A revision of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion
Transcrição
A revision of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27. With 10 figures A revision of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion (Bromeliaceae) based on phenetic analyses of morphological variation boj_1019 1..27 ANA PAULA GELLI DE FARIA1*, TÂNIA WENDT2 and GREGORY K. BROWN3 1 Departamento de Botânica, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora, ICB, Campus Universitário, Bairro Martelos, 36036-900, Juiz de Fora-MG, Brazil 2 Departamento de Botânica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, IB, CCS, Ilha do Fundão, 21941-590, Rio de Janeiro-RJ, Brazil 3 Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, 82071, Laramie, Wyoming, USA Received 16 August 2009; accept for publication 9 November 2009 Considerable taxonomic confusion exists among species of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion (Bromeliaceae), which comprises the A. bromeliifolia complex. Cluster and principal components analyses were performed in order to identify how many taxa exist in this complex and how they can be distinguished morphologically. Data for 16 morphological characters were scored from 38 selected specimens from different geographical regions, including type specimens. Results from phenetic analyses, associated with observations in the field and of herbaria exemplars, support the recognition of five species, one with two varieties (A. alba, A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia, A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata, A. lamarchei, A. maasii and A. triangularis). Five previously recognized taxa are placed into synonymy: A. maculata and A. chlorophylla (both under A. lamarchei); A. pabstii (under A. alba); A. kautskyana (under A. triangularis); and A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica (under A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia). This revision also includes a key to the species, descriptions, specimens examined, illustrations, photographs, distribution maps and information on conservation status. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27. ADDITIONAL KEYWORDS: Bromelioideae – conservation status – morphology – multivariate analyses – species complex – taxonomy. INTRODUCTION With more than 250 species (Luther, 2008), Aechmea Ruiz & Pav. is the largest genus in Bromelioideae (Bromeliaceae) and in the last monograph (Smith & Downs, 1979) eight subgenera were recognized: Aechmea, Chevaliera (Gaudich. ex. Beer) Baker, Lamprococcus Beer (Baker), Macrochordion de Vriese (Baker), Ortgiesia (Regel) Mez, Platyaechmea (Baker) Baker, Podaechmea Mez and Pothuava (Baker) Baker. Nearly 70% of Aechmea spp. are from Brazil (Smith & Downs, 1979; Luther & Sieff, 1994, 1997; Luther, 2001) and the Atlantic Forest is considered the centre *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] of diversity for this genus and for most other genera of Bromelioideae (Smith, 1934). Infrageneric systematics of Aechmea is considered artificial and poorly understood. The taxonomic boundaries that separate Aechmea from other genera of Bromelioideae are also vague and in need of revision. These problems were noted by early taxonomists (Baker, 1879, 1889; Mez, 1891–94, 1896, 1934–1935) and remain true in the most recent revision (Smith & Downs, 1979). Discordant classifications in Aechmea have emerged because monographers have stressed only a few characters and knowledge of many potentially useful diagnostic data (e.g. floral, seed and fruit morphology) is limited, these often being inaccessible in herbarium material and, thus, variability is poorly understood. Faria, Wendt & Brown (2004) also © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 1 2 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. demonstraded that most characters traditionally emphasized in taxonomic treatments of Aechmea show considerable homoplasy and often fail to delimit natural groups. After Smith & Downs (1979), taxonomic work within Aechmea has concerned mostly description of new taxa, sometimes on the basis of minor morphological variation. Published taxonomic revisions dealing with Aechmea and other genera of Bromelioideae are scarce (Wendt, 1997; Canela, Paz & Wendt, 2003; de Sousa & Wendt, 2008). Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion, the focus of this study, is distinguished from other subgenera by the simple, strobilate inflorescence with sessile, polystichous flowers, entire, unarmed, carinate floral bracts densely covered by trichomes and by unarmed sepals. However, the great morphological similarity shared among the species makes delimitation difficult, particularly when diagnostic characters, especially reproductive, are poorly preserved or not mentioned on herbarium specimen labels (e.g. calyx and corolla colour). Furthermore, the available key for species identification (Smith & Downs, 1979) includes some characters of dubious interpretation, a consequence of incomplete morphological descriptions. At the beginning of this study, Macrochordion included 11 taxa (A. alba Mez, A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia Rudge (Baker), A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata Philcox, A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica Philcox, A. chlorophylla L.B.Sm., A. kautskyana E.Pereira & L.B.Sm., A. lamarchei Mez, A. maasii Gouda & W.Till, A. maculata L.B.Sm, A. pabstii E.Pereira & Moutinho and A. triangularis L.B.Sm.). The subgenus has a distribution entirely restricted to the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, except for A. bromeliifolia, which occurs from Central America to Argentina. Originally established at the generic level (de Vriese, 1853), Macrochordion was later transferred under Aechmea as a subgenus (Baker, 1889). This infrageneric delimitation was kept in subsequent revisions for Bromeliaceae (Mez, 1891–94, 1896, 1934–1935; Smith & Downs, 1979). Between the establishment of Macrochordion and the publication of the Smith and Downs monograph, many species were described, synonymized or transferred to other subgenera of Aechmea. A brief summary of the taxonomic history of Macrochordion includes: the description of A. alba, A. lamarchei and A. turbinocalyx in Flora Braziliensis by Mez (1891–94); the four new species described in a treatment of Bromeliaceae of Brazil (Smith, 1955): A. chlorophylla, A. maculata, A. nervata and A. triangularis; the description of A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata by Philcox (1974); and the placement of 14 taxonomic synonyms in A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia by Smith & Downs (1979). At this point, Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion included eight species. Later, four new taxa were described for Macrochordion: A. pabstii (Pereira & Moutinho, 1980), A. kautskyana (Pereira, 1980), A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica (Philcox, 1992) and A. maasii (Gouda & Till, 1997). Leme (1992) synonymized A. nervata under A. vanhoutteana (Van Houtte) Mez, this last species belonging to Aechmea subgenus Pothuava. Faria & Wendt (2004) proposed the reclassification of A. turbinocalyx from Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion to subgenus Aechmea. The goals of this paper were to conduct a detailed taxonomic study of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion. In addition to field and herbarium studies, we also employed a phenetic analysis (cluster and principal components) as a tool to understand better the patterns of morphological variation within the A. bromeliifolia complex and to show similarity relationships among taxa studied. Underutilized characters received focus (e.g. floral structures) to improve knowledge of the morphology of Bromelioideae. MATERIAL AND METHODS This taxonomic revision is based on herbarium collections, field observations, bibliographic information and phenetic analyses of morphological data. Nearly 600 herbarium sheets were analysed from the following herbaria: ALCB, BHCB, CVRD, CEPEC, CESJ, COR, CTES, GH, HB, HBR, HRB, HUEFS, HUFU, IBGE, MBM, MBML, MO, NY, R, RB, RFA, SEL, SP, SPF, TRIN, UB, VIC, VIES. Digital photographs from G, K, LG, M, P, US and WU were also examined. Field work was conducted in north-east and south-east Brazil and collected specimens were deposited in RFA. Some individuals studied in the field were cultivated at the greenhouse, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, in order to observe in more detail the variability of selected characters. Live blooming specimens were photographed and fresh flowers were preserved in 70% alcohol prior to examination. Morphological characters were documented for