identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
8BF8C77C59735206B8A3A8C72DCE898F.text	8BF8C77C59735206B8A3A8C72DCE898F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola allenii D. Santam. & Aguilar 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 1.  Virola allenii D.Santam. &amp; Aguilar sp. nov. Figs 5, 6, 7A </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Species resembling  Virola macrocarpa in its leaf blades that are whitish on the abaxial side and covered with stellate, sessile trichomes with the centre reddish and contrasting with the hyaline branches to reddish-clear in colour and lateral veins that are not densely arranged, as well as large fruits that are covered with ferruginous trichomes. It differs in its narrow leaf blades (3.2-7.3 cm vs. 7-11 cm wide) with acute or obtuse to rounded bases (vs. broadly obtuse), fruits with thick pericarp (3.2-3.8 mm vs. 1.8-3 mm thick) and preference for humid lowland forests at 0-350 (-1350) m elevation (vs. montane forests in Andes of Colombia at around 1100 m elevation). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p>Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Esquinas forest preserve, 0 m, 10 Jan 1951 (♂ fl), P. H. Allen 5763 (holotype: F-2 sheets* [1394346!, 1679106!]; isotype: USJ [9016]).</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree 13-30 m  × 10.4-50 cm DBH; bark sometimes described as smooth and reddish or dark brown. Exudate sometimes described as abundant and reddish or watery, but without specifying from where or red in the trunk. Twigs 0.16-0.22 cm thick, terete to slightly flattened laterally, puberulent, trichomes stellate to irregularly stellate, ferruginous. Leaves: petiole 0.5-1.4  × 0.13-0.24 cm, slightly canaliculate, tomentose, the trichomes stellate to irregularly stellate; leaf blades 16.2-29.2  × 3.2-7.3 cm, oblong-elliptic or rarely elliptic; adaxial surface of mature leaves olive or light brown (sometimes shining) when dry, glabrous or with scattered stellate trichomes, the surface smooth; abaxial surface pale brown to whitish when dry, densely but inconspicuously pubescent, trichomes stellate, sessile, the central part of the trichome reddish and contrasting in colour with the hyaline branches to reddish-clear, with 4-10 branches, the branches  ± 0.01-0.05 mm long, persistent; lateral veins 15-20 per side, 4-5 veins per 5 cm, 1.2-1.8 cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface or slightly transparent, on adaxial side flat to sunken, on abaxial side slightly elevated, arcuate-ascending, slightly anastomosing near the margin and without forming a very marked intramarginal vein; tertiary veins barely visible on both sides; midvein adaxially slightly elevated (sometimes flat, distally), abaxially raised, rounded to somewhat triangular, tomentose to glabrate; base acute or obtuse to rounded, not revolute, flat; margin flat; apex acuminate or rarely rounded. Staminate inflorescences 3.5-5.5 cm long, axillary, axes flattened, tomentose, with trichomes irregularly stellate, ferruginous; peduncle 1.2-1.9  × ca. 0.1 cm long; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles dense, with 15-40+ flowers. Staminate flowers with the pedicel 0.3-1.2 mm long; receptacle 1.2-2 mm wide; perianth 2-2.8 mm long, infundibuliform, yellow when fresh, connate by 1.1-1.7 (-2.3) mm long, external surface pubescent, with brown trichomes, internal surface glabrous or with few trichomes close to the margin of the lobes; lobes 3 (4), 0.8-1.5  × 0.6-0.9 (-1.2) mm; stamens 3, the filament column 0.5-0.6 mm long, glabrous, straight, thin, sometimes slightly thickened at the base, not constricted at the apex; anthers 0.6-0.9 mm long; apiculus 0.06-0.1 mm long, acute to apiculate, connate. Pistillate inflorescences and pistillate flowers not seen. Infructescence 2.5-7.5 cm long, with 2-13 fruits, peduncle 2-3.5  × ca. 0.47 cm. Fruits 2.7-3.5  × 1.5-2.5 cm, usually ellipsoid or rarely ovoid, stipitate, densely tomentose, the trichomes dendritic, ferruginous and falling very easily to the touch (as dust), the surface rugose or smooth when dry, the line of dehiscence usually carinate, but not very conspicuous, the base obtuse, the apex acute to obtuse, green or golden and ferruginous by the pubescence when fresh; pericarp 3.2-3.8 mm thick; pedicel 0.4-0.7 cm long; seed ca. 2.5  × 1.3 cm, the testa when dry whitish-greyish, markedly grooved; aril usually described as red when fresh, pale brown when dry, membranaceous, the texture dry and thin, laciniate in narrow bands distally. Germination epigeal, seedling cryptocotylar, the first pair of leaves (sub)opposite (Ley  López and  Chacón Madrigal 2017; as  V. macrocarpa ). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola allenii is recognised by its narrow leaf blades with lateral veins that are well separated (Fig. 8A) with a whitish abaxial surface and covered with stellate, sessile trichomes with the central portion of the trichome reddish and contrasting in colour with the hyaline branches to reddish-clear (Figs 3A, 6F); the staminate flowers with the lobes of the perianth almost glabrous on the inner surface, the column of filaments straight and not constricted at the apex, anthers that are usually longer (0.6-0.9 mm long) than the column of the filaments (0.5-0.6 mm long) and an apiculus that is 0.06-0.1 mm long. It is also distinctive for its large, usually ellipsoid fruits (Figs 4A, 6  I–K ) with thick pericarp that are green when ripe and covered by ferruginous trichomes that fall very easily to the touch (Fig. 6K inset); and seeds with the testa markedly ribbed. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The specific epithet honours the collector of the type specimen, Paul H. Allen (1911-1963), who was probably the first person to collect this species 67 years ago (P. H. Allen 5763; 10 Jan 1951). During his five-year residency in Palmar Norte, Puntarenas, Costa Rica (Grayum et al. 2004), Allen made important collections and publications in this region (e.g. The Rain Forests of Golfo Dulce, Allen 1956).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola allenii is known only from Costa Rica (Puntarenas and San  José ) (Fig. 9A). It is found on the Pacific slope, at 0-350 (-1350) m elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p> Virola allenii is Vulnerable following IUCN critera B1a and B2a. Justifying its status, it is known from seven localities and has an EOO of 3,424 km2 and an AOO of 40 km2. Specimens have been collected regularly since the 1990s during botanical expeditions in the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica, though only 22 specimens have been verified. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>None recorded.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola allenii has been recorded in January, March, April and December. Fruits have been observed in January, August to October. Pistillate flowers were not seen in the studied material. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p> The bark is described as brown and smooth or as peeling in small pieces, sometimes with a strong, spicy scent. Twigs and leaves often have galls (e.g. Fig. 6I). Leaf blades are adaxially lustrous and abaxially whitish. Staminate flowers are yellow and fragrant. Fruits, which are ca. 5  × 3.2 cm when fresh, are green at maturity and covered with brown trichomes that fall very easily when touched and have a pericarp that is ca. 6 mm thick. The aril of mature fruits is red and white in immature fruits. Seeds have a white testa. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Virola allenii is most similar to  V. macrocarpa , a species from montane forests at 1100 m elevation in the Andes of Colombia (  Boyacá ) and this name has been previously applied to the species described here (e.g.  Jiménez 2007; Cornejo et al. 2012; Aguilar et al. 2017 onward). It is differentiated from  V. macrocarpa by the characteristics presented in the diagnosis and in Table 2. </p>
            <p> The comparison presented hereafter for  Virola macrocarpa (Fig. 7C) is strictly based on the protologue (except for the pericarp thickness), from which we have been able to study two physical duplicates deposited at MO (A. Lawrance 675, MO-2 sheets!, fr [Fig. 4D]) and the images at A! (st), F! (2-sheets, fr), G! (2-sheets, st.), K! (st), S (fr) and US! (2-sheets, fruits likely in the packet, but not seen). We confirmed all measurements from the protologue on Lawrance 675 (MO) and found them consistent with the exception of pericarp thickness; while 2-4 mm was stated in the protologue, our measurements ranged from 1.8-3 mm, which we present in Table 2 below. In our estimation, all other observed South American specimens, annotated with this name, represent an amalgamation of different identities (D.  Santamaría-Aguilar , in prep.). </p>
            <p> Based on a number of features listed in the diagnosis of  V. alleni , including colour of the abaxial leaf blade, sessile trichomes, degree of separation of lateral veins and the length of the anther apiculus,  V. allenii is similar to  V. calophylla (Fig. 10A, B) and  V. calophylloidea from South America; the latter was recently included as a synonym of  V. calophylla (see notes below). Furthermore,  Virola allenii also shares narrow oblong-elliptic leaf blades (3.2-8 cm broad) and short inflorescences with  V. calophylloidea . However, it is distinguished from both species by the filament column that is constricted at or towards the apex (vs. not constricted in  V. allenii ) and the tendency towards short anthers (0.4-0.7 mm vs. 0.6-0.9 mm long). Additional differences amongst these three species are presented in the Table 2. </p>
            <p> In Mesoamerica,  Virola allenii can be confused with  V. amistadensis and  V. otobifolia (which are formally described as new below). All these species have lateral veins that are well spaced (Fig. 8A, B, M) and an abaxial leaf surface that is usually whitish with sessile stellate trichomes; for differences between these species see Table 3. </p>
            <p> Some of the first specimens of this new species were confused with other taxa, though they differ based on their trichomes:  Otoba (e.g. L. J. Poveda 887, CR!) with malpighiaceous trichomes (vs. stellate trichomes),  Virola sebifera (e.g. N. Zamora et al. 1440, CR!) with dendritic to dendritic-stellate and generally pediculate trichomes (vs. stellate and sessile) (Fig. 3A, N); or  V. guatemalensis (e.g. P. H. Allen 6727, F, GH) with the central part of the trichome colourless (vs. reddish) and with more compressed lateral veins (0.6-1.1 cm vs. 1.2-1.8 cm of separation between veins) (Figs 3A, 8A, F). </p>
            <p>*From Smith 1938.</p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p>The holotype, deposited at Field Museum (F), represents two sheets with hand written annotation ("Sheet 1 of 2," "Sheet 2 of 2"), which suggests that they represent a multi-sheet specimen of the same plant (ICN Art. 8.3) (Turland et al. 2018).</p>
            <p> The specimen B. Hammel et al. 24041 (CR!; fr) from 1370 m elevation in the  Tarrazú region of San  José province (Costa Rica) differs from other members of this new species by its more rounded and pubescent fruits and its occurrence at a higher elevation than other specimens. It is included here with some reservation. This specimen is most similar to E. Alfaro 492 (CR!, LSU!, MO!; ♂ fl), which was also collected in montane forests on the Pacific slope of the Cordillera de Talamanca (1240 m elevation). E. Alfaro 492 differs from the rest of  V. alleni in its larger staminate perianth (ca. 3.8-4 mm vs. 2-2.8 mm long) that is fleshy with dense pubescence on the entire adaxial surface (vs. glabrous or with sparse trichomes close to the margin of the lobes in  V. allenii ) and the column of the filaments (ca. 0.5-0.7 mm vs. 0.5-0.6 mm long) that is shorter than the anthers (ca. 1.2 mm vs. 0.6-0.9 mm long). This specimen was also discussed by  Jiménez (2007) as  V. macrocarpa . </p>
            <p> The specimens [P. H.] Allen 5763 (type; F, USJ) and [P. H.] Allen 6727 (F, GH), cited as  V. guatemalensis in The Rain Forests of Golfo Dulce (Allen, 1956), correspond with this new species. </p>
            <p> Virola calophylloidea has recently been considered synonymous with  V. calophylla (e.g. Rodrigues 1980; Jaramillo et al. 2004; ter Steege et al. 2019). However, here, it is treated as a morphologically distinct species. This is due to its smaller leaves, more compact staminate and pistillate inflorescences and infructescences, staminate flowers with the filament column longer than the anthers and smaller fruits (see Table 2). Some representative collections of  V. calophylloidea include: </p>
            <p> Brazil. Acre: Rio Jurua &amp; Rio Moa, Serra da Moa, 30 Apr 1971 (♂ fl), P. J. M. Maas et al. P12659 (MO). Amazonas: Rio  Urubú , 04 Aug 1979 (♂ fl), C. E. Calderon et al. 2922 (MO); Km 500 on  Manaus-Humaitá road, 17 Sep 1980 (fr), S. R. Lowrie et al. 54 (MO); Km. 133, Manaus-Itacoatiara Road, 11 Sep 1974 (♂ fl), T. D. Pennington &amp; O. P. Monteiro P22638 (MO); Rio Cuieras, 12 Sep 1973 (♂ fl), G. T. Prance et al. 17790 (MO); Reserva Experimental Station of INPA, 30 Aug 1974 (♂ fl), G. T. Prance et al. 21689 (MO); Rio Javari, Rio  Curaçá , 8 miles above mouth, 26 Oct 1976 (♀ fl), G. T. Prance et al. 24133 (MO).  Pará : Km 133, Madeira-Mamore Railway, 15 Sep 1963 (♂ fl), B. Maguire et al. 56666 (MO); Itaituba, Km 60 da estrada Itaituba, 16 Nov 1978 (fr), M. G. da Silva &amp; C. S.  Rosário 3775 (MO).  Rondônia : Basin of Rio Madeira, 23 Nov 1968 (fr), G. T. Prance et al. 8775 (MO). </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Golfito, alrededores de la  estación Agujas, 300 m elev., 22 May 2000 (st), L. Acosta et al. 1389 (CR!); Golfito, Piro, 100 m elev., 14 Oct 1991 (st), R. Aguilar 511 (CR!); Golfito,  estación Los Patos, 200 m elev., 02 Sep 1993 (imm fr), R. Aguilar 2224 (CR-2 sheets!, LSU!, MO!); Osa,  Bahía Chal, La Parcela, 150 m elev., 12 Dic 1996 (st), R. Aguilar 4735 (CR!, MO!);  Península de Osa, Rancho Quemado, sendero a Cerro Brujo, 343 m elev., 30 Jul 2013 (st), R. Aguilar 14519 (CR!); area between Rio Esquinas &amp; Palmar, 60 m elev., 18 Feb 1963 (fr, dupl. in GH), P. H. Allen 6727 (F!*, GH!*); Osa, Sierpe, 1 km antes de la Villa de Banegas, 55 m elev., 14 Oct 2007 (fr), E.  Chacón et al. 885 (USJ!); Osa, fila Casa Loma, Aguabuena Sur, 07 Oct 1992 (fr), 50-150 m elev., A.  Fernández 410 (CR!, MO!); Osa, Playa Campanario o San Josecito, 1-10 m elev., 29 Dec 1991 (fl bud), P. Harmon 291 (CR-2 sheets!); Golfito, bosque de los Austriacos, La Gamba, 300 m elev., 09 Jan 1994 (fr), W. Huber &amp; A. Weissenhofer 136 (CR!, LI*); Golfito, near the Tropenstation La Gamba on the fila, 200 m elev., 27 Jan 2002 (fl), H. Huber 3012 (LI-2 sheets!*); Golfito,  Jiménez , Piro, no elev., 20 Jan 2012 (fr), J. M.  Ley-López 69 (USJ!); Golfito,  montaña aledaña al campo de aterrizaje, 07 Jun 1994 (st), L. J. Poveda 887 (CR!); Osa, 3 km  después de la quebrada Banegas, camino a Rancho Quemado, 200 m elev., 10 Jan 2018 (fr), D.  Santamaría &amp; R. Aguilar 9865 (CR!);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 3.5 km W of  Rincón , 350 m elev., 14 Jun 1993 (st), K. Thomsen 746 (CR!);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 3 km W of  Rincón , 130 m elev., 15 Apr 1993 (♂ fl), K. Thomsen 857 (CR!, MO!, NY!*);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 3 km W of  Rincón , 130 m elev., 05 May 1993 (st), K. Thomsen 915 (CR!);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 3.5 km W of  Rincón , 150 m elev., 06 Oct 1994 (fr), K. Thomsen 1049 (CR!);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 2.5 km W of  Rincón , 150 m elev., 10 Mar 1995 (fl), K. Thomsen 1283 (NY!*);  Península de Osa, Aguabuena, 2.5 km W of  Rincón , 150 m elev., 10 Mar 1995 (♂ fl), K. Thomsen 1284 (NO!, NY!*). San  José :  Tarrazú , del puente de San Marcos 18 km camino hacia Quepos, 1370 m elev., 13 Jan 2006 (fr), B. Hammel et al. 24041 (CR!); Esquipulas, base del Cerro San Isidro, alrededores del  río Naranjo, 400 m elev., 28 Aug 1987 (fr), N. Zamora et al. 1440 (CR!, MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8BF8C77C59735206B8A3A8C72DCE898F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
