After the publication of our article, some issues were brought to our attention that we would like to clarify. First, our study was based on Lockwood's (1973) taxonomy of Brugmansia, which recognizes five species. More recently, the work of Hay & al. (2012) recognizes two additional species (one described as a subspecies and the other as a hybrid in Lockwood, 1973), bringing the number of Brugmansia species to seven sensu Hay & al. (2012). Thus, our phylogeny contains the five species of Brugmansia sensu Lockwood (1973), but is not complete under the taxonomy of Hay & al. (2012). One of the two taxa not included in our study, B. vulcanicola (A.S.Barclay) R.E.Schult., was however sampled in another recent phylogeny (Ng & Smith, 2016) and appears sister to B. sanguinea (Ruiz & Pav.) D.Don. This species was formerly considered a subspecies of B. sanguinea (Lockwood, 1973) and was placed in the same section (sect. Sphaerocarpium J.M.H.Shaw) along with B. arborea (L.) Sweet by Shaw (1999). We would also like to correct several errors in the text. First, since we considered Datura quercifolia Kunth and Datura ferox L. synonyms (following Symon & Haegi, 1991), the species should have been listed as D. ferox (not as D. quercifolia) throughout due to nomenclatural priority. Also, the authority listed for Brugmansia arborea should appear as “(L.) Sweet”, and that for B. suaveolens should appear as “(Willd.) Sweet”. Also, although we state that Datura are generally referred to as annuals, some species, such as D. wrightii, can grow as perennials in warmer areas (Bronstein & al., 2009). Avery & al. (1959) describe section Dutra of Datura (that includes D. wrightii) as “annual herbs, occasionally forming perennial roots”, although D. wrightii is the only species described as forming “perennial thickened roots”. Luna-Cavazos & al. (2008) refers to all species in section Dutra (D. inoxia, D. lanosa, D. metel, D. wrightii) as “long-lived, tuberous rooted perennials”. Further, the text on p. 366 (left column, second paragraph) should state that the clade comprising D. stramonium and D. ferox is the only lineage of Datura that lacks elaiosomes, following Figure 4. Finally, the first paragraph on p. 368 stated incorrectly that Hay & al.'s (2012) treatment divides Brugmansia as in Lockwood (1973), when in fact, these authors used Shaw's (1999) formal infrageneric classification, which recognizes two sections (sect. Sphaerocarpium as described above and sect. Brugmansia containing the remaining taxa). This division proposed by Shaw (1999) mirrors the two clades of Brugmansia recovered in our phylogeny. In this same paragraph, we state that B. suaveolens is found in the Amazonian lowlands, when it is in fact native from the southern Atlantic forest in Brazil. We are grateful to Alistair Hay, Judie Bronstein, Dave Keil, and Julian Shaw for pointing out these issues.