identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
94A3300FF6FE020A63584F06D97532B6.text	94A3300FF6FE020A63584F06D97532B6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mcvaughia bahiana W. R. Anderson, Taxon 28: 157. 1979	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> 1.  Mcvaughia bahiana W.R.Anderson, Taxon 28: 157. 1979 Figs 5, 6, 11 </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> BRAZIL. Bahia:  Conceição do  Coité , road from  Coité , 12 km to Santaluz, fl. Fr., 6 Mar 1976, W.R. Anderson 11740 (holotype: MBM barcode MBM59835!; isotypes: F barcode F0062743F!, G barcode G00352842!, K barcode K000426948!, MICH barcode MICH1102251!, NY barcode NY00067680!, P barcode P02429273!, RB barcode RB00540751!, SP barcode SP000249!, U barcode U0003826!, UB barcode UB1950!, US barcode US00108758!). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Shrubs 1-3 m tall. Branches densely sericeous, glabrescent at age. Stipules 2.5-5 mm long, adaxially glabrous, abaxially sericeous. Leaves opposite; leaf blades 4.5-8.8  × 2-5 cm, chartaceous to subcoriaceous, elliptic to obovate, base cuneate to rotund, margins plain, entire, apex acute to apiculate, adaxial side initially tomentose, glabrous at age, abaxial side densely tomentose, a pair of conspicuous glands at base abaxially, on each side of the midrib, a few inconspicuous glands scattered over the blade, with 1-3 glands near the apex; petiole 0.3-0.7 cm long, canaliculate, densely tomentose, eglandular. Thyrsi of 2-7-flowered cincinni; rachis 3-10 cm long, smooth, densely tomentose, with brown hairs; lateral cincinni 12-24, subopposite; bracts 2-7 mm long, narrowly-triangular, appressed to the peduncle, eglandular, tomentose; peduncle 1.5-4.5 mm long, tomentose; bracteoles 1.5-2.5 mm long, narrowly triangular, opposite, appressed to the peduncle, tomentose, one of each pair bearing a conspicuous gland at base, 1-1.2 mm long. Flowers 1-1.2 cm diam. at anthesis, floral buds 3-3.2 mm long, pedicel 0.5-1.7 mm long, tomentose. Sepals 2-3  × 1.5-2.5 mm, straight, keeled, covering most of the androecium, apex acute, margin glabrous, adaxial side glabrous, abaxial side tomentose, glabrescent near the margin; 10-glandular, glands 1.5-2.5  × 0.7-0.8 mm, yellow, elliptic. Petals yellow, both sides glabrous, soon deciduous; anterior lateral petals orbicular, cucullate, nested inside one another, limb 3-3.3  × 4.5-4.7 mm, margin denticulate, 2-glandular at base, claws 1.2-1.5  × 0.2-0.25 mm, glabrous; posterior lateral petals obovate, spreading, limb 5.5-6.5  × 6-7 mm, margin erose, 2-glandular at base, claws 1.8-2  × 0.3-0.35 mm, glabrous; posterior petal obovate to orbicular, erect, limb 6-7  × 7-8 mm, margin erose, 3-5 pairs of rounded glands at the base of limb, proximal pair larger, claws 3-4  × 0.7-0.9 mm, both sides glabrous. Stamens free at base, filaments 2-3  × 0.2-0.4 mm, cylindrical, thicker at base; connective inconspicuous, glabrous; anthers 0.7-1  × 0.4-0.45 mm; staminodes opposite the posterior-lateral sepals covered by sepals, filaments ca. 1 mm long, long-triangular, anthers ca. 0.2 mm long, oblong, locules lacking; staminode opposite the posterior petal not covered by sepals, exserted, diverging from styles, filament 2-2.1  × 0.2-0.4 mm long, anther 0.25-0.3 mm long, oblong, locules reduced. Ovary 1-1.3  × 1-1.3 mm, ovoid, densely sericeous; styles 3, erect, ca. 2.5-2.7  × 0.5-0.6 mm, cylindrical, parallel, glabrous, apex truncate, anterior style slightly smaller than posterior ones; stigma lateral, circular. Drupes 7-8.5  × 4-5 mm, cylindrical, slightly twisted, apex with persistent styles, sparsely tomentose, with two chambers, proximal chamber containing the seed, distal chamber containing an oily substance; seed globose, smooth. Embryo not seen. </p>
            <p>Specimens seen.</p>
