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Flora of Espírito Santo, Brazil: Bixaceae

Abstract

The present study is part of the Flora of Espírito Santo project and aimed to survey and describe the morphological diversity of species of Bixaceae from Espírito Santo state, Brazil, as well as to provide data on geographical distribution, biology, and habitat of these species. To do so, fieldwork was carried out in several areas of Espírito Santo and the most important herbaria collections in the state were examined. Bixaceae in Espírito Santo is represented by the genus Bixa, with two species. Bixa atlantica, recently described and repeatedly misidentified as Bixa arborea, is a forest tree up to 20 m tall (rarely appearing as treelet or shrub in savannah-like vegetation), with spine fruits and lacking nectaries in the pedicel apex. Bixa orellana, on the other hand, is recognized as a shrub or treelet up to 5-6 m tall, with conspicuous nectaries in the pedicel apex. The species origin is uncertain, though it occurs sub-spontaneously in Espírito Santo state, where it is widely cultivated due to its value as a spice. In this paper we provide taxonomic descriptions, an identification key, geographic distribution maps, photographic plates and comments on the ecology, conservation, and recognition of both species.

Key words:
Atlantic Forest; Bixa; Malvales; neotropical flora; taxonomy.

Resumo

O presente trabalho é parte do projeto Flora do Espírito Santo e objetivou levantar e descrever a diversidade morfológica das espécies de Bixaceae deste estado, assim como prover dados da distribuição geográfica e comentários sobre a biologia e o habitat das espécies. Diversas expedições de coleta foram conduzidas no Espírito Santo e os herbários com as coleções mais importantes do estado foram examinados. Bixaceae no Espírito Santo é representada pelo gênero Bixa com duas espécies. Bixa atlantica, recentemente descrita e repetidamente identificada incorretamente como Bixa arborea, é uma árvore de floresta com até 20 m de altura (raramente arvoreta ou arbusto em vegetação savanoide), com frutos espinescentes e nectários no ápice do pedicelo ausentes. Bixa orellana é reconhecida por ser um arbusto ou arvoreta com 5-6 m de altura, com nectários conspícuos no ápice do pedicelo. A espécie é amplamente cultivada por seu uso como condimento e possui origem incerta, mas ocorre espontaneamente no estado do Espírito Santo. Aqui, fornecemos descrições taxonômicas, uma chave de identificação, mapas de distribuição geográfica, pranchas fotográficas e comentários sobre a ecologia, conservação e reconhecimento para ambas as espécies.

Palavras-chave:
Floresta atlântica; Bixa; Malvales; flora neotropical; taxonomia.

Introduction

The Bixaceae family comprises four genera and 20-26 species, has a pantropical distribution, and is especially diverse in the Neotropics. Amoreuxia Moç. & Sessé is composed of four species distributed in Mexico and South USA (Stevens 2022Stevens PF (2022) Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 14, July 2017 (and more or less continuously updated since). Available at <http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/>. Access in October 2022.
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APwe...
); Bixa L. is composed of five to seven species distributed in tropical America, especially in the Amazon (Dequigiovanni et al. 2018Dequigiovanni G, Ramos SLF, Alves-Pereira A, Fabri EG, Picanço-Rodrigues D, Clement CR, Gepts P & Veasey EA (2018) Highly structured genetic diversity of Bixa orellana var. urucurana, the wild ancestor of annatto, in Brazilian Amazonia. Plos One 13: e0198593.; Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
); Cochlospermum Kunth is composed of 12-15 species distributed in the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania (Johnson-Fulton & Watson 2017Johnson-Fulton SB & Watson LE (2017) Phylogenetic systematics of Cochlospermaceae (Malvales) based on molecular and morphological evidence. Systematic Botany 42: 271-282.; WCVP 2022WCVP (2022) World Checklist of Vascular Plants, version 2.0. Facilitated by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Available at <http://wcvp.science.kew.org/>. Access in June 2022.
http://wcvp.science.kew.org/...
); and Diegodendron Capuron is monotypic and endemic to Madagascar (Bayer 2002Bayer C (2002) Diegodendraceae. In: Kubitzki K & Bayer C (eds.) The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. 5. Flowering plants. Dicotyledons. Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 175-177.). The species of Bixaceae occur predominantly in seasonal climates, inhabiting deciduous or semi-deciduous forests, tropical forests, natural grasslands, savannahs, and sometimes, disturbed environments (Poppendieck 1981Poppendieck H (1981) Cochlospermaceae. Flora Neotropica Monographs 27: 1-34., 2002aPoppendieck H (2002a) Cochlospermaceae. In: Kubitzki K & Bayer C (eds.) The families and genera of vascular plants. Flowering plants Dicotyledons Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 71-74.,b; Stevens 2022Stevens PF (2022) Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 14, July 2017 (and more or less continuously updated since). Available at <http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/>. Access in October 2022.
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APwe...
).