71D7988BA64F5D009A972802DD6B6058.text	71D7988BA64F5D009A972802DD6B6058.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola amistadensis Santamaría-Aguilar & Aguilar & Lagomarsino 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 2.  Virola amistadensis D.Santam. sp. nov. Figs 7B, 11 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Similar to  Virola calophylla in its abaxial leaf surface that is whitish and covered with stellate, sessile trichomes whose centre is reddish-clear to reddish and contrasting in colour with the hyaline branches and the lateral veins that are well-spaced.  Virola amistadensis can be distinguished from  V. calophylla by its shorter leaf blades [12.3-22.8 (-27) cm vs. (15-) 20-60 cm long] with a usually acute or sometimes attenuate base (vs. usually deeply cordate to truncate), shorter staminate inflorescence (3-7.5 cm vs. 12-30 cm long) and fruits with an obtuse base (vs. usually truncate). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> Panama. Bocas del Toro: Vicinity of Fortuna Dam, below pass on  Chiriquí Grande road, ca. 800 m elev., 27 Jun 1986 (♀ fl), G. McPherson 9717 (holotype: MO! [5565285, MO281258]; isotypes: INPA!* [144165], PMA!* [046113, PMA36179]). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree 4-13 m tall, no recorded DBH; bark and exudate not described in herbarium specimens. Twigs 0.18-0.42 cm thick, inconspicuous but densely strigulose, glabrescent, trichomes irregularly stellate to dendritic, ferruginous to whitish. Leaves: petiole 1.4-2.3  × 0.18-0.23 cm, slightly canaliculate, pubescent, trichomes stellate; leaf blades 12.3-22.8 (-27)  × 4.4-9.5 (-12.5) cm, elliptic to widely elliptic; adaxial surface leaves pale to dark brown (sometimes shining) when dry, glabrous or occasionally with scattered stellate trichomes; abaxial surface usually whitish-greyish when dry, but can be very light to dark brown, densely but inconspicuously pubescent, trichomes stellate, sessile, ferruginous or sometimes with the central part of the trichome reddish, contrasting in colour with the hyaline branches to reddish-clear, with 4-8 branches, the branches ca. 0.02 mm, persistent (the surface with a dense layer of squamiform hyaline structures, especially obvious at high resolution); lateral veins 9-15 per side, 3-5 veins per 5 cm, (1.2-) 1.4-2.5 cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface, on adaxial surface flat to slightly elevated or slightly sunken, on abaxial surface raised, free or slightly anastomosing near the margin and without forming a very marked intramarginal vein; tertiary veins barely visible or indistinct on both surfaces; midvein adaxially raised, slightly sunken in a channel, abaxially raised, rounded, tomentose, adpressed pubescent to glabrate; base usually acute or sometimes attenuate, not revolute, flat; margin not revolute; apex acuminate. Staminate inflorescences 3-7.5 cm long, axillary, axes flattened, pubescent, with trichomes stellate, ferruginous; peduncle 1-2  × 0.09-0.16 cm; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles lax, with 2-11 flowers. Staminate flowers with the pedicel 0.7-1 mm long; receptacle sometimes ca. 1 mm wide; perianth 1.5-2.2 mm long, infundibuliform, brown when fresh (possibly due to indumentum), connate for ca. 0.8 mm of length, abaxial surface pubescent with brown trichomes, adaxial surface pubescent, especially on the lobes and margins; lobes 3, ca. 1.2  × 0.7 mm; stamens 3 (-6), the filament column 0.2-0.4 mm long, glabrous, straight, conspicuously thickened throughout its length, constricted at the apex; anthers 0.6-0.7 mm long; apiculus 0.1-0.15 mm long, apiculate, connate or slightly separated at the apex. Pistillate inflorescences 4.3-5 cm, similar to staminate inflorescences; peduncle 1.5-1.8  × 0.18-0.25 cm; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles of 4-10 flowers. Pistillate flowers in terminal fascicles of 4-10 flowers; with the pedicel 1.5-2 mm long; perianth 3.4-3.8 mm long, infundibuliform, brown-yellow when fresh, connate for 2.2-2.5 mm of length, abaxial surface pubescent, with brown trichomes, adaxial surface pubescent, especially on the lobes and sparsely pubescent basally; lobes 3, 1-1.4  × 1-1.2 mm; gynoecium 1.8-2  × 0.8-1.1 mm, densely pubescent, ovate, sessile; stigmatic lobes 0.4-0.5 mm, erect. Infructescence 2.7-6.3 cm long, with 1-5 fruits, peduncle 1-2.5  × 0.25-0.5 cm. Fruits 2.1-3.8  × 1.7-2 cm, ovoid to globose, shortly stipitate, densely tomentose, the trichomes irregularly stellate, ferruginous, persistent, the surface smooth to rugulate when dry, the line of dehiscence slightly carinate, the base obtuse, the apex acute to obtuse, brown to brown-yellow when fresh; pericarp 1-2 mm thick; pedicel 0.4-0.9 cm long; seed 1.6-2.2  × 1.4-1.6 cm, the testa when dry pale brown; aril described as red, pale brown or blackish when dry, membranaceous, dry in texture, thin, laciniate in narrow bands. </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola amistadensis is recognised by its elliptical to widely elliptical leaf blades with lateral veins that are well separated (Fig. 8B) and abaxially covered with stellate, sessile trichomes (Fig. 3B) and a dense layer of squamiform structures that are hyaline in colour; the small staminate flowers with a thickened filament column that is markedly constricted at the apex and shorter (0.2-0.4 mm long) than the anthers (0.6-0.7 mm), which are apiculate at the apex; and the ovoid to globose fruits (Fig. 4B) with relatively thin pericarp (1-2 mm thick) (Figs 7B inset, 11D) that are covered by a dense, but inconspicuous layer of ferruginous trichomes. It is also distinctive for being a small tree (4-13 m tall) and its preference for premontane forests. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The specific epithet, amistadensis, refers to Parque Internacional La Amistad, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, shared between Costa Rica and Panama where the holotype and some of the paratypes of this species were collected.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola amistadensis is known from Costa Rica (  Limón ) and Panama (Bocas del Toro and Veraguas; Fig. 9B). It is found on the Caribbean slope at 650-1200 m elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p> Virola amistadensis is Endangered following IUCN criteria B1a and B2a. This species is known from 4 localities and has an EOO of 2,573 km2 and an AOO of only 28 km2. Only nine specimens were verified in this study. While it occurs in protected areas, its montane habitat is particularly prone to habitat disturbance. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>None recorded.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  V. amistadensis has been recorded in April, June and July and fruiting in January to March, May, June and December. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees that are 4-13 m tall. Flowers have a yellow-brown perianth and brown fruits.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Herbarium specimens of this new species usually have been identified as  Virola calophylla (Figs 10A, B) or  V. macrocarpa (Fig. 7C), probably because its leaves are abaxially whitish and covered with stellate, sessile trichomes with a reddish-clear to reddish centre that contrasts in colour with the hyaline branches and lateral veins that are well-spaced. Differences between  V. amistadensis and  V. calophylla are enumerated in the diagnosis, while those separating it from  V. macrocarpa are listed in Table 4. </p>
            <p> In Mesoamerica,  Virola amistadensis is similar to  V. allenii (Figs 6, 7A) and  V. otobifolia (Figs 7D, 23  A–E ), two species from the lowland wet forest of Costa Rica and Panama. Their similarities include the characteristics of the leaf blades mentioned above. Their differences are summarised in Table 3. </p>
            <p>* From Smith 1938.</p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> Specimens from Veraguas Province (Panama), have smaller leaf blades and lateral veins that are more deeply sunken on the adaxial surface than the specimens from  Limón and Bocas del Toro provinces. </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica.  Limón : Parque Internacional La Amistad, subiendo por la fila entre la margen derecha del  Río Uren y la Quebrada Crori,  Croriña , 650 m elev., 17 Jul 1989 (♂ fl), A.  Chacón 194 (CR, MO!). Panama. Bocas del Toro: Along pipeline road in area of Fortuna Dam, 900-950 m elev., 08 Mar 1986 (fr), G. McPherson 8703 (INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*); vicinity of Fortuna Dam, below pass on  Chiriquí Grande road, 800 m elev., 27 Jun 1986 (fr), G. McPherson 9715 (INPA!*, MO!); along old pipeline road from continental divide, 900 m elev., 27 Dec 1986 (imm fr), G. McPherson &amp; J. Aranda 10169 (INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*). Veraguas: Vicinity of Escuela de Agricultura Alto Piedra, near Santa  Fé , 2800-3200 ft [850-975 m] elev., 03 Apr 1980 (♂ fl), T. Antonio 4011 (INPA!*, MO!); vicinity of Cerro Tute, 850-1000 m elev., 19 Mar 1987 (fr), G. McPherson 10687 (MO!); near Cerro Tute-Arizona, above Santa Fe and Alto de Piedra, 850-1100 m elev., 05 Feb 1988 (fr), G. McPherson 12047 (MO!); vicinity of Santa Fe on slopes of Cerro Tute-Arizona above school at Alto Piedra, 900-1100 m elev., 29 Jan 1989 (fr), G. McPherson 13669 (INPA!*, MO!); Cerro Tute, 1 km beyond Escuela  Agrícola Alto Piedra above Santa Fe, 900-1200 m elev., 14 May 1981 (fr), K. Sytsma &amp; L. Andersson 4653 (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/71D7988BA64F5D009A972802DD6B6058	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
A0D0CB899ED955D1ABE63768352D7FDA.text	A0D0CB899ED955D1ABE63768352D7FDA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola chrysocarpa D. Santam. & Aguilar 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 3.  Virola chrysocarpa D.Santam. &amp; Aguilar sp. nov. Figs 12, 13, 14 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Species similar to  Virola koschnyi due to many characteristics of the leaf, including overall shape, number of lateral veins and stalked trichomes. It differs in leaf blades with pubescent adaxial surfaces that are rough to the touch in herbarium specimens (vs. adaxial surface glabrous to glabrescent and smooth) and abaxial surfaces that are hirsute to hirsutulous (vs. tomentose) with trichomes that have few (3-6 vs. 4-10), but long branches (0.2-0.6 mm vs. 0.1-0.2 mm long), staminate flowers with a longer filament column (1.3-1.5 mm vs. 0.7-0.9 [-1.4)] mm long) and fruits with an acute to apiculate apex (vs. typically obtuse). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Golfito, Parque Nacional Corcovado,  Estación Sirena, 10 m elev., 06 Feb 1994 (♂ fl), R. Aguilar 3082 (holotype: CR! [9864]; isotypes: CR! [201389], LSU! [0193694, LSU00199098], MO! [5551151, MO280080], USJ! [60813]). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree 15-45 m  × 25-50 cm DBH; bark sometimes described as reddish to reddish-brown. Exudate described as light red but without specifying from which part or red from the trunk. Twigs 0.18-0.28 cm thick, terete, flattened laterally to slightly angulate, hirsute tomentose, trichomes dendritic, yellowish or very pale brown. Leaves: petiole 1-1.6 (-2)  × 0.15-0.28 cm, canaliculated, pubescent, the trichomes dendritic; leaf blades (17.5-) 24.2-28.8  × 7.6-10 cm, obovate to oblong; adaxial surface of mature leaves olivaceous, brown to greyish when dry, hirsute to hirsutulous, asperous (in new leaves hirsute, the trichomes dendritic-stellate, pediculate, asperous to the touch); abaxial surface similar in colour to the adaxial surface when dry, densely hirsute to hirsutulous, trichomes dendritic to dendritic-stellate, yellowish to pale brown, pediculate, with 3-6 branches, the branches 0.2-0.6 mm long, persistent; lateral veins 28-32 per side, with 5-7 (-11) veins per 5 cm, (0.5-) 0.7-1.3 cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface or sometimes contrasting in colour, on adaxial surface flat to slightly sunken, on abaxial surface conspicuous and raised, straight to slightly arcuate, anastomosing near the margin, forming an intramarginal vein; tertiary veins usually inconspicuous adaxially, conspicuous abaxially; midvein adaxially flat, pubescent, abaxially raised, rounded, pubescent; base usually markedly cordate, not revolute, flat; margin flat, sometimes ciliolate; apex acuminate. Staminate inflorescences 4-8.5 cm long, usually at nodes lacking leaves or, on few occasions, in the axis of leaves, axes slightly flattened, densely pubescent, the trichomes dendritic, yellowish to pale brown; peduncle 1.5-4  × 0.13-0.19 (-0.3) cm; bracts 0.5-0.8  × 0.3-0.5 cm, pubescent on both sides, caducous; terminal fascicles dense, with 15-30 + flowers. Staminate flowers with the pedicel 2.8-3.5 mm long; receptacle 2-4 mm wide; perianth 2-3 mm long, subglobose to rhomboid, yellow when fresh, connate for 0.6-1.5 mm of length, abaxial surface pubescent, with pale brown, yellowish or golden trichomes, adaxial surface with few scattered trichomes, especially on the lobes; lobes 3, 1.5-2.3  × 0.6-1.5 mm; stamens 3, the filament column 1.3-1.5 mm long, thin, not constricted at the apex; anthers 0.6 mm long; apiculus apparently absent, the apex obtuse; pollen 28  µm , with bilateral symmetry, boat shaped to elliptic grain, exine reticulate, exine structure tectate-perforate (based on Lambright 1981; Skutch 4260, US). Pistillate inflorescences and flowers not seen. Infructescence 3.2-7.5 cm long, 1-2 fruits (sometimes 4 in an immature infrutescence), peduncle 1.2-5  × 0.18-0.27 cm. Fruits 2.4-2.9  × 1.7-1.8 cm, ellipsoid, sessile, densely tomentose to glabrate, the trichomes dendritic, brown to brown-reddish, the surface smooth to rugulose, the line of dehiscence smooth, canaliculate, to slightly carinate, the base rounded, the apex acute to apiculate, yellow, orange or ferruginous (possibly by the indumentum) when fresh; pericarp 1.8-2.5 mm thick; pedicel 0.5-0.8 cm long; seed ca. 1.7-2.1  × 1.3-1.4 cm, the testa pale brown to blackish when dry, slightly grooved to almost smooth; aril usually described as red or pink when fresh, brown or yellowish when dry, oily, thick, laciniate in narrow bands or wide distally. Germination epigeal, seedling cryptocotylar (Ley  López and  Chacón Madrigal 2017; as  V. koschnyi ). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola chrysocarpa is distinguishable for its leaf blades with pubescent adaxial surfaces that are rough to the touch in mature leaves (at least in herbarium specimens) and abaxial surfaces that are hirsute to hirsutulous with trichomes with long branches (0.2-0.6 mm long) (Fig. 3C), numerous lateral veins (28-32 per side), tertiary veins that are usually conspicuous on both surfaces (Figs 3C, 8C) and with a base that is usually markedly cordate; staminate inflorescences that are little-branched (Fig. 14D) with flowers with filament columns that are much longer (1.3-1.5 mm) than the anthers (0.6 mm); and fruits that are acute to apiculate at the apex (Fig. 14E, F, H). Additionally, as far as we are aware, this is the only Mesoamerica species that is completely deciduous (i.e. all leaves fall off the tree) (Fig. 13A). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The specific epithet, chrysocarpa, is derived from the Greek chryso (gold) and carpo (fruit). This is in reference to its common name, "fruta dorada" (golden fruit), which is used by locals of the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica, where this species is frequent.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola chrysocarpa is known from Costa Rica (Puntarenas and San  José ) and Panama (  Chiriquí ) (Fig. 9C). It is found in the Pacific slope at 0-700 m in elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p>Possible Near Threatened: This species has a small estimated AOO (60 km2), though a relatively large estimated EOO of 5,334 km2. Its eighteen known specimens represent eleven localities. This limited number of specimens warrants a Possible NT status, though additional collection efforts may demonstrate the lack of conservation threat for this poorly known species.</p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Costa Rica: fruta dorada. Panama: bogamani.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Herbarium specimens of flowering  Virola chrysocarpa have been collected in December to March and fruiting specimens from March to June. Herbarium specimens with pistillate flowers were not observed. In the Osa Peninsula, leaves fall completely during the dry season, which occurs in November to February (Allen 1956; Quesada Quesada et al. 1997; and R. Aguilar pers. obs., 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019). </p>