            <p> BRAZIL. Bahia:  Itiúba , 20 km de  Camaleão para  Cansanção , 330 m, fl., 26 Feb 2000, A.M. Giulietti 1827 (CEN, FLOR, HUEFS, RB, UB); 20 Km East  Camaleão , Rod.  Itiúba/Cansanção , 21 Feb1974, fl., R.M. Harley 16465 (CEPEC, MICH, NY, P, RB). Monte Santo, Fazenda Bom Jesus, fl. fr., 11 Oct 2000, C.M.L. Aguiar 17, 18, 19, 27, 28, 30, 31 (HUEFS); fl. fr., 12 Jan 2006, M.L. Guedes 12148 (ALCB). Quijingue, Serra das Candeias, 5 Km W povoado  Quixabá do Mandacaru, near Tucano, fl. fr., 15 May 2005, D. Cardoso 529 (HUEFS); fl. fr., 8 Jul 2006, D. Cardoso 1311 (HUEFS). Tucano, povoado Bizamum, 23 km from Tucano, fl. fr., 6 Jun 2004, D. Cardoso 57, 99 (HUEFS, SP); povoado  Marizá , 13 km from Tucano, fl. fr., 6 Jan 2006, D. Cardoso 958 (HUEFS, RB); distrito de Caldas do Jorro, estrada entre Caldas do Jorro e rio  Itapicurú , fl. fr., 1 Mar 1992, A.M. Carvalho 3863 (CEPEC, HUEFS, MBM, NY, SP); fl., 15 March 2008, G. Costa 341 (HST, HUEFS); povoado Bizamum, fl., 6 Feb 2004, L.P. Queiroz 9017 (HUEFS); povoado Bizamum, fl. fr., 22 Sep 2015, I.R. Guesdon 300, 301 (VIC). </p>
            <p>Distribution, habitat, and phenology.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia bahiana is known only from sandy caatingas (seasonally dry forests) within northeastern state of Bahia, Brazil (Fig. 11). Flowering and fruiting throughout the year. </p>
            <p>Conservation status.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia bahiana shows an extent of occurrence of 2,527 km2, and an area of occupancy of 16.000 km2 within the northeastern state of Bahia, Brazil. Its restricted distribution associated with an accelerated habitat degradation categorizes it as Endangered (EN).  Mcvaughia bahiana is the only species in the genus not protected within the limits of a conservation unit. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The epithet refers to the distribution of  M. bahiana , which is restricted to the state of Bahia, Brazil. </p>
            <p>Anatomical notes.</p>
            <p> Leaf glands are distributed throughout the leaf blade. Two basilaminar glands are typically positioned in pairs and visible to the naked eye (Fig. 3A). However, the anatomical study revealed a few additional glands distributed distally and difficult to see with the naked eye, two or three of them positioned subjacent to the apical leaf tooth. Anatomically, the basilaminar and laminar glands are short-stalked (Fig. 3D, J). The section of the bracteole and sepal glands revealed a subsessile anatomical structure (Fig. 4E). Malpighiaceous trichomes and their scars are frequent on the leaf, especially on the abaxial surface (Fig. 3O). On mature leaves, the indumentum along the middle and secondary veins and the apical leaf tooth is typically tomentose. The outline of the anticlinal walls is straight on the adaxial surface and sinuous on the abaxial (Fig. 3Q). Field observations revealed that the leaf glands are yellow, while the bracteole and sepal glands are green becoming yellow in blooming. The glands on the posterior petal are restricted to the proximal portion of the limb, where ca. 5 marginal glands were observed on each side of the petal limb (Fig. 4L,  O–P ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/94A3300FF6FE020A63584F06D97532B6	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	Almeida, Rafael F.;Guesdon, Isabel R.;Pace, Marcelo R.;Meira, Renata M. S.	Almeida, Rafael F., Guesdon, Isabel R., Pace, Marcelo R., Meira, Renata M. S. (2019): Taxonomic revision of Mcvaughia W. R. Anderson (Malpighiaceae): notes on vegetative and reproductive anatomy and the description of a new species. PhytoKeys 117: 45-72, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207
EB37B3D4490631C8A23976A7F6DF7A87.text	EB37B3D4490631C8A23976A7F6DF7A87.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mcvaughia piauhiensis R. F. Almeida & Guesdon 2019	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> 2.  Mcvaughia piauhiensis R.F.Almeida &amp; Guesdon sp. nov. Figs 7, 8, 11 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia piauhiensis differs from  M. sergipana Amorim &amp; R.F.Almeida due to its leaf blades abaxially lanate-velutinous (versus sericeous), margins plain (versus revolute), conspicuous and stalked glands only near base and apex (versus throughout the leaf blade), cincinni 3-7-flowered (versus 2-flowered), margins of posterior petal glandular at base only (versus entirely glandular), and staminode opposite the posterior petal with slender filament (versus with stout filament). It also differs from  M. bahiana W.R.Anderson due to its subshrub habit (versus shrub habit), leaf blades lanate-velutinous (versus tomentose), flowers 1.5-2 cm diam. (versus 1-1.2 cm diam.), staminode opposite the posterior petal as long as fertile stamens (versus shorter than fertile stamens), and the apex of styles uncinate (versus truncate). </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p> BRAZIL.  