Bixaceae has traditionally been recognized as monogeneric, composed exclusively of Bixa, while the other genera currently placed within Bixaceae have been treated in separated families: Amourexia and Cochlospermum in Cochlospermaceae, and Diegodendron in Diegodendraceae (Bayer 2002Bayer C (2002) Diegodendraceae. In: Kubitzki K & Bayer C (eds.) The families and genera of vascular plants. Vol. 5. Flowering plants. Dicotyledons. Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 175-177.; Poppendieck 2002aPoppendieck H (2002a) Cochlospermaceae. In: Kubitzki K & Bayer C (eds.) The families and genera of vascular plants. Flowering plants Dicotyledons Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 71-74.,b). Phylogenies based on molecular characters supported the placement of all these members within Bixaceae (APG IV 2016; Fay et al. 1988). This hypothesis is currently widely accepted (Stevens 2022Stevens PF (2022) Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 14, July 2017 (and more or less continuously updated since). Available at <http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/>. Access in October 2022.
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APwe...
), although it is not a consensus, as a concurrent phylogenetic hypothesis (Johnson-Fulton & Watson 2017Johnson-Fulton SB & Watson LE (2017) Phylogenetic systematics of Cochlospermaceae (Malvales) based on molecular and morphological evidence. Systematic Botany 42: 271-282.) advocated the separation of Cochlospermaceae. The lack of consensus indicates that further studies on these taxa are needed.

In Brazil, Bixaceae is represented by seven species and two genera, Bixa and Cochlospermum (Antar 2022Antar GM (2022) Bixaceae in Flora e Funga do Brasil. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Available at <https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/FB62>. Access in October 2022.
https://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/FB62...
; Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
). These taxa have been the subject of recent floristic studies, which resulted in the publication of some treatments (e.g., Kirazawa 2002; Antar & Sano 2016Antar GM & Sano PT (2016) Flora da Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais: Bixaceae. Boletim de Botânica da Universidade de São Paulo 34: 53-56.; Fernandes-Júnior & Gil 2017Fernandes-Júnior AJ & Gil ASB (2017) Flora das Cangas da Serra dos Carajás, Pará, Brasil: Bixaceae. Rodriguesia 68: 917-920.; Ribeiro & Loiola 2017; Antar et al. 2020Antar GM, Lozano ED & Sano PT (2020) Bixaceae do estado do Paraná, Brasil. Hoehnea 47: e672019. <https://doi.org/10.1590/2236-8906-67/2019>.
https://doi.org/10.1590/2236-8906-67/201...
; Antar & Sano 2022Antar GM & Sano PT (2022) Bixaceae. In: Cavalcanti TB & Lopes ACA (eds.) Flora do Distrito Federal, Brasil. Vol. 14. Embrapa, Brasília. Pp. 141-150.). In the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil, Bixaceae is represented by two species of the genus Bixa, B. atlantica Antar & Sano and B. orellana L., both of which are the subject of this study.