            <p> A study of vegetative, flowering and fruiting phenology has been published by Lobo et al. (2008; as  V. koschnyi ) in the Osa Peninsula and Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica. In this study, flowering was documented in January and February, when the canopy was deciduous. Fruiting occurred in the rainy season from June to August. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are large trees with boles that are straight and do not begin to branch until they reach a great height, with buttresses, up to 1.6-2.5 m tall. Bark is sometimes described as finely fissured. The new leaves are lime green in colour. Twigs, petioles and leaf blades on both surfaces (especially the youngest ones) are covered with golden, brown-reddish to rusty-red trichomes. Flowers have yellow or yellow-cream perianth and anthers. Mature fruits are yellow, orange or ferruginous (possibly due to their indumentum). Seeds are brown or blackish and covered with a red to scarlet aril.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Virola chrysocarpa resembles a morphological group of species from South America that includes  V. caducifolia W. A. Rodrigues,  V. decorticans Ducke,  V. guggenheimii W. A. Rodrigues,  V. multicostata Ducke,  V. multinervia Ducke,  V. polyneura W. A. Rodrigues and  V. rugulosa (Spruce) Warb. These species are characterised by having leaves that are evidently pubescent, some with dendritic to irregularly dendritic pediculate trichomes on the abaxial surface and leaf blades with numerous, conspicuous and comparatively dense lateral veins; staminate flowers with anthers that are subequal to or shorter than the filament column; and fruits with thick pericarp. Additionally, these species tend to be large, sometimes deciduous trees with cordate leaf bases and staminate flowers with the anthers that are obtuse at the apex. Table 5 presents the differences between these species and  V. chrysocarpa . </p>
            <p>‡From Rodrigues 1980, except where it is specified otherwise that it comes from †Smith 1938 and § Jaramillo et al. 2004.</p>
            <p> In Mesoamerica,  Virola chrysocarpa resembles and has been confused with,  V. koschnyi (e.g. Allen 1956; Quesada Quesada et al. 1997;  Jiménez 2007; Aguilar et al. 2017 onward) (Figs 3G, 4F, 17), from which it differs by the characteristics included in the diagnosis. Additionally,  V. chrysocarpa is a deciduous (vs. evergreen) species of the Pacific slope (vs. Caribbean slope). In the region,  Virola chrysocarpa can also be confused with  V. megacarpa from Panama for its leaf blades with dense lateral veins and a prominent marginal vein, as well as pediculate trichomes on the abaxial leaf surface; however,  V. megacarpa has more lateral veins [(32-) 40-50 vs. 28-32 per side], the fruits are larger (4-5.7  × 2-2.9 cm vs. 2.4-2.9  × 1.7-1.8 cm) and with an acuminate to rostrate apex (vs. apex acute to apiculate) (Fig. 4E, P) and thick pericarp (3-6 mm vs. 1.8-2.5 mm). </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> The illustration presented in Manual de Plantas de Costa Rica (  Jiménez 2007) as  V. koschnyi is a mix of these two species. The branch with leaves and inflorescences (and, most likely, the trichomes) are based on material that represents  V. chrysocarpa (R. Aguilar 3082, 3125), while the other parts of this illustration (staminate flowers and fruits) represent  V. koschnyi and are based on F. Araya 197 (fl), and U.  Chavarría 1918 (fr) (B. Hammel pers. comm., Feb 2019). </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Osa, Parque Nacional Corcovado,  Estación San Pedrillo, 10-100 m elev., 19 Feb 1994 (♂ fl), R. Aguilar 3125 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Osa, Reserva Forestal Golfo Dulce, Mogos, a 20 km. de Chacarita, 17 Apr 2008 (fr), R. Aguilar 11190 (NY!*, USJ!);  Rincón , Banegas centro del pueblo, 49 m elev., 15 Dec 2008 (♂ fl), R. Aguilar 11569 (MO!, NY n.v., PMA!*); forest below Esquinas Experiment Station Residence, area between  Río Esquinas and Palmar Sur de Osa, 100 ft [30 m] elev., 30 May 1950 (fr), P. H. Allen 5554 (CR-2 sheets!, MEXU!*, MO-2 sheets! [photo &amp; dried specimen], PMA!*); Golfito,  Estación Agujas, 300 m elev., 18 Feb 1998 (♂ fl), A. Azofeifa 683 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Osa  Península , Rancho Quemado, ca. 15 km W of  Rincón , 200-400 m elev., 28 May 1988 (fr), B. Hammel et al. 16864 (CR!, INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*); Rancho Quemado, a lo largo de  Río Riyito en la pura entrada al valle, 200 m elev., 31 Mar 1991 (imm fr), B. Hammel et al. 18186 (CR!, MEXU!*, MO!, USJ!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Pavo Forest, 0-150 m elev., 16 Jun 1988 (fr), C. Kernan &amp; P. Phillips 582 (CR!, INPA!*, MO!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Ollas trail, 0-100 m elev., 09 Jan 1989 (fl bud), C. Kernan et al. 876 (CR!, MEXU!*, MO!, USJ!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Llorona Forest, 0 m elev., 16 Jan 1989 (♂ fl), C. Kernan &amp; P. Phillips 913 (CR!, INPA!*, MO!, USJ!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Sirena, 1-20 m elev., 15 Jun 1990 (fr), G. Maass 34 (CR!, MO!); Golfito, Parque Nacional Corcovado, sendero Las Ollas, 100-150 m elev., 21 Mar 1995 (fr), J. F. Morales 3690 (CR!, LSU!, MO); Aguabuena, 3 km W of  Rincón , 120 m elev., 06 May 1993 (fr), K. Thomsen 371 (CR-2 sheets!). San  José : [  Pérez Zeledón ], Vicinity of El General, 700 m elev., n.d., Feb 1939 (♂ fl), A. F. Skutch 4241 (MO!); [  Pérez Zeledón ], Vicinity of El General, 740 m elev., n.d. Mar 1939 (♂ fl), A. F. Skutch 4260 (MO!, US n.v.);  Tarrazú , San Lorenzo, camino entre cerro Pito y cerro Toro, 600-700 m elev., 26 May 1998 (fr), O. Valverde 970 (CR!, MO!, USJ!). PANAMA.  Chiriquí : Progreso, no elev.,  Jul–Aug 1927 (fr, at GH, NY), G. P. Cooper &amp; G. M. Slater 175 (F!*, GH!*, NY!*). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A0D0CB899ED955D1ABE63768352D7FDA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
051616A20EFF5C8280C7375A645056AA.text	051616A20EFF5C8280C7375A645056AA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola elongata (Benth.) Warb.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 4.  Virola elongata (Benth.) Warb. Fig. 10  C–D</p>
            <p> Virola elongata (Benth.) Warb. Nova Acta Acad. Caes. Leop.-Carol. German. Nat. Cur. 68: 178. 1897. </p>
            <p> Myristica elongata Benth.  Hooker’s J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 5: 5. 1853. Type. Brazil. "Brasilia prope Borba", Aug. 1828, [L.] Riedel 116 or s.n. (holotype: K; isotypes: B destroyed, BM, C, G, LE, P, S; fide Jaramillo et al. 2004). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola elongata it is recognized by its relatively small leaf blades [10.8-18.5  × 2.7-3.7 (-5.1) cm] with a sparsely pubescent abaxial surface with stellate to dendritic-stellate trichomes that are usually sessile (Fig. 3D) and few lateral veins (9-14 per side) that are well separated [(0.8-) 1-1.7 cm apart] (Fig. 8D); staminate inflorescences with thin axes and flowers with short filament columns (0.3-0.4 mm long), anthers that are apiculate at the apex (apicula 0.1-0.2 mm long) and more than twice the length of the column (0.6-0.9 mm long); and its small fruits (1.6-1.9  × 0.9-1.1 cm) (Fig. 4L) that are green when ripe (drying light brown in herbarium specimens with the surface blistering to rough), inconspicuously to sparsely pubescent (densely pubescent when young) with trichomes that are dendritic and brown to ferruginous in colour (when present), pericarp that is 0.5-0.7 mm thick and an aril that is thin and laciniate in narrow bands. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> In Mesoamerica,  Virola elongata is only known in Panama (  Colón ,  Panamá and San Blas) (Fig. 9D). It has been recorded from between 50-450 m elevation. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>None recorded in Mesoamerica.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Specimens of  Virola elongata with flowers were collected in July, October and September and with fruits in January, February, April, July, August and October. Collections with pistillate flowers were not seen. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees between (3-) 7-15 m tall and 0.7-12 cm DBH. Bark cuts are sometimes aromatic. Leaf blades are light green or whitish abaxially. Flowers have a yellow or yellow-orange perianth.</p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Panama.  Colón : Camino a la zona maderera de Santa Rita, no elev., 03 Oct 1968 (♂ fl), M. D. Correa &amp; R. L. Dressler 1078 (MO!); Santa Rita, East ridge, no elev., 23 Jan 1968 (fr), J. D. Dwyer &amp; Correa 8420 (MO!); near Rio Boqueron, no elev., 11 Oct 1974 (♂ fl), S. Mori &amp; J. Kallunki 2423 (MO!); Santa Rita Ridge, 1000-1200 ft [305-365 m] elev., 25 Sep 1985 (♂ fl), K. J. Sytsma 1346 (MO!).  Panamá : Una milla  después del Lago Goofy, no elev., 04 Jan 1968 (imm fr), M. D. Correa &amp; R. L. Dressler 585 (MO!); El Llano-Carti road, 350 m elev., 16 Jul 1987 (fl bud), G. McPherson 11275 (MO!); Cerro Azul, [600 m elev.], 06 Aug 1961 (fl bud, imm fr), J. D. Dwyer 1383 (MO!); Canal Zone, between Chilibre and Madden Dam, no elev. and date (fr), J. D. Dwyer 8420A (MO!); vicinity of El Llano, no elev., 07-08 Sep 1962 (♂ fl), J. A. Duke 5508 (MO!); along Rio Terable, [50 m elev.], 14-15 Sep 1962 (♂ fl), J. A. Duke 5667 (MO!); West of El Llano, [20-50 m elev.], 03 Oct 1972 (imm fr, ♂ fl), E. L. Tyson 6866, 6867 (MO!). San Blas: San  Blas–Panama border, 300 m elev., 01 Feb 1989 (fr), G. McPherson 13674 (MO!);  Río Cangandi, 100 m elev., 17 Feb 1985 (fr), G. de Nevers 4891 (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/051616A20EFF5C8280C7375A645056AA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
5D1C8010D8B4501F81CAC3DE1AF0229A.text	5D1C8010D8B4501F81CAC3DE1AF0229A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola fosteri Santamaría-Aguilar & Aguilar & Lagomarsino 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 5.  Virola fosteri D.Santam. sp. nov. Figs 15, 16 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Species resembling  Virola multiflora due its small leaf blades and fruits, similar leaf shape and inconspicuous stellate, sessile trichomes on the abaxial leaf surface. Both species also occur on the Caribbean slope of Mesoamerica. They differ in the shape of the leaf base (revolute in  V. fosteri vs. not revolute in  V. multiflora ), the length of the filament column (0.9-1.3 mm vs. 0.7-1 mm long) and anthers (0.6-0.9 mm vs. 0.3-0.6 mm long) and thickness of the pericarp (1.5-2.5 mm vs. 0.7-1 mm thick). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> Panama. Bocas del Toro: Isla  Colón , Aprox. a 8 km al NE de los laboratorios del Instituto Smithsonian de Investigaciones Tropicales, Big Creek, 5 m elev., 23 Apr 2009 (♂ fl), C. Galdames, M. Stapf, K. Toribio &amp; Arsenio 6422 (holotype: PMA!* [094201, PMA92162]; isotypes: MO! [6421737, MO-2504180], SCZ!* [17752, SCZ17684]). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree (15-) 20-35 m  × 35-60 cm DBH; bark brown or reddish. Exudate described as watery-reddish possibly from the bark, damage to any part of the plant causes the flow of a watery exudate that turns reddish moments later. Twigs 0.12-0.24 cm thick, terete to slightly angulate, puberulent, trichomes stellate, yellowish to pale brown. Leaves: petiole 0.4-0.7 (-1)  × 0.07-0.12 cm, canaliculate, densely tomentose to sparsely pubescent, the trichomes stellate; leaf blades 7.8-12  × 1.4-2.7 cm, narrowly elliptical or oblong to oblanceolate; adaxial surface dark brown, light brown or blackish when dry, glabrous, the surface smooth; abaxial surface pale brown to reddish-brown when dry, puberulent, trichomes stellate, sessile, yellowish to pale brown, with 4-8 branches, each branch  ± 0.03-0.05 mm long, persistent; lateral veins 16-24 per side, 10-15 veins per 5 cm, 0.2-0.5 (-0.7) cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface, on adaxial surface sunken, on abaxial surface flat to slightly elevated, arcuate-ascending, slightly anastomosing near the margin and not forming a marked intramarginal vein; tertiary veins adaxially almost indistinct to slightly sunken, abaxially almost indistinct; midvein adaxially canaliculate, glabrous, abaxially raised, laterally compressed and sometimes resembling a cutting edge, tomentose to sparsely pubescent; base attenuate, revolute; margin revolute (especially near the base) or flat; apex acute to acuminate. Staminate inflorescences 2.5-5.3 cm long, axillary, usually in the axil of terminal leaves, axes flattened to irregularly angled, tomentose, with trichomes stellate, yellowish to pale brown; peduncle 0.9-17  × 0.13-0.25 cm; bracts 2-5  × ca. 2.5 mm, tomentose on both surfaces, the indumentum more clustered on the external side, caducous; terminal fascicles dense, with 5-15+ flowers. Staminate flower with the pedicel 1-2 mm long; receptacle 1.5-2.3 mm wide; perianth 2-2.5 (-3) mm long, subglobose, yellow, orange or yellow-orange when fresh, connate for 0.5-0.8 mm of length, abaxial pubescent, with golden to yellowish trichomes, adaxial surface glabrous somewhat pubescent near the lobes; lobes 3, 1.5-2.6  × (0.6-) 1.3-1.8 mm; stamens 3 (-6), the filament column 0.9-1.3 mm long, glabrous, straight or rarely thickened near the base in some flowers (McPherson 20148), thin, not constricted at the apex; anthers 0.6-0.9 mm long; apiculus small enough to as appear absent, acute to obtuse. Pistillate inflorescences 1.3-3.9 cm long, axillary, with trichomes on the axes similar to those of the staminate inflorescences; peduncle 0.7-2.2  × 0.08-0.14 cm; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles of 4-7 flowers. Pistillate flowers with the pedicel 1.5-2.5 mm long; perianth 2-3 mm long, subglobose, yellow when fresh, connate by 0.6-0.8 mm long, abaxial surface pubescent with golden to yellowish trichomes, adaxial surface sparsely pubescent, the indumentum on the lobes; lobes 3, 1.2-1.5 (-2.5)  × 0.7-2.1 mm; gynoecium 1.6-2.4  × 1.1-1.4 mm, densely pubescent, globose to subglobose, stipitate; stigmatic lobes ca. 0.6 mm, erect. Infructescence 2.5-3 cm long, with 1-3 fruits, peduncle 1.5-1.7  × 0.15-0.38 cm. Fruits 1.5-2.3  × 1.2-1.8 cm, ovoid, sessile or very shortly stipitate, tomentose, the trichomes stellate, reddish-brown, the surface rugose when dry, the line of dehiscence canaliculate or smooth, the base obtuse to rounded, the apex obtuse, yellow, orange or golden brown when fresh; pericarp 1.5-2.5 mm thick; pedicel 0.4-0.5 cm long; seed ca. 1.6  × 0.9 cm, the testa pale brown when dry, very slightly grooved; aril usually described as red when fresh, reddish-brown when dry, coriaceous, oily, somewhat thick, laciniate in narrow bands. Germination epigeal, seedling cryptocotylar, epicotyl hairy, moderately dense, stellate and sessile (Garwood 2009; as  V. multiflora ). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola fosteri is recognised by its small leaf blades (7.8-12  × 1.4-2.7 cm) and fruits (1.5-2.3  × 1.2-1.8 cm) (Figs 4I and 16  F–H ), as well the stellate, sessile trichomes on the abaxial surface of the leaf (Fig. 3E). It is also distinguished by its leaf blades that have numerous lateral veins (16-24 per side) that are prominent on adaxial surface, the revolute leaf margin and the base (Fig. 16C), the midvein that is laterally compressed adaxially and sometimes resembling a cutting edge; staminate flowers with a filament column (0.9-1.3 mm long) that is longer than the anthers (0.6-0.9 mm long); and its thick pericarp (1.5-2.5 mm). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The specific epithet honours one of its collectors, Robin B. Foster (1945-), ecologist and botanist at Field Museum in Chicago (F) who pioneered the cataloguing of the flora of Barro Colorado Island (BCI) in Panama, where  V. fosteri occurs. Robin noted on one of his collections (R. B. Foster 2931) that it could represent a new species. In addition, on the same herbarium sheet, he observed one of the taxonomic characters that we here use to distinguish this as a new species: " Leaves are consistently small throughout the tree and on juvenile plants." </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola fosteri is known from Costa Rica (  Limón ) and Panama (Bocas del Toro,  Colón ,  Panamá , San Blas and Veraguas) (Fig. 9E). It is found on the Caribbean slope from 0-350 (-800) m elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p> Virola fosteri is Vulnerable following IUCN criterion B2a. While the EOO for this species is large (25,645 km2), the small AOO (40 km2) with only eight known localities warrants its conservative status. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Panama: bogamani, fruta dorada.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola fosteri has been recorded in January to April, June and October and production of fruits in January to April. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are large trees with tall buttresses. Bark exudes reddish watery exudate when damaged. Their small leaves are white or grey below. Flowers have pale orange or yellow perianth. The mature fruit is yellowish or golden brown with a red aril and brown seed.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> In addition to the characteristics presented in diagnosis,  Virola fosteri tends to have a higher number of and sunken (vs. plane) lateral veins per side than  V. multiflora (16-24 vs. 10-18 per side), denser trichomes with longer branches on the abaxial leaf surface (Fig. 3E, K) and larger fruits [1.5-2.3  × 1.2-1.8 cm vs. 1.3-1.9  × 0.9-1.2 (-1.4) cm] (Fig. 4I, J). </p>