Piauí : Guaribas, Parque Nacional da Serra das  Confusões , Barreiro, fl., 28 Mar 2007, R. Barros 2922 (holotype: HUEFS barcode HUEFS135774!; isotype: CEPEC!, TEPB!). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Subshrubs ca. 50 cm tall. Branches densely lanate-velutinous, glabrescent at age. Stipules 4-4.5 mm long, adaxially glabrous, abaxially densely lanate-velutinous. Leaves opposite; leaf blades 6-11  × 3-6 cm, chartaceous to subcoriaceous, elliptic to obovate, base cuneate, margins plain, entire, apex acute to apiculate, adaxial side light green in sicco, initially lanate-velutinous to glabrescent, abaxial side dark green in sicco, initially lanate-velutinous to glabrescent, except from midvein at base, a pair of conspicuous glands at base abaxially, on each side of the midrib, a few inconspicuous glands scattered on the blade, with 2 conspicuous glands near apex; petiole 0.8-1 cm long, canaliculate, densely lanate-velutinous, eglandular. Thyrsi of 5-8-flowered cincinni; rachis 6.5-7 cm long, smooth, densely tomentose-velutinous, with rusty hairs; lateral cincinni 14-15, alternate; bracts 1.5-2.5 mm long, triangular, appressed to the peduncle, eglandular, tomentose-velutinous; peduncle 3-4 mm long, tomentose-velutinous; bracteoles 1.5-2 mm long, triangular, subopposite, appressed to the peduncle, tomentose-velutinous, one of each pair bearing a conspicuous gland at base, 1.3-1.8 mm long. Flowers 1.5-2 cm diam. at anthesis, floral buds 3-3.5 mm long, pedicel 2-3 mm long, tomentose-velutinous. Sepals 2-2.5  × 1-1.3 cm, straight, keeled, covering most of the androecium, apex rounded, margin short ciliate, adaxial side glabrous, abaxial side tomentose, glabrescent near the margin; 10-glandular, glands 1-1.2  × 0.7-0.8 mm, yellow, elliptic. Petals yellow, soon deciduous; anterior lateral petals orbicular, cucullate, nested inside one another, limb 2.9-3.2  × 4-4.3 mm, margin erose, eglandular, claws 1-1.2  × 0.2-0.25 mm, glabrous; posterior lateral petals obovate, spreading, limb 4-5  × 4-4.5 mm, margin erose, eglandular, claws 1.5-2  × 0.3-0.35 mm, glabrous; posterior petal obovate to orbicular, erect, limb 5-5.5  × 5-5.5 mm, margin erose, 2-3 pairs of reniform glands at the base of limb, proximal pair larger, claws 2.5-3  × 0.6-0.8 mm, adaxially pubescent. Stamens free at base, filaments 2-3  × 0.2-0.4 mm, cylindrical, thicker at base; connective inconspicuous, glabrous; anthers 0.3-0.45  × 0.4-0.45 mm; staminodes opposite the posterior-lateral sepals covered by sepals, filaments ca. 1 mm long, long-triangular, anthers ca. 0.2 mm long, oblong, locules lacking; staminode opposite the posterior petal not covered by sepals, exserted, diverging from styles, filament 2-2.1  × 0.2-0.4 mm long, anther 0.25-0.3 mm long, oblong, locules reduced. Ovary ca. 1  × 1 mm, ovoid, densely tomentose; styles 3, erect, ca. 3  × 0.5 mm, cylindrical, parallel, tomentose at base, uncinate at apex, anterior style slightly smaller than posterior ones; stigma lateral, circular. Drupes (immature) 5-6  × 2-3 mm, cylindrical, slightly twisted, apex with persistent styles, rusty tomentose, with two chambers, proximal chamber containing the seed, distal chamber containing an oily substance; seed (immature) globose, smooth. Embryo not seen. </p>
            <p>Distribution, habitat, and phenology.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia piauhiensis is known only from sandy caatingas (seasonally dry forests) within Serra das  Confusões National Park in state of  Piauí , Brazil (Fig. 11). Flowering in March. </p>
            <p>Conservation status.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia piauhiensis is known only from a single population within the limits of the Serra das  Confusões National Park in state of  Piauí , Brazil. Until additional fieldwork can be done in seasonally dry forests from  Piauí , this species is best categorized as data deficient (DD). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The epithet refers to the distribution of  M. piauhiensis , which is restricted to the state of  Piauí , Brazil. </p>