both herbarium and liquid-preserved samples. When possible, flowers from herbarium material were rehydrated before analysis. The specific terminology adopted for morphological descriptions follows Radford (1986) and Smith & Downs (1979). Distribution and habitat data were taken from the herbarium specimens and from the literature. Only nomenclatural changes published after Smith & Downs (1979) are cited here. Conservation assessments were generated using the IUCN red list category criteria (IUCN, 2001). The phenetic study included multivariate analyses of cluster (CA) and principal component (PCA). Cluster analysis was carried out to evaluate the relative similarities among taxa and principal component © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION analysis was conducted to identify those morphological traits that were most important in the differentiation of taxa. From all examined specimens, 38 provided sufficient and available data for the analyses, with intact and well-preserved vegetative and reproductive structures. Each specimen was considered an operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and they were selected to represent, as far as possible, the entire geographical range and morphological variability present within each taxon. Data from A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica, A. maasii, A. maculata, A. pabstii and A. kautskyana were obtained from the type specimen only, through analysis of detailed photos and/or direct examination of holotypes or isotypes, complemented with the original descriptions. More than one OTU, including type specimens, was analysed for A. alba, A. chlorophylla, A. lamarchei, A. triangularis, A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata and A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia. For this last taxon, a representative specimen from the type locality was sampled, because of the unavailability of the holotype, including suitable photographs. Sixteen morphological characters (three vegetative and 13 reproductive) were examined on each specimen and scored as binary or multistate (Table 1). The continuous variable of leaf spine length was assigned discrete states based on observed length gaps among species. Vegetative characters were analysed from dry specimens and the reproductive ones were documented from rehydrated or alcohol-preserved flowers. For cluster analysis, pairwise relationships were estimated by the Manhattan Distance coefficient and the resulting distance matrix displayed as a phenogram using the UPGMA clustering method. The PCA was based on a correlation matrix where only those axes corresponding to components with eigenvalues greater than 1.0 were extracted. Both data analyses were carried out using the program Statistica 5.1 (StatSoft, 1998). RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Two major groups were found in cluster analysis, here called A and B (Fig. 1). Group A contains A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia, var. albobracteata, var. angustispica, A. triangularis and A. kautskyana, and was further divided in two subgroups (C and D), thus segregating A. triangularis and A. kaustyana from the varieties of A. bromeliifolia (Fig. 1). Group B comprises A. maculata, A. lamarchei, A. chlorophylla, A. maasii, A. pabstii and A. alba and was divided in subgroup E (A. chlorophylla, A. lamarchei and A. maculata) and subgroup F, with this last segregating A. maasii plus the remaining sampled OTUs identified as A. lamarchei from A. alba and A. pabstii (subgroups G and H, respectively, Fig. 1). In the PCA, the first three axes accounted for 75.43% of the total variance (45.78%, 19.22% and 10.43%, respectively; Table 2). The first component was weighted heavily for leaf blade apex (2; numbers in parentheses refer to characters in Table 1), floral bract apex (7), sepal symmetry (9), sepal apex (10), sepal fusion (11), petal shape (13), petal apex (14) and fimbriate ligulae position (16). The second component was weighted heavily for leaf spine length (2), peduncle bract margins (5) sepal colour (12), petal colour (15) and the third component for floral bract texture (8). The same two major groups identified in CA (groups A and B, Fig. 1) were also segregated in the PCA (Fig. 2A), where A. bromeliifolia and variet- Table 1. Qualitative characters and states used for the phenetic analysis 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3 Habit: (0) epiphytic or rupicolous; (1) terrestrial Leaf blade apex: (0) apiculate; (1) caudate Leaf spine length: (0) up to 3 mm; (1) longer than 3 mm Peduncle bract colour: (0) pink; (1) red; (2) white Peduncle bract margins: (0) entire; (1) denticulate toward the apex Peduncle bract arrangement and orientation: (0) subdense and divergent toward the apex of the peduncle (1) imbricate and erect toward the apex of the peduncle Floral bract apex: (0) truncate; (1) truncate–apiculate; (2) emarginated–apiculate; (3) obtuse–apiculate Floral bract texture: (0) coriaceous with thin apex; (1) coriaceous throughout Sepal symmetry: (0) symmetric to slightly asymmetric; (1) distinctly asymmetric Sepal apex: (0) emarginate; (1) obtuse Sepal fusion: (0) connate to the middle; (1) connate near the base Sepal colour: (0) white to greenish white; (1) yellow to greenish yellow; (2) vinaceous Petal shape: (0) spatulate; (1) lingulate Petal apex: (0) obtuse; (1) emarginated Petal colour: (0) white; (1) yellow to greenish yellow; (2) dark blue Fimbriate ligulae position: (0) at distal end of the lateral folds; (1) approximately halfway along the lateral folds © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 4 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Figure 1. Phenogram obtained from cluster analysis of the Aechmea bromeliifolia complex using UPGMA. Names of each OTU correspond to those recorded on herbarium sheets and are abbreviated as alb (A. alba); pab (A. pabstii); lam (A. lamarchei); chl (A. chlorophylla); maa (A. maasii); mac (A. maculata); bbr (A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia); ban (A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica); bal (A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata); kau (A. kautskyana) and tri (A. triangularis). * indicates the type specimen or a specimen from the type locality. Main clusters discussed in the text are identified by the letters A to H. Names on the left of the brackets correspond to those adopted after the taxonomic revision. ies plus A. kautskyana and A. triangularis (group A) can be characterized by leaf spines of 3 mm or longer, symmetrical to slightly asymmetrical sepals, emarginated and connate to the middle, and spatulate and emarginate petals. Likewise, the taxa of group B (A. alba, A. chorophylla, A. lamarchei, A. maasii, A. maculata and A. pabstii) can be characterized by leaf spines of 1–3 mm, distinctly asymmetrical and obtuse sepals, and lingulate and obtuse petals, with fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 5 Table 2. Factor loadings and percentage of variance for the three principal components obtained from the 16 characters analysed Principal components Characters 1 2 3 Habit Leaf spine length Leaf blade apex Peduncle bract colour Peduncle bract margins Peduncle bract arrangement and orientation Floral bract apex Floral bract texture Sepal symmetry Sepal apex Sepal fusion Sepal colour Petal shape Petal apex Petal colour Fimbriate ligulae position Variation explained (%) -0.467813 0.264660 0.879458 -0.379908 -0.163165 0.242058 -0.741839 0.462271 -0.979068 -0.942595 -0.772111 0.413198 -0.948542 0.926107 0.503039 -0.802943 45.78 0.133173 0.700785 -0.092568 -0.403411 0.791543 -0.111028 0.428431 -0.408898 -0.057405 0.108021 -0.105821 0.780321 0.087313 0.084962 0.793290 0.355665 19.22 -0.450599 -0.465866 -0.015972 0.358292 -0.077763 0.492872 0.350477 -0.656441 0.101977 0.032188 -0.349294 0.242256 0.036852 -0.042609 0.147347 -0.317341 10.43 The analyses suggested little morphological differentiation between A. alba and A. pabstii (Figs 1, 2). Petal colour was the variable that contributed most to the separation of both species from other OTUs along PC2 (Table 2). Apart from the white corolla, A. alba and A. pabstii have morphologically identical floral bracts, sepals and petals. Both taxa also share a restricted and overlapping distribution in the south of Bahia state. Close morphological similarity between A. kautskyana and A. triangularis was also found (Figs 1, 2B). Both taxa are endemic to dense ombrophile forest areas of Espírito Santo state. The caudate–recurvate leaf apex and the dark-blue corolla clearly distinguish these two species from others in the subgenus. As suggested for A. alba and A. pabstii, the multivariate analyses support field observations and herbarium