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Malvaceae from Serra do Lenheiro, Minas Gerais, Brazil

Abstract

We present a taxonomic treatment of the Malvaceae from Serra do Lenheiro, a montane range in the municipality of São João del-Rei, Minas Gerais, Brazil, in order to contribute to the knowledge of this family and the state’s flora. Eleven genera and twenty-nine species were recorded. Sida, Pavonia and Peltaea are the richest genera. Among the recorded species, nine are considered as ruderal and ten are endemic of Brazil. Three species have São João del-Rei as the type-locality. Analytic keys, morphological descriptions, photographic plates and comments about the treated species are presented. Illustrations are presented for two species: one has no iconography in Brazilian studies for Malvaceae (Sida plumosa) and one has only poor iconographic representations (Sida viarum).

Key words:
campos rupestres; flora; Malvales; taxonomy.

Resumo

Apresentamos um tratamento taxonômico para Malvaceae da Serra do Lenheiro, São João del-Rei, Minas Gerais, Brasil, com o objetivo de contribuir para o conhecimento dessa família e da flora do estado. Foram registrados 11 gêneros e 29 espécies. Sida, Pavonia e Peltaea são os gêneros mais ricos. Entre as espécies registradas, nove são consideradas ruderais e dez são endêmicas do Brasil. Três espécies têm como localidade-tipo São João del-Rei. São apresentados chaves analíticas, descrições morfológicas, pranchas fotográficas e comentários sobre as espécies tratadas. Ilustrações são apresentadas para duas espécies: uma que não possui iconografia em trabalhos brasileiros para Malvaceae (Sida plumosa) e uma que possui somente representações iconográficas pobres (Sida viarum).

Palavras-chave:
campos rupestres; flora; Malvales; taxonomia.

Introduction

Malvaceae comprises 243 genera and about 4,225 species with cosmopolitan distribution (Stevens 2021Stevens PF (2021) Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 14, July 2017 [and more or less continuously updated since]. Available at <http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/>. Access on 20 May 2021.
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APwe...
). In Brazil, Malvaceae is among the ten largest families of Angiosperms and it is represented by 80 genera and 840 species, with more than half considered endemic from the country (Flora do Brasil 2020Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated) Malvaceae. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB156>. Access on 28 March 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
, continuously updated). The family is currently divided into nine subfamilies, and two of them, Dombeyoideae and Tilioideae, do not occur in South America (Bayer & Kubitzki 2003Bayer C & Kubitzki K (2003) Malvaceae. In: The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 225-311.).

Malvaceae has very large morphological variation (Bayer & Kubitzki 2003Bayer C & Kubitzki K (2003) Malvaceae. In: The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 225-311.). The presence of stipulated alternate leaves, internal base of calyx with a nectary formed by glandular hairs, and stamens sometimes attached to a staminal tube are among the characters shared by most species (Bayer & Kubitzki 2003Bayer C & Kubitzki K (2003) Malvaceae. In: The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 225-311.).

The economic value of the family derives from the use of some genera in ornamentation, such as Abutilon Mill., Alcea L., Ceiba Mill., Pachira Aubl., Hibiscus L., Malvaviscus Fabr. and Thespesia Sol. The textile industry also benefits from some species of the genus Gossypium L. that provide cotton and Corchorus L. and Urena L. that provide jute. In the food sector, the genera Theobroma L., by its supply of cocoa and cupuaçu, and Abelmoschus Medik., for okra, stand out (Bovini 2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301.).

Only a few surveys of Malvaceae in Minas Gerais state are available and they were carried out in Serra do Cipó (Esteves 1986Esteves GL (1986) A ordem Malvales na Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo. 190p.; Colli-Silva et al. 2019Colli-Silva M, Esteves GL & Duarte MC (2019) Flora da Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais: Byttnerioideae, Helicterioideae e Sterculioideae (Malvaceae). Boletim de Botânica da Universidade de São Paulo 37: 27-48.; Yoshikawa et al. 2019Yoshikawa VN, Esteves GL & Duarte MC (2019) Flora da Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais: Bombacoideae (Malvaceae). Boletim de Botânica da Universidade de São Paulo 37: 49-58., 2020Yoshikawa VN, Esteves GL & Duarte MC (2020) Flora da Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais: Grewioideae (Malvaceae). Boletim de Botânica da Universidade de São Paulo 38: 1-7.), Rio Doce State Park (Bovini et al. 2001), Grão-Mogol (Esteves 2003Esteves GL (2003) Flora de Grão-Mogol, Minas Gerais: Bombacaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 21: 123-126.; Esteves & Ferrucci 2006Esteves GL & Ferrucci MS (2006) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Tiliaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 24: 119-120.; Cristóbal 2006Cristóbal CL (2006) Flora de Grão-Mogol, Minas Gerais: Sterculiaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 24: 107-113.; Esteves & Krapovickas 2009Esteves GL & Krapovickas A (2009) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Malvaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 27: 63-71.) and Ibitipoca State Park (Fernandes-Júnior & Konno 2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523.). This effort is still limited given the extent and potential of the state.

Therefore, in order to contribute to the knowledge about Malvaceae from Minas Gerais, a taxonomic study of its species occurring in Serra do Lenheiro was carried out. A key for identification, morphological descriptions, photographs and illustrations are presented.

Material and Methods

Study area

Serra do Lenheiro is a montane range formed by a group of close elevations located in the northwestern portion of the City of São João del-Rei, Minas Gerais (Fig. 1). This range comprises an area of 1,760 ha with altitudinal variation between 900 and 1,246 m. A tiny portion of the range constitutes the Serra do Lenheiro Ecological Park (Fig. 1), a biological preservation area of the city. The region’s climate is classified as Cwa sensu Köppen (Alvares et al. 2013Alvares CA, Stape JL, Sentelhas PC, Gonçalves JLM & Sparovek G (2013) Köppen’s climate classification map for Brazil. Meteorologische Zeitschrift 22: 711-728.) with rainy summers and dry winters (Alves & Kolbek 2009Alves RJV & Kolbek J (2009) Summit vascular flora of the Serra de São José, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Check List 5: 35-73.). Serra do Lenheiro is located in the Rio Grande basin at the Campos das Vertentes mesoregion (Minas Gerais 2010Minas Gerais (2010) Meso e microrregiões do IBGE. Available at <https://www.mg.gov.br/sites/default/files/paginas/arquivos/2016/ligminas_10_2_04_listamesomicro.pdf>. Access on 01 December 2021.
https://www.mg.gov.br/sites/default/file...
). It presents two types of soils: cambisoils and latosoils. The phytophysionomies present at Serra do Lenheiro are semidecidual seasonal forest, campos limpos (open grassland), campos sujos (shrubby fields) and campos rupestres (rocky fields) (Vasconcelos 2011Vasconcelos MF (2011) O que são campos rupestres e campos de altitude nos topos de montanha do Leste do Brasil? Revista Brasileira de Botânica 34: 241-246.). Campos rupestres grow up in association with quartzite rocks, and they are predominant in the landscape.

Figure 1
Locating of the study area: Serra do Lenheiro, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Taxonomic treatment

This study was based on the analysis of specimens we collected at Serra do Lenheiro and collections from previous researchers kept in herbaria BHCB, HUFSJ, R and RB (acronyms according to Thiers, continuously updatedThiers B (continuously updated) Index Herbariorum: a global directory of public herbaria and associated staff. New York Botanical Garden’s Virtual Herbarium. Available at <http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/>. Access on 19 April 2022.
http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/...
). The field work was carried out between 2015 and 2019 covering many parts of the mountain range and the Ecological Park. The collected material was photographed, herborized according to conventional techniques (Mori et al. 1989Mori SA, Silva LAM, Lisboa G & Coraden L (1989) Manual de herbário fanerogâmico. 2 ed. Centro de Pesquisa do Cacau, Ilhéus. 104p.), and incorporated into the collection of HUFSJ with duplicates in R and RB.

The analysis of this material was done through the mensuration and description of the shapes of the stems, leaves, flowers, fruits and seeds using a stereomicroscope. The characterization of these structures follows that of Radford et al. (1974)Radford AE, Dickison WC, Massey JR & Bell CR (1974) Vascular plant systematics. Harper & Row, New York. 891p.. More specific concepts of some genera were obtained from Lay (1950)Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395., Krapovickas & Cristóbal (1965)Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216., Fryxell (1988Fryxell PA (1988) Malvaceae of Mexico. Systematic Botany Monographs 25: 1-522., 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.), Carvalho-Sobrinho (2006)Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p., Krapovickas (2006)Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45., Saunders (2007)Saunders JG (2007) Sterculiaceae of Paraguay. II. Waltheria. Bonplandia 16: 143-180. and Gonçalez & Esteves (2017)Gonçalez VM & Esteves GL (2017) Estudo taxonômico de Melochia L. (Byttnerioideae, Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 431-448.. Additional material was used in the description of some taxa when structures like flowers or fruits were absent. The cited iconographic representations follow illustrations already published in papers about Brazilian flora of Malvaceae, in addition to revisional works of the studied genera.

The species are organized in alphabetical order together with morphological description, examined specimens, geographic distribution and comments. The measurements presented in the descriptions of each species are given in the order length × width, and when a single set of measurements is mentioned, it refers to the length of the structure. The characterization of the species as ruderal for the Cerrado was performed according to the list from the Flora vascular do bioma Cerrado, by Mendonça et al. (1998Mendonça RC, Felfili JM, Walter BMT, Silva Júnior MC, Rezende AV, Filgueiras TS & Nogueira PE (1998) A flora vascular do Cerrado. In: Sano SM & Almeida SP (eds.) Cerrado: ambiente e flora. Embrapa, Planaltina. Pp. 289-556.).

Results and Discussion

Four subfamilies, 11 genera and 29 species of Malvaceae were recorded from the Serra do Lenheiro (Figs. 2; 3). The richest genera are Sida (12 spp.), Pavonia (4 spp.) and Peltaea (3 spp.). The growth form most representative of the species from the Serra do Lenheiro is herb, reflecting the local predominance of field vegetation (campos limpos and campos rupestres). Subshrubs, shrubs and trees are less frequent growth forms recorded.

Figure 2
a-b. Hibiscus kitaibelifolius - a. flower; b. fruit. c. Krapovickasia macrodon - flower. d-e. Luehea grandiflora - d. habit; e. fruits. f. Malvastrum coromandelianum - buds. g. Melochia villosa - flower. h. Pavonia communis - buds and flower. i-j. Pavonia malacophylla - i. habit; j. buds and flower. k. Pavonia sagittata - buds and flower. l-m. Pavonia viscosa - l. habit; m. buds and flower. n. Peltaea obsita - buds and flower. o. Peltaea polymorpha - flower. p. Peltaea speciosa - flower. (Photos: a-p. M.T.R. Costa).

Figure 3
a-b. Pseudobombax longiflorum - a. stems with flowers; b. flower. c. Pseudobombax tomentosum - habit. d. Sida acrantha - buds and flower. e. Sida cerradoensis - buds and flower. f. Sida cordifolia - fruits. g. Sida glaziovii - fruits. h. Sida linifolia - flower and fruits. i. Sida martiana - buds and flower. j. Sida nemorensis - buds. k. Sida planicaulis - flowers. l. Sida plumosa - a young flower and some senescent flowers. m. Sida rhombifolia - flower and fruits. n. Sida urens - flower. o. Sida viarum - flower. p. Triumfetta bartramia - buds and some immature fruits. q. Triumfetta semitriloba - buds. r. Waltheria indica - flowers. (Photos: a-r. M.T.R. Costa).

Nine species are considered as ruderal to the Cerrado: Malvastrum coromandelianum, Sida cordifolia, S. glaziovii, S. linifolia, S. rhombifolia, S. urens, S. viarum, Triumfetta semitriloba and Waltheria indica. The presence of these ruderal species could reflect its wide distribution and could be evidence of the anthropization process that Serra do Lenheiro has suffered.

