Ouratea yamamotoana Fraga, G.H.Shimizu & D.B.O.S.Cardoso, 2022

Fraga, C. N., Shimizu, G. H. & Cardoso, D. B. O. S., 2022, Ouratea yamamotoana (Ochnaceae), a new species from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, Edinburgh Journal of Botany 79, pp. 1-9 : 2-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24823/EJB.2022.406

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7374116

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/854D8786-FFE7-7310-FF94-FBBE65F1FDE2

treatment provided by

Jonas

scientific name

Ouratea yamamotoana Fraga, G.H.Shimizu & D.B.O.S.Cardoso
status

sp. nov.

Ouratea yamamotoana Fraga, G.H.Shimizu & D.B.O.S.Cardoso View in CoL , sp. nov.

Similar to Ouratea camposportoi Sleumer but differs by its persistent stipules (vs caducous in O. camposportoi ); chartaceous leaves with cordate or slightly auriculate base and slightly revolute (vs leaves rigid chartaceous or coriaceous, with obtuse, truncated or rounded base, and distinctly revolute); flowers with pedicel measuring 6–8 mm long but reaching 7–11 mm long when in fruit, the petals spathulate or elliptic, and gynophore 1.2–1.8 mm long (vs pedicel 9–15 mm long when in flower and 14–16 mm long when in fruit, the petals obovate, and gynophore 0.9–1 mm long); and fruit with a subterete to clavate carpophore of 7–16 × 1.8–4 mm (vs carpophore elongate, piriform, 12–14 × 3.3–6.5 mm). – Type: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Paraty, Fazenda Santa Maria , estrada para Praia do Sono , 27 ix 1989, fl., Freitas, M.F. & Silva, L.C.S. 116 (holotype RB ; isotypes NY, SP) . Figures 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 .

Shrub 1.3–2 m tall, virgate. Stems erect to reclining at the apex, branched, glabrous, rugose, light brown; leaf internodes short, 6–24 mm long. Stipules 4–6 × 2.5–3.5 mm, 2 per leaf node, persistent, triangular, rigid, with slightly revolute margins, apex acute or mucronulate. Leaves 14.8–30.2 × 3–7.4 cm, congested at the terminal branches, petiolate, alternate; petiole 4.5–8.5 mm, canaliculated on adaxial surface, thick; leaf blade chartaceous, lanceolate or falcate, base cordate or slightly auriculate, margin entire at the base and serrulate at the apex, slightly revolute, apex acute-acuminate, venation eucamptodromous, midvein sulcate at the base and raised at the apex on adaxial surface and strongly raised abaxially, secondary veins curving strongly near the margin and continuing almost as submarginal veins impressed on adaxial surface and raised on adaxial surface, tertiary veins inconspicuous on both surfaces. Inflorescence terminal or rarely subterminal at the distal leaf axils, 16.4–32.5 cm long, panicle, erect to reclining, glabrous, basal bracts similar to the stipules, 4–6 × 2.5–3.5 mm, isolated, distichous and imbricate, generally followed by a pair of smaller bracteoles, 2.5–5 × 1.6–2.5 mm, triangular, rigid, revolute margins, persistent, chestnut brown; lateral branchlets 0.5–18 cm long, simple or compound, terete, bracts shallowly triangular to lanceolate, chartaceous 3–5 mm long, chestnut brown; bracteoles 0.8–1.5 mm long, shallowly triangular to linear, isolated, chestnut brown; flower pedicels 6–8 mm long, reaching 7–11 mm when in fruit, straight to curved, glabrous, regularly slender in bud and flower. Flowers pentamerous, radially symmetrical; sepals 4.3–6 × 2.1–3 mm, green-yellowish, glabrous, imbricate, elliptical, concave, internally smooth, externally thick in the middle, hyaline in the margin, acute at the apex; petals 5.8–8.1 × 2.6–3.4 mm, yellow, glabrous, spathulate or elliptic, reflexed, a few somewhat thick at the base and along the central vein, attenuate to unguiculate base, rounded apex; stamens 10, arranged in a circle around the ovary, the anthers 4.8–6.2 mm long, yellow, erect, sessile, transversely rugulose, dehiscing by a terminal pore; ovary superior, 5-carpellate; gynophore 1.2–1.8 × 0.5–0.9 mm, cylindrical, columnar, thickening near apex; fertile gynoecium units 5, 0.5–0.9 × 0.4–0.7 mm, oblong, cream; style 2.8–3.2 mm long, single, erect or genuflected at apex, filiform, gynobasic, stigma punctiform, light green. Fruit with carpophore 7–16 × 1.8–4 mm, subterete to clavate, straight or slightly curved, rugose near base, red wine-coloured in ripe fruit; mericarps 1–3, 6–11 × 5–8 mm, greenish to chestnut brown, suborbicular, erect or obliquely disposed on carpophore head, inflated, pericarp thin.