study, that A. kautskyana and A. triangularis do not possess any significant morphological traits to justify their continued recognition as distinct species. With regard to the remaining taxa of the complex (the yellow-flowered species), the analyses did not support the previously recognized taxonomic status of A. chlorophylla and A. maculata as distinct species from A. lamarchei. Cluster analysis suggested a close linkage among these taxa (group E, Fig. 1), distributed in rocky grasslands (campos rupestres), semideciduous and dense ombrophile forest habitats of Minas Gerais and Espírito Santo states. Comparision of PCs 1 and 3 revealed this same cluster of OTUs (Fig. 2B). Floral bract texture was the variable that contributed most to the separation of these taxa from the other OTUs along PC3 (Table 2). In fact, A. chlorophylla and A. maculata resemble A. lamarchei in several reproductive characters, including those here considered diagnostic for this last species (floral bracts ovate to widely ovate, coriaceous with thin apex). High similarity was also indicated between A. maasii and specimens from Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro states, distributed in sandy coastal plains (restingas) and tableland forests (florestas de tabuleiros) (group G, Figs 1, 2B). Until this study, A. maasii was practically only known from the type locality, as most exemplars in herbarium collections had been identified under miscellaneous names (e.g. A. lamarchei, A. bromeliifolia and A. chlorophylla). Aechmea maasii resembles A. alba and A. lamarchei in many morphological characters. This is illustrated in the phenogram produced by CA (Fig. 1) and by the intermediate position of this species on the scatterplot of PCs 1 vs. 3 (Fig. 2B). In addition to the distribution and habitat, A. maasii can be characterized by the coriaceous, truncate–apiculate and densely floccose floral bracts. The analyses also suggested that A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica has a greater morphological affinity with the typical variety than with A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata (Fig. 1). Variety angustispica is based on differences of leaf indument and inflorescence shape (Philcox, 1992). In Macrochordion, we observed that these characters show considerable plasticity under field conditions, within the same individual (leaf indument) or among © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 6 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Figure 2. Principal component analysis (PCA) scatterplots of the first two axes (A) and the first and third axes (B) based on 16 morphological characters of the Aechmea bromeliifolia complex taxa. Groups A, B, C, D, E, G and H are the same as in Figure 1. Names for each symbol correspond to those adopted after the taxonomic revision. individuals of a same population (inflorescence shape). Aechmea bromeliifolia var. angustispica is only known from the type locality, a place also with numerous records for var. bromeliifolia. For A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata, Philcox (1974) stressed the white peduncle bracts as a distinctive character, contrasting with the pink bracts of the typical variety. We also observed other clear differences, such as green peduncle and floral bracts compared with these being vinaceous to dark purple in the typical variety. Field observations and the herbarium study indicated a sympatric occurrence of both taxa in some areas of south-east and central Brazil. However, A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata assumes its geographical integrity along the rest of its distribution in south of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay. Unlike A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica, the results indicate that the maintenance of the status of A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata as a distinct variety seems appropriate. This study provided the first comprehensive analysis of the A. bromeliifolia complex. It supports the recognition of six distinct taxa for Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion: A. alba, A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia, A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata, A. lamarchei, A. maasii and A. triangularis, that were defined on the basis of their morphological discontinuities, following the phenetic species concept (Sneath, 1976). Statistical analyses were important for evaluating the status of some ignored or underutilized floral characters (e.g. sepal and petal morphology). Multivariate analyses were also conducted to better understand the delimitation of others species complexes in Bromeliaceae, as in Pitcairnia L’Hér. (Wendt et al., 2000) and Vriesea Lindl. (Costa, Rodrigues & Wanderley, 2009). Future approaches dealing with reproductive biology, population genetic data and phylogenetic studies will be interesting to provide knowledge about taxa of Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion in the light of other species concepts. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION KEY TO THE TAXA OF AECHMEA SUBGENUS 7 MACROCHORDION 1. Leaf blades with spines 1–3 mm long; sepals distinctly asymmetric, apex obtuse; petals lingulate, apex obtuse .. ..................................................................................................................................................... 2 1′. Leaf blades with spines 3 mm or longer; sepals symmetric to slightly asymmetric, connate to the middle, apex emarginate; petals spatulate, apex emarginate.......................................................................................4 2. Floral bracts ovate to widely ovate, coriaceous with thin apex, obtuse or emarginated, apiculate...................... .................................................................................................................................. 3. A. lamarchei 2′. Floral bracts depressed ovate, coriaceous, apex truncate, apiculate............................................................3 3. Calyx white or greenish white; corolla white. East of Brazil (Bahia and Minas Gerais) ..................... 1. A. alba 3′. Calyx yellow, yellow greenish or reddish; corolla yellow. East of Brazil (Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro)....... ...................................................................................................................................... 4. A. maasii 4. Flowers 1.6–2 cm long; calyx vinaceous; corolla dark blue; fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. East of Brazil (Espírito Santo).......................................................................................5. A. triangularis 4′. Flowers 1.4–1.6 cm long; calyx green or yellow greenish; corolla yellow or yellow greenish; fimbriate ligulae at distal end of the lateral folds. Central America to Argentina ....................................................................5 5. Peduncle of the inflorescence and floral bracts vinaceous or dark purpureous; peduncle bracts pink. Central America to south-east of Brazil .......................................................... 2.1. A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia 5′. Peduncle of the inflorescence and floral bracts green, peduncle bracts white. Central, south-east and south Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay ....................................................................... 2.2. A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata TAXONOMIC TREATMENT AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION (DE VRIESE) BAKER, Hand. Bromel. 34. 1889. Type: Bromelia tinctoria Mart. [= Aechmea bromeliifolia (Rudge) Baker]. Basionym: Macrochordion de Vriese, Jaarb. Kon. Ned. Maatsch. Tuinb. 1853: 14. 1853. = ‘Macrochordium’ de Vriese in Beer, Fam. Bromel. 22: 145. 