  Key for the subfamilies of Malvaceae from the Serra do Lenheiro
  • 1. Compound leaves; calyx not divided in lobes 2. Bombacoideae

  • 1’. Simple leaves; calyx divided in lobes 2

    • 2. Calyx lobes united just in the base; stamens free or arranged in phalanges; androgynophore usually present 3. Grewioideae

    • 2’. Calyx lobes united until the medium portion of the calyx; stamens forming a staminal tube; androgynophore absent 3

      • 3. Epicalyx sometimes present; fruits schizocarp or capsule (only Hibiscus) type 4. Malvoideae

      • 3’. Epicalyx absent; fruits capsule type 1. Byttnerioideae

1. Subfamily Byttnerioideae.

  Key for the species of Byttnerioideae from the Serra do Lenheiro
  • 1. Ovary with 5 locules and 5 styles 1.1. Melochia villosa var. villosa

  • 1’. Ovary with 1 locule and 1 style 1.2. Waltheria indica

1.1. Melochia villosa (Mill.) Fawc. & Rendle var. villosa, Fl. Jamaica 5: 165. 1926Fawcett W & Rendle AB (1926) Flora of Jamaica, containing descriptions of the flowering plants known from the island. Vol. 5. Trustees of the British Museum, London. 165p.. = Sida villosa Mill., Gard. Dict. (ed. 8): [unpaged] Sida n. 6. 1768Miller P (1768) The Gardeners Dictionary. 8. ed. Printed for the author and sold by John and Francis Rivington, London. (no page numbers) Sida no. 6..

Iconography: Gonçalez & Esteves (2017Gonçalez VM & Esteves GL (2017) Estudo taxonômico de Melochia L. (Byttnerioideae, Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 431-448., Fig. 3: G-J); Colli-Silva et al. (2019, Fig. 4). Fig. 2g

Figure 4
a-d. Sida plumosa - a. habit; b. mericarp; c. adaxial face of the leaf; d. abaxial face of the leaf. e-k. Sida viarum - e. habit; f. calyx; g. mericarp; h. adaxial face of the leaf; i. abaxial face of the leaf; j. indument of adaxial face of the leaf; k. indument of abaxial face of the leaf. [a-d. Costa 511 (RB); e-k. Costa 403 (RB)].

Subshrubs to shrubs 0.4-0.8 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, velutinous, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.3-0.5 cm, cylindrical, velutinous, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; stipules 0.4-0.7 mm, triangular, persistent; leaf blades 1.2-3.5 × 1.1-2.5 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, widely ovate to elliptic, base truncate to cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute to rounded, adaxial and abaxial surfaces with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillary or terminal glomerules; subsessile; epicalyx absent; calyx cupuliform, lobes ca. 2.2 × 1.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, velutinous externally, with stellate hairs; corolla with petals ca. 8 mm, obovate, purple; longistyle form: staminal tube ca. 3 mm, with simple hairs; brevistyle form: staminal tube ca. 1.5 mm, with simple hairs; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, 2-ovulate, longistyle form: style ca. 3 mm, brevistyle form: style ca. 1.5 mm, stigmas 5. Capsules 5-locular, ca. 3.5 × 5 mm, dehiscent, unornamented; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 43 (HUFSJ); 21.II.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 46 (HUFSJ); subida pelo Tijuco, 12.XII.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 266 (HUFSJ); Águas Férreas, 16.X.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 456 (HUFSJ).

Melochia villosa is distributed across the American continent, especially in Central and South America (Gonçalez & Esteves 2017Gonçalez VM & Esteves GL (2017) Estudo taxonômico de Melochia L. (Byttnerioideae, Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 431-448.). In Brazil, it occurs in Cerrado and Atlantic Forest (Gonçalez 2020Gonçalez VM (2020) Melochia in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9103>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos limpos, campos rupestres and anthropized areas.

This species can be recognized in the genus Melochia by stems and adaxial surface of the leaves covered by simple, biradiated and stellate hairs (Gonçalez & Esteves 2017Gonçalez VM & Esteves GL (2017) Estudo taxonômico de Melochia L. (Byttnerioideae, Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 431-448.). The other variety that occurs in Brazil, Melochia villosa var. tomentosa (K.Schum.) Goldberg, has stems and leaf blades covered by stellate hairs only (Gonçalez & Esteves 2017Gonçalez VM & Esteves GL (2017) Estudo taxonômico de Melochia L. (Byttnerioideae, Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 431-448.). Melochia villosa is included in section Melochia, the biggest of the genus (Rondón 2009Rondón JB (2009) Revision taxonómica del género Melochia L. (Sterculiaceae) en Venezuela. Acta Botánica Venezuelica 32: 1-61.).

1.2. Waltheria indica L., Sp. Pl. 2: 673. 1753Linnaeus C (1753) Species Plantarum. Vol. 2. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp 673-687..

Iconography: Schumann (1891cSchumann KM (1891c) Sterculiaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 1-24., Tab. 12); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 3: L); Colli-Silva et al. (2019, Fig. 6). Fig. 3r

Subshrub 0.4-1 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, velutinous, with yellowish simple hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.3-0.5 cm, cylindrical, velutinous, with yellowish simple hairs; stipules 0.3-0.4 mm, linear to lanceolate, less persistent; leaf blades 2.8-3.7 × 1-1.5 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, ovate to elliptic, base truncate to narrowly cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute to rounded, adaxial and abaxial surfaces velutinous, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillary or terminal glomerules; flowers subsessiles; epicalyx absent; calyx cupuliform, lobes 2.3-4 × 0.7-1 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, velutinous externally, with stellate hairs; corolla with petals ca. 3 mm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube 2-3 mm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 1-locular, uniovulate locule, style 2-3 mm, stigma 1, penicillate. Capsules 1-locular, 2-3.5 × 2-3 mm, dehiscent, unornamented; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 10.VI.2013, fl. and fr., M. Sobral et al. 15516 (HUFSJ); estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 47 (HUFSJ); campos próximos a Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 515 (HUFSJ; RB); 12.XII.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa 259 (HUFSJ; RB); 6.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 342 (BHCB, HUFSJ).

Waltheria indica has tropical and subtropical distribution across the world (Saunders 2007Saunders JG (2007) Sterculiaceae of Paraguay. II. Waltheria. Bonplandia 16: 143-180.). In Brazil, it occurs in all states (Coutinho et al. 2020Coutinho TS, Colli-Silva M & Pirani JR (2020) Waltheria in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9270>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species can be recognized by its stems and leaves with velutine indument, and homostylic flowers densely grouped in glomerules (Fernandes-Júnior & Konno 2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523.). It is one of the most widely distributed species of the genus in the world and has broad morphological variation of certain characters (Saunders 2007Saunders JG (2007) Sterculiaceae of Paraguay. II. Waltheria. Bonplandia 16: 143-180.). Waltheria indica is also used for popular medicinal purposes (Zongo et al. 2013Zongo F, Ribuot C, Boumendjel A & Guissou I (2013) Botany, traditional uses, phytochemistry and pharmacology of Waltheria indica L. (syn. Waltheria americana): a review. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 148: 14-26.).

2. Subfamily Bombacoideae.

  Key for the species of Bombacoideae from the Serra do Lenheiro
  • 1. Receptacle with 12 glands; calyx glabrate externally; staminal tube glabrate 2.1. Pseudobombax longiflorum

  • 1’. Receptacle with 14 glands; calyx velutinous externally; staminal tube pubescent 2.2. Pseudobombax tomentosum

2.1. Pseudobombax longiflorum (Mart.) A.Robyns, Bull. Jard. Bot. État Bruxelles 33: 57. 1963Robyns A (1963) Essai de monographie du genre Bombax L. s.l. (Bombacaceae). Bulletin du Jardin botanique de l’État à Bruxelles 33: 1-315.. = Carolinea longiflora Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 86. 1823Martius CFP (1823) Nova Genera et Species Plantarum. Vol. 1. Lindauer, Münich. Pp. 83-86, 99-100..

Iconography: Duarte et al. (2007Duarte MC, Esteves GL & Semir J (2007) Bombacaceae. In: Melhem TS, Wanderley MGL, Martins SE, Jung-Mendaçolli SL, Shepherd GJ & Kirizawa M (eds.) Flora fanerogâmica do estado de São Paulo. Instituto de Botânica, São Paulo. Vol. 5, pp. 21-38., Fig. 2: B-E); Fernandes-Júnior & Cruz (2018Fernandes-Júnior AF & Cruz APO (2018) Flora das cangas da Serra dos Carajás, Pará, Brasil: Malvaceae. Rodriguesia 69: 1237-1254., Fig. 3: A). Fig. 3a-b

Tree 3 m tall. Stems irregular, glabrate. Leaves not seen. Flowers solitary axillar or more frequently terminal; pedicels 2.5-5 cm, cylindrical to sulcate, glabrate; receptacle with 12 glands on the base; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate to cupuliform, ca. 2.1 × 1.5 cm, not subdivided in lobes, glabrate externally, sericeous internally; corolla with petals ca. 16.5 cm, lanceolate, white; staminal tube ca. 5.5 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, pluriovulate locules, styles ca. 6 cm, stigmas 5. Fruits not seen.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, campo rupestre imediato a estrada para as torres de transmissão, 11.VIII.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1099 (HUFSJ, R).

Pseudobombax longiflorum occurs in Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay (Carvalho-Sobrinho 2006Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p.). In Brazil, the species occurs in all regions, especially in Cerrado formations (Carvalho-Sobrinho & Yoshikawa 2020Carvalho-Sobrinho JG & Yoshikawa VN (2020) Pseudobombax in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9193>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos rupestres in the southern region of the area, especially along the road leading to transmission antennas.

This species can be distinguished from others of the genus Pseudobombax by its large petioles 12.5-25.5 cm in length, glabrescent leaflets, calyx externally glabrate, petals internally glabrate in the basal third and oblong fruit (Carvalho-Sobrinho 2006Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p.). Although only one specimen was collected in the study area, the characteristics of the flowers were enough to recognize the species. The name of this species alludes to the length of its petals, which tends to be longer than that of other species of the genus (Carvalho-Sobrinho 2006Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p.).

2.2. Pseudobombax tomentosum (Mart.) A.Robyns, Bull. Jard. Bot. État Bruxelles 33: 63. 1963Robyns A (1963) Essai de monographie du genre Bombax L. s.l. (Bombacaceae). Bulletin du Jardin botanique de l’État à Bruxelles 33: 1-315.. = Carolinea tomentosa Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 84. 1823Martius CFP (1823) Nova Genera et Species Plantarum. Vol. 1. Lindauer, Münich. Pp. 83-86, 99-100..

Iconography: Duarte et al. (2007Duarte MC, Esteves GL & Semir J (2007) Bombacaceae. In: Melhem TS, Wanderley MGL, Martins SE, Jung-Mendaçolli SL, Shepherd GJ & Kirizawa M (eds.) Flora fanerogâmica do estado de São Paulo. Instituto de Botânica, São Paulo. Vol. 5, pp. 21-38., Fig. 2: I-J). Fig. 3c

Tree 4 m tall. Stems cylindrical to irregular, glabrescent. Leaves compound, spiralled; petiole ca. 15 cm, slightly flattened, velutinous, with yellowish to ferruginous stellate hairs; stipule not seen; leaf blades 7-8-foliated, leaflets sessile to subsessile, 10-17 × 4.8-10.5 cm, chartaceous, elliptic to obovate, base attenuate to obtuse, margin erose, apex rounded to obtuse, adaxial surface floccose, with stellate hairs, abaxial surface velutinous, with stellate hairs; 1 gland near to the leaf base. Flowers solitary terminal; pedicels ca. 2.1 cm, cylindrical to striated, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; receptacle with 14 glands; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate to cupuliform, ca. 2.1 × 2.2 cm, not subdivided in lobes, velutinous externally, sericeous internally; corolla with petals 10.5-11.7 cm, lanceolate, white; staminal tube ca. 5.1 cm, pubescent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, pluriovulate locules, styles ca. 11 cm, stigmas 5. Fruits not seen.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, entorno da Serra do Lenheiro, 7.XII.2018, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. (HUFSJ 10278, R).

