Abstract

ABSTRACT The Northeast region of Brazil has the second highest number of species of the Myrtaceae family. It is mostly covered by the Caatinga biome, which is very degraded, making it difficult to preserve species of this family. Thus, the objective of this work was to describe the seed, seedling, and fruit morphology, and seed germination of Psidium sobralianum Landrum & Proença plants of the São Francisco Valley, Brazil. The fruits were collected in an area of the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa Semiarid), in Petrolina PE, Brazil. The evaluations consisted of determinations of fruit shape, consistency, and number of seeds; seed form, cotyledons, hilum, hypocotyl-radicle axis, and embryo type; epicarp, mesocarp, endocarp, and seed staining; longitudinal, transversal, and ventral diameters of fruits and seeds; fruit, pulp, and seed fresh and dry masses; germination test; first count of germinated seeds; germination speed index; shoot and root lengths; shoot and root fresh and dry masses; and imbibition test. Psidium sobralianum has polyspermic, berry fruits, subclassified as solanidium, with persistent sepals and globular shape, consisting of epicarp, mesocarp, endocarp and seeds. The fruits have green with orange epicarp, pale-green mesocarp, and white endocarp. The seeds have a pilose and bony aspect, a pimentoid type of embryo, foliaceous cotyledons, presence of operculum and hilum, and pale-yellow tegument. The germination is epigeal phanerocotiledonar, with root protrusion from 26 days after sowing (DAS); it presents a short, glabrous, thick radicle, and a rounded, pale-green apex. The germination is slow, probably due to the mechanical barrier of the tegument, and stabilizes at 90 DAS.

Highlights

  • Species of the family Myrtaceae are widespread in Brazil, including the genus Psidium

  • Fruits and seeds of P. sobralianum were acquired in an area of the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa Semiarid), in Petrolina PE, Brazil (9o09'S, 40o22'W, and altitude of 365 m)

  • According to Barroso et al (2012), South American species of the Myrtaceae family have bacoid, fleshy, indehiscent fruits, which may be globose, obovoid, oblong, piriform, ellipsoid, or lageniform; and the bacoid fruits of Psidium can be classified in the subtype solanidium, which have fleshy and developed placentas, reduced loci, and numerous ovules involved by pulp

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Summary

Introduction

Species of the family Myrtaceae are widespread in Brazil, including the genus Psidium. The species Psidium sobralianum, is known as araçá in the São Francisco Valley, and as little guava in Crato, and Barbalha, in the state of Ceará (CAMPOS et al, 2016), and is used as a medicinal plant to treat sore throats and flu in the Chapada do Araripe (LANDRUM; PROENÇA, 2015) in the Northeast of Brazil. It was discovered and described by Landrum and Proença (2015); according to these authors, it is found in regions of Dry Highland Forests, Carrasco vegetation, and Wet Forests, in Northeast Brazil

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