1857. HERBS, epiphytic, rupicolous or terrestrial. ROSETTES forming a tank, funnelform to tubulose, with numerous leaves. LEAF SHEATHS orbicular, narrowly elliptic to transversely elliptic, entire. LEAF BLADES linear, lanceolate or linear–triangular, sparsely to densely serrate, apex obtuse, acute or caudate, usually apiculate. INFLORESCENCE simple, forming a cylindrical compact spike; peduncle thin, erect, green, reddish, vinaceous or dark purple, floccose or lanate; peduncle bracts alternate, imbricate or subdense, erect or divergent toward the apex of the peduncle, chartaceous, entire or denticulate toward the apex, pink, red or white, cymbiform, apex acute or acuminate. FLOWERS hermaphroditic, sessile, polystichous, congested. FLORAL BRACT bicarinate (the lowest) or tricarinate, having a 3-dimensional form with the flowers in between, entire, coriaceous throughout or thin toward the apex, white, green, yellow greenish, reddish, purplish, castaneous or vinaceous, white floccose, appressed lepidote or lanate, ovate, widely ovate or depressed ovate, shorter to about equalling the sepal length, apex obtuse, emarginate or truncate, muticous or apiculate. SEPALS symmetric to distinctly asymmetric, with a lateral membranaceous wing, connate near the base or to the middle, white, yellow, green, reddish or vinaceous, white lanuginose or covered with white appressed scales, apex obtuse or emarginate, muticous or minutely apiculate. PETALS lingulate or spatulate, yellow, yellow greenish, white or dark blue, turning black after the anthesis, bearing a pair of appendages on the adaxial surface formed by two lateral folds and two fimbriate ligulae implanted on the lateral folds, apex obtuse or emarginate, erect or slightly divergent. STAMENS with antipetalous filaments adnate to the petals and the antisepalous ones free, anthers dorsifixed. STIGMA conduplicate–spiralized. OVARY inferior, epigynous tube short or conspicuous, placentation axial, ovules caudate. FRUIT baccate, globose, greenish or red; seeds many, light pink or pale brown, caudate. 1. Aechmea alba Mez, in Martius, Eichler & Urbain, Fl. Bras. 3(3): 375. 1892. (Figs 3A–F, 10A, B) Type: Brazil, Bahia, without specific locality, 1834, Blanchet 2276 (Holotype G! photo, Isotype G! photo). = Macrochordion alba (Mez) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989. H. E. Luther & E. Sieff, Selbyana 15(1): 65. 1994, pro syn. = Aechmea pabstii E.Pereira & Moutinho, Bradea 3: 86–7, 91, 95. 1980. Type: Brazil, Bahia, Porto Seguro, estrada para Arraial de Nossa Senhora D’Ajuda, 5.ii.1980, Moutinho 59 (Holotype HB!). Paratype: Bahia, Porto Seguro, Fazenda Brasília, 6.ii.1980, Moutinho 68 (HB!), syn. nov. = Macrochordion pabstii (E.Pereira & Moutinho) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989, syn. nov. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 8 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Figure 3. Aechmea alba. A, habit. B, detail of leaf margin. C, flower with floral bract. D, floral bract. E, sepals. F, petal and stamens. A, B (Faria et al. 140). C–F (Faria et al. 139). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 9 Figure 4. Distribution of (A) Aechmea alba, (B) A. lamarchei, (C) A. maasii and (D) A. triangularis. Description: HERB epiphyte or terrestrial, 24.5– 47.5 cm high. ROSETTE funnelform or wide-funnelform, with 15–25 leaves. LEAF SHEATHS 10–15 ¥ 4–9 cm, orbicular or elliptic, adaxial surface vinaceous, abaxial surface green. LEAF BLADES 20–55 ¥ 2–5 cm, linear, concolorous green, apex obtuse or acute, apiculate, margins serrate; spines castaneous, 1–3 mm long. INFLORESCENCE with spike 3–6 ¥ 2–4 cm; peduncle green, 18.5–42 cm long, white floccose; peduncle bracts imbricate or subdense, divergent toward the apex of the peduncle, entire, red, 5.5–11 ¥ 1.5–3 cm, apex acuminate. FLOWERS 1.8– 2.1 cm long. FLORAL BRACTS 8–12 ¥ 11–17 mm, depressed ovate, shorter than the sepals, coriaceous, white, green or yellow greenish with red apex and margins, white floccose or appressed lepidote, apex truncate, apiculate. SEPALS 8–12 ¥ 5–7 mm, distinctly asymmetric, connate near the base, white or white greenish, covered with white appressed scales, apex obtuse, muticous or minutely apiculate. PETALS 14–17 ¥ 4 mm, lingulate, white, apex obtuse, erect; fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. STAMENS with filaments 12–15 mm long; anthers c. 5 mm long. STIGMA c. 2 mm long. OVARY c. 4 mm long, bearing a short epigynous tube; ovules 0.5–1 mm long. FRUIT greenish; seeds c. 4 mm long, pale brown. Distribution and habitat: A. alba is almost restricted to the south of Bahia state, being recorded at lower frequency in boundary areas with Minas Gerais state (Fig. 4A). It grows at 5–700 m altitude, in herbaceous, shrubby and wooded restingas, dense ombrophile forest and florestas de tabuleiros. Conservation status: Near Threatened (IUCN, 2001). Specimens examined: BRAZIL, BAHIA – BELMONTE: Estação Experimental Gregório Bondar, 16.v.1979, Silva et al. 365 (CEPEC); id., 16°08′S 39°15′W, 12.v.1993, Thomas et al. 9892 (CEPEC, HUEFS, NY). CARAVELAS, rod. BR 418, 16 km do entroncamento com a BA 001, 18.iii.1978, Mori et al. 9660 (CEPEC); Guaratinga to São Paulinho, BA km 10, 29.iii.1973, Pinheiro 2040 (CEPEC). ILHÉUS, c. 7 km na estrada de Olivença–Vila Brazil, 30.v.1991, Carvalho et al. 3292 (CEPEC); ITAMARAJÚ: Rod. para F. São José de © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 10 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Baixo, 28.i.1972, Pinheiro 1792 (CEPEC); id., Rod. Itamarajú–Teixeira de Freitas, 3 km from Itamarajú, Fazenda Chapadão, 3.xi. 1983, Callejas et al. 1631 (CEPEC). NOVA VIÇOSA: 22.vii.1979, Martinelli 6025 (RB); id., 10.iv.1984, Hatschbach 47800 (MBM). PORTO SEGURO: BR 05, km 5, 19.vi.1962, Duarte 6782 (HB, HBR, RB); id., in cultivation on Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 4.x.1996, Anderson 48 (SEL); id., 1.ix.1999, Luther s.n. (SEL 081043); id., Parque Nacional de Monte Pascoal, 25.vi.1967, Castellanos 25519, 26515 (CEPEC); id., 21.iii.1968, Vinha & Santos 90 (CEPEC); id., 15°15′53″S 40°34′29″W, 25.iii.1996, Thomas et al. 11161 (CEPEC, NY); id., 12°52′02″S 37°24′54″W, 5.ii.1999, Thomas et al. 11979 (CEPEC); id., Rod. para Caraíva, 6.iv.2003, Faria et al. 143 (RFA); id., Rod. para Sta Cruz de Cabrália, km 7, 20.iv.1982, Carvalho et al. 1227 (CEPEC, HRB, MBM); id., Reserva Biológica Pau–Brazil, 4.viii.1973, Hage 69 (CEPEC); id., 16°25′S 39°12′W, 19.iii.1974, Harley 17183, 17186 (CEPEC, RB); id., 19.iv. 1982, Carvalho et al. 1187 (CEPEC); id., 16°23′27″S 39°10′48″W, 4.iv.2003, Faria et al. 139 (RFA). POTIRAGUÁ: Road to Potiraguá, 26.3 km da rodovia BR-415, 15°22′38″S 39°58′28″W, 2.xi.2000, Jardim et al. 3139 (CEPEC, NY); id., Road Una–Olivença, 16.vi.1971, Pinheiro 1379 (CEPEC); id., Rod. Porto Seguro– Eunápolis, km 12, 4.iv.1972, Eupunino 256 (CEPEC); id., km 8, 26.xi.1975, Hage 138 (CEPEC, RB). STa CRUZ DE CABRÁLIA, 6.iv.1979, Mori et al. 11692 (CEPEC); id., estrada para Porto Seguro, 19.iii.1968, Vinha & Santos 64 (CEPEC); id., 21.v.1985, Martinelli et al. 11135 (NY, RB); id., estrada para Santo André, 16°15′S 39°1′30″W, 17.vi.1980, Silva & Brito 878 (CEPEC); id., 16°7′90″S 38°59′39″W, 5.iv.2003, Faria et al. 140 (RFA), id., 16°14′43″S 39°1′50″W, 5.iv.2003, Faria et al. 141, 142 (RFA); id., próximo ao lixão, 7.iv. 2003, Faria et al. 145 (RFA); id., Reserva Biológica do Pau Brazil, 17.ix.1971, Santos 1953 (CEPEC); id., rodovia Estação Ecológica Pau Brazil– Sta Cruz, 5–7 km NE da Estação, 16°23′S 39°08′W, 5.vii.1979, Mori et al. 12088 (ALCB, CEPEC). STa TERESINHA: in cultivation on Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 10.iii.1997, Berg s.n. (SEL 076901); id., 6.v.2002, Luther s.n. (SEL 086394). TEIXEIRA DE FREITAS: Vale do Rio Alcobaça, 12.v.1971, Santos 1624 (CEPEC). UNA, estrada Una–Olivença, km 4, 12.viii.1994, Ramírez et al. 478 (CEPEC); id., Reserva Biológica de Una, 2.iv.2003, Wendt et al. 478A (RFA); id., in cultivation on UFRJ, 5.i.2004, Wendt et al. 462 (RFA); id., Reserva Biológica do Mico–Leão, entrada km 16 da rodovia BR 001 Ihéus–Una, Fazenda Dois de Julho, 15°09′S 39°05′W, 14.vii.1993, Jardim et al. 156 (CEPEC); id., 20.vii.1996, Amorim 1847 (CEPEC); id., rodovia Olivença–Una, km 35, próximo a Reserva Biológica do Mico Leão, 2.vi.1981, Hage & Santos 819 (CEPEC, RB); id., 19.v.1985, Martinelli et al. 11121 (NY, RB). MINAS GERAIS – SALTO DA DIVISA: 3.vi.1990, Hatschbach 54114 (MBM); id., Fazenda Santana, 16°04′16,2″S 40°03′19″W, 20.ii.2003, Lombardi et al. 5094 (BHCB); STa MARIA DO SALTO: Fazenda Duas Barras, 16°24′40,7″S 40,2°50,5′W, 23.viii.2003, Lombardi et al. 5409 (RFA). Notes: When Pereira & Moutinho (1980) described A. pabstii, they proposed an affinity with A. lamarchei, A. chlorophylla and A. triangularis. Even although the white corolla was considered relevant for the identification of this species, the authors disregarded the fact that the same character was found in A. alba, described almost 90 years earlier (Mez, 1891–94) for the same region of A. pabstii. The fact that A. alba was described as having petiolate leaves and that this feature was stressed by Smith & Downs (1979) in the taxonomic treatment of the subgenus, could explain why, until now, A. alba and A. pabstii were considered distinct species. We did not detect, however, the presence of petiolate leaves in the holotype or isotype of A. alba or in other herbarium specimens examined in this study. The phenetic analyses suggested a close affinity between A. alba and A. pabstii. The comparision of type materials and original descriptions indicate that they should be treated as synonyms. Aechmea alba can be characterized by the coriaceous, depressed ovate and truncate–apiculate floral bracts (Fig. 3D) and, especially, by the white calyx and corolla (Fig. 10A, B). It resembles A. lamarchei and A. maasii in having leaf spines up to 3 mm long, obtuse and distinctly asymmetric sepals and obtuse, lingulate petals with fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds (Fig. 3B, E, F). The species is well represented in herbaria, where most of the exemplars were previously erroneously identified as A. lamarchei or A. chlorophylla. 