Pseudobombax tomentosum is distributed from Brazil to Paraguay (Carvalho-Sobrinho 2006Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p.). In Brazil, the species occurs in all regions, except the South. It is more frequently found in Cerrado formations (Carvalho-Sobrinho & Yoshikawa 2020Carvalho-Sobrinho JG & Yoshikawa VN (2020) Pseudobombax in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9193>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded at the edge of a fragment of seasonal forest that surrounds the local highest areas.

The species can be characterized by its suberified branches, sessile to subsessile leaflets, and velutine indument on the abaxial face of the leaflets and calyx (Carvalho-Sobrinho 2006Carvalho-Sobrinho JG (2006) O gênero Pseudobombax Dugand (Malvaceae s.l., Bombacoideae) no estado da Bahia, Brasil. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana. 155p.). Several pollination agents have already been recorded in flowers of P. tomentosum; among them bats, bees and marsupials stand out (Gribel 1988Gribel R (1988) Visits of Caluromys lanatus (Didelphidae) to flowers of Pseudobombax tomentosum (Bombacaceae): a probable case of pollination by marsupials in Central Brazil. Biotropica 20: 344-347.).

3. Subfamily Grewioideae.

  Key for the species of Grewioideae from the Serra do Lenheiro
  • 1. Trees; epicalyx present; fimbriated staminodes present 3.1. Luehea grandiflora

  • 1’. Herbs, subshrubs and shrubs; epicalyx absent; fimbriated staminodes absent 2

    • 2. Stipules linear; stamens on average 15; nutlet with 75-100 aculei 3.2. Triumfetta bartramia

    • 2’. Stipules ovate to lanceolate; stamens 20 or more; nutlet with 50-75 aculei 3.3. Triumfetta semitriloba

3.1. Luehea grandiflora Mart., Nov. Gen. Sp. Pl. 1: 99-100, t. 61. 1826.

Iconography: Cunha (1985Cunha MCS (1985) Revisão das espécies do gênero Luehea Willd. (Tiliaceae) ocorrentes no estado do Rio de Janeiro. Sellowia 37: 5-41., Fig. 3); Brandão & Laca-Buendia (1993Brandão M & Laca-Buendia JP (1993) O gênero Luehea Willd. (Tiliaceae) no estado de Minas Gerais. Daphne 3: 38-45., Fig. 1-B); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 2: J-K); Yoshikawa et al. (2019Yoshikawa VN, Esteves GL & Duarte MC (2019) Flora da Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais: Bombacoideae (Malvaceae). Boletim de Botânica da Universidade de São Paulo 37: 49-58., Fig. 1-H). Fig. 2d-e

Tree 4-6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, glabrescent, with brown stellate hairs grouped in longitudinal lines. Leaves simple, distichous; petioles 0.9-1.5 cm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, pubescent, with brown stellate hairs; stipules ca. 3 mm, lanceolate, caducous; leaf blades 7-22 × 4-11.8 cm, entire, coriaceous, ovate to elliptic, base truncate to oblique, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial surface puberulent, with brown stellate hairs, abaxial surface velutinous, with brown stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillary or terminal racemes; pedicels 1-2.5 cm, cylindrical, pubescent, with brown stellate hairs; epicalyx with 8-9 involucellar bracts, 1.1-1.5 cm, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade, lanceolate; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 2.5 × 0.7 cm, lanceolate, united just in the base, apex acute to acuminate, tomentose externally, with simple hairs; corolla with petals ca. 2.5 cm, lanceolate, white; stamens fused in 5 phalanges, these ca. 2.5 cm, with simple hairs; staminodes present, ca. 1.2 cm, fimbriate; ovary 5-locular, pluriovulate locules, styles ca. 2.7 cm, stigmas 5. Capsules 5-locular, 2.5-3.1 × 1.2-2.2 cm, ovate, valves reflexed or flat, dehiscent, unornamented; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 22.VIII.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa 390 (HUFSJ; RB); entorno da serra, beira da estrada, 7.XII.2019, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. (HUFSJ 10277).

Additional specimens examined: Brasil. Minas Gerais: São João del-Rei, São Sebastião da Vitória, 10.V.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa 106 (HUFSJ).

Luehea grandiflora occurs in Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Peru (Cunha 1985Cunha MCS (1985) Revisão das espécies do gênero Luehea Willd. (Tiliaceae) ocorrentes no estado do Rio de Janeiro. Sellowia 37: 5-41.). In Brazil, the species occurs in all regions within the phytogeographic domains of the Amazon Forest, Caatinga, Cerrado, Atlantic Forest and Pantanal (Gerace & Bovini 2020Gerace S & Bovini MG (2020) Luehea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9091>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, this species was recorded at the edge of seasonal forests.

The presence of the lanceolate petals and staminodes slightly fimbriate (Cunha 1985Cunha MCS (1985) Revisão das espécies do gênero Luehea Willd. (Tiliaceae) ocorrentes no estado do Rio de Janeiro. Sellowia 37: 5-41.) differentiates this species from others in the genus Luehea. Brandão & Laca-Buendia (1993)Brandão M & Laca-Buendia JP (1993) O gênero Luehea Willd. (Tiliaceae) no estado de Minas Gerais. Daphne 3: 38-45. affirmed that the large dimensions of the fruit (3 × 2.5 cm) and the covering by golden hairs help in the identification of the species. Luehea grandiflora is probably the most polymorphic species into the genus and it is also the most distributed in Brazil. It is suggested that more studies should focus on this taxon since its large distribution and morphological variations cause conflicts with Luehea speciosa Willd., as cited previously by Schumann (1891b)Schumann KM (1891b) Tiliaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 115-200. and Burret (1926)Burret KEM (1926) Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Tiliaceen. Notizblatt des Botanischen Gartens und Museums zu Berlin-Dahlem 9: 592-880.. It is also suggested that the current concept of L. grandiflora comprises a taxonomic complex.

3.2. Triumfetta bartramia L., Syst. Nat. 10 (2): 1044. 1759Linnaeus C (1759) Systema Naturae. Ed. 10. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp. 1044, 1145..

Iconography: Schumann (1891bSchumann KM (1891b) Tiliaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 115-200., Tab. 27: I). Fig. 3p

Subshrubs 0.5-1.6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, glabrescent to puberulent, with hyaline stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.4-3 cm, cylindrical, puberulent, with hyaline stellate hairs; stipules ca. 5 mm, filiform to linear, caducous; leaf blades 3.8-7.5 × 1.5-6 cm, entire to 3-lobed, membranaceous to chartaceous, rhombic to widely ovate, base truncate to rounded, margin irregularly serrate with the basal teeth transformed into 4-6 nectaries, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with hyaline stellate hairs. Flowers in axillary or terminal cymules; pedicels ca. 1 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with hyaline stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx cucullate, lobes 3.5-4 × 0.5-0.7 mm, oblong, united just in the base, apex rounded, pubescent externally; corolla with petals 0.6-0.7 cm, obovate, yellow; androgynophore ca. 0.5 mm, glabrate, stamens 10-15; staminodes absent; ovary 3-locular, 2-ovulate locules, style ca. 7.5 mm, stigma 1, tripartite. Nutlet spherical 4-4.7 mm diam., indehiscent, aculeate, aculeus 75-100; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 6.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 345 (BHCB, HUFSJ); 22.VIII.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 392 (HUFSJ; RB); 16.X.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 452 (HUFSJ); Águas Férreas, 21.II.2017, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 745 (HUFSJ, R).

Triumfetta bartramia is a species with wide distribution across the American continent (Lay 1950Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395.). In Brazil, it occurs in all regions of the country (Bovini 2020bBovini MG (2020b) Triumfetta in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9260>. Access on 5 April 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in anthropized field areas and edges of seasonal forests.

This species is distinguished from the others by presenting an average of 10 to 15 stamens and nutlet with a cinereal-tomentose body with 75 to 100 glabrescent aculei (Lay 1950Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395.). Triumfetta bartramia is very similar to Triumfetta sampaioi Mont., but the latter has 5 stamens and an occurrence recorded so far only in Northeastern Brazil.

3.3. Triumfetta semitriloba Jacq., Enum. Syst. Pl.: 22. 1760Jacquin NJ (1760) Enumeratio Systematica Plantarum, quas in insulis Caribaeis. Systematica Plantarum 4: 22..

Iconography: Schumann (1891bSchumann KM (1891b) Tiliaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 115-200., Tab. 27: III); Lay (1950Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395., Fig. 11); Esteves & Ferrucci (2006Esteves GL & Ferrucci MS (2006) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Tiliaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 24: 119-120., Fig. 1: D-I); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 3: I; Fig. 4: L-M). Fig. 3q

Subshrubs up to 1 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, glabrescent to puberulent, with hyaline stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.5-3.8 cm, cylindrical, puberulent to pubescent, with hyaline stellate hairs; stipules ca. 3 mm, lanceolate, caducous; leaf blades 2.1-6 × 0.9-5 cm, entire to 3-lobed, membranaceous to chartaceous, lanceolate to widely ovate, base cuneate to rounded, sometimes subcordate, margin irregularly serrate with the basal teeth transformed into up to 4 nectaries, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with hyaline stellate hairs. Flowers in axillary or terminal cymules; pedicels 1-3 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with hyaline stellate hairs, curved to down when bearing fruit; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 1.5-1.8 × 0.4 mm, oblong, united just in the base, apex rounded, pubescent externally; corolla with petals ca. 0.5 cm, obovate, yellow; androgynophore ca. 0.5 mm, glabrate; stamens 20-40; staminodes absent; ovary 3-locular, 2-ovulate locules, style ca. 4.6 mm, stigma 1, tripartite. Nutlet spherical 3-5 mm diam., indehiscent, aculeate, aculeus 50-75; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, Águas Férreas, 21.II.2017, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 733 (HUFSJ, R).

Triumfetta semitriloba occurs on the American and African continents, most frequently in their tropical portions (Lay 1950Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395.). In Brazil, it occurs in all regions of the country (Bovini 2020bBovini MG (2020b) Triumfetta in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9260>. Access on 5 April 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in anthropized field areas.

Triumfetta semitriloba is characterized within its genus by having stamens numbering from 20 to 40 and pubescent nuclei with 3 locules and hairy aculei varying in number from 50 to 75 (Lay 1950Lay KK (1950) The American species of Triumfetta L. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 37: 315-395.). The epithet “semitriloba” alludes to leaf blades that often have three slightly pronounced lobes; however, the variability of this characteristic is not exclusive to T. semitriloba, occurring in several species and causing some controversies involving the determination of their identity. Thus, an updated review for the genus is necessary, so that dubious characters like this can be clarified.