Distribution and habitat. Restricted to the Brazilian Atlantic coastal rain forest of southern Rio de Janeiro and northern São Paulo states ( Figure 3 View Figure 3 ). Most specimens are collected outside forest reserves, but the species is recorded from the relatively well-preserved forest reserve of Área de Proteção Ambiental Cairuçu, Rio de Janeiro, and in the municipality of Caraguatatuba and Ubatuba, São Paulo. In São Paulo, this new species is recorded from Núcleo Picinguaba in the northeast region of the Parque Estadual Serra do Mar in São Paulo, one of the most biodiverse and largest preserved portions of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and a hotspot of biodiversity ( Murray-Smith et al., 2009; Colli-Silva et al., 2020). It is also recorded from Pontal de Toninha in the Parque Estadual da Ilha Anchieta, the second largest island of the northern coast of São Paulo.

Phenology. Flowering has been recorded from January to May, and fruiting in July.

Etymology. The name pays homage to Professor Kikyo Yamamoto, who has made important taxonomic contributions to neotropical Ochnaceae , and especially Ouratea . She carried out an in-depth study of morphological traits to untangle the complex taxonomy of this genus and studied the Ouratea parviflora (A.DC.) Baill. species complex in her graduate studies. Kikyo has also played an important role training and guiding generations of plant systematists at Unicamp in São Paulo, Brazil, for over 30 years.

Proposed IUCN conservation category. Ouratea yamamotoana is known from nine specimens and seven locations (sensu IUCN). Using GeoCAT ( Bachman et al., 2011) and a 2 km 2 grid, it has an estimated extent of occurrence (EOO) of 570.85 km 2 and minimal area of occupancy (AOO) of 28 km 2. Although these figures fall within the limits for Endangered (EN) status under criteria B1 (EOO <5000 km 2) and B2 (<500 km 2), the number of locations is greater than five and falls within the Vulnerable (VU) category ( IUCN, 2012). The species is found in forested areas that are not severely fragmented but are threatened by real estate speculation and urban development, which may lead to a decline in the EOO, AOO and quality of habitat. For this reason, Ouratea yamamotoana is assessed as Vulnerable: VU B1ab(i,ii,iii)+2ab(i,ii,iii).

Additional specimens examined. BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro: Paraty, Área de Proteção Ambiental Cairuçu , Morro do Córrego dos Micos , 100–150 m alt., 26 xi 1994, fr., Bovini, M.G. & Giordano, L.C. 646 ( RB). São Paulo: Caraguatatuba, Captação da SABESP , Alto Rio Claro , margem do rio na estrada de acesso a captação, 25 iv 2020, fl., Miranda, M.R. 214 ( SPSF) ; Ubatuba, BR 101, Km 23, 17 iv 1979, fr., Ferreira, V.F. 617 ( RB) ; ibid., 17 iv 1979, fl., Jouvin, P.P. 494 ( CEN, RB) ; Ubatuba, Ilha Anchieta , Trilha do Guilherme , 15 xii 1994, fl., Santin, D.A. & Moreira, J.L.A. 32442 ( CEN, UEC) ; Ubatuba, Estação Experimental de Ubatuba (IAC), 29 i 1980, fl., Shepherd, G.J. et al. 10969 ( CEN) ; Ubatuba, Rodovia Rio-Santos , Enseada da Lagoinha ao lado das ruínas da Igreja de Pedra , 6 v 2000, fl., Amorim, A.M. & Forzza, R.C. 3387 ( CEPEC) ; Ubatuba, Rodovia Rio Santos , prox. da praia de Prumirim , 3 v 2005, fl., Campos-Rocha, A. & Volet, D.P. 1616 ( UEC) .

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