2. Aechmea bromeliifolia (Rudge) Baker, in Bentham & Hooker f., Gen. pl. 3: 664. 1883. Description: HERB epiphytic, rupicolous or terrestrial, 50.5–100 cm high. ROSETTE funnelform or tubular, with 15–20 leaves. LEAF SHEATHS 13.5– 34.5 ¥ 4–15.5 cm, elliptic to narrow-elliptic. LEAF BLADES 26.5–85.5 ¥ 3–8 cm, linear or lanceolate, apex obtuse or acute, apiculate, margins serrate or sparsely serrate. INFLORESCENCE with spike 4.5– 13 ¥ 2–4 cm; peduncle 40.5–90 cm long, white lanate; peduncle bracts imbricate or subdense, erect or divergent toward the apex of the peduncle, entire, 8–17.5 ¥ 1.5–2.5 cm, apex acuminate. FLOWERS 1.4– 1.6 cm long. FLORAL BRACTS 8–11 ¥ 14–16 mm, depressed ovate, shorter than the sepals, coriaceous, white lanate, apex truncate or truncate–emarginate, muticous. SEPALS 5–8 ¥ 5–7 mm, symmetric to slightly asymmetric, connate to the middle, white lanuginose, apex emarginate, muticous. PETALS © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 11–12 ¥ 4–5 mm, spatulate, apex emarginate, erect or slightly divergent; fimbriate ligulae at distal end of the lateral folds. STAMENS with filaments 6.5–8 mm long; anthers 3–4 mm long. STIGMA c. 1 mm long. OVARY c. 4 mm long, bearing a short epigynous tube; ovules c. 0.5 mm long. FRUITS greenish; seeds c. 4 mm long, pale brown. 2.1. Aechmea bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia (Figs 5A–E, 10C, D) Type: Guiana Francesa, s.d., Martin s.n. (Holotype BM! photo). Basionym: Tillandsia bromeliaefolia Rudge, Pl. Guian. 32, t. 50. 1807. = Macrochordion bromeliifolia (Rudge) Beer in L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989. H. E. Luther & E. Sieff, Selbyana 15(1): 65. 1994, pro syn. = Aechmea lagenaria Mez, in Martius, Eichler & Urbain, Fl. Bras. 3(3): 372. 1892. Type: Brazil, viii.1884, Morren Hortus s.n. (Holotype LG! photo), syn. nov. = Aechmea bromeliifolia var. angustispica Philcox, Kew Bull. 47(2): 268, 270. 1992. Type: Brazil, Bahia, 27.5 km south-east de Morro do Chapéu, on road to Mundo Novo, i.1977, Storr 145 (Holotype CEPEC!, Isotype K! photo), syn. nov. Description: LEAF SHEATHS with adaxial surface vinaceous or purpureous, abaxial surface green or sometimes reddish. LEAF BLADES concolorous green or concolorous reddish, sometimes with abaxial surface reddish and adaxial surface green, margins serrate or sparsely serrate; spines black or sometimes reddish, 0.3–1 cm long. INFLORESCENCE with peduncle vinaceous or dark purple; peduncle bracts pink. FLORAL BRACTS vinaceous or purplish. SEPALS green or yellow–greenish. PETALS yellow or yellow–greenish. Distribution and habitat: Aechmea bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia occurs from Central America (Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras), to northwest of South America (Guianas, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia) and Brazil (Maranhão, Ceará, Bahia, Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Tocantins, Goiás, Mato Grosso, Amapá, Roraima, Pará, Amazonas and Rondônia states and in Distrito Federal (Fig. 6). It grows at 140–1700 m altitude, in Amazonian campinas and terra firme forests, semi-deciduous forests, savannas (cerrados), rocky grasslands (campos rupestres) and caatinga vegetation. Conservation status: Least Concern (IUCN, 2001). Specimens Examined: BOLIVIA, BENI – VACA DIEZ: camino de Riberalta hacia Guayaramerín, 18°08′S 65°45′W, 15.viii.2000, Kromer & Acebey 1450 (SEL); id., on road to Cachuela Esperanza, 11°05′S 65°50′W, 7.ix.1981, Solomon 6179 (MO, SEL). CHUQUISACA – 11 HERNANDO SILES: 10 km de Monteagudo a Padilla, 19°48′S 64°01′W, 1.vii.1995, Kessler et al. 4973 (SEL). LA PAZ – FRANZ TAMAYO: Parque Nacional Madidi, refugio Chalalán, campamento Estabon y alrededores, 14°27′S 67°56′W, 24.iv.2000, Kromer & Acebey 1100 (SEL). SUD YUNGAS: rio Bopi, San Bartolome, near Calisaya, vii.1939, Krukoff 10248 (GH, NY); id., 5 km de Chamaca a La Asunta, 16°13′S 67°13′W, 6.x.1995, Kessler et al. 5812 (SEL). PANDO – NICOLAS SUÁREZ: junto a Puerto Rico, riberas del río Tahuamanu, 26.i.1983, Casas 8484 (NY). SANTA CRUZ – CHIQUITOS: Santiago, 3.ix.1942, Cutler 7035 (GH). ICHILO: 4 km south-west campamento Macuñucu, 17°44′S 63°35′, 27.ix.1996, Kessler et al. 8684 (SEL). NUFLO DE CHÁVEZ: 17°47′S 63°11′W, 26.vii.1987, Nee 35769, 35771 (NY). VELASCO: campamento El Refugio, 14°46′39″S 61°02′52″W, 15.x.1994, Gullén & Choré 2354 (WU). TARIJA – Aniceto ARCE: Bermejo, 9 km west and road Sta Cruz–Samaipata, 3.viii.1982, Till 145 (WU). BRAZIL, AMAZONAS – distrito agropecuário da SUFRAMA, 80 km de Manaus, 02°26′S 59°48′W, 23.vi.1992, Nee 42834 (NY); Manaus–Caracaraí road, km 130, Igarapé, Lages, 9.v.1974, Prance et al. 21054 (NY); Manaus– Itacoatiara highway, km 202, near Rio Urubu, 19.xii.1966, Prance et al. 3736 (NY); rio Cuieras, below mouth of rio Brancinho, 29.ix.1971, Prance et al. 15038 (NY); id., 15.ix.1973, Prance et al. 17958 (NY); id., 02°41′S 60°19′W, 21.vi.1992, Mori & Gracie 22429 (NY); rio Cunhuá, Deni indian village, 06°43′S 66 47′W, 28.ix.1971, Prance et al. 16471 (NY); Xiborem, rio Negro, 19.viii.1928, Luetzelburg 22013 (R). AMAPÁ – rio Araguari, road side forest between Porto Platón and Macapá, 18.ix.1961, Pires et al. 51090 (NY). BAHIA – ABAÍRA: distrito de Catolés, 13°17′30″S 41°52′39″W, 19.ix.1999, Nunes et al. 75 (HUEFS). BARRA DE ESTIVA–ITUAÇU: 23.iii.1980, Araújo 280 (HRB, RB). CAETÉ–AÇU: cachoeira da Fumaça, 30.iii.1993, Esteves & Kameyana 2527 (SP). CAETITÉ: on road to Brejinho das Ametistas, 14°07′S 42°30′W, 13.iv.1980, Harley et al. 21317 (CEPEC); id., 14°04′49″S 42°30′50″W, 7.viii.1996, Carvalho et al. 6255 (CEPEC). IBIQUERA: 13°3′09″S 41°18′33″W, 22.vi.1978, Vaillant 64 (RB); Ibiquera–Cascavel, trilha para o Rumo (Machobongo), entre Riachão e Morro do Chapéu, 4.xi.1989, Ferreira 243 (HRB, RB). ITIRUÇÚ–MARACÁS: km 29, Fazenda Contendas, 7.vii.1971, Pinheiro 1429 (CEPEC). ITUAÇÚ: arredores do Morro da Mangabeira, 13°50′22″S 41°18′43″W, 20.vi.1987, Queiroz et al. 1628 (HUEFS). LENÇÓIS: Serra da Chapadinha, 12°27′13″S 41°26′50″W, 30.vii.1994, Pereira et al. 328 (ALCB); id., 12°27′35″S 41°26′25″W, 27.x.1994, Carvalho et al. 1108 (ALCB). MARACÁS: Fazenda Gameleira, rod. BA 250, trecho Itiriçú–Maracás, km 25, 29.ii.1988, Silva et al. 2247 (CEPEC). MORRO DO CHAPÉU: estrada para Morrão, © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 12 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Figure 5. Aechmea bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia. A, habit. B, flower with floral bract. C, floral bract. D, sepals. E, petal and stamens. (Faria 176). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 13 Figure 6. Distribution of Aechmea bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia and A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata. 11°35′03″S 41°11′31″W, 5.viii.2001, Nonato et al. 975 (HUEFS); Morro do Ouro, 19.vii.1981, Giulietti et al. 1334 (SPF). MUCUGÊ: 3 km S de Mucugê, estrada para Jussiapi, 13°00′S 41°24′W, 26.vii.1979, Mori et al. 12649 (RB); Mucugê–Guiné, 5 km de Mucugê, 7.ix.1981, Furlan et al. 1958 (CTES, RB, SPF). PALMEIRAS: Morro Pai Inácio, 14.ii.1989, Till 4042 (WU); id., 12°27′20″S 41°28′15″W, 27.xii.1994, Guedes et al. 1386 (ALCB, CEPEC); id., 12°27′31″S 41°28′17″W, 24.iv.1995, Costa et al. 1763 (ALCB). PIATÃ: Serra do Atalho, entre Cravada e Cravadinha, 13°07′S 41°54′W, 22.viii.1992, Ganev 940 (HUEFS). RIO DE CONTAS: 9–11 km N de Rio de Contas, estrada para o povoado Mato Grosso, 13°32′S 41°46′W, 20.vii.1979, Mori et al. 12331 (CEPEC). SÃO FELIPE: 16.vii.1978, Heringer et al. 17116 (IBGE). SEABRA: Morro do Pai Inácio, N da BR 242, 45 km de Seabra, 14.ii. 1989, Till 4040 (WU); Serra do Sincorá, 20 km west of Barra da Estiva, 13°35′S 41°27′W, 22.iii.1980, Harley et al. 20721 (CEPEC, SPF); vicinity of Toca da Onça, vi.1915, Rose & Russell 20108 (GH photo). CEARÁ – BATURITÉ: Serra do Baturité, 28.i.1974, Reitz 7556 (HBR). CRATO: 12 km south-west of Crato, on road to Exú, Serra do Araripe, 7°14′55″S 39°29′53″W, 30.vii.1997, Thomas et al. 11693 (CEPEC); Jaquara, Serra do Araripe, 11.ii.1935, Luetzelburg 26461 (GH). UBAJARA: Parque Nacional de Ubajara, 03°49′S 40°53′W, 12.viii.1998, Martinelli et al. 15055 (RB). DISTRITO FEDERAL – BRASÍLIA: APA de