            <p> It is also comparable to  V. micrantha A. C. Sm. from Colombia due to the similar size of the leaf blades, which also have sessile stellate trichomes on the abaxial surface and short staminate inflorescences.  Virola micrantha is a name apparently ignored in recent publications (ter Steege et al. 2016, 2019; Ulloa Ulloa et al. 2017; Gradstein 2016). Until recently,  V. micrantha was only known from the type specimen (R. E. Schultes &amp; G. A. Black 46-377, US*); however, via a herbarium study at MO, we identified additional Colombian material with staminate flowers (R. Jaramillo et al. 7846, MO-2 sheets!) and can also extend its distribution to Venezuela (E.  Marín 571 [MO!], R. L. Liesner 6778 [MO!] and J. Velazco 851 [MO!]).  Virola fosteri differs from this species by its attenuate leaf base and acute to acuminate apex (vs. obtuse on both sides, also mucronulate at the apex), longer perianth of staminate flowers (2-2.5 [-3] mm vs. ca. 1 mm long) and longer anthers (0.6-0.9 mm vs. ca. 0.3 mm long) (Smith 1953). </p>
            <p> Virola coelhoi W. A. Rodrigues (Colombia; S. Defler 411, MO!. Peru; C.  Grández &amp; N. Jaramillo 2787, MO!) from Brazil, and  V. parvifolia Ducke (Brazil) are other species with similarly-sized leaves with revolute margins, traits shared with  V. fosteri . Additionally, with  V. coelhoi , which it is more likely to be confused,  V. fosteri shares overall leaf shape and the type of trichomes on the abaxial surface (i.e. stellate, sessile and yellowish). The new species is distinguished from  V. coelhoi by the abaxial surface that is pale brown to reddish-brown when dry and puberulent (vs. abaxial surface yellowish, very densely pubescent), staminate inflorescences with small bracts (2-5  × ca. 2.5 mm vs. 2.5-9  × 4-6 mm), and staminate flowers with longer filament columns [0.9-1.3 mm vs. (0.3-) 0.6-0.7 long] and anthers (0.6-0.9 mm vs. 0.4-0.5 mm long). It can be differentiated from  V. parvifolia by its leaf blades and inflorescences that are glabrous or nearly so (vs. pubescent in  V. fosteri ) (Ducke 1936); additionally, Ducke (1936) mentions that  V. parvifolia has numerous small granules or tubercles on the branches, leaf blades and peduncles that are lacking in  V. fosteri . </p>
            <p> Jiménez (2007; as  Virola sp. B) mentions that the new species is similar to  Virola pavonis (A. DC.) A. C. Sm. from South America. This is probably because both species have sessile and stellate trichomes on the abaxial surface of the leaf, sometimes a similar leaf size, a similar number of lateral veins (though there is a tendency towards higher numbers of veins in  V. pavonis ) and the length of the filament column and anthers. However, the new species differs in its shorter staminate inflorescences [2.5-5.3 cm vs. (3-) 7-15 cm long], smaller fruits (1.5-2.3  × 1.2-1.8 cm vs. 2.5-5  × 1.5-2.5 cm) and in the canaliculate or smooth line of dehiscence (vs. carinate). </p>
            <p> In Mesoamerica, other species with leaf blades that are covered with stellate and sessile trichomes on the abaxial surface (Fig. 3E, F, L) and a filament column that is longer than the anthers are  V. guatemalensis and  V. nobilis . However, these two species have larger leaf blades (12.3-17.2 [-27.5] cm vs. 7.8-12 cm long) and fruits ([2.1-] 2.3-2.7 [-3.1] cm vs. 1.5-2.3 cm long). Similarities with  V. nobilis , specifically, include their distribution pattern (at least in Panama), leaf blades with more lateral veins per side (20-30 [25-32] vs. 16-24) that are markedly elevated abaxially (vs. flat to slightly elevated), the leaf margin and base that are usually not revolute (vs. revolute) and fruits that generally have thick pericarp (2.5-3.5 mm vs. 1.5-2.5 mm). </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> The species referred to as  Virola sp. B in the Manual de Plantas de Costa Rica (  Jiménez 2007) and as  V. multiflora (G. de Nevers 7608, MO!) in the  Catálogo de las plantas vasculares de  Panamá (Correa et al. 2004) correspond to  V. fosteri . </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica.  Limón : Talamanca. San Miguel, Asacode, sendero a San Miguel, 30-100 m elev., 18 Jan 1997 (♂ fl), J.  González et al. 1632 (CR!, MEXU!*, MO!); Lomas Mreduk (La Pera), antiguo campo de  exploración petrolera, 300-350 m elev., 06 Oct 2002 (fl), J.  Gómez-Laurito et al. 13903 (USJ!); cerros al sur del camino entre Puerto Viejo y Manzanillo por un camino nuevo hacia Bribri, 100 m elev., 18 Jan 1992 (fr), B. Hammel 18392 (CR-2 sheets!, MEXU!*, MO!). Panama. Bocas del Toro: Parcela ubicada a 10 km de la desembocadura de la quebrada Boca Chica en la margen izquierda del  río Changuinola, 550 m elev., 23 Oct 2007 (fl), R.  Aizprúa et al. 3398-RA (PMA!*, US!*); ibid, 23 Oct 2007 (fl), N. Daguerre et al. 660-ND (PMA!*); along road to  Chiriquí Grande, ca. 1.5 miles along side road east of highway, 250-300 m elev., 24 Jun 1986 (♂ fl), G. McPherson &amp; B Allen 9646 (MO!).  Colón : San Lorenzo, no elev., 15 Jun 2009 (fr), J. Lezcano &amp; E. Spear 593 (PMA!*); Donoso, Teck Cominco Petaquilla mining concession, 300 m elev., 22 Feb 2008 (♂ fl), G. McPherson &amp; M. Merello 20148 (MO!, PMA!*); Donoso, westernmost part of province, site of proposed copper mine (INMET), 150 m elev., 12 Apr 2009 (imm fr), G. McPherson 20913 (MO!, PMA!*); camino viejo de  Piñas-Sherman , no elev., 22 Sep 2013 (fl), R.  Pérez et al. 1130 (MO n.v., PMA!*, SCZ!*).  Panamá : Zona del Canal, Barro Colorado Island, slope between AVA 7 and FD 5, [10-100 m elev.], 30 Mar 1979 (fr), R. B. Foster 2931 (MO!, PMA!*); Barro Colorado Island, Wetmore trail, [10-100 m elev.], n.d. 1980 (♂ fl), R. B. Foster 2946 (CR!, F!*, MO!, PMA!*, U!*, US!*); Barro Colorado Island, Drayton, Drayton 18-19, [10-100 m elev.], 31 Mar 1988 (fr), N. Garwood 2301A (PMA!*). San Blas: El Llano  Cartí road, km 26.5, no elev. 10 Apr 1985 (fr), G. de Nevers et al. 5285 (INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!, PMA!*); El  Llano-Cartí road, km 32.3, 200 m elev., 02 Mar 1986 (♀ fl, imm fr), G. de Nevers 7226 (INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*); Cangandi, 30 m elev., 27 Mar 1986 (♀ fl, imm fr), G. de Nevers et al. 7608 (MO!). Veraguas: Santa Fe, near the entrance to the agriculture school, Alto de Piedra, [800 m elev.], 26 Feb 1975 (fr), S. Mori &amp; J. Kallunki 4891 (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D1C8010D8B4501F81CAC3DE1AF0229A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
55D4AA719DD15A3EBD311FDFAEFE9F58.text	55D4AA719DD15A3EBD311FDFAEFE9F58.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola guatemalensis (Hemsl.) Warb.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 6.  Virola guatemalensis (Hemsl.) Warb. Fig. 10  E–G</p>
            <p> Virola guatemalensis (Hemsl.) Warb. Nova Acta Acad. Caes. Leop.-Carol. German. Nat. Cur. 68: 220. 1897. </p>
            <p> Myristica guatemalensis Hemsl. Biol. Cent.-Amer., Bot. 3. 66-67. 1882. Type. Guatemala. [no specific data in location], [no date], [seeds], [G. U.] Skinner s.n. (holotype: K!*). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola guatemalensis is distinguished by many characters of its leaf, including overall size [12.3-17.5 (-24.1)  × (2.4-) 3.8-5.5 (-8.9) cm], inconspicuous pubescence of tiny stellate and sessile trichomes on abaxial surfaces (Fig. 3F), 13-21 lateral veins on each side of the leaf that are barely distinctive abaxially (Figs 8F, 10F) and slightly revolute margins. Additionally, the staminate flowers have a filament column that is longer (1-1.2 mm long) than the anthers (0.5-0.8 mm long) and fruits that are 2.7-3.4  × 1.7-2.3 cm, ellipsoid (Fig. 4G), commonly glabrous or glabrous distally and with pubescence at the base with the line of dehiscence slightly carinate or smooth and a thin pericarp [0.4-1 (-2.5) mm thick]. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola guatemalensis is known from Mexico (Chiapas, Oaxaca and Veracruz), Guatemala (  Sololá ) and Honduras (Yoro) (Fig. 9F). It has been recorded between 150-1250 m elevation. Standley and Steyermark (1946) mention that it also occurs in Alto Verapaz,  Suchitepéquez , San Marcos and Huehuetenango in Guatemala, while Standley (1931) indicates that it occurs in Lancentilla (Honduras), where it is noted to be one of the most common tree species. While Gentry (2001) postulated that  V. guatemalensis is an expected species for Nicaragua, no Nicaraguan collections of this species are known. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p> Mexico: cacao, cacao volador (Chiapas), cacaotillo, cedrillo (Veracruz),  k’ik’ che’ [Lacandon name]. Guatemala: chucul, palo de sebo, cacao volador, cacao  cimarrón . Honduras: sangre. </p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola guatemalensis has been recorded in April and May and fruit production in January, March, August, October and December. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees between 12-35 m high and 45-130 cm DBH with a straight trunk, sometimes with moderately sized buttresses. The bark is variously described as smooth or fissured and scaly and is brown to greyish-brown in colour and exudes watery reddish transparent sap when damaged. Flowers have yellow, green-yellowish or brown perianth. The mature fruit is yellow with a red aril.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> While the name  Virola guatemalensis has been applied to herbarium specimens from Costa Rica and Panama in the past, those are here interpreted as a distinct species,  V. montana . Based on our interpretation,  V. guatemalensis is restricted to Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras. It is distinguished from  V. montana by a series of characters, described below. While  V. laevigata was typified with material from the Pacific slope in  Chiriquí , Panama and is frequently considered a synonym of  V. guatemalensis (e.g. Smith and Wodehouse 1938; Standley and Steyermark 1946; Duke 1962), we treat these as morphologically distinct; differences between these two species are discussed under  V. laevigata . </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> The specimens, identified in  Gómez-Laurito and Ortiz (2004), Haber (2014) and Monro et al. (2017) as  V. guatemalensis or  V. surinamensis , correspond to  V. montana (R. Aguilar 1131, [E.] Bello 470, M. Chinchilla 3, J.  Gómez-Laurito 11846, 11970, J.  González 823) or  V. amistadensis (A.  Chacón 194). Additionally, a specimen cited as  V. guatemalensis in Flora of Panama (Duke 1962) corresponds with the type of  V. laevigata (G. P. Cooper &amp; G. M. Slater 308). </p>
            <p>The specimen J. A. Steyermark 47624 (MO-3 sheets!) seems to represent two different individuals - two of the sheets have staminate flowers, while the third has immature fruits. The duplicate of this collection at the Field Museum (digital image) has two sheets, both from a pistillate individual: one sheet carries flowers and the other immature fruits.</p>
            <p> Virola guatemalensis , along with another Mesoamerican species,  V. koschnyi (see below), produce the largest grains of pollen in  Virola (Walker and Walker 1979). </p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Mexico. Chiapas: Tila, Chewupaj, 1000 m elev., 10 Dec 1982 (fr), A.  Méndez 5223 (MEXU!*, MO!); Peltalcingo, slope of  Ahk’ulbal Nab above Peltalcingo, 1700 m elev., 27 Feb 1981 (fr), D. Breedlove 49868 (MEXU!*); La Trinitaria, 10 km east northeast of Dos Lagos above Santa Elena, 1170 m elev., 19 Jan 1982 (fr), D. Breedlove &amp; F. Almeda 57553 (MO!); La Independencia, ridge, 45-50 km E of Lagos de Montebello National Park on road to  Ixcán from Santa Elena, 760 m elev., 22 Jan 1982 (fr), D. Breedlove &amp; F. Almeda 57735 (MO!). Oaxaca:  Matías Romero  Avendaño ,  ± 11 Km. al S de Aserradero La Floresta,  ± 24 Km. al S de Esmeralda, lomas al S del  Río Verde, 300 m elev., 24 Apr 1981 (fl), T. Wendt et al. 3235 (MEXU!*). Veracruz: Cima del cerro Vigia, 450 m elev., 19 Apr 2005 (♂ fl), E. Velasco-Sinaca 678 (MEXU!*, MO!); La Escondida, 3 km NO de  Estación de  Biología Tropical Los Tuxtlas, 200 m elev., 05 Apr 1983 (♂ fl), G. Ibarra 604 (MEXU!*, MO!);  Estación de  Biología Tropical Los Tuxtlas, 200 m elev., 29 Oct 1983 (fr), G. Ibarra 957 (MO!); camino Laguna Escondida, 2 km NW de la  Estación de  Biológia Tropical Los Tuxtlas, 200 m elev., 08 May 1984 (♂ fl), G. Ibarra &amp; G.  Gómez 1607 (MO!); Ocotal Grande, 5 km N de Mecayapan, 1000 m elev., 14 Mar 1985 (fr), G. Ibarra et al. 2357 (MEXU!*, MO!, NO!); 2 km al NW del rancho  Rubén Sánchez , 250-350 m elev., 28 May 1985 (♂ fl), G. Ibarra 2450 (MO!); Santiago Tuxtla, Alta Luz, 540 m elev., 11 May 1968 (♂ fl), M. Sousa 3680 (MO!); Catemaco, Tebanca, no elev., 20 Oct 1971 (fr), J. I. Calzada 615 (MO!); Cerro El Vigia de Santiago Tuxtla, 800 m elev., 18 Feb 1967 (fr), R. Cedillo 9 (MO!); Catemaco, El Chinchero, 14.2 km al SE de Tebanca camino al  río Huacinapan, no elev., 19 Dec 1984 (fr), R. Cedillo &amp; G.  Pérez 2958 (MEXU!*, MO!, NO!);  Hidalgotitlán , lomitas al SE de Poblado 6, 150 m elev., 27 Apr 1982 (♂ fl), T. Wendt et al. 3898 (LSU!, MO!). Guatemala.  Sololá : Bordering barranco on Finca Olas de  Mocá , just west of Finca  Mocá , south-facing slopes of  Volcán Atitlán , 1000-1100 m elev., 15 Jun 1942 (♂ fl, imm fr), J. A. Steyermark 47624 (F!*, MO-3 sheets!). Honduras. Yoro: Cascada de  Río Guán Guán , 400-440 m elev., 20 Apr 1995 (♂ fl), T. Hawkins &amp; M. Merello 768B (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/55D4AA719DD15A3EBD311FDFAEFE9F58	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
A5F614C7BCBE54FE9642232C771993C1.text	A5F614C7BCBE54FE9642232C771993C1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola koschnyi Warb.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 7.  Virola koschnyi Warb. Fig. 17 </p>
            <p> Virola koschnyi Warb. Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 1: 71. 1905. Type. Costarica [Costa Rica]. [Alajuela] San Carlos, Th. Koschny s.n. (lectotype, here designated: F!*, fragment with B photo [649050, F0360191F]); Costa Rica. Heredia. [Sarapiqui] Parque Nacional Braulio Carrillo, bosque primario frente al Puesto La Ceiba, 450 m elev., 23 Dec 1988 (♂ fl), M. Ballestero 72 (epitype, designated here: CR! [16354]; isoepitypes: CR! [156734], MO! [5550256, MO-299037]. </p>
            <p> Virola merendonis Pittier., Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 20: 453. 1922. Type. [Honduras]. [  Copán :] Collected in the forests of Cuchillitas, between Arranca Barba Hills and Mohanes, in the Cordillera de Merendon, borders of Guatemala and Honduras, in fruit, [10-] 18 May 1919 [fr], H. Pittier 8530 (holotype: US!*; isotype: NY!*). </p>
            <p> Virola costaricensis nomen nudum </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola koschnyi can be recognised by the densely tomentose leaf undersides with pediculate, dendritic trichomes (Fig. 3G) that are soft to the touch, the numerous lateral veins [(16-) 20-35] that form a clear submarginal vein and tertiary veins that are usually inconspicuous abaxially (Figs 3G, 8G). Adaxially, the new leaves are densely covered with dendritic sessile or subsessile trichomes that are deciduous at maturity, resulting in glabrous to glabrescent and smooth adxial surface on mature leaves. The staminate flowers have filament columns that are 0.7-0.9 (-1.4) mm long with anthers 0.5-0.7 (-1) mm long. Its fruits are 1.9-3.1  × 1.5-1.9 cm and ellipsoid or subglobose (Fig. 4F), with a pericarp 1.2-3.1 mm thick. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola koschnyi is known from Mexico (Chiapas), Guatemala (Izabal and  Petén ), Belize (Cayo, Toledo and Stann Creek), Honduras (  Atlántida ,  Cortés , Gracias a Dios and Olancho), Nicaragua (  Atlántico Norte,  Atlántico Sur, Jinotega and  Río San Juan), Costa Rica (Alajuela, Guanacaste, Heredia, San  José and  Limón ), and  Panamá (Bocas del Toro) (Fig. 18A). It is found mainly on the Caribbean slope, where it has been recorded between 10-1000 (-1700) m elevation. </p>
