Miconia hybophylla (Urb.) Majure & Judd, J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas. 7: 268. 2013.

Majure, Lucas C., Becquer, Eldis R. & Judd, Walter S., 2016, Revision of the Lima clade (Miconia sect. Lima, Miconieae, Melastomataceae) of the Greater Antilles, PhytoKeys 72, pp. 1-99 : 33-34

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.72.9355

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F7EBE458-995E-5289-B1B6-5E8959EBBD99

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Miconia hybophylla (Urb.) Majure & Judd, J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas. 7: 268. 2013.
status

 

7. Miconia hybophylla (Urb.) Majure & Judd, J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas. 7: 268. 2013. Fig. 10A-D View Figure 10

Ossaea hybophylla Urb., Ark. Bot. 21A(5): 51. 1927. Type: HAITI. Massif des Cahos, Petite-Riviére de l’Artibonite, Pérodin, at Ingram, 7 Mar 1925, E.L. Ekman H3440 (lectotype: S! [S-R-10017], designated here; isolectotypes EHH n.v., G! [G00353948], NY! [NY00099692], US! [US00123686], K! [K000535605]).

Leandra hybophylla (Urb.) Alain, Sida 18: 1026. 1999. Type. Based on Ossaea hybophylla Urb.

Type.

Based on Ossaea hybophylla Urb.

Description.

Small evergreen tree (height unknown); young stems purplish, round to slightly quadrangular with rounded angles in cross section, not ridged, the internodes 0.6-4.3 cm long, stem indumentum of granulate, bulla-based hairs to 0.3 mm long, these spreading; nodal line present but inconspicuous. Leaves opposite, decussate, broadly elliptic, 2.2-4.5 × 1.6-2.6 cm, slightly anisophyllous, margins with conspicuous spine-tipped hairs, these spreading (especially at base of leaf) to appressed or recurved along the leaf margin, apex acute, base acute often asymmetrical, venation acrodromous, 5-veined, the midvein and 2 pairs of arching secondary veins, the outermost pair of secondary veins ocasionally intramarginal, mostly basal, the innermost pair, suprabasal, asymmetrical or symmetrical, produced 2.5-6.5 mm from leaf base, positioned 2.2-4.3 mm in from margin at widest point of blade, tertiary veins percurrent, more or less perpendicular to midvein, 1.8-3.3 mm apart at midleaf, intertertiary veins rarely present and inconspicuous when present, tertiary veins often joined by quaternary veins; adaxial leaf surface covered in bulla-based hairs, widest hair bases to 0.7 mm, apices of bulla-based hairs mostly erect or recurved towards the leaf margin, young leaf adaxial surface producing long-stemmed, clavate-dentritic hairs along the primary, secondary, and tertiary veins from between the bulla-based hairs, sessile, glandular hairs produced along the primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary veins between the bulla-based hairs, especially toward the base of the leaf; abaxial leaf surface with sparse bulla-based hairs, these mostly erect to spreading, those along the primary, secondary, and tertiary veins larger than hairs produced throughout the lamina, the lamina clearly visible, olive green or occasionally purplish, not deeply pitted, sessile, glandular hairs produced throughout the lamina, conspicuous domatia produced as tufts of hairs at the junction of the primary and secondary veins, as well as at the junctions of the primary and secondary veins with the tertiary veins; petioles 0.5-1.1 cm long, purplish, adaxial surface of petiole with spreading, multicellular hairs to 1.2 mm long, the rest of the petiole covered in short 0.1-0.4 mm spreading, bulla-based hairs. Inflorescences terminal, pyramidal, purplish, with up to 41 flowers, flowers produced in cymose clusters, 1.7-4 × 2-3.1 cm, the peduncle 0.1-1.4 cm long, proximal inflorescence branches 6-13 mm long, bracts oblong to narrowly ovate, 0.6-1.5 mm long; bracteoles narrowly ovate, 0.4-0.8 × 0.2-0.25 mm, appearing as large bulla-based hairs. Flowers 4-merous, pedicels 0.5-0.8 mm long; hypanthium 1.3-2.7 mm long, short-oblong to globose, 4-lobed, slightly constricted below the torus; free portion of the hypanthium ca. 0.5 mm long, abaxial surface covered in dorsi-ventrally compressed or erect bulla-based hairs to 0.1 mm long, and sessile, glandular hairs between the bulla-based hairs, adaxial surface (i.e., free portion) covered in small, bulla-based hairs; calyx teeth 0.5-1 × 0.3-0.6 mm, spreading with straight or recurved apices, having the general appearance of a large bulla-based hair and often with a large bulla-based hair at the base; calyx lobes triangular, apex acute, 0.9-1.2 × 1.4-1.7 mm, covered in bulla-based and sessile, glandular hairs abaxially and sessile, glandular hairs adaxially; calyx tube not tearing, 0.3-0.5 mm long with bulla-based hairs abaxially and sessile, glandular hairs adaxially, clavate-dendritic hairs produced at the apex of the calyx tube; petals 4, most likely white, 2-3 × 1.7-1.8 mm, ovate, apex acute, with one slightly bulla-based hair produced just below the apex on the abaxial surface, to 0.3 mm long; stamens 8; filaments 1.2-1.3 mm long, glabrous, anthers 1.1-1.3 mm long, with one dorsally oriented pore, anther thecae 0.9-1.1 mm long, anthers with a dorso-basal appendage 0.2 mm long; style 3.5-4.3 mm long, glabrous, not or only slightly dilated in the middle (mostly oblong), collar absent, style subtended by an inconspicuous crown of triangular hairs (longer than those on the rest of the ovary apex), which are slightly longer than the surrounding bulla-based hairs of the ovary apex, stigma punctate; ovary 1.3-4 × 1.9-2.4 mm, 4-lobed, apex truncate, pubescent with triangular, bulla-based hairs, placentation axile with deeply intruded placenta, 4-locular; immature berries globose, 4-lobed, color at maturity unknown, but probably more or less purple, 2.5-2.7 mm long (including calyx tube), 3.1- 3.3 mm wide, seeds 0.4-0.5 mm long, obpyramidal, testa smooth, raphe smooth, extending the length of the seed.

Phenology.

Flowers at anthesis, as well as buds and immature fruit were present on the type collection, which was gathered in March.

Distribution.

(Fig. 11 View Figure 11 ). Haiti, Massif du Cahos, Petite-Riviére de l´Artibonite, Pérodin, at Ingram; known only from the type collection.

Ecology.

Nothing is known regarding the ecology of this species.

Conservation status.

Insufficient data are available for determining the conservation status of this species, although Miconia hybophylla is very likely endangered as a result of forest clearing for subsistence agriculture and charcoal production in west-central Haiti.

Discussion.

Miconia hybophylla is likely sister to Miconia asperifolia and can be easily recognized as a smaller, more compact version of Miconia asperifolia , as compared with other species in the Lima clade. The two species also share very, well developed domatia in the axils of the primary and secondary veins, as well as the axils of the tertiary with primary and tertiary with secondary veins.

Specimens examined.

This species is only known from the type specimen.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Myrtales

Family

Melastomataceae

Genus

Miconia

Loc

Miconia hybophylla (Urb.) Majure & Judd, J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas. 7: 268. 2013.

Majure, Lucas C., Becquer, Eldis R. & Judd, Walter S. 2016
2016
Loc

Ossaea hybophylla

Urb 1927
1927
Loc

Ossaea hybophylla

Urb 1927
1927