4. Subfamily Malvoideae.

  Key for the species of Malvoideae from the Serra do Lenheiro
  • 1. Flowers with epicalyx 2

  • 1’. Flowers without epicalyx 10

    • 2. Epicalyx composed by 3 involucellar bracts 4.3. Malvastrum coromandelianum

    • 2’. Epicalyx composed by 5 or more involucellar bracts 3

      • 3. Extrafloral nectaries present at the base of the leaf blades; leaf blades entire or 3-5-lobed; fruits capsule type 4.1. Hibiscus kitaibelifolius

      • 3’. Extrafloral nectaries absent; leaf blades entire; fruits schizocarp type 4

        • 4. Involucellar bracts morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade 5

        • 4’. Involucellar bracts not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade 7

          • 5. Involucellar bracts peltate; corolla yellow 4.8. Peltaea obsita

          • 5’. Involucellar bracts spatulate to lanceolate; corolla pink 6

            • 6. Stems covered by sparse stellate hairs, these frequently grouped in longitudinal lines; flowers in terminal inflorescences, rarely in leaf axils 4.9. Peltaea polymorpha

            • 6’. Stems densely covered by stellate hairs; flowers solitary in the leaf axils 4.10. Peltaea speciosa

              • 7. Corolla yellow with or without reddish base and nervures 8

              • 7’. Corolla pink 9

                • 8. Epicalyx with 6-7 involucellar bracts; corolla entirely yellow; mericarps with spines 4.4. Pavonia communis

                • 8’. Epicalyx with 12-14 involucellar bracts; corolla yellow with reddish base and nervures; mericarps without spines 4.7. Pavonia viscosa

                  • 9. Presence of glandular hairs in the stems; epicalyx with 16-22 involucellar bracts; blackish mericarps 4.5. Pavonia malacophylla

                  • 9’. Absence of glandular hairs in the stems; epicalyx with 5 involucellar bracts; mericarps never blackish 4.6. Pavonia sagittata

                    • 10. Calyx accrescent and inflate 4.2. Krapovickasia macrodon

                    • 10’. Calyx not accrescent or inflate 11

                      • 11. Leaf blades linear to lanceolate 12

                      • 11’. Leaf blades rhombic, elliptic, ovate to obovate 13

                        • 12. Leaf blades with margin entire; inflorescence in corymbs; mericarps 7-9 4.15. Sida linifolia

                        • 12’. Leaf blades with margin serrate at the apical portion; inflorescence other types, not a corymb; mericarps 5 4.22. Sida viarum

                          • 13. Leaf blades with margin serrate only at the apical portion 14

                          • 13’. Leaf blades with entire margin serrate 17

                            • 14. Leaf blades with tomentose indumentum covering both surfaces; seeds puberulent 15

                            • 14’. Leaf blades glabrescent on both surfaces; seeds glabrate to glabrescent 16

                              • 15. Leaf blades with yellow hairs; flowers axillary, rarely terminal; mericarps 10-11 4.14. Sida glaziovii

                              • 15’. Leaf blades with ferruginous hairs; flowers terminal, surrounded by apical leaves, rarely along the stems; mericarps 5-7 4.11. Sida acrantha

                                • 16. Subshrubs usually erect; mericarps 9-12, without dorsal prominences 4.20. Sida rhombifolia

                                • 16’. Subshrubs prostate; mericarps 5-7, with dorsal prominences 4.19. Sida plumosa

                                  • 17. Leaf blades with purplish margin 18

                                  • 17’. Leaf blades with margin not purplish 19

                                    • 18. Mericarps 5, not spined 4.16. Sida martiana

                                    • 18’. Mericarps 10-12, spined 4.12. Sida cerradoensis

                                      • 19. Subshrubs decumbent; mericarps muticous 4.21. Sida urens

                                      • 19’. Subshrubs erect; mericarps 2-spined 20

                                        • 20. Stems and leaves glabrescent; leaves distichous 4.18. Sida planicaulis

                                        • 20’. Stems and leaves velutinous, tomentose or hirsute; leaves spiralled 21

                                          • 21. Stems with glandular hairs; mericarps 5 4.17. Sida nemorensis

                                          • 21’. Stems without glandular hairs; mericarps 9-10 4.13. Sida cordifolia

4.1. Hibiscus kitaibelifolius A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. 1(7): 248-249, pl. 48. 1828.

Iconography: Esteves et al. (2014Esteves GL, Duarte MC & Takeuchi C (2014) Sinopse de Hibiscus L. (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) do estado de São Paulo, Brasil: espécies nativas e cultivadas ornamentais. Hoehnea 41: 529-539., Fig. 1: A-F); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 2: E; Fig. 4: C); Rigueiral et al. (2019Rigueiral LHG, Gonçalez VM & Duarte MC (2019) Espécies nativas de Hibiscus (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) da Região Sudeste do Brasil. Rodriguésia 70: e03102017., Fig, 4: F-H). Fig. 2a-b

Shrubs ca. 1.6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs, the stellate hairs grouped in longitudinal lines. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 4-10.5 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 5 mm, lanceolate, caducous; leaf blades 4.7-11.5 × 4.6-13.5 cm, entire or 3-5-lobed, chartaceous, ovate to obovate, base rounded to cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute to acuminate, adaxial and abaxial surface pubescent, with yellowish stellate hairs; 1-3 adaxial extrafloral nectaries on the basal portion of the nerves. Flowers in axillary or terminal racemes, rarely solitary; pedicels 0.6-1.5 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx with 10-12 involucellar bracts, 1-1.2 cm long, linear, bifurcated at the apex; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 2.2 × 0.7 cm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acuminate, hirsute, with simple and stellate hairs, 1 nectary on the apical third of midvein; corolla with petals ca. 5.5 cm, obovate, pink with a dark pink centre; staminal tube ca. 3.3 cm, with glandular hairs; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, pluriovulate locules, styles ca. 4.3 cm, stigmas 5. Capsules 5-locular, ca. 1.8 × 1.4 cm, dehiscent, unornamented, glabrate; seeds floccose.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, brejo na beira da estrada para Trindade, 5.VIII.2017, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1056 (HUFSJ).

Hibiscus kitaibelifolius is an endemic species from Minas Gerais and São Paulo (Rigueiral et al. 2019Rigueiral LHG, Gonçalez VM & Duarte MC (2019) Espécies nativas de Hibiscus (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) da Região Sudeste do Brasil. Rodriguésia 70: e03102017.). In Serra do Lenheiro, this species was recorded in a seasonal swamp in the central area of the range.

This species is characterized by the presence of a hirsute stem, leaf blades 3-5-lobed, leaf base with 1-3 nectaries and capsule glabrate (Rigueiral et al. 2019Rigueiral LHG, Gonçalez VM & Duarte MC (2019) Espécies nativas de Hibiscus (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) da Região Sudeste do Brasil. Rodriguésia 70: e03102017.). Krapovickas & Fryxell (2004)Krapovickas A & Fryxell P (2004) Las especies sudamericanas de Hibiscus secc. Furcaria DC. (Malvaceae - Hibisceae). Bonplandia 13: 35-115. reported that the presence of three nectaries at the base of the leaf blade distinguishes H. kitaibelifolius from other species of section Furcaria DC., to which it belongs. However, in the driest months of the year, these nectaries can become inconspicuous. The type-material of H. kitaibelifolius was collected in 1822 by Saint-Hilaire in São João del-Rei, where Serra do Lenheiro is located. This type-material is deposited in the collection of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle herbarium (P) in Paris.

4.2. Krapovickasia macrodon (A.DC.) Fryxell, Brittonia 30(4): 456-457. 1978. = Sida macrodon DC., Prodr. 1: 464. 1824Candolle AP (1824) Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis. Vol. 1. Treuttel et Würtz, Paris. 464p..

Iconography: Fryxell (1978Fryxell PA (1978) Neotropical segregates from Sida L. (Malvaceae). Brittonia 30: 447-462., Fig. 3: C-D). Fig. 2c

Subshrub 0.1-0.15 m tall, procumbent. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 3.6-6 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules 2.5 mm, lanceolate, caducous; leaf blades 1.1-2 × 0.8-1.6 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate to widely ovate, base cordate, margin crenate to dentate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces pubescent, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in the leaf axils; pedicels 1.2-3 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, accrescent and inflate, lobes ca. 6 × 2.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acuminate, hirsute, with simple and stellate hairs; corolla with petals ca. 8 mm, obovate, pink or orange; staminal tube ca. 5 mm, with glandular hairs; staminodes absent; ovary 8-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 5.3 mm, stigmas 8. Schizocarps 8 mericarps, ca. 2.5 × 1.5 cm, with a small dehiscence, muticous; seeds puberulent.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 8.III.2005, fl., M. Quinelato (HUFSJ 398; RB 568127); 27.III.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 517 (HUFSJ); campo rupestre na trilha para o areal, parte central da serra, 12.XII.2017, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1298 (HUFSJ).

Krapovickasia macrodon is found in field formations in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay (Fryxell 1978Fryxell PA (1978) Neotropical segregates from Sida L. (Malvaceae). Brittonia 30: 447-462.). In Brazil, the species occurs in Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul (Gring 2020). In Serra do Lenheiro, this species was found in Cerrado formations called campos limpos and campos rupestres.

The species is distinguished from others of the genus Krapovickasia by its solitary flowers and the presence of 8-9 stigmas and mericarps (Fryxell 1978Fryxell PA (1978) Neotropical segregates from Sida L. (Malvaceae). Brittonia 30: 447-462.; Grings 2020Grings M (2020) Krapovickasia in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9087>. Access on 8 January 2021.
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).

4.3. Malvastrum coromandelianum (L.) Garcke, Bonplandia (Hannover) 5(18): 295. 1857Garcke CAF (1857) Die Gattung Malvastrum Asa Gray. Bonplandia 5: 295-297.. = Malva coromandeliana L., Sp. Pl. 2: 687. 1753Linnaeus C (1753) Species Plantarum. Vol. 2. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp 673-687..

Iconography: Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 53); Hill (1982Hill SR (1982) A monograph of the genus Malvastrum - III. Rhodora 84: 317-409., Fig. 63 e 64); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 3: H-I); Bovini (2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301., Fig. 3: A). Fig. 2f

Subshrubs 0.5 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.4-1.7 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 4.5 mm, triangular, caducous; leaf blades 1.5-4 × 1.1-3 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate to widely ovate, base truncate to cuneate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in the leaf axils or terminal, rarely in axillary glomerules; pedicels 1.3-6.6 mm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx with 3 involucellar bracts, ca. 4.5 mm, lanceolate, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 6.8 × 4.2 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acuminate, externally hirsute, with simple and stellate hairs; corolla with petals ca. 5.7 mm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 5 mm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 10-12-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 5 mm, stigmas 10-12. Schizocarps 10-12 mericarps, ca. 2.2 × 1.5 mm, indehiscent, 3-spined, spines 0.1-0.2 cm; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, subida pelo Tijuco, 12.XII.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 264 (HUFSJ).

Malvastrum coromandelianum has pantropical distribution (Fryxell 1988Fryxell PA (1988) Malvaceae of Mexico. Systematic Botany Monographs 25: 1-522.). In Brazil, it occurs in all regions of the country (Coutinho 2020Coutinho TS (2020) Malvastrum in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9098>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in anthropized areas.

This species differs from the others of the genus by its mericarps 3-spined and habitat weedy (Hill 1982Hill SR (1982) A monograph of the genus Malvastrum - III. Rhodora 84: 317-409.). Malvastrum coromandelianum is frequently used in popular medicine of some countries, such as India, for example, as an anti-inflammatory, analgesic and anti-dysenteric (Khonsung et al. 2006Khonsung P, Nantsupawat S, Jesadanont SN, Chantharateptawan V & Panthong A (2006) Anti-inflammatory and analgesic activities of water extract of Malvastrum coromandelianum (L.) Garcke. Thai J Pharmacol 28: 8-15.).

4.4. Pavonia communis A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(6): 224-225. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Esteves (2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194., Fig. 20: G-K). Fig. 2h

Subshrubs 0.8 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, velutinous, with yellowish stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.2-1.8 cm, cylindrical, velutinous, with yellowish stellate hairs; stipules ca. 0.6 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 4-7.7 × 2.5-5.4 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate, base truncate to subcordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acuminate, adaxial surface sparsely puberulent with yellowish stellate hairs, abaxial surface velutinous with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in leaf axils or grouped at the apex of stems; pedicels 0.5-2 cm, cylindrical, velutinous, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx with 6-7 involucellar bracts, ca. 1 mm, linear to lanceolate, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 8.4 × 3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with sparse stellate hairs, margin ciliate; corolla with petals ca. 2.3 cm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 1.5 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 2.1 cm, stigmas 8. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 8.5 × 3 mm, dehiscent, 3-spined with retrorse hairs, spines 0.3-0.5 cm; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 48 (HUFSJ).