            <p> We consider this species restricted to Mesoamerica. The collections identified as  V. koschnyi from Ecuador in Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Ecuador (i.e. C. H. Dodson et al. 6465 [RPSC, SEL];  Jørgensen and  León-Yánez 1999) correspond to  V. multinervia Ducke (Jaramillo et al. 2004). Determinations of  V. koschyni cited for Colombia by Cogollo et al. (2007) are doubtful and do not cite voucher specimens, while those of Gradstein (2016) could not be confirmed. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p> Guatemala: Cedrillo, drago, sangre. Belize: banak, black banak. Honduras:  bának , sebo, sangre de  montaña , sangre real. Nicaragua: banak blanco, banak colorado, cebo, fruta dorada, sebo. Costa Rica: achiotillo, fruta dorada. </p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola koschnyi has been recorded in January, March and May, July, September, October and December. Only three herbarium specimens with pistillate flowers were seen, two from Costa Rica and one from Nicaragua. Fruits are produced throughout the year, though most often collected in March, May and June. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees (4-) 10-70 m tall and 12-80 cm DBH, with a trunk that is straight with well-developed buttresses. The bark is described as scaly and falling off in small plates or as smooth, red-brown or whitish in colour; clear, red or reddish exudate is released when damaged. Flowers usually have yellow perianth, though it can sometimes be white, brown, or orange. The mature fruit is yellow, orange or brown, with a red or pink-red aril. The testa of the seed is black, brown or white.</p>
            <p>Typification.</p>
            <p> Virola koschnyi was described by Otto Warburg based on a collection made by Theodor Koschny (Warburg 1905). Warburg indicated in the protologue "Costarica: San Carlos, leg. Th. Koschny," but did not mention where the type was housed. The type is presumed to have been housed at Berlin (B) and subsequently destroyed during World War II. </p>
            <p> The only known original material of  Virola koschnyi is a fragmentary specimen accompanied with a photograph at the Field Museum. The photo shows the original specimen was composed of three fertile branches with leaves (two with inflorescences and one with fruit), with a handwritten annotation of "  V. costaricensis Warb", presumably by Warburg, though this name was never validly published. The fragment material consists of pieces of leaves, two inflorescence branches with a few immature flowers and a broken fruit comprising pericarp, testa and seed. Since they are mounted with the photo of the Berlin specimen, these fragments presumably originated from the holotype. Although it is not ideal type material due to its fragmentary nature, the specimen at F appears to be the only extant original material and is sufficient to confirm that it coincides with the protologue and concept of the species used and so is here designated as lectotype. In order to ensure the precise application of the name, given the fragmentary type material, an epitype was selected from the studied specimens. </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> Most of the specimens from the Pacific slope of Costa Rica and Panama previously identified as  V. koschnyi are here interpreted as  V. chrysocarpa . The similarities and differences between  V. koschnyi and V.  chrysocarpa are discussed under the latter species. While most fruiting specimens of  V. koschnyi have obtuse to rounded apices, G. Herrera 1092 (CR!, MO!) from Costa Rica and R. Rueda &amp; H. Mendoza 17069 (MO!) from Nicaragua have apiculate apices. Aside from the fruit apex, these specimens conform to the species concept adopted here in all other characters (e.g. number of lateral veins, submarginal vein and tertiary veins that are usually inconspicuous abaxially and pediculate, dendritic trichomes). </p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Mexico. Chiapas: Ocosingo, En ejido Chaju, 150 m elev., 17 Mar 1993 (fl), E.  Martínez &amp; C. H. Ramos 26336 (MEXU-4 sheets!*); Boca de Chajul, 800 m al SE del poblado, 350 m elev., 21 May 1992 (fr), G.  Domínguez 438 (MEXU!*). Belize. Cayo: At mile 28.5 m on Hummingbird highway, 200-300 ft [60-90 m] elev., 14-21 Jun 1973 (fr), T. B. Croat 24562 (MO!). Stann Creek: Mountain Cow, [200 m elev.], 25 Mar 1940 (imm fr), P. H. Gentle 3277 (MO!); Big Eddy Ridge, [50-200 m elev.], 21 May 1940 (fr), P. H. Gentle 3347 (MO!); 22 miles Stann Creek, 200 ft [60 m] elev., 27 Jun 1927 (fr), W. A. Schipp 949 (MO-2 sheets!). Toledo: Bladen Nature Reserve, 20 m from the Bladen River, 45 m elev., 27 Feb 1997 (♂ fl), S. W. Brewer 178 (MO!); Southern Maya mountains, Bladen Nature Reserve, 250 m elev., 23 May 1996 (fr), G. Davidse 36211 (MO!). Guatemala. Izabal: Between Seja and Fronteras, no elev. 08 May 1971 (fl bud), E. Contreras 10751 (MO!); Livingston, Creek Jute, Biotopo  Chocón Machacas, [0-5 m elev.], 28 Jul 1988 (fr), P. Tenorio et al. 14953 (MEXU!*, MO!).  Petén : Chinchila, Sebol road, [20 m elev.], 16 May 1967 (fr), E. Contreras 6924 (MO!); La Cumbre, [300 m elev.], 30 Jul 1969 (fr), E. Contreras 8790 (MEXU!*, MO!). Honduras.  Atlántida : Lancetilla S of Tela, 20-50 m elev., 25 Jun 1970 (fr), G. Davidse &amp; R. Pohl 2178 (MO!).  Cortés : [Santa Cruz de Yojoa], 660 m elev., 13 Feb 1952 (fl), P. H. Allen 6456 (GH!*, EAP-2 sheets!*). Gracias a Dios: La Mosquitia, Ahuas Bila, 100 m elev., 5-13 May 1985 (fr), C. Nelson &amp; G. Cruz 9484 (MO!). Olancho: San Esteban,  montaña El  Carbón , 460 m elev., 02 Feb 1994 (fl bud), A. Meras 02 (MO); a 3 km comunidad El  Carbón , 430 m elev., 12 Mar 1997 (fl), I. Rivas 08-C1 (EAP!*). Nicaragua.  Atlántico Norte: Bonanza, Musawas, 50-150 m elev., 17 Oct 2002 (♂ fl), C. Aker et al. 624 (MO!); Siuna, Waspado, 100-120 m elev., 06 Oct 1982 (imm fr), F.  Ortíz 252 (MO!); sur de  río Wawa, 40 m elev., 16 Mar 1971 (imm fr), E. L. Little Jr. 25164 (MO!).  Atlántico Sur: Kurinwac[s]ito, 80-100 m elev., 18-22 Mar 1984 (♀ fl, fr), P. P. Moreno 23682 (MO), P. P. Moreno 23701 (MO!); El Zapote, 40 km NE de Nueva Guinea, 130-150 m elev., 29 Feb 1984 (♂ fl), J. C. Sandino 4808 (MO!).  Estelí : El  Zacatón , entre Mesas Plan Helado y la laguna de Miraflor, 1300-1400 m elev., 29 Mar 1983 (imm fr), P. P. Moreno 23788 (MO!). Jinotega: Cua Bocay, Reserva de Bosawas, comunidad de San  Andrés , 180 m elev., 30 Jun 2005 (fr), I. Coronado et al. 1951 (MO!).  Río San Juan: El Castillo, Reserva Indio  Maíz , 100-200 m elev., 15 Mar 1999 (♂ fl), R. Rueda el al. 10319 (MO!); San Juan del Norte, Reserva Indio  Maíz , 30 m elev., 18 May 2002 (fr), R. Rueda &amp; H. Mendoza 17069 (MO!);  río Sábalos , 2 km de Santa Eduviges, 80 m elev., 18 Feb 1984 (♂ fl), P. P. Moreno 23042 (MO!). Costa Rica. Alajuela: Parque Nacional  Rincón de La Vieja, 900-1000 m elev., 07 Mar 1988 (♀ fl), G. Herrera 1607 (CR!, MO!); Upala, Dos  Ríos , 500 m elev., 02 Nov 1987 (fr), G. Herrera 1092 (CR!, MO!); Upala,  Estación San  Ramón , 550 m elev., 27 Jan 1995 (fr), F. Quesada 243 (CR!, LSU!, MO!); Upala, Finca San Gerardo, 600 m elev., 20 Feb 1998 (fl bud), F. Quesada et al. 577 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!, USJ!). Cartago: Turrialba, CATIE, 650 m elev., 08 Feb 1975 (fr), C. Vaughan 93 (USJ!); Bosque de Florencia de Turrialba, 650 m elev., 31 Jul 1969 (fr), R. Ramalho 7990 (USJ!). Guanacaste: Santa Cruz, road from Santa Cecilia to La Esperanza, 340 m elev., 29 Dec 1989 (fr), R. E. Gereau et al. 3455 (CR-2!, MO!); Parque Nacional Guanacaste,  Estación Pitilla, 700 m elev., 02 Mar 1991 (♂ fl), P.  Ríos 309 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!). Heredia: Parque Nacional Braulio Carrilo,  Estación El Ceibo, 500-600 m elev., 01 Oct 1989 (fl bud), R. Aguilar 9 (MO!, LSU!, USJ!); Los Arbolito, al N de Puerto Viejo, 20 m elev., 09 Mar 1993 (♂ fl), F. Araya 197 (CR-2 sheets!, LSU!, MO!); between La Selva entrance and bridge before Puerto Viejo, [100 m elev.], 18 Apr 1981 (fr), J. Folsom 9791 (MO!).  Limón : Refugio de Vida Silvestre Gandoca Manzanillo, sendero Cerillo, 1 m elev., 03 Mar 1999 (fr), U.  Chavarría 1918 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Cordillera de Talamanca, ridge separating  Río Madre de Dios from Quebrada  Cañabral , 440 m elev., 02 Sep 1988 (♀ fl), M. Grayum et al. 8692 (CR-2 sheets!, MO-2 sheets!, USJ!); Sixaola, Quebrada Mata de  Limón , 20-40 m elev., 27 Jan 1987 (fr), M. Grayum et al. 8004 (CR!, MO!);  Río Peje, no elev., 14 Jun 1979 (fr), R. Ocampo 2582 (CR!); Parque Nacional Tortuguero,  Estación Agua  Fría , 40 m elev., 02 Feb 1988 (fr), R. Robles 1587 (CR!, MO!); Cerro Coronel, 20-170 m elev., 16-23 Jan 1986 (♂ fl), W. D. Stevens 23768 (CR, MO). San  José : Z. P. [Zona Protectora] La Cangreja, Santa Rosa de Puriscal, 350 m elev., 01 Oct 1992 (fr), J. F. Morales 764 (CR). Panama. Bocas del Toro: Isla Colon, camino central, unos 4 km de Boca de Drago, 2-25 m elev., 16 Mar 1993 (fr), R. Foster et al. 14549 (F!*). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A5F614C7BCBE54FE9642232C771993C1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
CA381C53D596526F974179D43FC36DB2.text	CA381C53D596526F974179D43FC36DB2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola laevigata Standl.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 8.  Virola laevigata Standl. Fig. 19 </p>
            <p> Virola laevigata Standl. Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 4(8): 209. 1929. Type. Panama. Province of  Chiriquí , Progreso, [  July–Aug .] 1927 [♂ fl], G. P. Cooper &amp; G. M. Slater 308 (holotype: F!*; isotypes: NY!*, WIS!*, US!*). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola laevigata is distinguished by its glabrous or nearly glabrous vegetative parts (i.e. twigs, mature leaf blades on both surfaces [Fig. 3H], petioles); when trichomes are present, they are primarily on the leaf buds or very new leaves. Additionally, leaves have 12-20 lateral veins and margins and bases that are slightly revolute, staminate flowers have a straight filament column that is longer (0.8-1.3 mm) than the anthers (0.5-0.7 mm) and relatively small fruits (1.8-2.9  × 1.5-1.8 cm) (Fig. 4M) with pericarp that is 1.8-2.8 mm thick. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola laevigata is known from Costa Rica (Puntarenas and San  José ) and Panama (  Chiriquí ) (Fig. 18B). It is found on the Pacific slope, where it has been recorded between 0-500 (1600?) m elevation.  Jiménez (2007) suggested that the maximum elevation for this species in Costa Rica is 1600 m, potentially based on L.  González 3089 from Cerro Turrubares (San  José province) (B. Hammel pers. comm., Aug. 2019); however, we have not found any specimen that occurs this high. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Costa Rica: fruta dorada. Panama: bogamani.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola laevigata has been recorded in January, May, July and November. Fruits are produced from December to February. Pistillate flowers were not present on herbarium sheets studied. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees 9-40 m tall and 35-60 cm DBH with a straight trunk and small (ca. 20 cm tall), triangular buttresses. The bark is described as finally grooved, smooth, flaking in vertical strips or scaly and is grey, blackish or reddish in colour, with exudate that is reddish or colourless and oxidising to reddish-cream. The leaves are bright green on both sides and have numerous pellucid dots that are most visible against the light. Flowers have yellow, yellow-brown or yellowish perianth, sometimes with a slight aroma in staminate flowers (N. Z amora &amp; T. D. Pennington 1583, but the specimen label states pistillate flower). The mature fruit is yellow with a red aril (when immature, it is white). In the Osa Peninsula, where this species is frequent, it prefers riparian habitats.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Virola laevigata has traditionally been considered a synonym of  V. guatemalensis (e.g. Smith and Wodehouse 1938; Standley and Steyermark 1946; Duke 1962), likely due to limited material. However, with new herbarium specimens, both species can be clearly distinguished vegetatively and with fruit characters. Vegetative material of  V. laevigata can be distinguished by petioles and mature leaf blades that are abaxially glabrous (vs. diminutively pubescent with tiny stellate, sessile trichomes in  V. guatemalensis ). Their fruits also differ in size, shape and thickness of the pericarp; in  V. laevigata , they are smaller (1.8-2.9  × 1.5-1.8 cm), ovoid or subglobose and with thick pericarp (1.8-2.8 mm); while in  V. guatemalensis , they are large (vs. 2.7-3.4  × 1.7-2.3 cm), ellipsoid and with a thin pericarp [0.4-1 (-2.5) mm]. </p>
            <p> In addition to  Virola guatemalensis , herbarium specimens of  V. laevigata have been determined as  V. surinamensis (interpreted here as  V. nobilis ). However,  V. laevigata is distinguished by its glabrous or almost glabrous abaxial leaf surface (Fig. 3H, O) and mature fruits (vs. pubescent) and its tendency towards thinner pericarp [1.8-2.8 mm vs. 2.5-3.5 (-4.2) mm thick]. In the Osa Peninsula, where these two species grow together, they can be easily distinguished in the field:  V. laevigata prefers riparian habitats, does not usually develop tall buttresses and the external bark has a greenish tone, while  V. nobilis grows far from bodies of water, has tall buttresses and the external bark is reddish to brown. For a description and comparison of the bark of these two species, see Moya Roque et al. (2014), as  Virola sp. A and  V. surinamensis . </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> The seedlings of  V. laevigata are described by Ley  López and  Chacón Madrigal (2017) (though as "  Virola sp. A"). Additionally, the species presented as "  Virola sp. A" in  Jiménez (2007) and as  V. surinamensis in  Jiménez Madrigal and Grayum (2002; RZ [= R.  Zuñiga ] 459) corresponds with  V. laevigata . The illustration in Quesada Quesada et al. (1997) as  V. guatemalensis is potentially also  V. laevigata . </p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Golfito, 1 km antes de llegar a La Palma, 8 m elev., 16 Jan 1993 (fr), R. Aguilar 1585 (CR-2 sheets!, LSU!, MO!); fila Carbonera, cabo Matapalo, 300 m elev., 16 Jul 1993 (♂ fl), R. Aguilar 2004 (CR!, MO!);  estación Sirena, 10 m elev., 12 Oct 1993 (fl bud, fr), R. Aguilar 2490 (CR-2 sheets!, LSU!, MO!); Golfito, orillas del camino a las torres de  comunicación , 450-500 m elev., 12 Jan 1999 (fr), J.  Gómez-Laurito &amp; V. Mora 13191 (CR!); Playa Cacao, Fila entre quebrada Nazanero y el mar en Punta Voladora, 200 m elev., 26 May 1994 (♂ fl), G. Herrera &amp; G. Rivera 7076 (CR!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Sirena, 10 m elev., 28 Feb 1989 (fr), C. Kernan &amp; P. Phillips 962 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Parque Nacional Corcovado, Sirena, Ollas Trail, 1-20 m elev., 19 Oct 1989 (fr), C. Kernan &amp; G. Fonseca 1288 (CR-2 sheets!, INPA!*, MO!);  Jiménez , Piro, camino a Laguna Silvestre, [0-100 m elev.], 01 Feb 2012 (fr), J. M.  Ley-López 74 (USJ); Osa, fila Esquinas, 200 m elev., 26 May 1993 (♂ fl), M. Segura &amp; F. Quesada 69 (CR!, LSU!, MO!);  Rincón de Osa, in vicinity of airstrip, 40 m elev., 25 Jul 1974 (fl bud), J. Utley &amp; K. Utley 1236 (CR!); Garabito, por Carara, cerca de la toma de agua, 97 m elev., 22 Nov 2006 (fl bud), L. D. Vargas &amp; D. Castillo 1870 (CR!); Osa, Uvita, cerca de Dominical, 200 m elev., 28 Jan 1991 (♂ fl), N. Zamora &amp; T. D. Pennington 1583 (CR-2 sheets!, INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!); Puntarenas, Montezuma, camino a  Cóbano por el  río Montezuma, ca. 1.5 km oeste de la  intersección con camino a Cabuya, 101 m elev., 11 Dec 2005 (fr), B. Hammel &amp; I.  Pérez 23944 (CR!); Montezuma, por el Canopy, 100 m elev., 08 Jul 2006 (fl bud), B. Hammel &amp; I.  Pérez 24149 (CR!). San  José : Carara, sector Agrominas, sitio Carretera Costanera, 100 m elev., 20 Sep 1991 (fr), R.  Zuñiga 459 (CR-sheets!, LSU!). Panama.  Chiriquí :  Río Platanal-Bugaba, 10 Dec 1975 (fr), M. M.  Gutiérrez 21 (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CA381C53D596526F974179D43FC36DB2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
5FE769BF14B05418B4D5ED9739AE500C.text	5FE769BF14B05418B4D5ED9739AE500C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola megacarpa A. H. Gentry.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 9.  Virola megacarpa A. H. Gentry. Fig. 20A, B </p>
            <p> Virola megacarpa A. H. Gentry. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 62(2): 474. 1975. Type. Panama.  Colón : Santa Rita Ridge, 23 Mar 1972 [fr], [A. H.] Gentry &amp; [J. D.] Dwyer 4804 (holotype: MO!; isotypes: BM!*, MEXU!*, WIS!*). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola megacarpa can be recognised by its large and oblong leaf blades (20.3-37  × 7-13 cm) with numerous [(32-) 40-50 per side], dense lateral veins and a densely pubescent abaxial surface with dark brown to ferruginous dendritic trichomes (Fig. 3I). It is also the species with the largest fruits (4-5.7  × 2-2.9 cm) in the region and likely the genus; these are also densely pubescent with an acuminate to rostrate apex (Fig. 4P) and thick pericarp (3-6 mm). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola megacarpa is only known from Panama (  Colón ,  Panamá , San Blas and Veraguas) (Fig. 18C) from 50-550 m elevation. </p>