            <p>Anatomical notes.</p>
            <p> This new species resembles  M. bahiana in several aspects. The distribution pattern of leaf glands is quite similar, with both showing only one pair of conspicuous glands at base and a few conspicuous glands scattered over the blade (Fig. 3B). The basilaminar and laminar glands correspond to short-stalked glands (Fig. 3E, J). The sinuous outline of the anticlinal epidermal cell walls recorded on the abaxial leaf surface in  M. bahiana (Fig. 3Q) was also observed in  M. piauhiensis . On both surfaces of  M. piauhiensis , the malpighiaceous hairs are less frequent (Fig. 3M), when compared with  M. bahiana and  M. sergipana , but the indumentum is clearly lanuginose-velutinous in young leaves. The distribution pattern of glands on the posterior petal is the same observed in  M. bahiana , as ca. 5 short-stalked glands on the proximal portion of the petal limb margin (Fig. 4Q). Although no recent field observations have been recorded, we believe that the color of the glands and the color of the flower are the same observed in  M. bahiana . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EB37B3D4490631C8A23976A7F6DF7A87	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	Almeida, Rafael F.;Guesdon, Isabel R.;Pace, Marcelo R.;Meira, Renata M. S.	Almeida, Rafael F., Guesdon, Isabel R., Pace, Marcelo R., Meira, Renata M. S. (2019): Taxonomic revision of Mcvaughia W. R. Anderson (Malpighiaceae): notes on vegetative and reproductive anatomy and the description of a new species. PhytoKeys 117: 45-72, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207
7E585D05BCF0D9EE75D30AD3679D3C84.text	7E585D05BCF0D9EE75D30AD3679D3C84.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mcvaughia sergipana Amorim & R. F. Almeida, Systematic Botany 40 (2): 534. 2015	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> 3.  Mcvaughia sergipana Amorim &amp; R.F.Almeida, Systematic Botany 40(2): 534. 2015 Figs 9, 10, 11 </p>
            <p>Type.</p>
            <p>BRAZIL. Sergipe: Pirambu, estrada para lagoa redonda, restinga sobre tabuleiro, 10°41'79"S, 36°50'90.2"W, 96 m, fl. fr., 7 Oct 2013, A.M.A. Amorim et al. 8393 (holotype: CEPEC barcode CEPEC142146!; isotype: ASE barcode ASE0035770!, HUEFS barcode HUEFS226853!, MBM!, NY barcode NY02859382!, MICH!, P barcode P01168074!, RB barcodes RB01190994!, RB01191408!, RB01191409!, SP barcode SP003291!).</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Shrubs 1.5-2 m tall. Branches densely lanate-velutinous, glabrescent at age. Stipules 3-5 mm long, adaxially glabrous, abaxially sericeous. Leaves opposite; leaf blades 8.4-12  × 2.7-6.5 cm, chartaceous to subcoriaceous, elliptic to ovate to elliptic-lanceolate, base acute to cuneate, margins slightly revolute, entire, apex acute to slightly acuminate, adaxial side green in sicco, initially sericeous to glabrescent, abaxial side metallic green in sicco, densely sericeous to glabrescent, 1-4 pairs of conspicuous glands at base abaxially, on each side of the midrib, with many conspicuous glands scattered distally; petiole 0.3-1.5 cm long, canaliculate, densely sericeous to glabrous at age, eglandular. Thyrsi of 1-2-flowered cincinni; rachis 6.5-11.4 cm long, striated, densely sericeous, with brown hairs; lateral cincinni 15-30, opposite to subopposite; bracts 5-6.5 mm long, lanceolate, spreading, eglandular, sericeous; peduncle 4-5 mm long, sparsely sericeous; bracteoles 2.5-3 mm long, triangular, subopposite, spreading to the peduncle, sericeous, one of each pair bearing a conspicuous green gland at base, 1.3-1.8 mm long. Flowers 1.5-2 cm diam. at anthesis, floral buds 3-3.5 mm long, pedicel 2-3 mm long, tomentose-velutinous. Sepals 2-2.5  × 1-1.3 cm, straight, keeled, covering most of the androecium, apex rounded, margin short ciliate, adaxial side glabrous, abaxial side tomentose, glabrescent near the margin; 10-glandular, glands 1-1.2  × 0.7-0.8 mm, yellow, elliptic. Petals