Pavonia communis is widely distributed across South America (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). In Brazil, it occurs in the Central and Southern regions of the country, especially in Atlantic Forest and Cerrado phytophysionomies, in addition to secondary forest clearings and pasture areas (Esteves 2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194.). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in anthropized field areas.

This species can be distinguished from other species within the genus Pavonia by its flowers distributed along the foliar axils and also at the apex of the stems, the petals 2-3.5 cm, and the presence of retrorse hairs on the spines of the mericarps (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). Pavonia communis is included in the subgenus Typhalea (DC.) C. Presl, in the section Urenoideae A.St.-Hil., where yellow corolla and mericarps 3-spined are shared by a majority of the species (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.).

4.5. Pavonia malacophylla (Link & Otto) Garcke, Jahrb. Königl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 1: 221. 1881Garcke CAF (1881) Jahrbuch des Königlichen Botanischen Gartens und des Botanischen Museums zu Berlin. Vol. 1. Botanischer Garten, Berlin. 221p.. = Sida malacophylla Link & Otto, Icon. Pl. Select.: 67-68, t. 30. 1828Link JHF & Otto CF (1828) Icones plantarum selectarum. Pp. 67-68..

Iconography: Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 3: J-K); Esteves (2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194., Fig.7: A-F). Fig. 2i-j

Shrubs 1.2 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, densely pubescent, with yellowish stellate and glandular hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 2-6 cm, cylindrical, densely pubescent, with yellowish stellate and glandular hairs; stipules ca. 7 mm, lanceolate, caducous; leaf blades 4-14 × 3.5-13 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate to widely ovate, base cordate, margin serrulate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces densely pubescent, with yellowish stellate and glandular hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillary racemes or terminal panicles; pedicels 2-4.5 cm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, pubescent, with yellowish stellate and glandular hairs; epicalyx with 16-22 involucellar bracts, 1-1.2 mm, linear to lanceolate, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 4.5 × 2.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals ca. 2.3 cm, obovate, pink with a white centre; staminal tube ca. 1.7 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 2.5 cm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 5.2 × 2.4 mm, dehiscent, muticous, viscose, frequently blackish; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, trilha para a Serra do Lenheiro, 13.VI.2017, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 994 (HUFSJ).

Pavonia malacophylla occurs sporadically from Mexico to Brazil, especially at forest edges (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). In Brazil, the species is found in all regions (Esteves 2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194.). In Serra do Lenheiro, this species was recorded next to a trail in the Northwestern area of the range.

This species is characterized by 15-24 involucellar bracts, petals length of 2-3 cm and exserted androecium (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). According to Esteves (2001)Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194., the species presents a rare feature in the genus: the presence of a white mucilaginous substance over the surface of the mericarps. However, this feature disappears during the herborization process. The large leaf blades with length up to 21 cm distinguishes P. malacophylla from other species of the section Lopimia Mart. (Esteves 2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194.). Bovini (2001)Bovini MG (2001) Novidades em Malvaceae brasileiras. Eugeniana 25: 22-25. noted that the glandular hairs over the stems and leaves give them a sticky aspect.

4.6. Pavonia sagittata A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(6): 229-230. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 95: II); Esteves (2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194., Fig. 4: A-H); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 2: F-G; Fig. 4: G). Fig. 2k

Shrubs 0.4-0.5 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with ferruginous stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.9-1.5 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with ferruginous stellate hairs; stipules ca. 1 mm, linear, caducous or frequently hidden by stem hairs; leaf blades 3-5.5 × 1-1.6 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, lanceolate to elliptic, base sagittate, margin dentate and slightly revolute, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces hirsute, with ferruginous stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary axillary or terminal; pedicels 1-1.5 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with ferruginous stellate hairs; epicalyx with 5 involucellar bracts, ca. 6 mm, obovate to suborbicular, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 7.2 × 4 mm, obovate, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals ca. 1.2 cm, obovate, pink with a dark pink centre; staminal tube ca. 5 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 5.5 mm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, mericarps ca. 4.5 × 3.5 mm, dehiscent, muticous; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 6.III.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 339 (BHCB, HUFSJ); Águas Férreas, 16.X.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 455 (HUFSJ, RB).

Pavonia sagittata is considered endemic from Brazil, occurring mainly in Cerrado and Atlantic Forest (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). The species is most frequently found in southern region of Brazil (Esteves 2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194.). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species is characterized in the genus Pavonia by sagittate leaves and ovate to suborbicular involucellar bracts, besides the hirsute indumentum with a ferruginous aspect (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). However, Esteves (2001)Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194. affirmed that this species can exhibit variable indumentum density, leaf morphology and involucellar bracts shapes. The type-material of P. sagittata was collected by Saint-Hilaire in field formations in São João del-Rei (Saint-Hilaire 1828Saint-Hilaire A (1828) Malvaceae. In: Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Vol. 1. A. Belin, Paris. Pp. 1-256.), and it is deposited at the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle herbarium (P).

4.7. Pavonia viscosa A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(6): 236. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 100: II); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 2: H-I; Fig. 4: E-F). Fig. 2l-m

Shrubs 0.5-1.6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, puberulent, with ferruginous stellate and glandular hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 1-5 cm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, puberulent, with ferruginous stellate and glandular hairs; stipules 0.7-1.1 mm, linear, caducous; leaf blades 1.5-7.5 × 0.8-5.2 cm, entire, membranous, ovate, base cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial surface puberulent, with ferruginous simple and glandular hairs, abaxial surface pubescent, with ferruginous simple and glandular hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in the leaf axils; pedicels 2-4.5 cm, cylindrical, puberulent, with ferruginous stellate and glandular hairs; epicalyx with 12-14 involucellar bracts, ca. 1.5 cm, linear to lanceolate, not morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes 12-18 × 3-5 mm, ovate, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with sparsely simple hairs externally, margin ciliate; corolla with petals ca. 3 cm, obovate, yellow with reddish base and nervures; staminal tube 2.5-2.8 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles 2.9-3.3 mm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 7 × 3.5 mm, dehiscent, muticous; seeds puberulent.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, estrada para Trindade, 25.XII.2012, fl., M. Sobral 15287 (HUFSJ); 28.XI.2013, fl., M.T.R. Costa & O. Lara 10 (HUFSJ); 28.I.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 27 (BHCB, HUFSJ, RB); 9.V.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa & S.N. Carvalho 354 (HUFSJ); 14.VI.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa & S. Franco 378 (HUFSJ; RB); 8.VIII.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 338 (HUFSJ).

Pavonia viscosa is an endemic species from campos rupestres of Bahia and Minas Gerais (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos rupestres, growing between the quartzitic rocks.

This species can be distinguished from other species of the genus by the linear to lanceolate involucellar bracts, as well as stems and leaves covered by glandular hairs (Fryxell 1999Fryxell PA (1999) Pavonia Cavanilles (Malvaceae). Flora Neotropica Monograph 76. The New York Botanical Garden Press, New York. 284p.) that emit a strong odour (Esteves 2001Esteves GL (2001) O Gênero Pavonia Cav. (Malvaceae) na Região Sudeste do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 15: 125-194.). In 1981, Sazima registered hummingbirds as frequent pollinators of the species. Sazima (1981)Sazima M (1981) Polinização de duas espécies de Pavonia (Malvaceae) por beija-flores, na Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais. Revista Brasileira de Biologia 41: 733-737. had previously described this species as protogynous and indicated that crossed pollination has had major success in the formation of fruits and seeds.

4.8. Peltaea obsita (Mart. ex Colla) Krapov. & Cristóbal, Bonplandia 9 (1-2): 148. 1996. = Sida obsita Mart. ex Colla, Herb. Pedem. 1: 416. 1833Colla L (1833) Herbarium Pedemontanum. Vol. 1. Augustae Taurinorum: Ex Typis Regiis, Torino. 566p..

Iconography: Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 3: P-Q); Esteves & Krapovickas (2009Esteves GL & Krapovickas A (2009) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Malvaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 27: 63-71., Fig. 1: D-E). Fig. 2n

Shrubs 0.4-0.5 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 1-4 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; stipules 2-2.2 mm, triangular, persistent; leaf blades 3.3-7.5 × 2.3-6 cm, entire to 3-lobed, membranaceous, ovate, base cordate, margin double-serrate, apex acute, adaxial to abaxial surfaces tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers congested in axillary and terminal inflorescences; flowers subsessiles, pedicels up to 2 mm, cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx with 7-9 involucellar bracts, ca. 1.7 mm, peltate, morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 8 × 3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals ca. 1.6 cm, obovate, yellowish; staminal tube ca. 1.1 cm, puberulent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 1.6 cm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 3 × 2 mm, indehiscent, muticous; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, trilha para a Serra do Lenheiro, 6.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 341 (BHCB, HUFSJ); 13.III.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 394 (HUFSJ, RB); 10.IV.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 408 (HUFSJ).

Peltaea obsita is distributed across Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay (Zuloaga et al. 2008Zuloaga FO, Morrone O, Belgrano MJ, Marticorena C & Marchesi E (2008) Catálogo de las plantas vasculares del Cono Sur. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden 107: i-xcvi, 1-3348.; Jørgensen et al. 2014Jørgensen PM, Nee MH & Beck SG (2014) Catálogo de las plantas vasculares de Bolivia. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden 127: i-viii, 1-1744. Missouri Botanical Garden Press, St. Louis. 1744p.; BFG 2015BFG - The Brazil Flora Group (2015) Growing knowledge: an overview of seed plant diversity in Brazil. Rodriguésia 66: 1085-1113.). In Brazil, it occurs in Goiás, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro and Paraná (Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in the seasonally flooded field areas between 900 and 1,000 m in altitude.

Inside the genus, this species is characterized by stems and leaves covered exclusively by stellate hairs, peltate involucellar bracts and yellow corolla without a dark centre (Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
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). Peltaea obsita is very close to P. trinervis (Presl) Krap. & Crist. and this fact has caused controversies in determinations in herbaria collections. In this case, P. obsita can be distinguished from P. trinervis by its stellate hairs with similar length covering the herb’s entire surface and by its mericarps muticous. Peltaea trinervis has stems and leaves covered by stellate hairs of different length and spined mericarps (Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
).

4.9. Peltaea polymorpha (A.St.-Hil.) Krapov. & Cristóbal, Kurtziana 2: 199-202. 1965. = Pavonia polymorpha A. St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(6): 232. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Krapovickas & Cristóbal (1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216., Fig. 5: C; Fig. 18); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 4: H-I). Fig. 2o

Subshrubs up to 0.2 m tall, decumbent. Stems cylindrical, hirsute to glabrescent, with yellowish stellate hairs sparse and frequently grouped in longitudinal lines. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.5-1 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; stipules ca. 4 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 3.2-7.5 × 3.3-5.5 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate, elliptic to circular, base rounded, margin crenate to serrate, apex acute to obtuse, adaxial and abaxial surfaces hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers congest in terminal inflorescences or rarely solitary in leaf axils; flowers subsessiles, pedicels up to 2 mm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx with 8-10 involucellar bracts, ca. 1 cm, spatulate, morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 8.5 × 3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally on nervures, margin ciliate; corolla with petals ca. 3.5 cm, obovate, pink with a dark pink centre; staminal tube ca. 1 cm, puberulent, with glandular hairs; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 1.5 cm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, 4-4.5 × 2.5 mm, dehiscent, muticous; seeds puberulent.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, campos próximos a Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 508 (HUFSJ); 6.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 346 (HUFSJ); 22.V.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 370 (HUFSJ); Águas Férreas, 16.X.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 453 (HUFSJ); 10.IV.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 408 (HUFSJ); 8.I.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 673 (HUFSJ, R); campo rupestre, acesso por trilha em frente à Base do Exército, 28.X.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1241 (HUFSJ, R).

