Abstract

Abstract Cloud forests usually occur at high-altitude sites of the Atlantic Forest in eastern Brazil, albeit scattered and fragmented along the mountain tops. In this habitat, the vegetation occurs at low-temperature conditions and is usually provided by additional water sources that arise due to the horizontal precipitation of the frequent fogs. Together with the more considerable air movement and higher luminosity, these factors are conditioning for singular floras at high elevations, mainly the vascular epiphytes, which are macro and microclimate dependent. In the mountains range at the center of the Espírito Santo state, Southeastern Brazil, some mountain tops such as Pedra Azul (PA) hold these environmental features. Here, we aimed to present the first checklist of vascular epiphytes in the Pedra Azul State Park and surroundings based on fieldwork and herbarium specimens. The checklist comprises 152 species, 65 genera, and 17 families, the main families being Orchidaceae, Bromeliaceae, and Polypodiaceae, with the main genera represented by Vriesea, Acianthera, and Peperomia. The holoepiphytes were the main category among the epiphytes, although an unusually high number of facultative epiphytes were recorded. Asplenium theciferum and Octomeria cucullata are recorded in Espírito Santo for the first time, and we confirmed the occurrence of Rhipsalis cereuscula in the state. Overall, the richness recorded in PA is amongst the highest of the Atlantic Forest cloud forests. Six species are threatened at the national level and 32 at the state level. These results support the importance of the protected area for conserving the flora; however, several species - including threatened - were only recorded in the surroundings, demonstrating that the buffer zone of the Pedra Azul State Park must be included in the management plans.

Highlights

  • The Atlantic Forest, which occurs in eastern Brazil, northern Argentina, and eastern Paraguay, is a phytogeographic domain comprising the second largest forest massif of South America, only smaller than the Amazon (Oliveira-Filho & Fontes 2000; Fiaschi & Pirani 2009)

  • We presented the first checklist of the vascular epiphytes of the Pedra Azul, including part of the Pedra Azul State Park and a river valley in the buffer zone

  • We found new records for the state and species threatened of extinctions at both state and national level

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Summary

Introduction

The Atlantic Forest, which occurs in eastern Brazil, northern Argentina, and eastern Paraguay, is a phytogeographic domain comprising the second largest forest massif of South America, only smaller than the Amazon (Oliveira-Filho & Fontes 2000; Fiaschi & Pirani 2009). It occurs in the most mountainous region of Brazil, having a rugged relief and, a physiognomy conditioned by several environmental factors (e.g., climatic and edaphic), resulting in different types of vegetation (e.g., Semideciduous and Deciduous Seasonal Forests, Dense and Mixed Rain Forest, and Coastal Plain Forest (Restinga) (Oliveira-Filho & Fontes 2000; Fiaschi & Pirani 2009). It does not reach elevations as high as the former ones, with the highest peak reaching about 2,000 m on the highest mountain top of the Serra do Castelo (Chiron & Bolsanello 2015; Garbin et al 2017), it is one of the least botanically studied of the Atlantic Forest mountain ranges, with few floristic studies available

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