surface at the apex Microlicia johnwurdackiana
Leafblade with sparse indumentum of spherical glands; hypanthium campanulate; petal entirely magenta Microlicia trembleyiformis

Bacci et al. (2016) catalogued seven species of Microlicia to Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia: M. cordata (Spreng.) Cham., M. fasciculata, M. helvola, M. polystemma, M. macrantha Versiane & R.Romero (as Lavoisiera grandiflora A.St.-Hil. ex Naudin), M. parviflora (D.Don) Versiane & R.Romero (as Trembleya parviflora D.Don) and M. phlogiformis (DC.) Versiane & R.Romero (as Trembleya phlogiformis DC.) and we add here three more species: M. deflexa, M. johnwurdackiana and M. trembleyiformis Naudin.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to Carlos Henrique de Carvalho from Pró-Reitoria de Pesquisa e Pós-Graduação, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (PROPP/UFU) for financial support; to Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq/REFLORA process 563541/2010–5) and Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG process APQ 01911–16) for financial support for fieldwork; to Lilian Flávia Araújo Oliveira for being so kind and helping us with the map; to Kleber Del Claro for kindly facilitating our access to collect at Clube Caça e Pesca Itororó de Uberlândia; to Ana Flávia Alves Versiane for valuable suggestions to improve the text; to Paula Katiane Boesing Hemsing for detailed information about the occurrence of M. johnwurdackiana. Rodrigo Valentim thanks Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG) for the scientific initiation scholarship (process 23117.007850/2017-83). This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior – Brasil (CAPES) – Finance Code 001. Rosana Romero is deeply grateful to John Wurdack (in memorian) for teaching and attention at the beginning of her botanical studies.

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