Peltaea polymorpha is considered as an endemic species from Brazil, occurring from the central area of the country to the South (Krapovickas & Cristóbal 1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216.; Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species can be recognized by subsessile flowers which are frequently grouped in apical inflorescences, spatulate involucellar bracts and dehiscent pubescent mericarps (Fernandes-Júnior & Konno 2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523.). Peltaea polymorpha, as suggested by its name, presents variations in the shape and dimensions of the leaf blades (Krapovickas & Cristóbal 1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216.).

4.10. Peltaea speciosa (Kunth) Standl., Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 18(3): 113. 1916Standley PC (1916) Systematic investigations of Tropical American Plants. Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 18: 113.. = Pavonia speciosa Kunth, Nov. Gen. Sp. (quarto ed.) 5: 281-282, t. 477. 1822Kunth KS (1822) Malvaceae. In: Humboldt FWHA, Bonpland AJA & Kunth KS (Eds.) Nova Genera et Species Plantarum 6. Libraire Grecque-Latine-Allemande, Paris. Pp 281-280..

Iconography: Krapovickas & Cristóbal (1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216., Fig. 5: A; Fig. 19). Fig. 2p

Subshrubs to shrubs up to 0,2 m tall, decumbent to erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.4-1 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; stipules ca. 5 mm, linear, caducous; leaf blades 4.5-8 × 2.3-6.2 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate, obovate to circular, base rounded, margin crenate to serrate, apex acute to obtuse, adaxial and abaxial surfaces hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary, axillary or terminal; pedicels up to 1.2 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx with 7-9 involucellar bracts, ca. 1.2 cm, lanceolate to spatulate, morphologically differentiated into pedicel and blade; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 1.2 × 0.4 cm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals 4-4.5 cm, obovate, pink sometimes with a dark pink centre; staminal tube ca. 1.6 cm, puberulent, with glandular hairs; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 2.5 cm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 5 × 3 mm, dehiscent, muticous; seeds glabrate.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, campos próximos a Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 516 (HUFSJ, RB); 6.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 340 (BHCB, HUFSJ); 10.IV.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 410 (HUFSJ); 22.V.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa 368 (HUFSJ, RB).

Peltaea speciosa occurs across Central and South America, preferably in savannas and Brazilian Cerrado (Krapovickas & Cristóbal 1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216.). In Brazil, it occurs in Bahia, Tocantins, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul (Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded growing in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species is characterized inside the genus Peltaea as the one having stems and leaves densely covered by yellow stellate hairs, spatulate involucellar bracts and stamens distributed equally along the staminal tube (Fernandes-Júnior 2020Fernandes-Júnior AJ (2020) Peltaea in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9184>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). Peltaea speciosa is the most distributed species of the genus with registers from 100 to 1400 m in altitude (Krapovickas & Cristóbal 1965Krapovickas A & Cristóbal CL (1965) Revision del gênero Peltaea (Malvaceae). Kurtziana 2: 135-216.).

4.11. Sida acrantha Link, Enum. Hort. Berol. Alt. 2: 203. 1822Link JHF (1822) Enumeratio Plantarum Horti Regii Berolinensis Altera 2: 203..

Iconography: Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 1, fig. 9 = Sida subcuneata A. St.-Hil.). Fig. 3d

Subshrubs 0.3-0.7 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, tomentose, with ferruginous stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.4-0.7 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with ferruginous stellate hairs; stipules ca. 1.2 cm, lanceolate to linear, persistent; leaf blades 2.6-4 × 0.4-0.7 cm, entire, membranaceous, rhombic to elliptic, base cuneate, margin dentate from half to the apex of the leaf blade, apex acute to obtuse, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with ferruginous stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers congest at the stem apex evolved by the leaves, rarely grouped in 1-3 flowers in the leaf axils; pedicels up to 1.4 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx absent, calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 8 × 3.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, tomentose externally; corolla with petals ca. 1.2 cm, obovate, white with a dark red centre; staminal tube ca. 8 mm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 5-7-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 9 mm, stigmas 5-7. Schizocarps 5-7 mericarps, ca. 5.2 × 2.3 mm, indehiscent, muticous; puberulent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 9.V.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa & S.N. Carvalho 353 (HUFSJ); campo rupestre, acesso pela estrada para Cunha, trilha à esquerda, 19.V.2018, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1470 (HUFSJ, R).

Additional specimens examined: BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: São João del-Rei, estrada para a Fazenda do Pombal, 11.III.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 313 (HUFSJ).

Sida acrantha is a poorly recorded species and it has a questionable geographic distribution. Today, it is considered an endemic species from Minas Gerais and São Paulo (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). Krapovickas (2014)Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118. cited Bahia and Rio de Janeiro as Brazilian states where the species also occurs. In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

Sida acrantha belongs to section Sidae and is distinguished by stems and leaves covered by tomentose ferruginous indument, flowers frequently congested at the apex and 5-7 mericarps muticous (Krapovickas 2014Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118.). In São Paulo state, this species is considered as “in danger” (São Paulo 2016São Paulo (2016) Resolução SMA - 57, de 30-6-2016. Diário Oficial Poder Executivo - Seção I, São Paulo 126: 55-57. Available at <http://arquivos.ambiente.sp.gov.br/jardimbotanico/2017/04/resolucao-sma-057-2016-subst-300616-1_especies-ameacadas-de-extincao.pdf>. Access on 01 December 2021.
http://arquivos.ambiente.sp.gov.br/jardi...
). Monteiro (1949) considered this species as a variety of Sida subcuneata A. St.-Hil. because it presesents differences on the indument only. However, Monteiro did not realize at the time that the name S. acrantha is older and would have priority to be used. Krapovickas (2014)Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118., when reviewing section Sidae, re-adopted the name S. acrantha as correct and synonymized S. subcuneata.

4.12. Sida cerradoensis Krapov., Bonplandia 3: 11*. 1969.

Iconography: Esteves & Krapovickas (2009Esteves GL & Krapovickas A (2009) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Malvaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 27: 63-71., Fig. 1: T); Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227., Fig. 1: G-H); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 1: G-L; Fig. 14: E). Fig. 3e

Subshrubs 0.45-0.6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hispid, with hyaline, yellow to red simple hairs, and hyaline to yellowish stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.3-1 cm, cylindrical to flattened, hispid to hispidulous, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 2 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 0.5-2.5 × 0.3-0.7 cm, entire, membranaceous, lanceolate to oblong, base rounded to subcordate, margin dentate and purplish, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces pubescent, with hyaline to yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in the leaf axils or congest at the stem apex; pedicels 0.3-0.5 cm, cylindrical, hispidulous, with hyaline to yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 7 × 4 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, margin purplish, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals ca. 1.5 mm, obovate, yellowish to orange sometimes with a dark red centre; staminal tube ca. 0.9 cm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary (9-)10-12-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 1 cm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 10-12 mericarps, 8-9 × 2 mm, indehiscent, 2-spined with retrorse hairs, spines 0.3-0.4 cm; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 42 (HUFSJ; RB); subida pelo Tijuco, 12.XII.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 267 (HUFSJ; RB); 6.III.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 343 (HUFSJ).

Sida cerradoensis is considered an endemic species from Brazil and it occurs across all Brazilian regions (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos rupestres from the central-most part of the range.

The features that differentiate S. cerradoensis from the other species in Sida section Cordifoliae (DC.) Fryxell are the purplish leaf blades and sepal lobes margin, besides the presence of 9-10 mericarps 2-spined (Krapovickas 1969Krapovickas A (1969) Notas citotaxonómicas sobre Malváceas. Bonplandia 2: 1-16.). Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227.) comment that S. cerradoensis can have verrucous stems. The epithet “cerradoensis” alludes to the known occurrence of the species at the time it was described since it was considered restricted to the Cerrado. However, the current distribution of the species includes all Brazilian phytogeographic domains (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
).

4.13. Sida cordifolia L., Sp. Pl. 2: 684. 1753Linnaeus C (1753) Species Plantarum. Vol. 2. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp 673-687..

Iconography: Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 3: 5); Monteiro (1949, Fig. 2: 3-4); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 4: D-E); Esteves & Krapovickas (2009Esteves GL & Krapovickas A (2009) Flora de Grão Mogol, Minas Gerais: Malvaceae. Boletim do Instituto de Botânica 27: 63-71., Fig. 1: N-R); Lima & Conceição (2016Lima JB & Conceição AS (2016) Malvoideae Burnett (Malvaceae) in the Environmental Protection Area Serra Branca, Raso da Catarina, Jeremoabo, Bahia, Brazil. Biota Neotropica 16: e20160187., Fig. 2: J); Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227., Fig. 2: A); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 3: A-E; Fig. 14: F). Fig. 3f

Subshrubs 0.8 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, velutinous, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.9-4.2 cm, cylindrical, longitudinally sulcate, velutinous, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 4 mm, linear, caducous; leaf blades 2-5.5 × 1.5-4 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate to lanceolate, base cordate to rounded, margin dentate to serrate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillar or terminal racemes, solitary flowers less frequent; pedicels 2-5 mm, cylindrical, tomentose, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 6-7 × 3.5-4 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally; corolla with petals 1.2 cm, obovate, yellowish, sometimes with a dark yellow or orange centre; staminal tube ca. 8 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 9-10-locular, uniovulate locules, styles ca. 9 mm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 9-10 mericarps, 5-5.5 × 1.5 mm, indehiscent, 2-spined with retrorse hairs, spines ca. 0.5 cm; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 13.VI.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 72 (HUFSJ).

Additional specimens examined: BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: São João del-Rei, distrito de Rio das Mortes, 9.V.2016, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa & L.L. Alves 588 (HUFSJ).

Sida cordifolia is a species with pantropical distribution, occurring on all continents (Fuertes-Aguilar 1995Fuertes-Aguilar J (1995) Sida L. (Malvaceae). Flora da Colombia 17. Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. 142p.). In Brazil, it occurs in all the regions of the country (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos rupestres at the Northwestern area of the range.

This species is characterized by the velutinous indument covering the stems and leaf blades, large petals 1.2 m in length and mericarps 6-10 with two large spines covered by retrorse hairs (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). The species is included in Sida section Cordifoliae and is widely used in popular medicinal remedies in some countries, such as India, where it is used as an anti-rheumatic, analgesic, anti-asthmatic, and diuretic, among other uses (Galal et al. 2015Galal A, Raman V & Khan IA (2015) Sida cordifolia, a traditional herb in modern perspective - a review. Current Traditional Medicine 1: 5-17.).

4.14. Sida glaziovii K.Schum., Fl. bras. 12(3): 322-323. 1891.

Iconography: Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 3: 15); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 4: F-H); Bovini (2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301., Fig. 3: B-D); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 3: A; Fig. 4: K); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 3: K-N; Fig. 14: D). Fig. 3g

Subshrubs ca. 0.45 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 2-8 mm, cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 4.5 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 1.5-4.2 × 0.6-2.5 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate to rhombic, base cuneate to rounded, margin irregularly serrate at the 2/3 apical portion of the blade, apex rounded, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillar racemes, rare in terminal, and some solitary axillar flower; pedicels 0.5-1.2 cm, cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 6-7.5 × 2.7-3.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, with stellate hairs externally, corolla with petals 0.8-1 cm, obovate, white to yellowish with a dark red centre; staminal tube ca. 2 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 10-11-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 4 mm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 10-11 mericarps, 3-3.5 × 1.8-2 mm, indehiscent, submuticous, spines up to 0.1 cm; puberulent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 13.VI.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 73 (HUFSJ).

Additional specimens examined: BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: São João del-Rei, Rua Luís Giarola, 27.II.2012, fl., M. Sobral 14724 (HUFSJ).

Sida glaziovii is considered as endemic species from Brazil (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). It occurs in Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, Sergipe, Distrito Federal, Mato Grosso do Sul and Paraná states (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos rupestres.