yellow, soon deciduous; anterior lateral petals orbicular, cucullate, nested inside one another, limb 2.9-3.2  × 4-4.3 mm, margin erose, eglandular, claws 1-1.2  × 0.2-0.25 mm, glabrous; posterior lateral petals obovate, spreading, limb 4-5  × 4-4.5 mm, margin erose, eglandular, claws 1.5-2  × 0.3-0.35 mm, glabrous; posterior petal obovate to orbicular, erect, limb 5-5.5  × 5-5.5 mm, margin glandular, 2-3 pairs of stalked reniform glands at the base of limb, proximal pair larger and with many sessile glands scattered distally at the margin, claws 2.5-3  × 0.6-0.8 mm, adaxially pubescent. Stamens free at base, filaments 2-3  × 0.2-0.4 mm, cylindrical, thicker at base; connective inconspicuous, glabrous; anthers 0.3-0.45  × 0.4-0.45 mm; staminodes opposite the posterior lateral sepals covered by sepals, filaments ca. 1 mm long, long-triangular, anthers ca. 0.2 mm long, oblong, locules lacking; staminode opposite the posterior petal not covered by sepals, exserted, diverging from styles, filament 2-2.1  × 0.2-0.4 mm long, anther 0.25-0.3 mm long, oblong, locules reduced. Ovary ca. 1  × 1 mm, ovoid, densely tomentose; styles 3, erect, ca. 3  × 0.5 mm, cylindrical, parallel, tomentose at base, uncinate at apex, anterior style slightly smaller than posterior ones; stigma lateral, circular. Drupes 5-6  × 2-3 mm, cylindrical, slightly twisted, apex with persistent styles, rusty tomentose, with two chambers, proximal chamber containing the seed, distal chamber containing an oily substance; seed globose, smooth. Embryo not seen. </p>
            <p>Specimens seen.</p>
            <p> BRAZIL. Sergipe: Japaratuba, povoado  Sambaíba , fl. fr., 9 Sep 2013, B.C.A. Lima 37 (ASE); povoado Bonito, fl. fr., 24 Nov 2014, S.A. Damasceno 73 (ASE).  Pirambú , estrada para Lagoa Redonda, fl. fr., 20 Dec 1978, M.R. Fonseca s.n. (ASE671); fl. fr., 17 May 2011, Santana 911 (ASE); fl. fr., 1 Nov 2011, E.A. Melo 13 (ASE); fl. fr., 9 May 2013, G.M.A. Matos 270 (ASE, CEPEC); fl. fr., 24 Sep 2015, I.R. Guesdon 305, 306 (VIC). </p>
            <p>Distribution, habitat, and phenology.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia sergipana is known only from sandy restingas and coastal dunes within the Atlantic Forest Domain in the state of Sergipe, Brazil (Fig. 11). Flowering and fruiting from September to December. </p>
            <p>Conservation status.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia sergipana shows an extent of occurrence of 49.735 km2 and an area of occupancy of 12.000 km2. Its restricted distribution and accelerated degradation of habitat categorizes it as Critically Endangered (CR). Even though the populations of  M. sergipana are scattered within two municipalities in the state of Sergipe, Brazil, some of them are located within the limits of Santa Isabel Biological Reserve. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The epithet refers to the distribution of  M. sergipana , which is restricted to the state of Sergipe, Brazil. </p>
            <p>Anatomical notes.</p>
            <p> This species has an unusual distribution pattern of leaf glands (Fig. 3C), in which all conspicuous glands are scattered throughout the leaf blade and visible to the naked eye. The basilaminar glands are generally positioned in pairs, varying from 2-8 glands. Several laminar glands are distally scattered throughout the blade, and one pair is positioned subjacent to the apical leaf tooth (Fig. 3G). The outline of the anticlinal epidermal cell walls is straight on both adaxial and abaxial surfaces (Fig. 3N, P). Leaf glands are yellow, and bracteole glands are green in secretory stage (Fig. 4A), turning yellow at blooming. The basilaminar and laminar leaf glands were anatomically identified as sessile (Fig. 3F, K), while the bracteole gland was recognized as subsessile (Fig. 4D) and the sepal gland as short-stalked (Fig. 4I). The bracteole gland shows a flattened secretory surface. Another important character that distinguishes  M. sergipana is the distribution pattern of glands on the posterior petal. About five marginal petal glands are present on the proximal portion of the posterior petal in other  Mcvaughia species, but only in  M. sergipana do these glands extend the entire length of the petal margin (Fig. 4K,  M–N ). The proximal petal glands are stalked, in contrast to the small glands distributed distally that are sessile (Fig. 4  R–T ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7E585D05BCF0D9EE75D30AD3679D3C84	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	Almeida, Rafael F.;Guesdon, Isabel R.;Pace, Marcelo R.;Meira, Renata M. S.	