Materials and Methods

This study is based 1) on the analysis of material collected in field expeditions carried out since 2010 in several areas of Espírito Santo, and 2) on the comparative analysis of herborized specimens deposited in the botanical collections ESA, MBM, MBML, RB, SAMES, SPF and VIES (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 in May 2022.
http://sweetgum.nybg.org/science/ih/...
). Additionally, virtual collections, accessed via SpeciesLink (2022)SpeciesLink (2022) Available at <http://www.splink.org.br>. Access on May 2022.
http://www.splink.org.br...
and Reflora Herbário Virtual (2022)Reflora - Herbário Virtual (2022) Available at <http://reflora.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/herbarioVirtual/>. Access on May 2022.
http://reflora.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/herba...
, were examined. To identify and describe the taxa, specialized bibliography was used (Baer 1976Baer DF (1976) Systematics of the genus Bixa and geography of the cultivated annato tree. Ph.D. Thesis. University of California, Los Angeles. 260p.; Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
). Author names and species nomenclatures follow IPNI (2022). The morphological characters used in the descriptions follow the terminology of Hickey (1973)Hickey LJ (1973) Classification of the architecture of dicotyledonous leaves. American Journal of Botany 60: 17-33. for leaf morphology, Harris & Harris (2004)Harris J & Harris MW (2004) Plant identification terminology: an illustrated glossary. 2nd ed. Spring Lake Publishing, Spring Lake. 206p. for general terms, and Baer (1976)Baer DF (1976) Systematics of the genus Bixa and geography of the cultivated annato tree. Ph.D. Thesis. University of California, Los Angeles. 260p. for terms unique to Bixaceae. The species occurrences were obtained by consulting herbarium data, and the distribution maps were produced using the QGIS software, version 3.10.0 (QGIS Development Team 2019QGIS Development Team (2019) QGIS Geographic Information System. Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project, Beaverton. Available at <http://qgis.org>. Access in October 2022.
http://qgis.org...
). Only non-cultivated individuals (natural or spontaneous) were considered.

Results and Discussion

The flora of Bixaceae in Espírito Santo state is represented by two species, Bixa atlantica and B. orellana. Bixa atlantica occurs in semideciduous forest, tabuleiro forest, and sometimes in disturbed secondary forest or along forest edges and modified lands in savannah-like physiognomies. The species is able to grow among rocks at the bottom of valleys. The species also occurs in the states of Bahia and Minas Gerais, but most gatherings are from Espírito Santo. Specimens of Bixa atlantica have often been referred to as Bixa arborea Huber, an Amazonian species that clearly differs from B. atlantica in having spineless fruits (Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
). This misidentification was reproduced in published articles (e.g., Vieira Neto et al. 2012Vieira Neto O, Fassina GC & Pratte-Santos R (2012) Conservation status of urban nascent in municipal district of Vila Velha, ES. Natureza on line 10: 85-88.; Klippel et al. 2015Klippel VH, Pezzopane JEM, Silva GF, Caldeira MVW, Pimenta LR & Toledo JV (2015) Avaliação de métodos de restauração florestal de Mata de Tabuleiros. Revista Árvore 39: 69-79.; Spadeto et al. 2017Spadeto C, Wilson-Fernandes G, Negreiros D & Kunz SH (2017) Facilitative effects of tree species on natural regeneration in an endangered biodiversity hotspot. Brazilian Journal of Botany 40: 943-950.), and only recently resolved (Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
). The species was evaluated as Near Threatened due to its endemic distribution in the forest physiognomies of Espírito Santo, Bahia and Minas Gerais, a distribution pattern that links its conservation with the conservation of the Atlantic Forest, a domain under severe threats due to habitat loss by agriculture and urbanization (Rezende et al. 2018). In addition to several unprotected areas, Bixa atlantica occurs in three protected areas in Espírito Santo: Reserva Biológica de Sooretama, Reserva Biológica Córrego do Veado, and Reserva Natural Vale (Linhares).

Bixa orellana, on the other hand, is widely cultivated in tropical regions and its occurrence is documented for all Brazilian states. Although sometimes it can be hard to infer the proper origin of the individuals of Bixa orellana (i.e., whether cultivated or sub spontaneous), some collections - as Crepaldi 114 (RB 441580) - confirm the occurrence of the species in natural formations in Espírito Santo, mostly in areas of secondary forest. Thus, in view of its wide distribution and cultivation, there is little evidence of threats to its conservation.

Taxonomic treatment

  Key to the species of Bixaceae that occur in Espírito Santo
  • 1. Trees, treelets or rarely shrubs, up to 20 m tall; leaf base rounded, truncate or rarely slightly cordate; nectaries in the pedicel apex absent, rarely inconspicuous; fruits wider than long 1.1. Bixa atlantica

  • 1’. Shrubs or treelets 5-6 m tall; leaf base cordate or truncate; nectaries in the pedicel apex present, conspicuous; fruits longer than wide 1.2. Bixa orellana

Bixaceae Kunth.