This species can be distinguished from others of the genus Sida by its tomentose indumentum present in the stems, leaves and calyx, the shape of its leaves, varying from ovate to rhombic, and petals with a dark centre (Bovini 2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301.; Fernandes-Júnior & Konno 2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523.). The species is circumscribed in Sida section Sida and is very close to S. rhombifolia: these two are frequently confused. In 1977Fryxell PA (1977) New species of Malvaceae from Mexico and Brazil. Phytologia 37: 285-316., Fryxell described a new species based on the same characteristics as S. glaziovii: Sida andersonii Fryxell. Later, Bovini (2001)Bovini MG (2001) Novidades em Malvaceae brasileiras. Eugeniana 25: 22-25. commented on this mistake made by Fryxell and synonymized this name described by him in 1977.

4.15. Sida linifolia Cav., Diss. 1: 14, tab. II, f. I. 1785.

Iconography: Cavanilles (1785Cavanilles AJ (1785) Monadelphiae classis dissertationes decem. Vol. 1, part. 1. Paris, Matriti. 47p., Tab. II); Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 57); Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 1:4); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 5: A-B); Lima & Conceição (2016Lima JB & Conceição AS (2016) Malvoideae Burnett (Malvaceae) in the Environmental Protection Area Serra Branca, Raso da Catarina, Jeremoabo, Bahia, Brazil. Biota Neotropica 16: e20160187., Fig. 2: m); Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227., Fig. 5: B-C); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 4: G-J; Fig. 14: H). Fig. 3h

Subshrubs 0.4-0.6 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 3-5 mm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules 6-6.5 mm, linear to narrowly lanceolate, persistent; leaf blades 3.5-10 × 0.3-0.6 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, lanceolate to narrowly lanceolate, base obtuse to cuneate, margin entire, apex acute, adaxial surface hirsute, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs, abaxial surface velutinous, with hyaline to yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in terminal corymbs; pedicels 1.4-10 mm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline to yellowish simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 3.5-6 × 2-3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, pubescent, with hyaline simple hairs; corolla with petals 0.8-1 cm, obovate, white with a dark red centre; staminal tube ca. 2 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 7-9-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.2 mm, stigmas 7-9. Schizocarps 7-9 mericarps, 2.5-3 × 1 mm, indehiscent, submuticous, spines up to 0.1 cm; glabrescent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 13.VI.2013, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 74 (HUFSJ); estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 45 (HUFSJ); 12.XII.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 261 (HUFSJ).

Sida linifolia is distributed across Central and South America, especially in the tropical region (Fryxell 1985Fryxell PA (1985) Sidus Sidarum V. The North and Central American species of Sida. Sida 11: 62-91.). In Brazil, it occurs in all the states of the country (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species is included in Sida section Stenindae Griseb. and is characterized by leaf blades linear to narrowly lanceolate and margin entire, besides flowers grouped in corymbs and corolla with a dark red centre (Bovini 2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301.).

4.16. Sida martiana A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 1(5): 187. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Krapovickas (2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45., Fig. 2: A). Fig. 3i

Subshrubs up to 0.4 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple, stellate and glandular hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.5-3 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple, stellate and glandular hairs; stipules 1-1.1 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 2-5 × 1.1-2.5 cm, with some purplish blots, entire, membranaceous, ovate, base cordate, margin irregularly serrate and purplish, apex acute, adaxial surface glabrescent, with sparse hyaline simple and stellate hairs, abaxial surface puberulent, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary axillar or terminal; pedicels 0.15-2 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 5-6 × 2-3.2 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, ciliate, with hyaline simple hairs; corolla with petals ca. 0.6 cm, obovate, yellowish; staminal tube ca. 2 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.2 mm, stigmas 5. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, ca. 2 × 1.4 mm, indehiscent, muticous; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 22.V.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 371 (HUFSJ; RB); trilha alternativa de acesso às torres de transmissão, 6.IV.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 828 (HUFSJ, R); acesso pela estrada para Cunha, 26.IV.2018, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1461 (HUFSJ, R).

Sida martiana is an endemic species from Brazil (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Brazil, it is found in Pernambuco, Sergipe, Bahia, Tocantins, Goiás and Minas Gerais (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was registered in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

This species can be recognized by stems and leaves covered by glandular hairs, leaf blades with purplish macules and petals up to 0.6 cm in length (Fryxell 1987Fryxell PA (1987) Sidus Sidarum VI - The Sida martiana (Malvaceae) Complex in Mexico. Sida 13: 12-21.; Krapovickas 2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45.). According to Fuertes-Aguilar (1995)Fuertes-Aguilar J (1995) Sida L. (Malvaceae). Flora da Colombia 17. Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. 142p., S. martiana belongs to a species complex within Sida section Nelavagae Borss. Sida martiana is very similar to Sida luschnathiana Steud., but the presence of small glandular hairs on the adaxial face of the leaf blades of the latter distinguishes the two species (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In the treatment of the section Nelavagae for Argentina and neighbouring countries, Krapovickas (2006)Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45. states that S. martiana was only known up to that time for the Espinhaço Range. However, S. martiana has since been registered for several other locations and states in Brazil in the last few years (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
).

4.17. Sida nemorensis Mart. ex Colla, Herb. Pedem. 1: 416-417. 1833Colla L (1833) Herbarium Pedemontanum. Vol. 1. Augustae Taurinorum: Ex Typis Regiis, Torino. 566p..

Iconography: Krapovickas (2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45., Fig. 2: H); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 6: A-D; Fig. 14: J). Fig. 3j

Subshrubs ca. 1.7 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple, stellate and glandular hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.8-2.5 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple, stellate and glandular hairs; stipules 5-6 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 3.8-6.1 × 1.8-2.8 cm, entire, membranaceous, ovate, base cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces velutinous, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillar and terminal glomerules; flowers subsessiles, pedicels up to 2 mm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent, calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 6 × 3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, puberulent, ciliate, with rare hyaline simple and glandular hairs; corolla with petals ca. 0.9 cm, obovate, yellowish; staminal tubes ca. 2 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 3 mm, stigmas 5. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, 2-3 × 1.5 mm, indehiscent, 2-spined, spines 0.1-0.2 cm; glabrescent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 21.IX.2016, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 604 (HUFSJ).

Sida nemorensis occurs in Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay (Krapovickas 2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45.). In Brazil, the species is found in Mato Grosso, Goiás, Distrito Federal, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro and Paraná states (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, this species was recorded at the edge of seasonal forests.

Sida nemorensis belongs to Sida section Nelavagae and can be recognized from other species in the section by its stems covered by simple long, starry and glandular hairs, flowers grouped in axillary or terminal glomerules, and mericarps with two spines (Krapovickas 2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45.). After consulting physical herbaria and the speciesLink network (2021)speciesLink (2021) Sida nemorensis. Available at <http://www.splink.org.br>. Access on 18 January 2021.
http://www.splink.org.br...
, it was determined that the species apparently has few records in Brazil. It is believed that unidentified specimens may still reveal new occurrences.

4.18. Sida planicaulis Cav., Diss. 1: 24, tab. III, f. 11. 1785.

Iconografia: Cavanilles (1785Cavanilles AJ (1785) Monadelphiae classis dissertationes decem. Vol. 1, part. 1. Paris, Matriti. 47p., Tab. III: 11); Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab.1: 13 = S. acuta var. cbidensis); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 4: A-C); Krapovickas (2013Krapovickas A (2013) Sida sección Distichifolia (Monteiro) Krapov. comb. nov., stat. nov. (Malvaceae-Malveae). Bonplandia 12: 83-121., Fig. 5: I); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 3: E); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 6: K-P; Fig. 14: L). Fig. 3k

Subshrubs ca. 0.3 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, lateral stems flattened, glabrescent, with hyaline simple hairs. Leaves simple, distichous; petioles 3-5 mm, slightly flattened, glabrescent to puberulent, with hyaline simple hairs; stipules 4.5-6 mm, 3-nerved, two shapes: linear and falcate, persistent; leaf blades 2.1-4 × 0.9-1.7 cm, entire, membranaceous, lanceolate to ovate, base oblique to rounded, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces puberulent to glabrescent, with hyaline simple hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary or in 2-4-flowered glomerules at the leaf axils; flowers subsessiles, pedicels up to 1.5 mm, cylindrical to flattened, puberulent, with hyaline simple hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 2.5 × 1.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, puberulent to glabrescent, with hyaline simple hairs; corolla with petals 0.4-0.5 cm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 2 mm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 8-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.5 mm, stigmas 8. Schizocarps 8 mericarps, 2.5-2.7 × 1.5 mm, indehiscent, spines ca. 0.2 cm; glabrescent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 10.IV.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 404 (HUFSJ; RB).

Sida planicaulis has wide tropical and subtropical distribution (Robyns 1966Robyns A (1966) Family 115, Malvaceae. Flora of Panama. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 52: 497-578.). In Brazil, it occurs in all regions of the country, except the Northern region (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found near edges of seasonal forests.

This species is characterized by flattened stems, distichous leaves and 3-nerved stipules in two formats: linear and falcate (Bovini et al. 2001Bovini MG, Carvalho-Okano RM & Vieira MF (2001) Malvaceae A. Juss. no Parque Estadual do Rio Doce, MG, Brasil. Rodriguésia 52: 17-47.). Sida planicaulis is included in Sida section Distichifolia (Monteiro) Krapov., so it has distichous leaves and stipules with 1-6 ribs (Krapovickas 2003Krapovickas A (2003) Sida sección Distichifolia (Monteiro) Krapov. comb. nov., stat. nov. (Malvaceae-Malveae). Bonplandia 12: 83-121.). Undoubtedly, this is one of the species with the most controversy surrounding its circumscription among authors. Sida planicaulis is very similar to Sida acuta Burm. and Sida carpinifolia L.f. In this sense, Rodrigo (1944), Monteiro-Filho (1949)Monteiro-Filho HC (1949) As espécies Argentinas, Brasileiras e Uruguaias da secção Malvinda do gênero Sida. Lilloa 17: 501-522., Borssum-Waalkes (1966)Borssum-Waalkes J (1966) Malesian Malvaceae revised. Blumea 14: 1-251., Robyns (1966)Robyns A (1966) Family 115, Malvaceae. Flora of Panama. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 52: 497-578., and Fuertes-Aguilar (1995)Fuertes-Aguilar J (1995) Sida L. (Malvaceae). Flora da Colombia 17. Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. 142p., among others, established morphological characters that separate the three aforementioned species. However, these species can appear as synonyms, or even in infraspecific categories of each other. Krapovickas (2003)Krapovickas A (2003) Sida sección Distichifolia (Monteiro) Krapov. comb. nov., stat. nov. (Malvaceae-Malveae). Bonplandia 12: 83-121. wrote that S. planicaulis has a broader occurrence on the Brazilian coast, while S. acuta is more concentrated in the northern and northeastern regions of Brazil. Krapovickas (2003)Krapovickas A (2003) Sida sección Distichifolia (Monteiro) Krapov. comb. nov., stat. nov. (Malvaceae-Malveae). Bonplandia 12: 83-121. also moved S. carpinifolia and its varieties to infraspecific categories.

4.19. Sida plumosa Cav., Diss. 1: 7, tab. XII, f. 4. 1785.

Iconography: Cavanilles (1785Cavanilles AJ (1785) Monadelphiae classis dissertationes decem. Vol. 1, part. 1. Paris, Matriti. 47p., Tab. XII: 4). Figs. 3l; 4a-d

Subshrubs prostate. Stems cylindrical, tomentose, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 3-4.5 mm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, tomentose, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules 4.5-5 mm, two shapes: lanceolate and oblong, persistent; leaf blades 0.7-1.2 × 0.6-0.8 cm, entire, membranaceous, oblong to obovate, base cuneate, margin irregularly dentate at the 2/3 apical portion of the blade, apex rounded to retuse, adaxial surface puberulent to glabrescent, with rare hyaline simple hairs, abaxial surface slightly tomentose, with hyaline adpressed hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in terminal glomerules; flowers subsessiles; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes ca. 3 × 1.5 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, pubescent, with yellowish simple hairs; corolla with petals 0.7-0.8 cm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 3 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-7-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.5 mm, stigmas 5. Schizocarps 5-7 mericarps, ca. 1.5 × 1.5 mm, indehiscent, muticous with dorsal prominences and lacking glochids; glabrescent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, campos próximos a Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 511 (HUFSJ; RB); 22.V.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 369 (HUFSJ; RB); 21.IX.2016, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 601 (HUFSJ); 28.VI.2019, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 1655 (HUFSJ, R).