            <p> This species is attributed to Colombia in Cogollo (2011), based on the specimen J. Brand 1252 (JAUM!*; fr). It is also mentioned as occurring in Colombia in Gradstein (2016) and Ulloa Ulloa et al. (2017), though these references do not mention a voucher specimen (likely they refer back to the same specimen cited by Cogollo [2011]). The first author has seen a digital image of this specimen (J. Brand 1252, JAUM) and it appears that the leaf undersurface and fruits are scarcely pubescent, as well as smaller. This specimen clearly corresponds to a species of the group  Surinamenses sensu Smith and Wodehouse (1938) and not  V. megacarpa . For that reason,  V. megacarpa is considered restricted to Mesoamerica. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>None recorded.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p>The only observed herbarium specimen with flowers (these staminate) was collected in August. Fruits were collected in February and March and August to November.</p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees 12-30 m tall and 21.5-53 cm DBH. Damaged bark releases exudate that is red or that oxidises reddish-brown. Flowers have pale yellow perianth. Fruits are densely pubescent with brown trichomes and a red aril.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Vegetatively,  Virola megacarpa can be confused with  V. koschnyi and some specimens have been identified as the latter (e.g. G. de Nevers &amp; H. Herrera 7917, MO). Both species share leaf blades with numerous and conspicuous lateral veins and pediculate trichomes on the abaxial surface. However,  V. megacarpa has more lateral veins per side [(32-) 40-50 vs. (16-) 20-35] and these are more closely spaced (Figs 8G and I) and fruits are larger (4-5.7  × 2-2.9 cm vs. 1.9-3.1  × 1.5-1.9 cm) (Fig. 4F, P). </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Panama.  Colón : East of Portobelo, 50-100 m elev., 12 Oct 1992 (fr), G. McPherson &amp; M. Richardson 15873 (MO!); Teck Cominco Petaquilla mining concession, 220 m elev., 20 Feb 2008 (fr), G. McPherson &amp; M. Merello 20081 (MO!); East ridge, no elev., 23 Feb 1968 (fr), J. A. Duke 15261 (MEXU!*, MO!).  Panamá : [Chepo] El  Llano-Cartí road, 5 km N of Pan-American Highway at El Llano, 300 m elev., 10-11 Nov 1973 (imm fr), M. Nee 7920 (MEXU!*, MO!); El  Llano-Cartí road, 16-18.5 km by road N of PanAmerican Hwy, at El Llano, 400-450 m elev., 28 Mar 1974 (fr), M. Nee &amp; E. Tyson 10983 (CR!, F!*, INPA!*, MO-2 sheets!). San Blas: El  Llano-Cartí Road, Km 19.1, 350 m elev., 19 Mar 1985 (fr), G. de Nevers 5184 (INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!). Veraguas: Santa Fe, Valley of  Río Dos Bocas along road between Escuela Agricola Alto Piedra and Calovebora, 450-550 m elev., 31 Aug 1974 (♂ fl), T. B. Croat 27785 (INPA!*, MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5FE769BF14B05418B4D5ED9739AE500C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
A1E94AB74FA55164BE92C204B2AF880E.text	A1E94AB74FA55164BE92C204B2AF880E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola montana Santamaría-Aguilar & Aguilar & Lagomarsino 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 10.  Virola montana D.Santam. sp. nov. Figs 21, 22  A–D</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Species most similar to  Virola guatemalensis , from which it differs by the mostly caducous (vs. persistent) trichomes on the abaxial leaf surface that have 3-10 branches and are 0.2-0.6 mm long (vs. 3-6 branches 0.05-0.1 mm long), staminate flowers with a shorter filament column (0.6-0.9 mm vs. 1-1.2 mm long) and fruits with a thicker pericarp (3.2-5 mm vs. 0.4-1 [-2.5] mm thick). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Cartago:  Jiménez , Taus de Pejibaye, 900 m elev., 06 Apr 1994 (♂ fl), E.  Lépiz &amp; J. F. Morales 284 (holotype: CR! [201663]; isotypes: CR! [CR1578073], LSU! [0193696, LSU00199100], MO! [5551138, MO280083], USJ! [75968]). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree 6-35 m  × (4-) 10-50 cm DBH; bark not described. Exudate described on one occasion as orange in bark, branches and fruits. Twigs 0.13-0.4 cm thick, angulate to lightly compressed, densely tomentose to puberulent, trichomes dendritic, yellowish, brownish to ferruginous. Leaves: petiole 0.5-1.2  × 0.16-0.3 cm, canaliculate, densely to sparsely pubescent, the trichomes dendritic to irregularly stellate; leaf blades (11.2-) 15-30.5  × (3.9-) 4.5-7.4 cm, oblong-elliptic; adaxial surface on mature leaf blades dark brown when dry, reddish-brown or greyish-blackish, glabrous or with trichomes very sparse and scattered, the surface smooth; abaxial surface pale brown, dark brown or whitish-greyish when dry, sparsely pubescent, but usually densely to sparsely pubescent along the lateral veins and midvein (in new leaves, blades with a dense layer of trichomes that fall readily when touched, covering the entire surface), trichomes dendritic or rarely irregularly stellate, sessile, yellowish to pale brown, with 3-10 branches 0.2-0.6 mm long, caducous; lateral veins (15-) 18-30 per side, (4-) 6-9 veins per 5 cm, 0.5-0.9 (-1.5) cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface or sometimes lighter, flat or very slightly sunken on adaxial surface, raised on abaxial surface, straight to slightly arcuate (especially towards the distal part), slightly anastomosing near the margin and without forming a very marked intramarginal vein; tertiary veins usually visible on both surfaces; midvein adaxially flat to slightly canaliculate, glabrous or with scattered trichomes, sometimes densely pubescent at the base, abaxially raised, rounded, densely tomentose (with trichomes that fall very easily to the touch) to glabrescent; base acute to rounded, not revolute, flat; margin flat; apex acute to acuminate. Staminate inflorescences 3-9 cm long, axillary either at the junction with a leaf or at leafless nodes, axes slightly flattened to irregularly angled, densely tomentose, with trichomes dendritic, brown to yellowish-brown; peduncle 1.7-3.5  × 0.05-0.12 cm; bracts 3-7  × 1.9-4 cm, pubescent on both sides, caducous; terminal fascicles dense, with 7-20 + flowers. Staminate flowers with the pedicel 1.7-3.4 mm long; receptacle 1.5-3 mm wide;; perianth (1.6-) 2-2.7 mm, subglobose, yellow, greenish-white or brown, possibly by the indumentum), connate by (0.2-) 0.5-0.8 mm long, abaxial surface pubescent, with brown to ferruginous trichomes, adaxial surface glabrous at the base, sparsely pubescent on the lobes; lobes 3, 1.5-2  × 1-1.4 (-1.8) mm; stamens 3 (-6), the filament column 0.6-0.9 mm long, straight or sometimes slightly thickened at the base and somewhat narrow at the apex, thin, not constricted at the apex; anthers 0.5-0.8 mm long; apiculus ca. 0.07-0.1 mm, inconspicuously apiculate. Pistillate inflorescences 3.5 cm long, at leafless nodes, with trichomes on the axes similar to those of the staminate inflorescences; peduncle 1.8-2.5  × 1-2 cm; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles of 5-6 flowers. Pistillate flowers with the pedicel 3.5-4 mm long; perianth 3.5-4.6 mm long, globose to subglobose, pale brown when fresh (possibly by the indument), connate by 1-1.5 mm long, abaxial surface pubescent, with brown trichomes, adaxial surface sparsely pubescent; lobes 3, 2.5-3.5  × 1.5-2.2 mm; gynoecium 2-2.7  × 1.5-1.6 mm, densely pubescent, subglobose, stipitate; stigmatic lobes ca. 0.3 mm, erect. Infructescence 3-6.2 cm long, with 1 (-2) fruits, peduncle 2-3.3  × 0.19-0.3 cm. Fruits (2.8-) 3-3.6  × 2-2.5 cm, ovoid-ellipsoid, sessile, densely tomentose to tomentulose, the trichomes dendritic to irregularly stellate, pale brown to ferruginous, the surface commonly rugulose or smooth when dry, the line of dehiscence carinate, the base obtuse, the apex acute, orange, golden or yellowish-brown when fresh; pericarp 3.2-5 mm thick; pedicel 0.7-1 cm long; seed 2.2-2.5  × ca. 1.5 cm, the testa dark brown, almost smooth; aril usually described as red when fresh, yellowish- or reddish-brown when dry, coriaceous, oily in texture, thick, laciniate in narrow bands distally. </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola montana is recognised by twigs, new leaf undersurfaces, petioles and inflorescences covered in indument of dendritic to irregularly stellate, caducous trichomes, with long branches; on the underside of the leaf, this indument is mainly found on the midvein and the lateral veins (Fig. 3J). Additional traits that distinguish this species include leaf blades with numerous lateral veins [(15-) 18-30 per side; Fig. 22C, D]), the length of the filament column (0.6-0.9 mm long), nearly the same size as the anthers (0.5-0.8 mm long), fruits with thick pericarp that are densely tomentose (Fig. 4H) and carinate in the line of dehiscence (3.2-5 mm), as well as its montane habitat. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The specific epithet refers to the montane habitat where the species has been collected.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola montana is known from Costa Rica and Panama, where it has been collected on the Caribbean slope in the provinces of Alajuela, Cartago, Guanacaste, Heredia and  Limón in Costa Rica and Bocas del Toro in Panama; it has only been collected on the Pacific slope in Puntarenas (Costa Rica) (Fig. 18D). It has been recorded between 700-2000 m elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p> Virola montana is of Least Concern following IUCN guidelines. It has both a large EOO (14,606 km2) and AOO (104 km2) and is known from nineteen localities. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Costa Rica: fruta dorada.</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola montana has been recorded in January, March to May, November and December; only two herbarium specimens with pistillate flowers were seen. Fruits have been collected in March and June to December. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Leaf blades are lustrous, dark green above and whitish or silver below. Flowers have yellow, cream, greenish-white or brown perianth. Mature fruits are yellow, pale brown, brown yellow or orange. The seed is brown with a red aril.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> As far as we know, the first specimen of this species was collected 115 years ago by Henri F. Pittier (1857-1950) in the mountains of El Rosario de Orosi, Cartago, Costa Rica (H. Pittier 16628, NY-2 sheets!*). Paul C. Standley treated this specimen as  V. koschnyi in "Flora of Costa Rica" (Standley 1937). Shortly after, Albert C. Smith and Roger P. Wodehouse (1938) included the Pittier specimen under  V. guatemalensis and this remains the name that is most frequently misattributed to specimens of  V. montana (e.g. Standley and Steyermark 1946;  Jiménez 2007). However,  V. guatemalensis , as interpreted here, is restricted to northern Mesoamerica (Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras). In addition to the differences given in the diagnosis, the  V. montana can be distinguished morphologically from  V. guatemalensis by the differences summarised in Table 6. Although it is difficult to quantify, specimens of  V. montana commonly have twigs, petioles and inflorescences covered with more trichomes with long branches (see Fig. 3F, J). </p>
            <p> In addition to  Virola guatemalensis , herbarium specimens of this new species have been determined as three other species:  V. koschnyi ,  V. sebifera and  V. surinamensis (here treated as  V. nobilis ). Vegetatively,  V. montana can be distinguished from these species by its mature leaves that are abaxially sparsely pubescent (vs. covering the entire surface of the leaf blades abaxially). The first two species are distinguished by pediculate trichomes on abaxial surface of leaf blades (vs. sessile in  V. montana , these primarily present in young leaves). Finally,  V. nobilis has trichomes with short branches [0.05-0.1 mm (Fig. 3L) vs. 0.2-0.6 mm long (Fig. 3J)], tends to have more lateral veins [25-34 vs. (15-) 18-30 per side] and has a preference for lower elevation habitats [0-500 (-1300) m vs. 700-2000 m elevation]. </p>
            <p> Based on the number of herbarium specimens collected,  Virola montana is the most common montane species of  Virola in southern Mesoamerica and it is usually the only species where it occurs. However, three fruiting specimens of  Virola sp., represented by R. Aguilar et al. 4327 (CR!, MO!), G. McPherson 8723 (MO!) and G. McPherson 10514 (MO!), have been collected in the general vicinity of  V. montana in its preferred elevational range (1050-1500 m). These specimens clearly differ from  V. montana in their small leaf blades [10.5-12.5  × 2.3-3.5 cm vs. (11.2-) 15-30.5  × (3.9-) 4.5-7.4 cm] with trichomes on the abaxial surface that have short branches (0.08-0.1 mm vs. 0.2-0.6 mm long) and cover the entire surface (vs. sparsely pubescent, but usually densely to sparsely pubescent along the lateral veins and midvein in  V. montana ). These specimens share characteristics with two lowland species of  Virola :  V. nobilis and  V. fosteri , including sessile, stellate trichomes on the abaxial surface of leaves. Additionally, these three specimens share their small leaves with  V. fosteri , though not  V. nobilis (9-17.2 [-27.5]  × 2.5-5 [  –4.7– 7.1] cm vs. 10.5-12.5  × 2.3-3.5 cm). Further, the fruits of  V. fosteri are smaller (1.5-2.3  × 1.2-1.8 cm vs. 2.8-3.2  × 2.2-2.7 cm). Additional collection and study is necessary to determine the identity of these specimens. </p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Alajuela: Reserva  Biológica Monteverde,  Río Peñas Blancas, parcela de Badilla, 800 m elev., 23 Oct 1988 (fr), E. Bello 470 (CR-2 sheets!, INPA!*, LSU!, MO!); Reserva  Biológica Monteverde, Parcela de  Jesús Rojas, 850-900 m elev., 05 May 1989 (♂ fl), E. Bello 855 (CR-2 sheets!, INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!); Reserva  Biológica Monteverde, Ref. Aleman, 900 m elev., 10 Nov 1993 (♂ fl), E. Bello 5404 (CR!, LSU!, MO!); Reserva Forestal de San  Ramón , 850-1150 m elev., 12-14 Mar 1987 (♂ fl), W. Burger et al. 12152 (CR!, F!*); San  Ramón , Reserva  Biológica Alberto Brenes,  Estación San Lorencito, 900 m elev., 03 May 2000 (♂ fl), K. Caballero 2 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Reserva Forestal de San  Ramón , 900-1200 m elev., 12-15 Mar 1987 (♂ fl), J.  Gómez-Laurito 11446 (CR!, USJ!); Reserva Forestal de San  Ramón , 900-1200 m elev., 16-19 Apr 1987 (♂ fl), J.  Gómez-Laurito 11484 (CR!, F-2 sheets!*); Reserva Forestal de San  Ramón ,  Estación Río San Lorencito, 850-900 m elev., 18 Oct 1989 (fr), J.  Gómez-Laurito et al. 11846 (CR!, MEXU!*, MO!, USJ!); La Balsa, 1100 m elev., 02 Jul 1990 (st), J.  Gómez-Laurito &amp; J. A.  López 11970 (USJ!); Reserva  Biológica Monteverde,  Río Peñas Blancas, 850 m elev., 31 Mar 1987 (♂ fl), W. Haber &amp; E. Bello 6978 (CR!, F!*, INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!); Reserva  Biológica Monteverde, finca Wilson Salazar, 800 m elev., 07 Nov 1987 (fr), W. Haber &amp; E. Cruz 7698 (CR!, INPA!*, MO!, USJ!);  Río San Lorenzito, 800-1000 m elev., 30 Mar 1987 (♂ fl), G. Herrera et al. 514 (CR!, INPA!*, LSU!, MO!); La Fortuna, Finca El Jilguero, 1160 m elev., 20 Nov 1992 (fr), G. Herrera 5544 (CR!); 2 km N.E of La Balsa de San  Ramón , 900 m elev., 26 Sep 1976 (fr), R. Lent 3899 (CR-3 sheets!, INPA!*, MARY!*, MEXU!*, MO!, PMA!*, U!*); Reserva Forestal San  Ramón ,  Estación Río San Lorenzo, sendero al  Volcán Muerto, 1100 m elev., 26 Apr 1993 (♀ fl), F. Quesada 20 (CR!, LSU!, MO!); Lago Coter [Cote], Hotel Eco-Lodge, 700 m elev., 09 Apr 1997 (♂ fl), J. Rivera &amp; B. Petruzzi 2933 (CR!). Cartago: Taus, faldas del Cerro Alto El Humo, 900-1200 m elev., 06 Apr 1994 (♂ fl), J. F. Morales &amp; E.  Lépiz 2654 (CR!, MO!); El Rosario de Orosi, no date, Jan 1903 (fr), 1120 m elev., H. Pittier 16628 (NY-2 sheets!*); Turrialba, Monumento Nacional Guayabo, Santa Teresita, sobre los  ríos Guayabo, Lajas y Torito, 700-1800 m elev., 08 May 1992 (♂ fl), G. Rivera 1659 (CR!, MO!, USJ!);  límite Sur del Monumento Nacional Guayabo, sector Las Ventanas, 1100 m elev., 07 Jul 1992 (fr), G. Rivera 1910 (CR!, F!*, MO!, USJ!); [  Paraíso ] 5 km N.W of  Río Grande de Orosi at Tapanti, 1300 m elev., 27 May 1976 (♂ fl), J. Utley &amp; K. Utley 5054 (CR-2 sheets!, MEXU-2 sheets!*, MO-2 sheets!). Guanacaste: San Gerardo, 1000 m elev., 21 Nov 1998 (fr), E. Bello 553 (CR!, INPA!*, MO!). Heredia: Sarapiqui, Parque Nacional Braulio Carrillo, puesto El Ceibo, 750 m elev., 05 Mar 1994 (st), B. Boyle et al. 2938 (MO!); Cariblanco, 800 m elev., n.d. Mar 1950 (fl bud), J.  León 2368 (USJ!); Cariblanco, 800 m elev., 10 Aug 1950 (fr), LRH [L. R. Holdridge] 2618 (USJ!).  Limón : Talamanca, Bratsi, Alto Lari, Kivut, 1300-1500 m elev., 15 Mar 1992 (fr), R. Aguilar &amp; H. Schmidt 1131 (CR!, MO!). Puntarenas: Coto Brus, Zona Protectora Las Tablas, sitios Las Juntas, 1500 m elev., 03 Jul 1999 (fr), E. Alfaro 2357 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); [Coto Brus], Las Tablas,  río Cotoncito, [1300-1500 m elev.], 10 Dec 1983 (fr), I.  Chacón et al. 1819 (INPA!*, LSU-2 sheets!, MO!); Parque Internacional La Amistad,  Estación Pittier, 1650 m elev., 28 Jan 1995 (♀ fl), M. Chinchilla &amp; IV curso de  paratoxónomos 3 (CR-2 sheets!, LSU!, MO!); Zona Protectora Las Tablas, 2000 m elev., 01 Sep 1992 (fr), A.  Fernández 354 (CR!); Fila Tigre, SE of Las Alturas, 1350-1450 m elev., 29 Aug 1983 (fr), G. Davidse 24178 (CR!, INPA!*, MEXU!*, MO!); Parque Internacional La Amistad, Santa  María de Pittier, 1700 m elev., 13 Jun 1995 (fr), J.  González 823 (CR-2 sheets!); Coto Brus, Zona Protectora Las Tablas, Hacienda La Amistad, 1600-2000 m elev., 28 Dec 2003 (♂ fl), R. Kriebel et al. 4174 (CR-2!, MO!). Panama. Bocas del Toro: Bocas del  Toro-Chiriquí border above Fortuna Dam, 1200 m elev., 04 Dec 1985 (imm fr), G. McPherson 7756 (INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A1E94AB74FA55164BE92C204B2AF880E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