Almeida, Rafael F., Guesdon, Isabel R., Pace, Marcelo R., Meira, Renata M. S. (2019): Taxonomic revision of Mcvaughia W. R. Anderson (Malpighiaceae): notes on vegetative and reproductive anatomy and the description of a new species. PhytoKeys 117: 45-72, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207
BA6FCF10E3EB3709B61434617539657C.text	BA6FCF10E3EB3709B61434617539657C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mcvaughia W. R. Anderson, Taxon 28: 157. 1979	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Mcvaughia W.R.Anderson, Taxon 28: 157. 1979</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia bahiana W.R.Anderson </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Shrubs to subshrubs, perennial, growing in sandy soils. Branches cylindrical, densely sericeous or lanate-velutinous, generally glabrescent at age. Stipules epipetiolar, completely connate, persistent. Leaves opposite; petiole eglandular; blade bearing 2-many glands abaxially. Thyrsi terminal, pedunculate, many-branched; cincinni alternate to subopposite, 1-14-flowered; bracts persistent; bracteoles persistent, one of them 1-glandular, the other eglandular, gland green in bud turning yellow in anthesis. Flowers zygomorphic; floral buds slightly flattened at middle; pedicel stout, straight in bud. Sepals leaving petals exposed in pre-anthesis, all 2-glandular. Petals bright to golden yellow, glabrous, the anterior two remaining cupped one inside the other; lateral petals with the margin erose; posterior petal bearing several marginal glands. Stamens 7-8, staminodes 2-3 (stamens opposite the posterior-lateral sepals and the posterior petal); filaments glabrous, those opposite the posterior-lateral petals slightly curved towards the apex; connectives inconspicuous; anthers horseshoe-shaped, glabrous, outer locules confluent at apex, reduced to antherodes in staminodes. Ovary 3-carpellate, 3-locular, 2 locules  ± anterior, apparently collapsed lacking ovules, 1 locule almost posterior, fertile, 1-ovulate; styles 3, slender, truncate to uncinate at apex; stigma minute, lateral. Drupes rugose, twisted, asymmetric, 1-locular, proximal chamber thick-walled, 1-seeded, distal chamber thin-walled, filled with a viscous secretion (allowing the fruit to float and to be dispersed by water). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The epithet pays tribute to Dr. Rogers McVaugh (*1909-2009†), an American botanist, expert in the Mexican flora.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia is restricted to sandy soils within sedimentary basins of Northeastern Brazil, with different species being endemic to each sedimentary basin:  Mcvaughia bahiana - Tucano basin,  M. piauhiensis - Parnaiba basin, and  M. sergipana - Sergipe-Alagoas basin (Amorim and Almeida 2015). Sedimentary basins represent conspicuous phytogeographic zones within the Caatinga domain, with a distinct biota from other areas of Caatinga over crystalline shield, holding endemism records for some angiosperm families (Cardoso and Queiroz 2007; Almeida et al. 2018; Silva and Souza 2018). </p>
            <p>Biogeography.</p>
            <p> Mcvaughia is the sister-group of  Burdachia and  Glandonia , comprising a lineage (  Mcvaughia clade) of early diverging  Malpighiaceae with water-dispersed fruits, most commonly found growing along wetland floodplains and upland forest throughout the Amazon Basin (Anderson 1981). Davis et al. (2014) estimated that the ancestor of this clade might have arisen around 38.0-33.9 Myr, and its extant lineages diversified from 25 to 15 Myr. The description of  M. piauhiensis corroborates the hypothesis of Amorim and Almeida (2015) that extant lineages of  Mcvaughia have probably experienced recent radiations along the caatingas and restingas of