Herbs, subshrubs, shrubs, treelets or trees, frequently with reddish or orange exudate; subterranean system occasionally thickened, forming a xylopodium. Branches cylindrical, sometimes with nectaries in foliar nodes. Leaves simple or palmately compound, entire or palmatilobed, alternate, petiolate, deciduous or perennial, margin entire or serrate, venation actinodromous; petiole sometimes pulvinate at base and apex; stipules frequently deciduous. Inflorescence terminal, rarely axillar, thyrse, panicle or raceme; bracts early deciduous. Flowers conspicuous, monoclinous, actinomorphic, rarely zygomorphic, dichlamydeous, heterochlamydeous, hypogenous, pedicelate; pedicel occasionally with glands or extrafloral nectaries; calyx frequently deciduous, sepals free, (4)5(6)-merous, imbricate, deciduous or persistent, lobes equal or unequal; petals free, 5(6)-merous, rose, white or yellow, aestivation imbricate or contorted, lobes equal or subequal; stamens numerous, connate at base or free, anthers bitecous, basifixed, dehiscence rimose or poricidal; ovary superior, syncarpous, 2-5-carpelar, uniloculate or 3-5-loculate, ovules numerous, anatropous, placentation parietal or axial at base, style unique, gynobasic or terminal, stigma denticulate, entire or lobate, nectariferous disc present between androecium and gynoecium. Fruit capsule loculicidal or schizocarp, dehiscent or rarely indehiscent, unarmed or with flexible spines. Seeds 1-numerous, glabrous to lanate, turbinate, cocleate, globose or reniform, seed coat carnose or not.

1. Bixa L.

Trees up to 30 m tall, treelets or shrubs, orange or reddish exudate present, young branches, leaves and fruits with peltate trichomes. Branches cylindrical, pair of extrafloral nectaries in foliar nodes. Leaves simple, entire, perennial, membranous, chartaceous or rarely coriaceous, margin entire; petioles developed, pulvinate at apex and base; stipules linear to lanceolate, early deciduous. Inflorescence terminal, paniculate; bracts early deciduous, present at the inflorescence ramification, leaving a conspicuous transversal scar, extrafloral nectaries 1, located bellow the bract scars. Flowers actinomorphic; pedicel with five extrafloral nectaries at the apex of the pedicel, conspicuous, inconspicuous or absent; calyx early deciduous, sepals imbricate, 5, subequal or unequal; corolla rose or white, petals imbricate, 5, equal or subequal; stamens free or connate at base, anthers curved, horse-shaped, poricidal, with two linear pores at apex; ovary unilocular, bicarpelate, ovules with parietal placentation, style terminal, stigma lobate. Fruit capsule loculicidal, 2-valvar, dehiscent or indehiscent, with flexible or unarmed spines, spines obscuring the fruit surface or not. Seeds numerous, turbinate, glabrous, orange to red, seed coat carnose.

Bixa comprises four to six species distributed in Tropical America, especially in the Amazon region (Baer 1976Baer DF (1976) Systematics of the genus Bixa and geography of the cultivated annato tree. Ph.D. Thesis. University of California, Los Angeles. 260p.; Antar et al. 2020Antar GM, Lozano ED & Sano PT (2020) Bixaceae do estado do Paraná, Brasil. Hoehnea 47: e672019. <https://doi.org/10.1590/2236-8906-67/2019>.
https://doi.org/10.1590/2236-8906-67/201...
). Bixa orellana is widely cultivated and naturalized in some tropical localities (Poppendieck 2002bPoppendieck H (2002b) Bixaceae. In: Kubitzki K & Bayer C (eds.) The families and genera of vascular plants. Flowering plants Dicotyledons Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Vol. 5. Springer, Berlin. Pp. 33-35.). From four to five species occur in Brazil, depending on whether Bixa urucurana Willd. is a valid name (Baer 1976Baer DF (1976) Systematics of the genus Bixa and geography of the cultivated annato tree. Ph.D. Thesis. University of California, Los Angeles. 260p.; Steyermark & Holst 1997Steyermark JA & Holst BK (1997) Bixaceae. In: Berry PE, Holst K & Yatskievych K (eds.) Flora of the Venezuelan Guayana. Vol. III. Missouri Botanical Garden Press, St. Louis. Pp. 49-495.) or a synonym of B. orellana (Lleras 2015Lleras E (2015) Bixaceae in Lista de Espécies da Flora do Brasil. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Avilable at <http://floradobrasil2015.jbrj.gov.br/FB5743>. Access in October 2022.
http://floradobrasil2015.jbrj.gov.br/FB5...
; Dequigiovann et al. 2018). Bixa atlantica is the only species of the genus that is endemic to Brazil (Antar et al. 2022Antar GM, Lírio EJ, Almeida RBP & Sano PT (2022) Bixa atlantica sp. nov. (Bixaceae), a new species of wild annatto from the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil. Phytotaxa 544: 171-184. <https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.3>.
https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2...
).