04AE7760CAC258C993F6C8A0A4F5374C.text	04AE7760CAC258C993F6C8A0A4F5374C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola multiflora (Standl.) A. C. Sm.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 11.  Virola multiflora (Standl.) A. C. Sm. Fig. 22  E–H</p>
            <p> Virola multiflora (Standl.) A. C. Sm. Brittonia 2: 499. 1938. </p>
            <p> Dialyanthera multiflora Standl. Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 8: 12. 1930. Type. [Belize] British Honduras. In jungle, Stann Creek Railway, alt. 30 m, 16 Jul 1929 [♂ fl], W. A. Schipp 279 (holotype: F!*; isotypes: A!*, BM!*, G-2 sheets!*, GH!*, K!*, MO!, S!*). </p>
            <p> Virola brachycarpa Standl. Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 11: 131. 1932. Type. [Belize] British Honduras. Stann Creek Valley, 13 Jan 1932 [fr], J. A. Burns 20 (holotype: F!*; isotypes: BKL!*, G!*, US!*, WIS!*). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola multiflora is recognised by its usually small and narrow leaf blades [5.5-15.5  × 1.5-3.6 (-4.8) cm] with an inconspicuously pubescent abaxial surface with stellate and sessile trichomes (Fig. 3K), lateral veins that are not very prominent (Fig. 8K) and long and thin petioles [0.5-0.9 (-1.1) cm long]; staminate flowers with the filament column longer (0.7-1 mm long) than the anthers (0.3-0.6 mm long); and for its small fruits [1.3-1.9  × 0.9-1.2 (-1.4) cm] (Fig. 4J) with the pericarp 0.7-1 mm thick. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola multiflora is known from Belize (Cayo, Stann Creek and Toledo), Honduras (Gracias a Dios), Nicaragua (  Atlántico Norte,  Atlántico Sur, Jinotega, Matagalpa and  Río San Juan) and Costa Rica (Alajuela, Cartago, Heredia and  Limón ) (Fig. 18E). Throughout its range in Mesoamerica, it is only known from the Caribbean slope. It has been recorded from between 0-650 (-1400) m elevation. </p>
            <p> While  V. multiflora is not documented from Guatemala in herbaria, Standley and Steyermark (1946) postulated that the species is to be expected to occur in Izabal (Guatemala) and  Jiménez (2007) attributes it to that country. Conversely, while it is mentioned as occurring in Peru by  Jiménez (2007), specimens could not be located. The Peruvian specimen attributed to  V. multiflora (R.  Vásquez &amp; C.  Grández 17507, MO!; fr) in  Vásquez M. et al. (2018) corresponds to a species related to  V. multinervia . Finally, the report presented in the Nuevo  Catálogo de la Flora Vascular de Venezuela (Rodrigues 2008) is errorenous. Based on this evidence,  V. multiflora is considered as restricted to Mesoamerica. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p> Belize: banak, bastard banak. Honduras: asang banak,  bának , banak almuk,  báhanak luhpia, sangre, sebo  álmut , sebo negro. Nicaragua: conchillo, samo. Costa Rica: fruta dorada. </p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Flowering of  Virola multiflora has been recorded in March to August, with a noted peak in July; just one herbarium specimen with pistillate flowers was seen and it is from Nicaragua. Fruits were collected in December through April. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are trees between 6-30 m tall and 17-35 cm DBH. Bark exudes latex red. The leaf blades are sometimes whitish abaxially. The flowers usually have yellow, golden or orange perianth. The mature fruit is yellow or orange with a red aril.</p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> We were not able to locate any Panamanian specimens of  V. multiflora : all fertile Panamanian specimens identified as  V. multiflora that the first author has studied are actually  V. fosteri . However,  V. multiflora is to be expected in Panama because it occurs in physiognomically similar forests in Costa Rica near the border. The similarities and differences between  V. multiflora and  V. fosteri (which is formally described above) are discussed under the latter species. </p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Belize. Cayo: Hummingbird Highway south of Belmopan, 200-300 ft [60-90 m] elev., 26 Jun 1973 (♂ fl), A. Gentry 8615 (MO!). Stann Creek: Big Eddy Ridge, [50-200 m elev.], 12 May 1940 (fl bud), P. H. Gentle 3333 (MO!); Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, 80 m elev., 17 Jan 2007 (fr), P. Hechenleitner 289 (MO!). Toledo: Between Rancho Chico and Cockscomb, no elev., 26 Mar 1943 (fl bud), P. H. Gentle 4342 (MO!); Big Creek, 100 ft [30 m] elev., 02 Dec 1931 (fl bud), W. A. Schipp 858 (MO-2 sheets!). Honduras. Gracias a Dios: 1 km al sureste de Krausirpe, pie de  montaña de Wimpi, 90 m elev., 18 Feb 1994 (fr), P. R. House 1888 (MO!); transecto  Botánico Cerro Krautara, 120 m elev., 16 Mar 1995 (♂ fl), P. R. House 2308 (MO!). Nicaragua.  Atlántico Norte: El Salto, along  Río Pis Pis, 100 m elev., 27 Feb 1979 (fr), J. J. Pipoly 3615 (MO!); 13 km above Kururia on road to San  Jerónimo , 200 m elev., 02 Mar 1979 (♂ fl), J. J. Pipoly 3846 (MO!).  Atlántico Sur: Nueva Guinea, Reserva  Indio-Maíz , 200-300 m elev., 05 Jan 1999 (fr), R. Rueda et al. 9857 (MO!); 2 km de Colonia Serrano, Comarca El Escobillo, 80-100 m elev., 28 Jul 1982 (♀ fl), J. C. Sandino 3302 (MO!). Jinotega: Cua Bocay, Reserva de Bosawas, 278 m elev., 03 Oct 2005 (imm fr), I. Coronado et al. 2306 (MO!). Matagalpa:  Río Blanco, Reserva Natural Cerro  Musún , 500-1400 m elev., 15 Jul 2000 (♂ fl), R. Rueda &amp; O. Caballero 14294 (MO!).  Río San Juan: 1 km al NW del  Río Santa Cruz, 60 m elev., 22 Feb 1984 (fr), P. P. Moreno 23253 (MO!); sobre el  río Sábalo , 40 m elev., 07 Jul 1984 (♂ fl), P. P. Moreno &amp; W. Robleto 25984 (MO!); Boca Negra, 120 m elev., 14 Feb 1990 (fr), P. P. Moreno 27266 (MO!, P!*);  Estación Biológica Bartola, 50-100 m elev., 26 Jul 1998 (♂ fl), R. Rueda et al. 8196 (MO!);  Estación Experimental La Lupe, 100 m elev., 22 Nov. 2000 (fr), R. Rueda &amp; W.  Velásques 15004 (MO!). Costa Rica. Alajuela: Corredor Fronterizo Costa Rica-Nicaragua, 2 km antes de Boca San Carlos, 0-100 m elev., 15 Mar 2004 (♂ fl), J. F. Morales 10322 (CR!, MO!). Cartago: 24 km northeast of Turrialba on highway to  Limón , 450-525 m elev., 10 May 1983 (♂ fl), R. Liesner et al. 15390 (MO!). Heredia: Puerto Viejo de  Sarapiquí , camino a Cerros Sardinal,  Caño Negro, 71 m elev., 25 Jul 2016 (♂ fl), B. Hammel &amp; I.  Pérez 27148 (CR!); along  Guácimo ridge trail, 315 m elev., 18 Jan 1983 (fr), G. S. Hartshorn 2553 (CR!, MO-2 sheets!).  Limón : Siquirres, Fila Mirador, camino a Las Brisas de Pacuarito, 400 m elev., 13 Feb 2000 (fr), M. Blanco &amp; A. Vega 1460 (USJ!); Bajo Telire, 400-600 m elev., n.d. July 1984 (♂ fl), L. D.  Gómez 24151 (CR!, MO!); Talamanca, Finca La Culebra, a 1.5 km de camino  Bribrí , 0-200 m elev., 26 Oct 1992 (fl), J.  Gómez-Laurito &amp; H.  Gómez 12340 (USJ!); Matina,  intersección de  Río Barbilla y Quebrada  Cañabral , 100-200 m elev., 11 Oct 1988 (imm fr), G. Herrera 2167 (MO!); Parque Nacional Tortuguero, Lomas de Sierpe, 100 m elev., 15 Aug 1988 (♂ fl), R. Robles et al. 2063 (MO!); Sixaola, San Miguel, camino entre Fila Tsipubeta y Cerro Mirador, 200-300 m elev., 12 Nov 1999 (fl), O. Valverde &amp; S.  Hernández 1237 (CR!, USJ!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/04AE7760CAC258C993F6C8A0A4F5374C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
7C429EDB2AC852BDBB9EDF297C84E0CF.text	7C429EDB2AC852BDBB9EDF297C84E0CF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola nobilis A. C. Sm.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 12.  Virola nobilis A. C. Sm. Figs 20  C–G , 24B </p>
            <p> Virola nobilis A. C. Sm. Brittonia 2: 490. 1938. Type. Panama. Canal Zone, Barro Colorado Island, 07 Jan. 1932 [imm fr], [R. H.] Wetmore, [E. C.] Abbe &amp; [O. E.] Shattuck 155 (holotype: GH!*; isotypes: A!*, F!*, MO!). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola nobilis is recognised by its narrow, oblong leaf blades (9-17.2 [-27.5]  × 2.5-5 [  –4.7– 7.1] cm) with numerous lateral veins (20-30 [25-32] per side) corresponding to 8-11 (5-7 [-9]) veins per 5 cm, as well the stellate, tertiary veins that are slightly sunken above (Fig. 3L) and sessile trichomes scattered on underside of the leaf (Fig. 3L); the staminate flowers with the filament column longer (0.8-1.1 [1.2-1.3] mm long) than the anthers (0.6-0.8 mm long); and usually ellipsoid or ovoid fruits (2.3-2.7  × 2.2-2.4 cm [2.1-3.1  × 1.6-2.5 cm]) (Fig. 4N) with thick pericarp (2.3-3.5 mm [2.5-4.2 mm]) and aril. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola nobilis is known from the Pacific slope of Costa Rica (Puntarenas, San  José ) and the Caribbean slope of Panama (Bocas del Toro,  Colón ,  Panamá , San Blas). It is recorded from 0-400 (-1300) m elevation (Fig. 18F).  Jiménez (2007) reported this species (as  V. surinamensis ) from just one locality (  Chitaría ) on the Caribbean slope in Costa Rica; however, we have not examined the specimen (Poveda 144, CR). </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Costa Rica: Fruta dorada. Panama: bogamani, coton cuinur gia, sabdurgia (Kuna name).</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p>Flowers have been collected in January to April, July, August, November and December and fruits in almost all months except October.</p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are large trees between (5-) 15-40 m tall and 20-70 cm DBH. The trunk is straight, usually with conspicuous buttresses and does not begin to branch until it reaches a great height. The bark is reddish and releases red exudate when damaged. The leaves are whitish with inconspicuous trichomes on the abaxial surface. Flowers have yellow perianth. The mature fruit is yellow to orange with a red aril.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> This species has usually been treated, identified and included as a synonym of  Virola surinamensis (e.g. Gentry 1975; Croat 1978; Correa et al. 2004;  Jiménez 2007), which has similar leaf morphology (i.e. number of lateral veins, stellate and sessile trichomes scattered on the abaxial surface of the leave blades). However,  Virola surinamensis (Figs 23  G–J , 24A) is characterised by having a shorter perianth that is also somewhat fleshy to submembranous and smaller fruits that are also ovoid to subglobose, glabrescent and with a thin pericarp (Figs 23  I–J , 24A inset; also see illustration in Rodrigues 1972, 1980). Although both species may have similarly-sized leaves, they tend to be smaller in  V. surinamensis , which also has inflorescence axes that are longer and with many more flowers (Figs 23F, 24A). </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> Virola nobilis exhibits complex variation that requires more fieldwork, ideally in combination with molecular phylogenetic analysis, to clarify species boundaries. For example, specimens from the Pacific slope in Costa Rica (see specimens cited below and Figs 24C, 25) are included, with reservation, under  V. nobilis . These specimens differ from other collections of  V. nobilis , including the type and additional specimens from Barro Colorado Island (the type locality), in having wider leaf blades, fewer lateral veins, tertiary veins that are less inconspicuous below (Fig. 3L, O), a longer filament column and ovoid fruits with obtuse to rounded apices (Fig. 4N, O). These specimens also resemble  V. reidii Little, a species from Colombia and Ecuador (Jaramillo et al. 2004). The measurements presented in square brackets [] correspond with the Costa Rican material under question. </p>
            <p> Other material that potentially belongs to  V. nobilis includes a few collections from Panama, including both infertile and fruting specimens from El Llano  Cartí and others from Cerro Jefe (e.g. G. de Nevers &amp; H. Herrera 4333, imm fr, MO!; R. L. Liesner 657, fr, MO!; E. L. Tyson et al. 3353, fr, MO!). These differ from  V. nobilis by having the abaxial surface of the leaf blade covered by a dense and a very inconspicuous layer of stellate, sessile and yellowish trichomes and fruits with a more or less smooth surface and that are not carinate in the line of dehiscence. Finally, R. Aguilar 3408 (CR-3 sheets!, MO!) from the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica and G. McPherson 11474 (MO!; fr) from Panama differ from the species concept that we adopt in having trichomes on the abaxial leaf side with long branches (ca. 0.2 mm long) that are often shortly pediculate; and small fruits (ca. 2.1  × 1.6-1.7) that are ovoid to subglobose and apiculate at the apex. </p>
            <p>Selected specimens.</p>
            <p> Costa Rica. Puntarenas: Golfito, camino a Piro, finca de Adrian, 50 m elev., 16 Apr 2005 (fr), R. Aguilar &amp; X. Cornejo 9739 (MO!); Osa, Punta Pargos, 0 m elev., 17 Apr 2008 (fr), R. Aguilar 11186 (MO!, USJ!); Osa, Rancho Quemado, siguiendo el nuevo camino a Drake, 400 m elev., 20 Jun 1990 (fr), G. Herrera 4222 (MO!); Trocha de La Tarde rd. 10 km SW of La Palma, 150-200 m elev., 28 Apr 1988 (fr), B. Hammel &amp; R. Robles 16722 (MO!); Osa, Fila Ganado, 350 m elev., 15 Dec 1990 (♂ fl), B. Hammel et al. 18017 (CR-2 sheets!, MO!); Osa, Fila Ganado hasta Guerra, 1-300 m elev., 28 Mar 1991 (fr), B. Hammel et al. 18170 (MO!). San  José :  Tarrazú , 900-1300 m elev., 19 Aug 1997 (fr), O. Valverde &amp; A. Estrada 135 (CR!). Panama. Bocas del Toro: North of Fortuna Dam, on road to  Chiriquí Grande, 500 m elev., 18 Jan 1986 (fr), G. McPherson 8098 (MO!).  Colón : Carretera  Gatún-Piñas , 0-50 m elev., 26 Jul 1994 (fr), C. Galdames et al. 1415 (CR!, MO!).  Panamá : Barro Colorado Island, [10- 100 m elev.], 23 Jan 1969 (fl bud), T. B. Croat 7488 (MO!); ibid, 22 Feb 1969 (fr), T. B. Croat 8090 (MO!); El Llano  Cartí , 1100-1200 m [335-365 m] elev., 28 Dec 1974 (fr), S. Mori &amp; J. Kallunki 4151 (CR!). San Blas: El  Llano-Cartí , 100-350 m elev., 03 Nov 1985 (imm fr), G. de Nevers et al. 6172 (MO!). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7C429EDB2AC852BDBB9EDF297C84E0CF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