Northeastern Brazil. This inference is based on the fact that all three  Mcvaughia species occur along current or past courses of the  São Francisco river (SFR):  M. piauhiensis occurs to the west, and  M. bahiana and  M. sergipana occur to the east near the  SFR’s delta (Fig. 11). During the upper Pliocene, the SFR flowed to the equatorial Atlantic Ocean via the  Piauí or  Canindé Rivers, in the Parnaiba river basin, state of  Piauí (King 1956; Nascimento et al. 2013). However, the rising of the Grande and Ibiapaba Ridges in northwestern  Ceará state during the Pliocene/Pleistocene boundary would have abruptly interrupted the  SFR’s course (King 1956; Mabesoone 1994; Nascimento et al. 2013; Almeida et al. 2018). By this time, the ancestor of  Mcvaughia might have already been established in this area, and its populations might have been isolated from each other by the formation of several lakes in northwestern Bahia, due to the interruption of the river flow (King 1956; Mabesoone 1994; Nascimento et al. 2013). It was not until the Mindel glaciation (ca. 450.000 years ago) that the SFR found its way to the eastern Atlantic Ocean, bordering the states of Alagoas and Sergipe (King 1956; Mabesoone 1994; Nascimento et al. 2013), thus, paving the way for recent vicariant cladogenesis events within these populations. </p>
            <p> Wood Anatomy of  Mcvaughia sergipana . </p>
            <p> Heartwood and sapwood indistinct light brown; grain straight to slightly wavy. In anatomical sections, the heartwood appears with abundant cell contents (bottom of Fig. 1  A–B ) in vessels and other cell types. The contents stain in blue with safrablau (Fig. 1  A–B ). Growth ring boundaries are distinct (Fig. 1  A–B ), marked by a line of axial parenchyma (Fig. 1B) and thicker walled, radially narrow fibers (Fig. 1  A–B ). Wood is diffuse-porous (Fig. 1A). Vessels are narrow, 34  ± 9  μm , generally arranged in radial multiples of 4 or more (Fig. 1A), abundant, 244  ± 57 vessels/mm2, and with a mean length of 365  ± 73  μm . Some solitary vessels and shorter radial multiples are also present (Fig. 1  A–B ). Perforation plates are simple. Intervessel pits are alternate, minute, 4  μm , vestured. Vessel ray-pitting with distinct borders; similar to intervessel pits in size and shape. Fibers very thick-walled (Fig. 1  A–B ), with simple to minutely bordered pits. Axial parenchyma paratracheal, scanty and forming a discontinuous line at the growth ring limits (Fig. 1  A–B ), 3-4 cells per parenchyma strand (Fig. 1C). Rays with 1-3 cells wide (Fig. 1C), lower than 1 mm (Fig. 1C), heterocellular mixed, with procumbent, square and upright cells mixed throughout the ray (Fig. 1C). Perforated ray cells common, non-storied (Fig. 1C). Large prismatic crystals in enlarged ray cells (Fig. 1C) of the body and margins. </p>
            <p> Secondary phloem anatomy of  Mcvaughia sergipana . </p>
            <p> Growth rings are indistinct, phloem non-stratified (Fig. 2  A–C ). Conducting phloem represents a narrow band of 11-12 cells away from the cambium. Nonconducting phloem is marked by the collapse of the sieve tubes, a more significant dilatation of the axial and ray parenchyma (Fig. 2  A–B ), and belated sclerosis of some scattered ray cells. Sieve tubes are diffuse (Fig. 2C), solitary or in radial multiples of 2 cells (Fig. 2C), sieve plates are simple, slightly inclined, 441  ± 71  μm 2 in area (24  ± 2  μm in diameter). Sieve tube elements length is 243  ± 45  μm . Slime plug always evident at the sieve plates. One to two companion cells per sieve tube element, as seen in transverse section. When two companion cells are present, one lies on each side of the sieve tube. Dilatation due to cell expansion and division is evident in the rays, axial parenchyma, and the cortex (Fig. 2  A–B ). Axial phloem parenchyma constitutes the ground tissue (Fig. 2  A–C ), four cells per parenchyma strand. Axial parenchyma with druse crystals appears as diffuse-in-aggregate lines (Fig. 2  A–C , E), giving a stratified appearance to the phloem, clear both in transverse and radial section (Fig. 2  A–C , E). Rays with a straight course, slightly dilated (funnel-shaped). Ray width, height, and composition equal to those of secondary xylem (Fig. 2  D–E ). Sclerenchyma is represented by scattered bulky fiber-sclereids (Fig. 2  A–C ) and a few sclerified ray cells in the nonconducting phloem (Fig. 2B). Phloem elements are non-storied. Druses are abundant, present in absolutely all parenchyma cells (Fig. 2C). Crystals are present both in chambered axial parenchyma cells (Fig. 2C) and in individual axial and ray parenchyma cells of the phloem (Fig. 2D) and cortex. </p>
