Tovomitopsis paniculata (Spreng.) Planch. & Triana, Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot., Ser . 4, 14: 262. 1860.

Bertolonia paniculata ≡ Bertolonia paniculata Spreng., Neue Entdeck. Pflanzenk. II: 110, t. I. 1820 ( “1821”).

Tovomita paniculata = Tovomita paniculata Cambess., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(8): 315, pl. 64. 1828. Type. lectotype (designated here), [Brazil: Rio de Janeiro] in sylvis primaevis propè vicum Aguassu, haud longè ab urbe Rio de Janeiro. Florebat Februario [1816-1821, A. De Saint-Hilaire s/n] (P! P00093861; isolectotypes: MPU 2-sheets MPU014277, MPU014278). (Fig. 3)

Tovomita foliosa = Tovomita foliosa C.Presl, Symb. Bot. (Presl) ii(7). 20. tab. 66. 1834 (1833). Type. lectotype (designated here), illustration in Presl (1834: Tab. 66). (Fig. 4)

Type.

lectotype (designated here), illustration in Sprengel (1821: Tab. I). (Fig. 1, 1 - 4b)

Notes about Tovomitopsis saldanhae

Tovomitopsis saldanhae was described by Engler (1888) based on specimens from the Serra dos Órgãos (Rio de Janeiro state) as " Habitat in Brasiliae provincia Rio de Janeiro, in Serra dos Orgâos ad Theresopolim: J. de Saldanha n. 6777, 6780, 6781, Glaziou n. 13576 in herb. Eichler ". His description and the illustration point to the use of both staminate and pistillate specimens. In the same contribution, Engler also described Clusia angustifolia Engl. based on Saldanha 7335, which was collected in the same locality of T. saldanhae . The specimen (pistillate) clearly matches with specimens of T. saldanhae, especially the oblanceolate leaves with dark dots below, four petals and two series of resiniferous staminodes with subapical antherodes. As the specimen of Clusia angustifolia deposited in B was destroyed during World War II in 1943, we select a duplicate at R as the lectotype.

Tovomitopsis saldanhae was later transferred to Chrysochlamys as C. saldanhae (Engl.) Oliveira-Filho, but Oliveira-Filho (2006) did not mention or indicate a type. Chrysochlamys saldanhae is now a synonym of T. saldanhae (Marinho 2021). Among the T. saldanhae syntypes, we chose A. Glaziou 13576 (P01901232, Fig. 5), which is the best preserved specimen housed at P, as the lectotype.