8269F333FCF1547F96290F179013CC7F.text	8269F333FCF1547F96290F179013CC7F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola otobifolia Santamaría-Aguilar & Aguilar & Lagomarsino 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 13.  Virola otobifolia D.Santam. sp. nov. Figs 7D, 23  A–E , 26 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Species most similar to  Virola macrocarpa in having leaf blades that are discolorous abaxially with stellate, sessile trichomes with a reddish central portion and similar number of lateral veins (10-16) that are not densely spaced. However, it differs in its leaves with dense, but inconspicuously pubescent leaf undersides (vs. inconspicuously puberulent) with 2-4 veins per 5 cm that are 1.7-3 cm apart (vs. 4-5 veins per 5 cm, 0.8-1.5 cm apart) and fruits that are (2.7-) 3.5-4.5  × (1.9-) 2.3-2.9 cm, densely tomentose with persistent trichomes, a rugose surface when dry and a line of dehiscence that is conspicuously carinate (vs. 2.7-3.3  × 2-2.3 cm, tomentellous, with caducous, dust-like trichomes, a smooth surface when dry, the line of dehiscence slightly carinate), as well as the production of thicker pericarp [(2.7-) 3-4.7 mm vs. 1.8-3 mm thick]. </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> Panama. [  Panamá : Chepo], El Llano  Cartí road 6.9 km N of Panamerican Highway, 350-500 m elev., 23 Jan 1977 (fr), J. P. Folsom 1440 (holotype: MO-2 sheets! [2601823, MO117643, 5551400, MO299335]; isotype: PMA!* [101093, PMA111119]). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Tree 6-30 m  × 24.9-37.3 cm DBH; bark not described. Exudate from the trunk sometimes described as red, watery-red, or black-reddish. Twigs 0.23-0.34 cm, terete to slightly flattened, glabrescent to puberulent, trichomes stellate to irregularly stellate, ferruginous to greyish. Leaves: petiole (1-) 1.3-2  × 0.19-0.44 cm, flat to very slightly canaliculate, tomentose, the trichomes stellate; leaf blades (14-) 18.2-42.5  × (4.1-) 7.3-14.2 cm, oblong to elliptic; adaxial surface of mature leaf blades brown (sometimes shining) when dry, glabrous or sometimes with scattered stellate trichomes (especially along the veins), the surface smooth; abaxial surface when drying whitish-greyish or sometimes very light brown, dense but inconspicuously pubescent, trichomes stellate, sessile, the central part of the trichome usually reddish, contrasting in colour with the hyaline branches to reddish-clear, with 4-11 branches, the branches  ± 0.01-0.05 mm, persistent; lateral veins 10-16 per side, 2-4 veins per 5 cm, 1.7-3 cm apart, the same colour as the adaxial surface, on adaxial surface flat to slightly sunken, on abaxial surface slightly elevated, arcuate, slightly anastomosing near the margin and without forming a very marked intramarginal vein; tertiary veins barely visible on both surfaces; midvein adaxially elevated, but submerged in a channel, abaxially raised, triangular to rounded, tomentose; base acute to obtuse, sometimes slightly cordate, not revolute, flat; margin flat to slightly revolute; apex acuminate. Staminate inflorescences 3.5-9.5 cm long, axillary either at a leaf or at a leafless node, axes flattened or irregularly flattened, tomentose, with trichomes irregularly stellate to irregularly dendritic, brown to ferruginous; peduncle 1.4-2.2  × 0.22-0.34 cm long; bracts not seen; terminal fascicles lax, with 5-13 flowers. Staminate flower with the pedicel 1.5-2 mm long; receptacle 0.7-1.5 mm wide;; perianth 2.5-2.8 mm long, infundibuliform, yellow or brown when fresh, connate by 0.9-1.5 mm long, abaxial surface pubescent with brown trichomes, adaxial surface glabrous or with few trichomes close to the base; lobes 3 (4), 1.2-1.5  × 0.9-1.1 mm; stamens 3 (-6), the filament column 0.9-1 mm long, straight and very thickened throughout its length, fleshy, constricted at the apex; anthers 0.6-1 mm long; apiculus ca. 0.1 mm long, acute to apiculate, connate or slightly separate. Pistillate inflorescences 3.2-4 cm long (immature), axillary, axes flattened or irregularly flattened, tomentose, with trichomes stellate, brown to ferruginous; peduncle 0.6-1.2  × ca. 3.2 cm long; bracts not seen. Pistillate flowers not seen. Infructescence 3.2-5 cm long, with (1-) 2-4 fruits, peduncle 1-3.5  × 0.35-0.53 cm. Fruits (2.7-) 3.5-4.5  × (1.9-) 2.3-2.9 cm, ellipsoid, shortly stipitate, densely tomentose, the trichomes stellate, ferruginous, persistent, the surface rugose when dry, the line of dehiscence conspicuously carinate, the base obtuse to subtruncate, the apex acute to acuminate, brown (possibly by pubescence), although presumably green when fresh; pericarp (2.7-) 3-4.7 mm thick; pedicel 0.5-0.8 (-1) cm long; seed 2.5-2.8  × 1.5-1.7 cm, the testa dark brown when dry, markedly grooved; aril described as red when fresh, brown to blackish when dry, membranaceous, with a dry texture, thin, laciniate in narrow bands distally. </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola otobifolia is recognised by its large leaf blades with well-spaced lateral veins (Fig. 8M) and a whitish abaxial surface that is covered with stellate, sessile trichomes (Fig. 3M); staminate flowers that have a filament column that is straight and very thickened throughout its length, except where it is constricted at the apex and anthers that are almost the same length as the filament column; and its large fruits with thick pericarp that are densely tomentose and with a conspicuously carinate line of dehiscence (Fig. 4C). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The specific epithet refers to the similarity of the leaf blades with  Otoba , another member of  Myristicaceae . This epithet was, in part, inspired by the fact that some of the first collections of this new species were initially confused with this genus (as  Dialyanthera Warb.; e.g. A. Gentry &amp; S. Mori 14199, MO). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola otobifolia is only known in Panama (  Colón ,  Panamá and San Blas), where it is found on the Caribbean slope (Fig. 27A). It has been recorded between 50-850 m elevation. </p>
            <p>Preliminary conservation status.</p>
            <p> Virola obtobifolia is Endangered following IUCN criteria B1a and B2a. Justifying this status, it has both a small EOO (3,269 km2) and AOO (36 km2) and is known from only five localities. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p>Panama: velario, miguelario; cuinur burwi, putmas (Kuna).</p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p> Virola otobifolia has been recorded with flowers and fruits in February to April and one collection with fruits was made in October. </p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Exudate is slow to appear and is watery and red-black. Leaf blades are whitish abaxially. Flowers have yellow perianth. Fruits are green, but appearing brown (possibly due to pubescence).</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Specimens of  Virola otobifolia have been confused with and identified as  V. macrocarpa (e.g. Correa et al. 2004; Condit et al. 2011) (Figs 4D, 7C), probably due to the similar size of the fruits and the leaf morphology (i.e. large discolorous leaf blades, with stellate, sessile trichomes with a reddish centre, and lateral veins that are well-separated). However, it is easily distinguished by the leaf width, pubescence on abaxial surface of the leaves, the number of lateral veins, fruit morphology and habitat; a comparative table of these two species is presented in Table 7. </p>
            <p>* From Smith and Wodehouse 1938 (except the pericarp).</p>
            <p> Two similar species from Mesoamerica that resemble  Virola otobifolia are:  V. allenii (Figs 6, 7A), which ocurrs in the lowland wet forest on the Pacific slope of Costa Rica and  V. amistadensis (Fig. 7B) from montane forests of Costa Rica and Panama on the Caribbean slope. Morphological comparison between these species is presented in Table 3. </p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p>The holotype, deposited at Missouri Botanical Garden (MO), represents a single collection mounted on two sheets that are clearly labelled ("Sheet 1 of 2," "Sheet 2 of 2) as being parts of the same specimen (ICN Art. 8.3) (Turland et al. 2018).</p>
            <p>Specimens examined.</p>
            <p> Panama.  Colón : Teck Cominco Petaquilla, 200 m elev., 21 Feb 2008 (fl bud), G. McPherson 20135 (MO!); [Donoso] Westernmost part of province, site of proposed copper mine (INMET), 150 m elev., 12 Apr 2009 (fr), G. McPherson 20905 (MO!).  Panamá : [Chepo] El Llano  Cartí road, near El Llano, [460 m elev.], 27 Mar 1976 (fr), T. B. Croat 33725 (MO!); Cerro Jefe, Parque Nacional Chagres, [985 m elev.], 17 Jan 2002 (fr), N. Flores &amp; R.  Aizprúa B3156 (MO!); [Chepo] El Llano  Cartí road 18 km from Pan-Americana Highway, 330-370 m elev., 14 Feb 1975 (fr), A. Gentry &amp; S. Mori 14199 (MO!, SCZ!*); El Llano-Carti road, 12.7 km N from Pan American Highway, 350 m elev., 15 Feb 1975 (fl bud), A. Gentry &amp; S. Mori 14213 (MO!); below Cerro Jefe, along road to  Río Pacora, 850 m elev., 09 Jan 1986 (fr), G. McPherson 7946 (INPA!*, MO!, PMA!*). San Blas: El  Llano-Cartí road, 24.5-25 km from PanAmerican highway, [250-350 m elev.], 12 Apr 1975 (♂ fl), S. Mori &amp; J. Kallunki 5542 (MO!); El Llano-Carti road, 350 m elev., 01 Oct 1984 (fr), G. de Nevers &amp; H. Herrera 3981 (MO!, MEXU!*, PMA!*);  Cangandí , 30 m elev., 10 Feb 1986 (fr), G. de Nevers &amp; H. Herrera 7056 (MO!, INPA!*, PMA!*); ibid, 10 Feb 1986 (fl bud), G. de Nevers &amp; H. Herrera 7068 (MO!, INPA!*);  Cangandí , 30 m elev., 27 Mar 1986 (fr), G. de Nevers et al. 7430 (MO-2 sheets!, PMA!*); ibid, 27 Mar 1986 (fl bud), G. de Nevers et al. 7448 (MO!); ibid, 27 Mar 1986 (♂ fl), G. de Nevers et al. 7530 (MEXU!*, MO!, PMA!*); ibid, 27 Mar 1986 (fl bud), G. de Nevers et al. 7605, 7607 (MEXU!*, MO!, PMA!*). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8269F333FCF1547F96290F179013CC7F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
6543C7FD082F51418D924FD226374777.text	6543C7FD082F51418D924FD226374777.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Virola sebifera Aubl.	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> 14.  Virola sebifera Aubl. Fig. 28 </p>
            <p> Virola sebifera Aubl. Hist. Pl. Guiane. 2: 904. 1775. Type. French Guiana. Cayenne, 1775, [J.] Aublet s.n., (holotype: BM!*; isotypes: NY photograph of BM holotype). Fide Jaramillo et al. 2004. </p>
            <p> Myristica panamensis Hemsl. Biol. Cent.-Amer., Bot. 3: 67. 1882.  Virola panamensis (Hemsl.) Warb., Nova Acta Acad. Caes. Leop.-Carol. German. Nat. Cur. 68: 185. 1897. Syntypes: Panama. shady forest near Cruces, n.d. (fls.), Seemann 545 (BM!*, K!*); [Canal Area], Lion Hill station, [28 Mar 1862, leaves, excl. fr], S. Hayes 618 (K!*). </p>
            <p> Virola warburgii Pittier. Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 18: 143. 1916. Type. Panama.  Panamá , collected in forests along the Chagres River above Alhajuela, 12 May 1911 [fls], H. Pittier 3505 (holotype: US; isotype: BM). </p>
            <p>Distinctive characters.</p>
            <p> Virola sebifera is recognised by its dense pubescence of pediculate and ferruginous trichomes (Fig. 3N) that cover almost all parts of the plant; leaf blades with few lateral veins (9-17 per side), well-spaced between them [3-4 (-5) veins per 5 cm, 1.3-2.7 cm apart] (Fig. 8N); the long staminate inflorescences that are very branched; the staminate flowers with the filament column short (0.1-0.4 mm long) and the anthers more than twice the length of the column of the filaments (0.6-0.8 mm long) and apiculate at the apex; its small fruits [1.1-1.7 (-2.3)  × 0.8-1.3 (-1.6) cm] that are globose to subglobose (Fig. 4K), covered by a dense layer of trichomes that fall easily and a thin pericarp [0.3-0.6 (-0.9) mm]; and the thin aril that is laciniate in narrow bands. There are also usually many fruits per infructescence. </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Virola sebifera is the most collected and widespread species in Mesoamerica. It is known from Honduras (Gracias a Dios), Nicaragua (  Atlántico Norte,  Atlántico Sur, Jinotega, Matagalpa and  Río San Juan), Costa Rica (Alajuela, Cartago, Guanacaste, Heredia,  Limón , Puntarenas and San  José ) and  Panamá (Bocas del Toro,  Chiriquí ,  Coclé ,  Colón ,  Darién , Herrera,  Panamá , San Blas and Veraguas) (Fig. 27B). It has been recorded between 0-1000 m elevation. </p>
            <p>Common names.</p>
            <p> Honduras: walus, banak. Nicaragua: banak, cebo, cebo macho, cebo sirsio, sangre drago. Costa Rica: coton, fruta dorada, miguelario. Panama: bogamani, copidijo, fruta dorada, gorgoran, malagueta de  montaña , mancha, sangre, tabegua, velario colorado. </p>
            <p>Phenology.</p>
            <p>Herbarium specimens of flowering and fruiting individuals have been collected throughout the year. In the Osa Peninsula and Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica, flowering occurs in December to May.</p>
            <p>Field characters.</p>
            <p>Plants are shrubs or trees between 8-25 (-40) m tall and 7-40 cm DBH. Trunks are straight, sometimes with small buttresses and with long and horizontal branches. Bark is described as dark, minutely fissured vertically or flaking off in small pieces and aromatic. Exudate from different parts of the plant is red or reddish. The leaf blades are bright green above and whitish to greyish below in living material. Flowers have brown, cream, orange, yellow-brown or yellowish perianth and are sometimes fragrant, with a lemon or sweet aroma. The mature fruit is green and covered by a dense layer of trichomes, with a white seed with a red aril.</p>
            <p>Notes.</p>
            <p> The leaves of this species are very variable in shape and size. Sometimes, a single individual may have leaves of different sizes. Individuals with small leaf blades from Panama (e.g. G. McPherson 15341, MO; G. McPherson 20671, MO), that are sparsely pubescent and with sessile trichomes on the abaxial surface of the leaf, may be difficult to distinguish from  V. elongata . However, specimens of  V. sebifera tend to have thicker twigs, petioles and floriferous and fruiting peduncles. </p>
            <p>Selected specimens seen.</p>
            <p> Honduras. Gracias a Dios: Monte Alto de Anastasio, 90 m elev., 17 Mar 1994 (♂ fl), P. R. House 2019 (MO!); al sur de Krausirpe, 25 Mar 1995 (♀ fl), P. R. House 2351 (MO!); 30 minutos al sur de Krausirpe, 11 May 1994 (fr), P. R. House 2814 (MO!). Nicaragua.  Atlántico Norte: 13 km above Kururia on road to San  Jerónimo , 200 m elev., 02 Mar 1979 (♂ fl), J. J. Pipoly 3844 (MO!); Siuna, La Pimienta, [150 m elev.], 01 Jun 1984 (fr), F. Ortiz 1971 (MO!).  Atlántico Sur: El Zapote, 40 km NE de Nueva Guinea, 130-150 m elev., 27 Feb 1984 (♂ fl), J. C. Sandino 4767 (MO!); Boca de  Sábalo , 70 m elev., 24 Mar 1985 (♀ fl), P. P. Moreno 25639 (MO!). Jinotega: Wiwili, zona de amortiguamieno Bosawas, 170 m elev., 18 Jan 2006 (♀ fl), I. Coronado et al. 2949 (MO!); Wiwili, Reserva de Bosawas, 220 m elev., 09 Feb 2006 (♂ fl), I. Coronado et al. 3388 (MO!); Wiwili, Reserva de Bosawas, 170 m elev., 09 Jun 2007 (fr), I. Coronado et al. 3969 (MO!).  Río San Juan: 2 km al NW del  Río Santa Cruz, 70 m elev., 24 Feb 1984 (♀ fl), P. P. Moreno 23328 (MO!); El Castillo, Finca de Madrid, 100 m elev., 18 Jan 2005 (♂ fl), R. Loredo 2348 (MO!); entre el pueblo de San Juan del Norte Nuevo y la casa de  Ramón Castillo, 0-100 m elev., 07 Jul 1994 (fr), R. Rueda et al. 1851 (MO!). Costa Rica. Alajuela: Reserva  Biológica de Monteverde,  río Caño Negro, 800 m elev., 19 Oct 1989 (fr), E. Bello 1402 (MO!); Upala,  Estación San  Ramón , 550 m elev., 16 Mar 1993 (♂ fl), R. Espinoza 803 (MO!); San Carlos, Fortuna, 255-400 m elev., 27 May 2004 (fr), A.  Rodríguez 9046 (MO!). Cartago: Turrialba, El Zapote Nature Reserve, 700 m elev., 01 Mar 1987 (imm fr), W. Burger &amp; J.  Gómez-Laurito 12030 (CR!, MEXU!*). Guanacaste: Finca La Pasmompa, 400 m elev., 10 Dec 1990 (fl bud), C. Moraga 227 (MO!). Heredia: Tirimbina,  Istarú farm, 220 m elev., 28 Jan 1972 (♂ fl), R. W. Lent 2329 (MO); Finca La Selva, [90 m elev.], 09 Jul 1984 (fr), D. Smith 1088 (MO!).  Limón : Parque Nacional Barbilla, 300-400 m elev., 22 May 2000 (fl bud), E. Mora 1155 (MO); Cerro Coronel, 20-170 m elev., 16-23 Jan 1986 (♂ fl), W. D. Stevens 23823 (MO!). Puntarenas: Golfito, Mata Palo, 160-200 m elev., 09 Sep 1991 (fr), R. Aguilar 363 (MO!); Golfito, 1 km antes de llegar a la Palma, 8 m elev., 16 Jan 1993 (♂ fl), R. Aguilar 1586 (MO!); Punta Burica, 0-100 m elev., 22 Aug 1988 (fr), M. M.  Chavarría et al. 292 (MO-2 sheets!). San  José : Puriscal, San  Martín , 800 m elev., 20 Nov 1993 (fr), J. F. Morales 2022 (MO!); vicinity of El General, 915 m elev., n.d. May 1937 (♂ fl), A. F. Skutch 3118 (MO!); Turrubares, San Rafael, 600-700 m elev., 08 Dec 2004 (fr), A. Soto &amp; D.  Santamaría 409 (MO!). Panama. Bocas del Toro: Isla Bastimentos, Bocatorito, 30 m elev., 15 Feb 1989 (♀ fl), P. M. Peterson &amp; C. R. Annble 6872 (MO!).  Chiriquí : 17 km NE of San Felix, 1000 m elev., 18-19 Mar 1974 (fr), M. Nee 10664 (MO!).  Coclé : Caribbean side of divide at El  Copé , 200-400 m elev., 04 Feb 1983 (fr), C. Hamilton &amp; G. Davidse 2756 (MO!).  Colón : Area near Guasimo, no elev., 22 Apr 1970 (♂ fl), T. B. Croat 9950 (MO!); Santa Rita ridge, 500 m elev., 13 Jan 1987 (fr), G. McPherson 10265 (MO!).  Darién : Vicinity of Cana, 1750 ft [530 m] elev., 24 Jun 1959 (♂ fl), W. L. Stern 512 (MO!);  serranía de Sapo, 300-800 m elev., 26 Nov 1990 (fr), H. Herrera &amp; J. Polanco 793 (MO!). Herrera: Road between Las Minas and El Toro, 700-800 m elev., 23 Jan 1987 (fr), G. McPherson 10273 (MO!). San Blas: El Llano  Cartí road, 350 m elev., 06 May 1985 (fr), G. de Nevers 5609 (MO!).  Panamá : Barro Colorado Island, [10-100 m elev.], 13 Dec 1967 (fr), T. B. Croat 4275 (MO!); along Pipeline Road, 125 m elev., 10 Mar 1974 (♂ fl), M. Nee 10445 (MO!); Llano  Cartí road, 350 m elev., 26 Jan 1986 (fr), G. McPherson &amp; M. Merello 8148 (MO!). Veraguas: Cerro Hoya, subiendo por  Cobachón , [750 m elev.], 21 Apr 1997 (fl), J. Deago 499 (PMA!*). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6543C7FD082F51418D924FD226374777	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel;Aguilar, Reinaldo;Lagomarsino, Laura P.	Santamaria-Aguilar, Daniel, Aguilar, Reinaldo, Lagomarsino, Laura P. (2019): A taxonomic synopsis of Virola (Myristicaceae) in Mesoamerica, including six new species. PhytoKeys 134: 1-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.134.37979