            <p>Leaf anatomy.</p>
            <p> The leaf anatomy in the species of  Mcvaughia is quite similar. The vascular system of petioles is arranged as a curved arc with two conspicuous accessory bundles. The most distinctive leaf character is the distribution pattern of glands (Fig. 3  A–C ). These glands are distributed at the base and throughout the leaf blade, varying in number from two to eight basilaminar glands and from few to several distal laminar glands. The basilaminar and laminar leaf glands were identified as short-stalked (Fig. 3  D–E ), except in  M. sergipana which were recognized as sessile and partially set in the mesophyll (Fig. 3F). Based on the anatomical arrangement, these leaf glands are composed of a palisade-like secretory epidermis and vascularized parenchyma (Fig. 3F). The laminar glands in  M. sergipana are conspicuous (Fig. 3G, I), while in  M. bahiana (Fig. 3H) and  M. piauhiensis (Fig. 3J) these glands are inconspicuous, and difficult to see with the naked eye. The leaf blade anatomy revealed a dorsiventral mesophyll with a single layer of palisade parenchyma and a variable number of spongy parenchyma layers. In  M. sergipana the spongy parenchyma has several layers (Fig. 3K), while in  M. bahiana and  M. piauhiensis fewer layers were observed (Fig. 3L). Idioblasts containing druses are commonly observed in the mesophyll (Fig. 3L). Malpighiaceous trichomes were observed in the epidermis of both surfaces (Fig. 3  M–O ), being more abundant abaxially and in young leaves. The outline of the anticlinal epidermal cell walls adaxially is straight (Fig. 3  M–N ), while abaxially may vary from straight to sinuous (Fig. 3  P–Q ), being exclusively straight in  M. sergipana . All species of  Mcvaughia show hypostomatic leaves (Fig. 3  K–L ), with paracytic stomata (Fig. 3  P–Q ). </p>
            <p>Floral anatomy.</p>
            <p> Observations during field trips revealed that sepal and petal glands are yellow in  M. sergipana and  M. bahiana (Fig. 4  A–B ). The bracteole gland is initially green (Fig. 4A) turning yellow during anthesis. The secretory surface of the bracteole gland may vary from flattened (Fig. 4D) in  M. sergipana to convex in the other two  Mcvaughia species (Fig. 4  E–F ). The bracteole glands show an anatomical arrangement similar to that of the leaf glands, with palisade-like secretory epidermis and a vascularized secretory parenchyma (Fig. 4G). The calyces are particularly zygomorphic, due to the lateral displacement of glands in the anterior sepal (Fig. 4  H–I ). The bracteole glands are subsessile (Fig. 4  D–F ), while the sepal glands are short-stalked (Fig. 4J). Petal glands were recorded throughout the limb margin of the posterior petal in  M. sergipana (Fig. 4K) and distributed only at the base in  M. bahiana (Fig. 4L) and  M. piauhiensis . In  Mcvaughia sergipana the petal glands at the apex region are sessile (Fig. 4  M–N ). The basal petal glands in  M. bahiana (Fig. 4  O–P ) and  M. piauhiensis are sessile to slightly subsessile (Fig. 4Q), while in  M. sergipana are stalked (Fig. 4  R–S ). The petal glands show the same anatomical composition as the leaf, bracteole, and sepal glands (Fig. 4T). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BA6FCF10E3EB3709B61434617539657C	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	Almeida, Rafael F.;Guesdon, Isabel R.;Pace, Marcelo R.;Meira, Renata M. S.	Almeida, Rafael F., Guesdon, Isabel R., Pace, Marcelo R., Meira, Renata M. S. (2019): Taxonomic revision of Mcvaughia W. R. Anderson (Malpighiaceae): notes on vegetative and reproductive anatomy and the description of a new species. PhytoKeys 117: 45-72, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.117.32207
