Abstract

Based on phylogenetic and morphological evidence, Tridimeris chiapensis Escobar-Castellanos & Ortiz-Rodr., sp. n. (Annonaceae), a new species from the karst forest of southern Mexico, is described and illustrated. The new species differs from Tridimeris hahniana, the only described species in the genus, in that the latter has flowers with sepals densely tomentose outside, one (rarely two) carpel(s) per flower and fruits densely covered with golden-brown hairs, while Tridimeris chiapensis has flowers with glabrous sepals outside, two to five carpels per flower and glabrous fruits. Furthermore, a shallow triangular white patch at the base of the inner petals is found in Tridimeris chiapensis, a morphological character shared with the sister genus Sapranthus but absent in Tridimeris hahniana. Geographically, both species occur allopatrically. With just one known locality and seven individuals of Tridimeris chiapensis recorded in one sampling hectare, and based on application of the criteria established by the IUCN, we conclude tentatively that the species is critically endangered.

Highlights

  • Annonaceae is a plant family composed of about 110 genera and 2,500 species of trees and lianas (Couvreur et al 2012, Erkens et al 2012)

  • Sequences of the coding region matK, ndhF, rbcL and ycf1 and psbAtrnH and trnL-F spacers of other Neotropical genera of Miliuseae (Desmopsis, Sapranthus, Stenanona and Tridimeris hahniana) and a few representatives of Asian Miliuseae were obtained from GenBank and included in the molecular matrix. [The samples, localities and GenBank accession numbers are listed in Appendix 1]

  • We examined the specimens of Tridimeris hahniana deposited at XAL herbarium (Thiers 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

Annonaceae is a plant family composed of about 110 genera and 2,500 species of trees and lianas (Couvreur et al 2012, Erkens et al 2012). The endemism at generic level is very high and only the genus Xylopia is pantropical (Doyle and Le Thomas 1997). Recent phylogenetic analyses (Richardson et al 2004, Chatrou et al 2012) show that Annonaceae is composed of four major lineages, and on that basis, the family is classified into four subfamilies: Anaxagoreoideae, Ambavioideae, Annonoideae and Malmeoideae. Annonoideae (50 genera and 1600 species) and Malmeoideae (50 genera and 700 species) are the most species-rich lineages in Annonaceae (Pirie and Doyle 2012). In Mexico the family is represented by eleven genera, Anaxagorea, Annona, Cymbopetalum, Desmopsis, Guatteria, Mosannona, Sapranthus, Stenanona, Tridimeris, Unonopsis and Xylopia, of which Tridimeris is endemic

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