Sida plumosa is an endemic species from Brazil and occurs in Bahia, Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

Sida plumosa belongs to Sida section Malacroideae G. Don, where the species share among themselves a prostrate habit and a chromosome number of 2n = 24 (Fuertes-Aguilar et al. 2003Fuertes-Aguilar J, Fryxell PA & Jansen RK (2003) Phylogenetic relationships and classification of the Sida generic alliance (Malvaceae) based on nrDNA ITS evidence. Systematic Botany 28: 352-364.). Among other species in this section, S. plumose can be recognized by the presence of a few simple hairs on the adaxial face of leaf blades and mericarps without glochids. For a long time, S. plumosa was recognized as a synonym of S. ciliaris var. fulva (A.St-Hil.) K.Schum. Only in 2007 was S. plumosa returned to the species category with the work of Krapovickas (2007)Krapovickas A (2007) Las especies de Sida secc. Malacroideae (Malvaceae) del cono sur de Sudamérica. Bonplandia 16: 209-253.. Here it is illustrated for the first time in Brazilian studies.

4.20. Sida rhombifolia L., Sp. Pl. 2: 684. 1753Linnaeus C (1753) Species Plantarum. Vol. 2. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp 673-687..

Iconography: Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 57); Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 3: 7 e 8); Monteiro- Filho (1949, Fig. 16-18); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 5: C-D); Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227., Fig. 5: D); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 9: F-J; Fig. 14: P). Fig. 3m

Subshrubs to shrubs 0.15-0.4 m tall, erect. Stems cylindrical, glabrate to puberulent, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.5-1.8 cm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, puberulent to velutinous, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 5 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 3-7.2 × 1.1-2.2 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, rhombic, lanceolate to obovate, base cuneate, margin irregularly dentate at the 2/3 apical portion of the blade, apex acute, adaxial surface glabrescent, with sparse hyaline stellate hairs, abaxial surface puberulent to velutinous, with hyaline stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary in axils or in terminal glomerules; pedicels 0.4-1.2 cm, cylindrical, puberulent, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 4.5-5 × 2-2.6 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, puberulent externally, with hyaline simple hairs; corolla with petals ca. 0.6 cm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 2 mm, glabrate; staminodes absent; ovary 9-12-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.3 mm, stigmas 10. Schizocarps 9-12 mericarps, ca. 3.2 × 2.8 mm, indehiscent, spines ca. 0.2 cm; glabrate seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, fl. and fr., M. Quinelato (HUFSJ 405); estrada que liga o Tijuco a Trindade, 21.II.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa & M. Sobral 44 (HUFSJ); subida pelo Tijuco, 12.XII.2014, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa 263 (HUFSJ); 10.IV.2015, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 406 (HUFSJ; RB); 21.IX.2016, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 605 (HUFSJ); 8.I.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 668 (HUFSJ, R).

Sida rhombifolia is a species with wide distribution in tropical and subtropical regions of the New and Old World (Fryxell 1988Fryxell PA (1988) Malvaceae of Mexico. Systematic Botany Monographs 25: 1-522.). In Brazil, it occurs in all states of the country (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos limpos and campos rupestres, as well as anthropized areas and near edges of seasonal forests.

Sida rhombifolia belongs to Sida section Sidae and can be recognized within the section by its puberulent indumentum covering almost all the plant and solitary flowers (Krapovickas 2014Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118.). Sida rhombifolia composes a taxonomic complex within the genus Sida, contemplating a concept of morphological variation of its leaves and number of mericarps (Sivarajan & Pradeep 1994Sivarajan VV & Pradeep AK (1994) Taxonomy of the Sida rhombifolia (Malvaceae) complex in India. Sida 16: 63-78.). Most likely, this species is one of the most collected and polymorphic species of the genus. Fuertes-Aguilar (1995)Fuertes-Aguilar J (1995) Sida L. (Malvaceae). Flora da Colombia 17. Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. 142p. mentioned that the resolution of the S. rhombifolia complex requires a worldwide study and the use of different approaches, not just morphological taxonomy.

4.21. Sida urens L., Syst. Nat. (ed. 10) 2: 1145. 1759Linnaeus C (1759) Systema Naturae. Ed. 10. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm. Pp. 1044, 1145..

Iconography: Schumann (1891aSchumann KM (1891a) Malvaceae. In: Martius CFP & Eicher AG (eds.) Flora brasiliensis. Frid. Fleischer, Lipsiae. Vol. 12, pars 3, pp. 251-598., Tab. 60); Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab.1: 7); Bovini et al. (2001, Fig. 5: E-G); Krapovickas (2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45., Fig. 2: E); Brandão et al. (2017Brandão JL, Baracho GS, Sales MF & Filho MPV (2017) Synopsis of Sida (Malvaceae, Malvoideae, Malveae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. Phytotaxa 307: 205-227., Fig. 6: E); Fernandes-Júnior & Konno (2017Fernandes Júnior AF & Konno TUP (2017) Malvaceae do Parque Estadual do Ibitipoca, Estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Hoehnea 44: 505-523., Fig. 3: F; Fig. 4: L); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 12: A-E; Fig. 14: U). Fig. 3n

Subshrubs decumbent. Stems cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and rarely stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 0.8-1.5 cm, cylindrical to slightly flattened, hirsute, with hyaline simple hairs; stipules 4-5 mm, filiform to linear, caducous; leaf blades 2.5-5.8 × 1.5-3.1 cm, entire, membranaceous to chartaceous, ovate, base cordate, margin irregularly serrate, apex acute, adaxial and abaxial surfaces tomentose, with hyaline stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers in axillar and terminal glomerules, rare axillar solitary flowers; flowers subsessiles or with pedicels up to 0.7 cm, cylindrical, hirsute, with hyaline simple and stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 4-4.6 × 2.6-3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, setose externally, with hyaline simple hairs; corolla with petals 0.5-0.6 cm, obovate, yellow; staminal tube ca. 2.2 mm, glabrate, staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 2.3 mm, stigmas 5. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, 3 × 2-2.5 mm, indehiscent, submuticous, spines up to 0.1 cm; puberulent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, 13.VI.2013, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 75 (HUFSJ); campos próximos a Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 512 (HUFSJ); 16.X.2015, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 454 (HUFSJ).

Additional specimens examined: BRAZIL. Minas Gerais: Carandaí, 16.XI.2013, fr., M.T.R. Costa 4 (HUFSJ).

Sida urens is a well distributed species on the American continent from Mexico to Argentina (Krapovickas 2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45.). In Brazil, it occurs in all regions of the country (Bovini 2020aBovini MG (2020a) Sida in Flora do Brasil 2020 (continuously updated). Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB9203>. Access on 8 January 2021.
http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora...
). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was recorded in campos limpos and campos rupestres.

Sida urens is characterized by its decumbent habit, stems and leaves covered by long simple hairs, flowers grouped in glomerules and five muticous mericarps (Bovini 2010Bovini MG (2010) Malvaceae s. str. na Reserva Rio das Pedras, Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Rodriguésia 61: 289-301.). The species belongs to Sida section Nelavagae, the species of which are characterized by chordate leaf blades, dark green calyx lobes and a constant number of 5 mericarps (Krapovickas 2006Krapovickas A (2006) Las especies argentinas y de países vecinos de Sida secc. Nelavaga (Malvaceae, Malveae). Bonplandia 15: 5-45.).

4.22. Sida viarum A.St.-Hil., Fl. Bras. Merid. 1. 182. 1827Saint-Hilaire A, Jussieu A & Cambessedes J (1827) Flora Brasiliae Meridionalis. Ed. 4. A. Belin Bibliopolam, Paris. Pp. 1-395..

Iconography: Monteiro-Filho (1936Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56., Tab. 2: 2); Grings & Boldrini (2022Grings M & Boldrini I (2022) Synopsis of Sida (Malvoideae, Malvaceae) in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Phytotaxa 542: 105-135., Fig. 12: F-J; Fig. 14: V). Figs. 3o; 4e-k

Subshrubs up to 0.3 m tall, decumbent to erect. Stems cylindrical, pubescent, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs. Leaves simple, spiralled; petioles 3-4 mm, cylindrical, glabrescent to pubescent, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs; stipules ca. 5 mm, linear, persistent; leaf blades 3-5 × 0.4-0.7 cm, entire, membranaceous, lanceolate to almost oblong, base truncate to cuneate, margin dentate at the 2/3 apical portion of the blade, apex acute, adaxial surface pubescent, with yellowish simple and stellate hairs, abaxial surface pubescent, with yellowish stellate hairs; extrafloral nectaries absent. Flowers solitary at the leaf axils or congest at the stem apex; pedicels ca. 3 mm, cylindrical, pubescent, with yellowish stellate hairs; epicalyx absent; calyx campanulate, lobes 5-7 × 2-3 mm, triangular, united until the medium portion of the calyx, apex acute, glabrescent; corolla with petals 0.7-1.1 cm, obovate, white with a dark red centre; staminal tubes ca. 5 mm, glabrescent; staminodes absent; ovary 5-locular, uniovulate locules, style ca. 5.2 mm, stigmas 5. Schizocarps 5 mericarps, 3.5-4 × 2-3 mm, indehiscent, submuticous, spines up to 0.1 cm; puberulent seeds.

Specimens examined: São João del-Rei, campos próximos à Serra do Lenheiro, 27.III.2014, fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 510 (HUFSJ); 6.III.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 344 (BHCB, HUFSJ); 10.IV.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. Costa et al. 403 (HUFSJ; RB); 29.VIII.2015, fl. and fr., M.T.R. et al. 385 (HUFSJ); trilha alternativa de acesso às torres de transmissão, 6.IV.2017, fl., M.T.R. Costa et al. 841 (HUFSJ, R).

Sida viarum is distributed across Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil Paraguay and Venezuela, besides a record in Mexico (Krapovickas 2014Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118.). In Brazil, the species occurs from Pará to Rio Grande do Sul (Krapovickas 2014Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118.). In Serra do Lenheiro, the species was found in campos limpos and campos rupestres, in addition to some anthropized areas.

Sida viarum belongs to Sida section Sidae. This species is recognized by leaf blades with serrated margin in the apical portion, calyx up to 0.7 cm in length and mericarps muticous to submuticous (Krapovickas 2014Krapovickas A (2014) Nuevas especies de Sida, sección Sida (Malvaceae). Bonplandia 23: 65-118.). The species was described based on material collected in the municipality of São João del-Rei by Saint-Hilaire. The type-material is deposited in the herbarium of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris (P). Here, we present a better iconographic representation since the original illustration shown by Monteiro-Filho (1936)Monteiro-Filho HC (1936) Monographia das Malvaceas Brasileiras. Fasc. I. O gênero Sida; Revisão das espécies brasileiras. 1ª Partes. Chave das espécies sul americanas e novidades brasileiras. Ministério da Agricultura, Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 1-56..

Acknowledgements

We thank Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG), for the grants of the first author to conduct this study in 2015. We also thank all colleagues that helped in fieldwork, Isabel Restrepo for the map confection, the reviewers for the great contributions, the curators and teams of the listed herbaria.

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Edited by

Area Editor: Dr. Leandro Giacomin

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    06 Mar 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    16 Dec 2021
  • Accepted
    04 July 2022
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