Luiz Fernando Lima Carvalho, Dayana Maria Teodoro Francino, Elaine Lopes Pereira Nunes, Patrícia Soffiatti, Bruno Francisco Sant’Anna-Santos
{"title":"Splitting Butia archeri (Arecaceae) of Brazilian central highlands: new taxonomical and conservation insights for Butia","authors":"Luiz Fernando Lima Carvalho, Dayana Maria Teodoro Francino, Elaine Lopes Pereira Nunes, Patrícia Soffiatti, Bruno Francisco Sant’Anna-Santos","doi":"10.1007/s00606-024-01908-z","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Originally described as an acaulescent species, the <i>Butia archeri</i> complex currently comprises two varieties. <i>Butia archeri</i> var. <i>archeri</i> has a wide distribution and both acaulescent and caulescent populations, while <i>B. archeri</i> var. <i>diamantinensis</i> is a microendemic represented only by caulescent individuals. Here, we compared the morpho-anatomy of two caulescent populations, one of each variety, with the acaulescent <i>B. archeri</i> from the typus locality (Lavras). <i>Butia archeri</i> from Lavras have shorter inflorescence axis and prophyll, similar-sized flowers, raphides in the pinnae, and accessory bundles surrounding the fibrous ring completely. Revolute bracts and fibres in the expansion tissue are exclusive of <i>B. archeri</i> var. <i>diamantinensis</i>, which, allied to the geographical isolation, clearly supports a new status and combination: <i>Butia diamantinensis</i>. The caulescence and lax rachillae allied to anatomical differences, show that Brasília’s population, formerly <i>B. archeri</i> var. <i>archeri</i>, is not <i>B. archeri</i>. Our results showed that the main diagnostic characters of <i>B. archeri</i> are lacking in the studied caulescent populations, warranting the rejection of the taxon’s amended descriptions. Furthermore, our study highlights the urgent need for further investigation into other taxa currently classified under <i>B. archeri</i>, particularly those facing extinction threats in the Cerrado. Here, we underpin the relevance of circumscriptions based on reliable characters to understand variable taxa, which impact conservation policies.</p>","PeriodicalId":20187,"journal":{"name":"Plant Systematics and Evolution","volume":"15 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Plant Systematics and Evolution","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-024-01908-z","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Originally described as an acaulescent species, the Butia archeri complex currently comprises two varieties. Butia archeri var. archeri has a wide distribution and both acaulescent and caulescent populations, while B. archeri var. diamantinensis is a microendemic represented only by caulescent individuals. Here, we compared the morpho-anatomy of two caulescent populations, one of each variety, with the acaulescent B. archeri from the typus locality (Lavras). Butia archeri from Lavras have shorter inflorescence axis and prophyll, similar-sized flowers, raphides in the pinnae, and accessory bundles surrounding the fibrous ring completely. Revolute bracts and fibres in the expansion tissue are exclusive of B. archeri var. diamantinensis, which, allied to the geographical isolation, clearly supports a new status and combination: Butia diamantinensis. The caulescence and lax rachillae allied to anatomical differences, show that Brasília’s population, formerly B. archeri var. archeri, is not B. archeri. Our results showed that the main diagnostic characters of B. archeri are lacking in the studied caulescent populations, warranting the rejection of the taxon’s amended descriptions. Furthermore, our study highlights the urgent need for further investigation into other taxa currently classified under B. archeri, particularly those facing extinction threats in the Cerrado. Here, we underpin the relevance of circumscriptions based on reliable characters to understand variable taxa, which impact conservation policies.
Butia archeri 复合物最初被描述为无毛物种,目前包括两个变种。archeri var. archeri分布广泛,既有无毛种群,也有有毛种群,而 B. archeri var.在这里,我们比较了两个无毛种群(每个种群一个)与典型产地(拉夫拉斯)的无毛布提亚干酪蘑菇的形态解剖。拉夫拉斯的 archeri 布提亚花序轴和先出叶较短,花朵大小相似,羽片上有虹彩,附属束完全围绕着纤维环。archeri var. diamantinensis 所独有,这与地理隔离有关,显然支持新的地位和组合:Butia diamantinensis。与解剖学上的差异相联系的卷须和松弛的腋毛表明,巴西利亚的种群,即以前的 B. archeri var.我们的研究结果表明,在所研究的有鳞种群中缺乏 B. archeri 的主要诊断特征,因此有理由拒绝该分类群的修正描述。此外,我们的研究还强调了进一步调查目前归入 B. archeri 分类群的其他类群的迫切需要,尤其是那些在塞拉多地区面临灭绝威胁的类群。在此,我们强调了基于可靠特征的周缘描述对于了解可变类群的意义,这对保护政策产生了影响。
期刊介绍:
Plant Systematics and Evolution is an international journal dedicated to publication of peer-reviewed original papers and reviews on plant systematics in the broadest sense. The journal aims to bridge the specific subject areas in plant systematics and evolution, encompassing evolutionary, phylogenetic, genomic and biogeographical studies at the population and higher taxonomic levels. Taxonomic emphasis is on all land plant groups in a wide sense, including fungi and lichens.