1.1. Bixa atlantica Antar & Sano, Phytotaxa 544(2): 173 (2022). Figs. 1-2

Trees or treelets 6-20 m tall, rarely shrubs. Stems with lenticels, indument with scattered peltate trichomes, becoming denser, mostly stalked and ferruginous near the inflorescence, the older stems glabrescent or glabrous, stipule scar evident, transversal, narrow, with two circular nectaries beneath it. Leaves subcoriaceous to chartaceous, discolorous with abaxial surface lighter, blade narrow ovate, lanceolate or, less commonly, ovate, (7.6-)9.9-22.3 × (2.9-)4.1-12.5 cm, base rounded, truncate or rarely slightly cordate, apex acuminate to long acuminate, margin entire, adaxial surface with scattered peltate trichomes, mostly forming depressed small pits concentrated near the main veins, rarely densely disposed, abaxial surface with scattered peltate trichomes distributed all over the surface, venation with (4-)5 primary veins at each side of the midrib, the lowest at approximately 1/4 of the midrib length; petioles 2.1-9.7 cm long, with scattered peltate trichomes; stipules soon deciduous, lanceolate, apex acuminate to long acuminate, 5.9-8.5 × 1-1.8 mm, abaxial surface with peltate trichomes externally, except at base and margins, adaxial surface glabrous. Inflorescence 25-45 flowered, densely covered with ferruginous, stalked, peltate trichomes; bracts soon caducous, 2.2-3.6 mm long, ovate, apex acute, glabrescent with few peltate hairs, mostly near the base; nectaries below bract scar, glabrous, sometimes inconspicuous due to the indumentum. Flowers 3-5 cm diam.; pedicel 5.9-11.5 mm long, densely covered with ferruginous, stalked, peltate trichomes, extrafloral nectaries at the apex of the pedicel absent, rarely inconspicuous; calyx cream-colored to brownish, sepals concave, 6.6-7.8 × 6.9-7.4 mm, wide ovate or orbiculate, apex obtuse, base truncate, abaxial surface pubescent to glabrescent with peltate hairs, mostly near the base, adaxial surface glabrescent with peltate hairs, mostly near the base; corolla white, petals subequal, membranous, glabrous, 16-23 × 10-15 mm, obovate, apex obtuse, base cuneate to truncate; stamens vinaceous with the mid-portion whitish and the base yellowish, unequal, the ones at the base 3.5-6.5 mm long, the others 8.5-11.5 mm long, filaments glabrous, anther ca. 1 mm long; ovary ovoid to hemispherical, densely covered with peltate trichomes, ca. 2.5 × 2-2.5 mm, style 7.0-8.5 mm long, glabrous. Fruit dehiscent, reddish, becoming brownish when older, 1.2-1.7 × 2.0-2.8 cm, hemispherical or widely ovoid, apex rounded, densely covered with ferruginous, stalked, peltate trichomes, spines densely disposed but not obscuring the fruit surface, 11-13 mm long, erect, subulate, base enlarged, rarely branched; peduncle 1.1-2.0 cm long. Seeds 5-5.3 × 5-5.5 mm, ellipsoid or spheroid, brownish to blackish.

Figure 1
a-d. Bixa atlantica - a. branch bearing flowers; b. branch bearing fruits; c. fruits; d. branches bearing fruits (Photos: b-d. Guilheme Medeiros Antar; a. Cíntia Hencker).

Figure 2
Geographic distribution of Bixa atlantica in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil.

