Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex G.Don

Maas, P. J. M., Westra, L. Y. T., Guerrero, S. Arias, Lobão, A. Q., Scharf, U., Zamora, N. A. & Erkens, R. H. J., 2015, Confronting a morphological nightmare: revision of the Neotropical genus Guatteria (Annonaceae), Blumea 60 (1), pp. 1-219 : 113

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3767/000651915X690341

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387AD-FFA7-8513-AD75-6C7C9B84FAEE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex G.Don
status

 

98. Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex G.Don View in CoL — Map 20

Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex G. Don (1831) View in CoL 100; R.E.Fr. (1939) 337, f. 7c, d; Erkens et al. (2008) 503, f. 15. — Type: Ruiz L. s.n. (holo B; iso BR, G, HAL), Ecuador, Guayas, Guayaquil (‘Huayaquil’), anno 1800.

Guatteria sodiroi Diels (1907) View in CoL 42; R. E.Fr. (1939) 338, f. 7a, b, syn. nov. — Type: Sodiro 18 (holo B 2 sheets), Ecuador, Chimborazo, Pallatanga , 400–500 m, Sept. 1891 .

Guatteria sp. 15 Chatrou et al. (1997) 112.

Tree or shrub 2–8(–14) m tall, to c. 10 cm diam; young twigs densely to sparsely covered with erect, brown hairs, eventually glabrous. Leaves: petiole 3–6 mm long, 1–2 mm diam; lamina narrowly elliptic to narrowly obovate, 10–25 by (3–) 5–10 cm (leaf index 2–3.6), chartaceous, not verruculose, somewhat shiny, dark green, greyish green or greyish brown above, pale to dark brown below, sparsely covered with appressed and erect hairs, particularly along primary and secondary veins above, rather densely to sparsely covered with erect, brown hairs below, base obtuse, sometimes acute, apex acuminate (acumen 5–20 mm long), primary vein impressed above, secondary veins distinct, 10–15 on either side of primary vein, impressed to sometimes flat above, smallest distance between loops and margin 2– 5 mm, tertiary veins slightly raised above, reticulate. Flowers in 1(–3)-flowered inflorescences in axils of leaves or on leafless branchlets; pedicels 20–50 mm long, 0.5–2 mm diam, fruiting pedicels to c. 65 mm long, c. 3 mm diam, densely covered with erect hairs, becoming glabrous in age or not, articulated at 0.2–0.3 from the base, bracts c. 5, soon falling, uppermost bract elliptic, c. 4 mm long, basal bract broadly ovate-elliptic, c. 1 mm; flower buds broadly ovoid; se- pals free or basally connate, broadly ovate-triangular, 5–7{–9} by 5–7{–9} mm, appressed to spreading, outer side densely covered with appressed hairs; petals green, maturing cream in vivo, elliptic-obovate to obovate-oblong, 12–23 by 8–15 mm, outer side densely covered with appressed hairs; stamens 1.5–2 mm long, connective shield papillate to hairy. Monocarps 30–50, dark green, maturing black to purple-black in vivo, black in sicco, ellipsoid, 8–10 by 5–6 mm, glabrous, except for some scattered, appressed hairs, particularly at the apex, apex apiculate (apiculum <0.5 mm long), wall 0.2–0.3 mm thick, stipes red to purple, 12–25 by c. 1 mm. Seed ellipsoid, 8–9 by 5–6 mm, pale to dark brown, pitted, raphe slightly raised.

Distribution — Western Ecuador (Cañar, Cotopaxi, Esmer- aldas, Guayas, Los Ríos, Manabí, Napo?), adjacent Colombia (Nariño).

Habitat & Ecology — In non-inundated, lowland or premon- tane, primary or secondary forest (‘bosque húmedo tropical’ or ‘bosque muy húmedo premontano’).At elevations of 0–1000 m. Flowering: throughout the year; fruiting: throughout the year.

Vernacular name — Ecuador: Punta de lanza.

Uses — Ecuador: Sap of the leaves is used to cure wounds (‘El zumo de las hojas se usa para curar heridas’) (Alvarez et al. 89). Fishing rods are made of the stems (‘El tallo sirve para hacer lanzas para pescar’) (Cornejo & Bonifaz 4869).

Notes — Guatteria microcarpa was placed by Fries in sect. Trichoclonia because of the rather conspicuous brown hairs on the young twigs. Apart from the indument, it can be recognized by leaves with impressed secondary veins on the upper side, and by relatively long and slender pedicels.

We have added G. sodiroi in the synonymy as almost all features fit very well within the concept of G. microcarpa , the only minor difference being an acute leaf base instead of obtuse, as is mostly the case in G. microcarpa . However, in G. microcarpa an acute leaf base occurs occasionally, too.

One collection from Napo, Ecuador, Bensman 210 ( MO) may belong here .

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Magnoliales

Family

Annonaceae

Genus

Guatteria

Loc

Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex G.Don

Maas, P. J. M., Westra, L. Y. T., Guerrero, S. Arias, Lobão, A. Q., Scharf, U., Zamora, N. A. & Erkens, R. H. J. 2015
2015
Loc

Guatteria sodiroi

Diels 1907
1907
Loc

Guatteria microcarpa Ruiz & Pav. ex

G. Don 1831
1831
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