Cafuninga, 15°33′S 48°06′W, 11.ix.1990, Azevedo & Alvarenga 930 (IBGE); c. 10 km east of Brasília, near Sobradinho, 1.x.1965, Irwin et al. 8861 (NY, UB); c. 30 km north-east of Brasília, 14.v.1966, Irwin et al. 15835 (NY, UB); in cultivation on Estação Experimental de Biologia da UNB, 26.ix.1973, without collector (HB, UB); east side of Lagoa Paranoá, 17.ix.1965, Irwin et al. 8401 (NY); entre Brasília e Niquelândia, 10.v.1963, Pires et al. 9717 © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 14 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. (UB); Fazenda Água Limpa (UNB field station, near Vargem Bonita), 21.x.1976, Ratter et al. 3819 (UB); pastagem perto do ribeirão Água Doce ou Cafuninga, 15°31′S 47°58′W, 17.vii.1980, Kirkbride & Kirkbride 1315 (UB); Reserva Ecológica do Roncador, picada R-5, 13.ix.1977, Heringer et al. 63 (IBGE); id., picada R-4, 17.x.1977, Heringer et al. 227 (IBGE); Reserva Ecológica do IBGE, 15°54′54″S 47°53′46″W, 22.v.1989, Alvarenga 268 (HRB, IBGE, RB, SP). GOIÁS – ALTO PARAÍSO DE GOIÁS: Chapada dos Veadeiros, 17.xii.1967, Duarte 10629 (HB); c. 22 km N de Alto Paraíso, 22.iii.1971, Irwin et al. 32963 (NY, UB); c. 7 km by road south Terezina, 17.iii.1973, Anderson et al. 7347 (NY, UB); c. 52 km W de Alto Paraíso, estrada para Niquelândia, 15.x.1980, Martinelli et al. 7537 (RB); c. 56 km N de Alto Paraíso de Goiás, 30.xi.1988, Kral et al. 75765 (SP); c. 23 km de Alto Paraíso em direção a Teresina de Goiás, PN Chapada dos Veadeiros, 13°56′39″S 47°29′38″W, 12.xi.1996, Silva & Santos 3210 (IBGE, SP); Chapada dos Veadeiros, 6.v.1966, Heringer 11096 (HB); id., 24.ix.1967, Haas & Belém 275 (HB); id., 17.iii.1969, Irwin et al. 24633 (NY, UB); id., iii.1969, Irwin et al. 24634 (NY, UB); estrada Alto Paraíso–Terezina, 7 km após Alto Paraíso, 14°06′02″S 47°31′28″W, 7.xii.1988, Neto 129 (IBGE). ARAÇÚ: Mato Grosso de Goiás, Fazenda São José, 13.vii.1972, Leinig 520 (HB). COCALZINHO DE GOIÁS: estrada Cocalzinho–Pirenópolis, próximo a Três Picos, Serra dos Pirineus, 28.v.1998, Forzza et al. 908 (SPF). CRISTALINA: RPPN Linda Serra dos Topázios, 16°45′S 47°40′W, 23.vi.1997, Proença & Oliveira 1784 (UB); Filadélfia, Serra da Mamoneira, 5.viii.1964, Prance & Silva 58571 (GH, NY, UB). GUARANI DE GOIÁS: estrada Posse–Guarani de Goiás, ramal à direita, 2 km antes da divisa com a Bahia, 13°58′S 46°10′W, 29.vii.2000, Forzza et al. 1568 (SPF). MOSSÂMEDES: Serra Dourada, cerca de 6 km Nordeste de Mossâmedes, 16°04′S 50°11′W, 7.ii.1980, Kirkbride 3319 (UB). NIQUELÂNDIA: entrada a direita do km 06, Niquelândia–Companhia de Níquel de Tocantins, 14°25′02″S 48°26′11″W, 29.vi.1996, Azevedo et al. 1046 (IBGE). POSSE: Posse para Bahia, 16.vi.1979, Pereira 22 (HB); road to Cavalcante, 14°S 47°W, 22.x.1965, Irwin et al. 9516 (NY, MO, UB); rodovia GO-118, cerca 14 km N de Alto Paraíso de Goiás, 21.xi.1987, Mamede et al. 87 (SP); Serra Dourada, 1969, Rizzo 4092, 4094 (RB); id., 10.v.1973, Anderson et al. 10014 (NY, UB). SERRA DOS PIRINEUS: c. 18 km E de Pirenópolis, 18.i.1972, Irwin et al. 34489 (NY, UB). MARANHÃO – STA LUZIA: estrada Duas Barracas–Caldeirão, 7.x.1987, Monteiro et al. 20 (HRB, RB). MATO GROSSO – vii.1894, Kuntze s.n. (NY). ALTO TAQUARÍ: c. 25 km sudeste da cidade, estrada para Fazendas Córrego de Laje, 17°50′S 53°17′W, 21.ii.1996, Silva et al. 3010 (MBM). ARIPUANÃ: rio Alto Juruena, vii.1962, Mee s.n. (SP 69028); Camizão, 24.ix.1940, Foster 1090 (GH); Guia, 18.v.1894, Lindman A3521 (GH photo). SÃO FÉLIX: Fazenda Patizal, 12°49′S 51°46′W, 26.vii.1968, Richards 6523 (UB). SÃO LUIZ DE CÁCERES: ix.1908, Hoehne 383 (R); id., Hoehne 439 (GH photo, R); id., ix.1911, Hoehne 4723, 4724 (R). MINAS GERAIS – ARCOS: in cultivation on UFRJ, 5.ix.2003, Faria 176 (RFA); id., 16.x.2003, Faria 179 (RFA). BELO HORIZONTE: c. 140 km north of Belo Horizonte, Serra do Cipó, 19.ii.1968, Irwin et al. 20487 (NY, UB); id., campus da UFMG, 2.viii.1998, Marques & Formiga s.n. (BHCB 42945); id., dependências internas da UFMG, 23.ix.1998, Marques & Formigas s.n. (BHCB 43379); id., Estação Ecológica da UFMG, 17.viii.1993, Neto & França 858 (BHCB, US); id., Horto ICB, Department de Botânica da UFMG, 23.ix.1998, Marques & Formiga s.n. (BHCB 43372). BRUMADINHO: Serra da Calçada, retiro das Pedras, 20°08′S 44°13′W, 5.v.1990, Martins 398 (SPF); id., 20°05′35″S 43°59′01″W, 11.viii.2001, Viana 118 (BHCB). CALDAS: 1869, Regnell III 1255 (US); id., Regnell III 1726 (GH photo). CARMO DO RIO CLARO: Fazenda Novo Horizonte, 26.viii. 1961, Andrade & Emmerich 937 (HB, R); id., 2.ix.1961, Andrade & Emmerich 998 (R). CATAS ALTAS: Serra do Caraça, trilha para o Pico do Inficionado, 10.i.2000, Vasconcelos s.n. (BHCB 52560). CONCEIÇÃO DO MATO DENTRO: Parque Natural Municipal do Ribeirão do Campo, 19°06′12″S 43°34′28″W, 7.vii.2002, Mota & Viana 1833 (BHCB). CONGONHAS: 8.viii.1980, Gurken & Gurken 16 (HB). CONSELHEIRO MATTA: vi.1934, Brade 13971 (RB). CRISTÁLIA: Serra do Batieiro, 14.ix.1991, Carvalho 553 (BHCB). CURVELO: estrada Belo Horizonte– Brasília, cerca 15 km de Curvelo, 26.vi.1972, Braga 2537 (RB). DIAMANTINA: iv.1892, Schwacke 8412 (RB); id., 1.ii.1947, Egler s.n. (RB 59651); id., 3.vi.1955, Pereira 1675 (HB, RB); id., 2.iv.1957, Pereira & Pabst 2789 (RB); id., 3.viii.1973, Seidel 657 (HB); id., 20.i.1972, Hatschbasch et al. 29045 (MBM); id., estrada para Biri-Biri, afloramento acima da cachoeira Sentinela, 14.vii.1996, Parra et al. 108 (SPF); id., estrada para Conselheiro Mata, km 189, 2.viii.1985, Pirani et al. 7928 (SPF); id., estrada Diamantina–Mendanha, km 578, 19.iii.1993, Esteves & Kameyama 2473 (SP); id., km 572, 18°07′S 43°35′W, 26.ix.1994, Splett 699 (UB); id., estrada Diamantina–Turmalina, 33 km de Diamantina, 14.v.1979, Martinelli 5975 (RB); id., road from Sopa to São João da Chapada, 1 km north-west of Sopa, 29.i.1995, Till et al. 11048 (WU); id., Serra do Espinhaço, 3.ii.1972, Anderson et al. 35260 (UB). ENTRE RIOS DE MINAS: 5.ix.1970, Krieger 9114 (CESJ). GOUVÊIA: 30 km by road south-west of Gouvêia, at km 60 on road to Curvelo, Serra do Espinhaço, 11.iv.1973, Anderson et al. 8634 (MO, NY, UB, US). GRÃO MOGOL: campo rupestre atrás da cidade, © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 13.iv.1981, Cordeiro et al. 792 (RB, SP, SPF); id., Córrego do Pasto, 21.x.1978, Hatschbasch & Kasper 41618 (MBM); id., em direção ao nordeste da cidade, 16°32′S 42°55′W, 22.v.1982, Giulietti et al. 3493 (RB, SP, SPF); id., estrada para Barão, 14.v.1998, Forzza et al. 805 (SPF); id., Jambeiro, 7 km de Grão Mogol, 5.ix.1985, Cavalcanti et al. 8550 (SPF); id., próximo a saída da estrada para Francisco Sá, 7.vii.1986, Meguro et al. 8999 (SPF); id., road to Cristália, Serra do Espinhaço, 20.ii.1969, Irwin et al. 23608 (NY, UB, US); id., trilha da Tropa, 11.xii.1989, Pirani et al. 12482 (SPF); id., Vale do Rio das Mortes, oeste da cidade, 24.vii.1986, Mello-Silva et al. 9945 (RB, SPF). INDIANÓPOLIS: parcela 5 UHE Miranda, 20.viii.1998, Vasconcelos s.n. (BHCB 42869). ITABIRITO: Pico do Itabirito, Serra dos Inconfidentes, 2.vii.1993, Teixeira s.n. (BHCB 24107). ITUIUTABA: 16.ix.1956, Macedo 2591 (US). JABOTICATUBAS: Lapinha de Cima, próximo a RPPN Ermo de Minas, 28.viii.2003, Faria & Versieux 168, 169, 170 (RFA); id., km 115 rodovia Lagoa Santa–Conceição do Mato Dentro–Diamantina, 16.viii.1979, Wanderley 5688 (SP); id., Serra do Cipó, 21.v.1975, Reitz 7862 (HBR); id., 6.ix.1976, Menezes 819 (SP); id., 5.viii.1980, Wanderley et al. 218 (SP). LAGOA SANTA: APA Carste de Lagoa Santa, 1995, Brina s.n. (BHCB). MARIANA: Área da SAMARCO, 15.viii.2000, Brina s.n. (BHCB 60049). MONTE BELO: Fazenda Queimada Grande, 21°24′S 46°17′W, 7.ix.1987, Gentry 59138 (MO). OURO BRANCO: 28.xii.1937, Castellanos 20585 (CTES, GH); id., cultivada por R. A. Kautsky, 26.vi.1986, Kautsky 427 (RB); id., Serra do Ouro Branco, 20°28′S, 43°41′W, 12.v.1990, Arbo et al. 3989 (CTES, MBM, SPF); id., 29.viii.1996, Filho s.n. (BHCB 32937, 32938); id., 19.ix.1998, Marques et al. s.n. (BHCB 43368, 43369, 43371, 43375, 43376, 43377); id., 25.iv.2001, Silva 157 (VIC); id., 9.vi.2001, Silva 170 (VIC); id., 10.vi.2002, Paula et al. s.n. (VIC 27384); id., 28.vi.2002, Paula et al. s.n. (VIC 27383). OURO PRETO: 20.vii.1894, Schwacke 10557 (RB); id., x.1896, Silveira 1846 (R); id., Lavras Novas, 23.ii.2002, Paula et al. 4 (VIC). PAINS: Fazenda Amargoso, MG 439 km 16, 29.vii.2004, Melo 1230. PARAOPEBA: 5.x.1957, Heringer 9521 (GH, UB); id., 10.x.1959, Heringer 9505 (UB, US); id., 14.viii.1968, Pereira 10728 (HB, MBM); id., Fazenda das Pindaíbas, 28.vi.1959, Heringer 7053 (UB, US); id., Fazenda do Rasgão, 20.iv.1954, Heringer 3498 (HB); id., 10.viii.1956, Heringer 5328 (UB, US); id., Horto Florestal de Paraopeba, 11.v.1974, Martinelli & Silva 319 (RB). PATOS DE MINAS: 23.viii.1950, Duarte 2762 (BHCB, RB). PERDIZES: córrego da Aparecida, Unidade