Specimens examined: Água Doce do Norte, 27.IV.2008, L. Kollmann et al. 10952 (MBML, SPF). Águia Branca, assentamento 16 de Abril, 18°54’25.3’’S, 40°44’5’’W, 150-200 m, 15.III.2006, V. Demuner et al. 1953 (MBML, SPF). Águia Branca, assentamento 16 de Abril, fragmento à esquerda do campo, 18°54’25.3’’S, 40°44’5’’W, 200-400 m, 16.III.2006, V. Demuner et al. 2011 (MBML, SPF); córrego do Trinta (CEIER), proprietário: Alex Sandro, 19°1’22.2’’S, 40°38’52.8’’W, 170-500 m, 25.IV.2006, V. Demuner et al. 2187 (MBML, SPF); córrego Taquaral, Santa Luzia, propriedade José Rocinha, 18°59’39’’S, 40°41’46’’W, 200-350 m, 2.IV.2007, V. Demuner et al. 3442 (MBML, SPF); Rochedo, propriedade Arlindo Breda, 18°56’45’’S, 40°48’10’’W, 400-550 m, 16.V.2007, V. Demuner et al. 3912 (MBML, SPF); idem trilha do córrego, propriedade Ailton Corteleti, 18°56’39’’S, 40°47’55’’W, 380-560 m, 6.IX.2006, L.F.S. Magnago et al. 1317 (MBML, SPF); Santa Luzia, propriedade Ciro Ferreira, 18°58’40’’S, 40°39’56,1’’W, 170-300 m, 4.VII.2007, R.R. Vervloet et al. 2789 (MBML, SPF). Colatina, Jequitibá (Torre 45/2 - LT 230 Kv) Mascarenhas x Verona, 19°14’2.3’’S, 40°38’16.1’’W, 240 m, 15.VII.2008, A.M. Assis & K.F.O. Faria 1703 (MBML, SPF); idem, 19°15’2.3’’S, 40°38’16.1’’W, 240 m, 23.V.2008, A.M. Assis & K.F.O. Faria 1674 (MBML, SPF); São João Grande (Torre 15/2 - LT 230 Kv Mascarenhas x Verona), 19°26’50.1’’S, 40°47’11’’W, 300 m, 16.X.2008, A.M. Assis & V. Pereira 1823 (MBML, SPF); (Torre 18/1 - LT 230 Kv Mascarenhas x Verona), 19°26’25.5’’S, 40°46’16.9’’W, 200 m, 15.X.2008, A.M. Assis & V. Pereira 1810 (MBML, SPF). Conceição da Barra, Cobraice - Fazenda Jundiá, 18°25’14.3’’S, 39°55’31.6’’W, 50 m, 28.IX.1998, A.M. Assis & L.F.D. Valentin 1804 (MBML, SPF). Governador Lidemberg, Alto Moacir, propriedade Vitório Salomão, 19°18’42’’S, 40°32’15’’W, 350-630 m, 21.II.2006, L.F.S. Magnago et al. 682 (MBML, SPF). Itaguaçu, localidade de Cachoeirão, 27.II.2006, R.C. Britto et al. 26 (MBML, SPF). Itarana, Fragmento localizado na comunidade do Baixo Sossego, 15.II.2011, C. Hencker et al. 56 (MBML, SPF). Linhares, Reserva da Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, borda da trilha da Bicuíba, 55 m, 4.IV.2006, J.G. Rando et al. 150 (ESA). Linhares, Reserva de Linhares, Docemade, 1.II.1972, D. Sucre 8350 (MO, NY, RB); Reserva Florestal da Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, córrego João Pedro, aceiro com José Velascio, 26.IV.1990, L.P. Queiroz 2479 (CEN, HUEFS); Reserva Florestal da CVRD, acesso à casa de hóspedes, 22.VIII.1996, A.L.B. Sartori et al. 213 (CVRD, UEC); Reserva Florestal de Linhares-Cia. Vale do Rio Doce, estrada do Flamengo, ca. 500 m da sede, 19°9’6’’S, 40°4’8’’W, 64 m, 11.V.2000, J.R. Pirani et al. 4674 (RB, SPF); Reserva Natural da Vale, trecho de mussununga próximo ao nativo do contorno do Roxinho, 17.IV.2011, D.F. Lima et al. 210 (BHCB, CTES, CVRD, ESA, HUEFS, RB). Marilândia, Alto Liberdade, propriedade Deuclecio Lorenzini, 19°21’13’’S, 40°31’1’’W, 300-400 m, 19.IV.2006, L.F.S. Magnago et al. 899 (MBML, SPF). Pinheiros, Reserva Biológica Córrego do Veado, trilha de educação ambiental, 18°22’15’’S, 40°8’32’’W, 113 m, 1.II.2007, L.M. Versieux et al. 399 (SP, SPF); Santa Rita, 18°18’37’’S, 40°8’49’’W, 107 m, 31.I.2008, L. Kollmann & L. Magnago 10521 (MBML, SPF); Reserva Biológica Córrego do Veado, estrada, 1.VI.2010, M. Ribeiro et al. 179 (SAMES); estrada que circunda a reserva, 18º21’5’’S, 40º9’48’’W, 23.V.2022, G.M. Antar et al. 4437 (SAMES). Rio Bananal, Alto município de Rio Bananal, 19°14’56’’S, 40°24’59’’W, 300-450 m, 1.VIII.2007, R.R. Vervloet et al. 3106 (MBML, SPF); arredores de São Jorge de Tiradentes, 19°5’48.2’’S, 40°19’4.9’’ W, 7.X.2017, E.D. Lozano et al. 3882 (MBM, SPF). São Domingos do Norte, São Gonçalo (Torre 48/2 - LT 230 kv Mascarenhas x Verona), 19°12’17.8’’S, 40°38’12.3’’W, 244 m, 3.V.2008, A.M. Assis & K.F.O. Faria 1656 (MBML, SPF); trevo para Águia Branca (Torre 58/2 - LT230 Kv Mascarenhas x Verona), 19°7’37’’S, 40°36’41’’W, 150 m, 2.V.2008, A.M. Assis & K.F.O. Faria 1611 (MBML, SPF). São Gabriel da Palha, Fazenda Rondeli, próximo ao clube campestre, 19°1’8’’S, 40°33’19.5’’W, 200 m, 26.IV.2008, A.M. Assis & V.G. Demuner 1565 (MBML, SPF). Sooretama, Reserva Biológica de Sooretama, 74 m, 9.X.2012, M.B. Costa 18 (SAMES, VIES); idem, porção oeste, trilha do barro roxo, 18.I.2010, A.G. Oliveira et al. 705 (SAMES).