de Conservação do Galheiro, CEMIG, 28.v.1994, Neto & Werneck 1261 (BHCB). SABARÁ: Serra Rachada, 25.viii.2003, Faria & Versieux 167 (RFA). STA BÁRBARA: Caraça, 22.vii.1972, Emygdio et al. 3579 (R); id., 7.vii.1974, 15 Reitz 7651 (CTES, HBR). SANTANA DO RIACHO: caminho a Lapinha, 19°10′S 43°41′W, 11.ii.1991, Arbo et al. 4888 (CTES); id., PN Serra do Cipó, 3 km da Portaria do Alto Palácio do IBAMA, 25.viii.1992, Pereira et al. 1053 (BHCB); id., 27.viii.1992, Pereira et al. 1048 (BHCB); id., rodovia Belo Horizonte– Conceição do Mato Dentro, 10.ix.1987, Wanderley & Yano 10707 (SP); id., km 125, 26.iv.1991, Pirani et al. 12310 (SPF); id., Serra do Cipó, km 117, 27.iv.1978, Martinelli 4297 (RB); Serra do Cabral: c. 2 km N de Joaquim Felício, 10.iii.1970, Irwin et al. 27369 (GH, MO, NY, RB, UB, US); id., c. 15 km NW de Joaquim Felício, 7.vii.1985, Wanderley et al. 817 (SP); Serra do Cipó, v.1933, Costa 34 (R); id., vii.1949, Vidal s.n. (R 193027); id., vii.1956, Duarte 2703 (RB); id., 27.viii.1998, Filho et al. s.n. (BHCB 43374); Serra da Moeda, 5.ix.1968, Pereira 10730 (HB); Serra de Saramenha, viii.1895, Schwacke s.n. (RB 112219); Serra de Tipahy, 28.viii.1895, Schwacke 11609, 11610 (RB). SERRO: Milho Verde, 30.iv.2000, Goldschmidt et al. s.n. (VIC 24843); id., 24.vii.2002, Mota 1846 (BHCB). SETE LAGOAS: IPEACO, 26.viii.1969, Silva 350 (US). TIRADENTES: Serra de São José, 11.x.1987, Alves 61 (RB). PARÁ – Cupary river, plateau between the Xingu and Tapajós rivers, 18.ix.1931, Krukoff 1222 (GH, NY); Estação Ecológica do Jarí; 0°75′S 52°30′W, 17.x.1987, Beck et al. 134 (NY); Itaibuna, estrada Santarém–Cuiabá, BR 163, km 794, Serra do Cachimbo, 23.iv.1983, Amaral et al. 927 (NY); Rio Curuaúna, Cachoeira do Portão, região do Planalto de Santarém, 30.x.1954, Fróes 31269 (NY, R); Rio Jari, estrada Monte Dourado–Caracurú, 11.xi.1967, Oliveira 3594 (NY); Rios Pacaja e Muirapiranga, 2°33′–50′S 50°38′–50′W, 21.ix.1965, Prance et al. 1409 (NY); Rio Xingú, gleba Bacaja, lote 88, below mouth of rio Bacaja, 3°22′20″S 50°47′50″W, 21.xi.1980, Prance et al. 26373 (SEL); rodovia Belém–Brasília, km 92, 24.viii.1959, Kuhlmann & Jimbo 110 (SP); Serra do Cachimbo, iii.1957, Sick s.n. (HB 4604); 25–35 km de Tucurui, 3°56′S 49°49′W, 4.xi.1981, Daly et al. 1209 (NY). RONDÔNIA – Porto Velho–Cuiabá, Nova Vida, 20.ix.1962, Duarte & Appa 7028 (RB); road Guajará Mirim to Abunã, km 12, basin of Rio Madeira, 5.viii.1968, Prance et al. 6799 (NY); vicinity of Sta Bárbara, 15 km east of km 117, 14.viii.1968, Prance & Ramos 6931 (NY). RORAIMA – estrada Boa Vista– Venezuela, 5 km S de Rio Surumu, Serra Pacaraima, 2.xii.1977, Steward et al. 194 (NY). SÃO PAULO – BOTUCATU: 22.xii.1970, Gottsberger 882 (US). CAMPINAS: 20.i.1875, Mosén 3929 (GH foto). CORUMBATAÍ: Reserva Biológica da UNESP, 15.ii.1996, Paula 1105 (VIC). ITAPETININGA: viii.1901, Wettstein & Schiffner 809 (WU). ITÚ: viii.1967, Friedrich s.n. (HBR 46060). PIRASSUNUNGA: das Emas, 22°2′S 47°30′W, 21.iv.1995, Batalha et al. 401 (SP). SALTO GRANDE: rio Paranapanema, vii.1901, Wettstein & Schiffner 227 © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 16 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. (WU). SÃO PAULO: 3.ii.1929, Smith & Kuhlmann 1801 (F, GH); id., Butantã, 30.viii.1946, Joly s.n. (SPF 16760); id., Reserva da cidade universitária Armando Salles de Oliveira, 23°33′S 46°43′W, 3.v.1994, Dislich 80, 81 (SPF); São Paulo, chácara dos Morrinhos, s.d., Kruse & Pickel 4629 (SP); São Paulo, Cidade Universitária, jardim do Departamento de Botânica, Instituto de Biociências da USP, 12.vii.1993, Pirani et al. s.n. (SPF 78037); id., cultivada no Horto Oswaldo Cruz, 10.ix.1924, Gehrt 13179 (GH, NY, SP); id., Jardim Botânico, 18.viii.1980, Wanderley 210 (SP); id., jardim do Butantã, campus da USP, 1983, Hylio et al. s.n. (SPF 34337); id., mata do Instituto de Biociências, 15.vii.1994, Batalha & Mello 1 (SPF); id., nativa do Jardim Botânico, 31.vii.1939, Handro s.n. (SP 40195); id., Orchidário, 15.viii.1939, Foster 342 (GH, NY, R); id., Parque Estadual das Fontes do Ipiranga, Jardim Botânico, 6.vii.1979, Wanderley 116 (SP); id., 16.vii. 2003, Faria & Sousa 148 (RFA); São Paulo, Pinheiros, vii.1885, Loefgren 2590 (GH foto, SP); São Paulo, Pirajussara, 3.viii.1930, Gehrt & Kuhlmann 42 (CTES, SPF); São Paulo, Santo Amaro, 20.vii.1942, Krieger 178 (SP). SOROCABA: 1.viii.1961, Seidel 29 (HBR). TOCANTINS – MATEIROS: 10°33′S 46°45′W, 8.v.2001, Proença et al. 2510 (MBM, UB). COLÔMBIA, META – cordilhera La Macarena, macizo Renjifo, 1950–51, Idrobo & Schultes 925 (GH). MAGDALENA – PUEBLO BELLO: Sierra Nevada de Sta Marta, viii.1946, Foster & Smith 1465 (GH). EL SALVADOR, MORAZAN – rio Negro, 13°59′27″N 88°7′59″W, 24.iii.2002, Monro et al. 3805 (MO). GUYANA, CUYUNI–MAZARUNI – BARTICA: 12–15 miles from the town, 28.viii.1935, Potter 5332 (GH); Utshe river area, along trail leading to Venezuela, 5°45′N 61°9′S, 25.v.1990, Mac Dowel & Gopaul 2847 (NY). KAMIKUSA: Mazaruni river, 19.xii.1922, Leng 385 (NY); Partang river, Merume montains, 23.vi.1960, Maguire & Maguire 45905 (NY). POTARO– SIPARUNI – Iwokrama Rain Forest Reserve, 4°42′N 58°42′W, 18.ix.1995, Clarke 155 (SEL). UPPER DEMERARA–BERBICE – Demerara river, ix.1881, Jenman 4153 (NY); Mabura Hill, 5°20′N 58°40′W, 4.vi.1994, Kellof et al. 1019 (SEL). UPPER TAKUTU– UPPER ESSEQUIBO – 2°11′N 59°11′W, 19.ix.1993, Henkel et al. 3069 (SEL). FRENCH GUIANA, CAYENNE – Montagne de Kaw, 12.xii.1954, Cowan 38751 (NY). SAÜL: vicinity of Eaux Claires, 3°37′N 53°12′W, 3.xi.1992, Mori et al. 22763 (NY); id., 4.ix.1994, Mori et al. 23781 (NY). HONDURAS, COMAYAGUA – rio Tepemechin, c. 6 km north of Pito Solo, 15.iv.1951, Williams & Molina 18008 (GH). CORTÉS – Ocote Arrancado, 50 km N Lago de Yajoa, xi.1980, Nelson et al. 5946 (MO). EL PARAÍSO – Ojo de Água, 27.ii.1947, Standley 4720 (F). OLANCHO – Poncaya, 4.iii.1982, Blackmore & Heath 1997 (MO). MÉXICO, QUINTANA ROO – 1 km al leste de Chanca Veracruz, 7.v.1983, Cabrera & Durán 4646 (MO). PERU, MADRE DE DIOS – 39 km SW de Puerto Maldonado, 12°50′S 69°20′W, 9.x.1985, Smith et al. 637 (NY). SURINAME, NICKERIE – área of Kabalebo Dam Project, 4°–5°N 57°30′–58′W, 17 ix.1980, Lindman et al. 412 (GH, NY); Lucie Rivier, below confluence of Oost Rivier, 3°20′N 56°40′W, 6.vii.1963, Maguire et al. 53996 (NY); 9 km north of Lucie Rivier, 12 km west Oost Rivier, 3°36′N 56°30′N, 18.vii.1963, Maguire et al. 54258 (NY); id., 21 vii.1963, Maguire et al. 54333 (NY); 12 km north of Lucie Rivier, 3 km south of Juliana top, 3°36′–3°41′N 56°30′–56°34′W, 29.viii.1963, Irwin et al. 55153 (MO, NY); Tafelberg (Table Mountain), 10.viii.1944, Maguire 24276 (NY); Tanjimama River, 20.xi.1954, Mennega M487 (NY). TRINIDAD, ARIMA – iv.1874, O. Kuntze 988 (NY); Arima Valley, Sta Isabella trace, 24.i.1959, Aitken s.n. (TRIN 23688). CARAPICHAIMA – 23.iii.1892, Alexander 5723 (GH, NY). SAINT ANDREW – Balandra, March 1922, Freeman s.n. (GH foto), Long Stretch, 13.vii.1976, Adams 14011 (NY, TRIN). SANDRE GRAND – SANGRE GRANDE: Tractor trace, Melajo forest, 2.viii.1955, Martinez s.n. (TRIN 23648); Valencia, near Quare Reservoir, 11.v.1933, Broadway s.n. (GH). VENEZUELA, AMAZONAS – ATABAPO: between Duida and Marahuaca, near base of Duida, 3°34′N 65°32′W, 28.x.1988, Liesner 25569 (MO); id., Cerro Marahuaca, 3°43′N 65°31′W, 28.iii.1985, Steyermark & Holst 130896 (MO). ATURES: Rio Coro-Coro, west of Serrania de Yutage, 5°38′N 66°7′30″W, 19.ii.1987, Holst & Liesner 3096 (MO). RÍO NEGRO: along the Rio Mawarinuma, Neblina Massif, c. 7 km east-north-east of Puerto Chimo, 0°50–51′N 66°2–6′W, vii.1984, Davidse & Miller 27185 (MO); id., c. 1 km north-east of San Carlos de Rio Negro, 20 km south of confluence of Rio Negro and Brazo Casiquire, 1°56′N 67°3′W, 7.v.1979, Liesner 7266 (MO); id., cerro de La Neblina, camp IV, 15 km north-north-east of Pico Phelps, 0°51′N 65°57′W, iii.1984, Liesner 16813 (MO, NY). ARAGUA – COLONIA TOVAR: 1854–55, Fendler 1352 (GH); id., north-east of Maya, 7 km by air south-east of Colonia Tovar, 10°21′30″N 67°14′30″W, 24.iii.1980, Steyermark & Liesner 121854 (MO). APURE – PÁEZ: selva Cutufí, between Rio Cutufí and Rio Sanare, 7°9–11′N 71°56–58′N, xi.1982, Davidse & González 21955 (MO). BOLÍVAR – Cerro Guaiquinima: 5°45′N 63°35′W, 26.v.1978, Steyermark et al. 117471 (MO); Cerro Socopa, between estado Falcón and Lara, 10°29′N 70°48′W, 29.vi.1979, Liesner et al. 8350 (MO). GRAN SABANA: c. 10 km south-west of Karaurin Tepui, 5°19′N 61°3′W, 22.iv.1988, Liesner 23597 (MO); Miamo, Hato de Nuria, 25.i.1961, Steyermark 88852 (NY); Ptari-tepuí, xi.1944, Steyermark s.n. (GH); represa Guri, 7°46′N 63°W, 31.iii.1981, Liesner & González 11036 (MO); Rio Caura, 2–8 km S del Salto Para (Las Pavas), 6°13′N 64°28′W, 10.v.1982 Morillo © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION & Liesner 