Bixa atlantica is most closely related to B. excelsa Gleason & Krukoff, endemic to the Amazonian domain. The two species can be differentiated by the leaf venation [(4-)5 primary veins in B. atlantica vs. 3(-4)], petal color (white in B. atlantica vs. rose), fruit color (reddish in B. atlantica vs. greenish or brownish) and fruit spine density (not obscuring the surface in B. atlantica vs. obscuring the surface).

1.2. Bixa orellana L., Sp. Pl. 1: 512. 1753. Figs. 3-4

Trees up to 5 m tall, rarely shrubs. Stems with lenticels, indument with peltate trichomes of different heights, denser and ferruginous in younger branches, the older stems glabrescent or glabrous, stipule scar evident, transversal, narrow, with two circular nectaries below it. Leaves membranous to chartaceous, discolorous with abaxial face lighter, blade ovate, 7.7-18.3 × 4.6-12.1 cm, base rounded, truncate or cordate, apex acuminate, margin entire, adaxial surface glabrous or with few peltate trichomes mostly near the veins, abaxial surface with sparse scattered peltate trichomes, venation with 4-5 primary veins on each side of the midrib, the lowest at approximately 1/4 of the midrib length; petiole (2.7-)4.5-6.9 cm long, with scattered peltate trichomes; stipules linear 1.0-1.5 × 1-2 mm, early deciduous, adaxial surface glabrous, abaxial surface with densely arranged peltate circular trichomes. Inflorescence 7-25 flowered, densely covered by stalked, peltate trichomes; bracts early deciduous, 5.1-8 mm long, ovate, apex acute, glabrescent with few peltate hairs, mostly near the base. Flowers 3-5 cm diam.; pedicels 5-12.5 mm long, densely covered with ferruginous, stalked, peltate trichomes; 5 extrafloral nectaries at the apex of the pedicel, conspicuous, circular, ovate or with irregular shape; calyx castaneous or brown, sepals concave, 8-13 × 6.4-9.5 mm, wide ovate, apex obtuse, mucronate, base truncate, abaxial face densely covered with peltate, non-stalked, trichomes, adaxial face glabrescent; corolla rose or whitish, petals subequal, membranous, glabrous, 1.8-2.6 × 1.0-1.6 cm, obovate, apex obtuse or rounded, base cuneate to truncate; stamens rose with the mid-portion whitish and the base yellowish, subequal, 7-11 mm long, filaments glabrous, anther ca. 1 mm long; ovary ovoid to subglobose, densely covered with peltate trichomes, ca. 3 × 4 mm, style 14-15.5 mm long., glabrous. Fruit dehiscent at apex, greenish to reddish, becoming brownish to blackish when older, (2)3-4 × 2.5-3.5 cm, ovoid or spheroidal, apex acuminate, covered with peltate staked or sessile trichomes, spines densely disposed but no obscuring the fruit surface, 3-9 mm long, erect, subulate, base enlarged, rarely branched; peduncle 1.2-1.9 mm long. Seeds 4-5 mm × 3 mm, turbinate, reddish.

Figure 3
a-m. Bixa orellana - a. branch bearing flowers; b. branch bearing fruits; c. flower, upward view; d. detail of petal surface; e. flower, downward view; f. flower, side view; g. flower, side view, without sepals and petals, highlighting the pedicel nectaries; h. anther; i. gynoecium; j. immature fruit, longitudinal cut; k. immature seeds; l. opened fruit; m. mature seeds. (Photos: a-l. Danilo Alvarenga Zavatin).

Figure 4
Geographic distribution of Bixa orellana in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil.

Specimens examined: Águia Branca, Parque Natural Municipal Recanto do Jacaré, morro com macega e reflorestamento, 18º58’59’’S, 40º44’25’’W, 23.IV.2004, A.M. Assis & K.F.O. Faria 1026 (MBML, SPF). Conceição da Barra, 18º31’16’’S, 39º46’34’’W, 13.XI.2012, J.M. Ferreira 38 (SAMES); Comunidade Linharinho: Quinta Vanusa (morro), 9.VII.2011, M.G.S. Fink 87 (SAMES, VIES). Santa Leopoldina, distrito de Mangaraí, Cachoeira do Retiro, 20º9’2’’S, 40º26’55’’W, 1.V.2006, M.O.S. Crepaldi 114 (RB). Santa Teresa, Santa Lúcia, 26.IV.1984, W. Boone 72 (MBML, SPF). Vargem Alegre, Patrimônio (lugarejo), H.M. Ferreira (RB00059679).

Bixa orellana is unique within the genus due to the combination of shrub or treelet habits (up to 5 m tall), pedicel with 5 conspicuous extrafloral nectaries at the apex, and fruits with spines. As for morphology, the closest species is Bixa platycarpa Ruiz. & Pav. ex G.Don., which is sometimes treated as a synonym (Lleras 2015Lleras E (2015) Bixaceae in Lista de Espécies da Flora do Brasil. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Avilable at <http://floradobrasil2015.jbrj.gov.br/FB5743>. Access in October 2022.
http://floradobrasil2015.jbrj.gov.br/FB5...
); both species share characteristics such as conspicuous nectaries at the pedicel apex, but Bixa platycarpa is a forest tree reaching up to 30 m tall and showing different fruit morphology. This species has no record in Brazil (Baer 1976Baer DF (1976) Systematics of the genus Bixa and geography of the cultivated annato tree. Ph.D. Thesis. University of California, Los Angeles. 260p.).

As a widely cultivated species, the origin of Bixa orellana remains controversial, although Bixa urucurana (sometimes treated as B. orellana var. urucurana) stands as a potential candidate for a non-domesticated species from which B. orellana was selected (Dequigiovanni et al. 2018Dequigiovanni G, Ramos SLF, Alves-Pereira A, Fabri EG, Picanço-Rodrigues D, Clement CR, Gepts P & Veasey EA (2018) Highly structured genetic diversity of Bixa orellana var. urucurana, the wild ancestor of annatto, in Brazilian Amazonia. Plos One 13: e0198593.).

Acknowledgements

We thank the curators and staff of the herbaria visited; Danilo Alvarenga Zavatin, for sharing photos of Bixa orellana and preparing a beautiful photographic plate of the species; and Cíntia Hencker, for sharing photos of plants of Bixa atlantica. This study was partially funded by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Funding Code 001. GMA thanks CAPES and Idea Wild, for financial support; RBPA thanks CNPq, for financial support; and PTS thanks CNPq (Proc. 3103331/2019-6) and FAPESP (Proc. 2015/05843-4).

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Edited by

Area Editor: Dra. Tatiana Carrijo

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    15 May 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    04 July 2022
  • Accepted
    10 Nov 2022
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