9107 (MO); Rio Paragua, Salto de Auraima, 10.iv.1943, Killip 37339 (GH); Serra Imataca, Rio Toro, N of El Palmar,12.xii.1960, Steyermark 87984 (NY). ROSCIO: alrededores del Río Apongueo, 17.xi.1981, Burandt et al. V11120 b (MO); id., ‘El Abismo’, Rio Samay, 4°23′N 64°38′W, 26.x.1985, Holst et al. 2501 (MO). DELTA AMACURO – TUCUPITA: 5–14 km east-south-east of Los Castillos de Guayama, 8°28′N 62°17′W, 1979, Davidse & González 16421 (MO). MIRANDA – Cerro Sipapo (Paráque), 2.ii.1949, Maguire & Politi 28786 (NY); morros de al Guairita, 16.viii.1975, Berry 1025 (NY). PORTUGUESA – 30 km west of Guanare by air, along Rio Tucupido, 9°2′N 70°1′W, 11.iii.1982, Liesner et al. 12488 (MO). SUCRE – peninsula de Araya, 20 km north-west of Cariaco by air, 10°38′N 63°40′W, v.1981, Liesner & González 12050 (MO). TÁCHIRA – 10 km east of La Fundacíon, around Represa Dorada, iii.1981, Liesner & González 10169 (MO); Serra El Casadero, 13 km north of Rubio, between La Dantas and Las Adjuntas, 7°43′N 72°23′W, 12.xi.1979, Steyermark et al. 120133 (MO). ZULIA – COLÓN: intersection of Rio Catatumbo and the La Fria Maracaibo highway, 9°7′N 72°37′W, 29.vi.1980, Davidse et al. 18818 (MO, SEL). Notes: With one of the widest geographical distributions within Bromelioideae, A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia is the best represented taxon of the complex in herbarium collections. This taxon also presents an extensive list of synonyms. Here, we kept the 14 taxonomic synonyms considered by Smith & Downs (1979) and propose two more: A. bromeliifolia var. angustispica (see previous discussion) and A. lagenaria (a synonym of A. lamarchei prior to this study). This last is justified because A. lagenaria shows many typical characters of A. bromeliifolia (e.g. leaf spines > 3 mm and truncate floral bracts) that are not founded in A. lamarchei. Despite the great morphological variation of some vegetative structures (e.g. rosette and leaf shape), A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia is delimited by a set of reproductive characters, including flowers 1.4–1.6 cm long, densely lanate, depressed ovate floral bracts, with truncate or truncate emarginate apices and yellow petals with fimbriate ligulae at the distal end of the lateral folds (Fig. 5B, C, E). This species also resembles A. triangularis in having leaf spines ⱖ 3 cm, emarginate, symmetric to slightly asymmetric sepals, connate to the middle, and spatulate petals with emarginated apices (Fig. 5D, E). 2.2. Aechmea bromeliifolia var. albobracteata Philcox, Ashingtonia 1(8): 92. 1974 (Fig. 10E, F) Type: Brazil, Mato Grosso, 1 km E do km 264, estrada Xavantina–Cachimbo, 12°49′S, 51°46′W, 21.iii.1968, Philcox & Ferreira 4605 (Holotype K! photo). 17 Description: LEAF SHEATHS with adaxial surface vinaceous or purpureous, abaxial surface green. LEAF BLADES concolorous green, margins serrate; spines black, 3–6 mm long. INFLORESCENCE with peduncle green; peduncle bracts white. FLORAL BRACTS green. SEPALS green. PETALS yellow greenish. Distribution and habitat: Aechmea bromeliifolia var. albobracteata occurs from Argentina and Paraguay to central, south and south-eastern Brazil, in Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Minas Gerais, São Paulo and Paraná states (Fig. 6). It grows at 100–900 m altitude, in semi-deciduous forest, cerrados and campos rupestres. Conservation status: Least Concern (IUCN, 2001). Specimens examined: ARGENTINA, CORRIENTES – ITUZAINGÓ: Isla Apipé Grande, Puerto Mora, 1.xii.1973, Krapovickas et al. 24279 (CTES). SANTO TOMÉ: estancia Garrunchos, ayo Chimiray, 6.ii.1972, Krapovickas et al. 21051 (CTES). MISIONES – POSADAS: 28.xi.1907, Ekman 1211 (GH photo). SAN IGNÁCIO: Teyucuaré, 12.xi.1976, Quarín 3502 (CTES). BRAZIL, MATO GROSSO DO SUL – CORUMBÁ: estrada para o Jacadigo, 24.x.1992, Wendt et al. 261 (COR). MINAS GERAIS – BARROSO: mata do Baú, 26.viii.2001, Assis & Ladeira 180, 195 (CESJ); id., 20.x.2001, Forzza et al. 1931 (CESJ). LAMBARI: 6.viii.1967, Pereira 10615 (HB, MBM). SANTO ANTÔNIO DO ITAMBÉ: próximo ao Parque Estadual do Pico do Itambé, 29.viii.2003, Faria & Versieux 171 (RFA). SÃO GONÇALO DO RIO PRETO: P.E. do Rio Preto, 18°6′8″S 43°20′22″W, 14.vi.2002, Lombardi et al. 4857 (BHCB). UBERLÂNDIA: clube caça de pesca Itororó, 30.viii.2001, Araújo s.n. (HUFU 33309). VIÇOSA: in cultivation on Horto Botânico da UFV, 18.ix.1979, Filho s.n. (VIC 6337); id., 20.ix.1999, Goldschmidt s.n. (VIC 23790). PARANÁ – GUAÍRA: Sete Quedas, 27.i.1962, Reitz & Klein 12151 (HBR). GUARATUBA: 30.vii.1972, Hatschbach 29834 (MBM). JAGUARIAÍVA: 26.x.1910, Dusén 10779 (GH photo); id., 17.viii.1914, Dusén 15446 (GH photo); id., 18.xi.1914, Dusén 16072 (GH, MO, NY); id., 27.viii.1915, Dusén s.n. (GH photo); id., Parque Estadual do Cerrado, 17.x.2000, Lisingen 57 (MBM). PIRAÍ: 3.viii.1973, Seidel 658 (HB). PONTA GROSSA: Parque Velha, 2.x.1965, Hatschbasch 12876 (MBM). SENGÉS: Fazenda Morungava, rio do Funil, 10.ix.1959, Hatschbasch 6318 (HBR, MBM); Serrinha, 22.x.1908, Dusén 7024 (GH photo, NY). VENTANIA: 15.vi.1960, Seidel s.n. (HBR 46065); Vila Velha, 19.xii.1903, Dusén 2799 (R); id., 27.viii.1939, Foster 409 (GH, R); id., 28.viii.1939, Kuhlmann s.n. (SP 41547). SÃO PAULO – ANHEMBI: Fazenda Barreiro Rico, 6.x.1956, Kuhlmann 3998 (SP). BROTAS: NW of the intersection of the road Brotas–Itirapina, 22°17′S 47°56′W, 16.vi. 1961, Eiten et al. 2956 (SP). ITAPURA: 29.ix.1940, Foster 1099 (GH). MOJI–GUAÇÚ: Reserva Florestal © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 18 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. perto de Pádua Salles, 19.vii.1955, Handro 506 (SP). SÃO CARLOS: parque da Universidade Federal de São Carlos, viii.2000, Moura s.n. (RB 376129). SÃO PAULO: nativa do Jardim Botânico, 8.viii.1932, Hoehne s.n. (SP 29789). PARAGUAY, ALTO PARANÁ – estancia Bertoni (Rio Paraná), 25°38′S 54°36′W, 22.vii.1994, Zardini & Florentín 40049 (MO). AMAMBAY – CABALLERO: 20.i.1889, Morong 523 (NY). CAAGUAZÚ – GUAYAQUÍ: between Coronel Oviedo and Caaguazú, 25°29′S 56°11′W, 26.viii.1993, Zardini & Tilleria 37032 (SEL). CAAZAPÁ – TAVAÍ: 26°10′S 55°27′W, 28.x.1988, Zardini 7680 (CTES, MO); id., 29.x.1988, Zardini 7741 (CTES, MO). CORDILLERA – Cerro Zanja Jhú, 1 km east of road from route 1 to Atyra, 25°13′S 57°9′W, 25.vi.1988, Zardini 5150 (MO); eastern side of Rio Piribebuy basin, 17 km west of Arroyos y Esteros, 25°8′S 57°15′W, 23.xii.1989, Zardini & Velázquez 17163 (MO); road Eusébio Ayala, PN Vapor Cué, Arroyo Yakarey, 25°30′S 56°50′W, 7.vii.1990, Zardini & Velázquez 21916 (MO). ITACURUBI DE LA CORDILLERA: 3.ii.1991 Till 6015 (WU). EL CHACO – riacho Negro, 14.ix.1893, Lindman A2155 (GH photo). GUAIRÁ – VILLARICA: 9.xi.1928, Jorgensen 3961 (F, GH photo, NY); Cosme, Villarica– Caaguazu, iii.1876, Balansa 706 (MO photo, NY photo); Rio Chololo, Cordillera de Peribébuy, 15.ix.1883, Balansa 4748 (MO photo, NY photo). ITAPÚA – PIRAPÓ: 6.viii.1893, Lindman A 1893 (GH photo). PARAGUARÍ – Arroyo Moopicua, 26°20′32″S 57°8′45″W, 28.vii.1994, Zardini & Guerrero 40176 (SEL); Tebicuarymí river, 1 km north of Villa Florida, 26°23′S 57°8′W, 25.v.1993, Zardini & Guerrero 35829 (WU). SAN PEDRO – Alto Paraguay, Primavera, Tajoma Isla, 22.viii.1959, Woolston 1372 (NY); Yaguareté forest (Sustainable Forest Systems site), 23°49′46″S 56°12′48″W, 24.viii.1995, Zardini & Vargas 43519 (MO); id., 23°47′56″S 53°13′6″W, 24.viii.1995, Zardini & Vargas 43674 (MO); id., 1.viii.1996, Zardini & Guerrero 45463 (SEL). Notes: In the taxonomic treatment for Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion, Smith & Downs (1979) disregarded the relevance of white peduncle bracts for the recognition of A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata, and this type specimen was included in the list of examined material for A. bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia. Almost all herbarium material listed as A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata in this study was previously identified as var. bromeliifolia. In revising specimen identifications, besides the colour of the peduncle bracts, we also considered information about peduncle and floral bract coloration and the geographical origin of the specimen. 3. Aechmea lamarchei Mez, in Martius, Eichler & Urbain, Fl. Bras. 3(3): 370. 1892. (Figs 7A–F, 10G, H) Type: Brazil, without specific locality, Lamarche Hortus in Morren Hortus s.n., x.1877 (Holotype: LG! photo). = Macrochordion lamarchei (Mez) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989. H.E.Luther & E.Sieff, Selbyana 15 (1):65. 1994, pro syn. = Aechmea maculata L.B.Sm., Smithsonian Misc. Collect. 126:15, 227, f. 107. 1955. Type: Brazil, Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Pico da Piedade, 10.vii.1940, Foster 561 (Holotype: GH!, Isotype: US! photo, BHCB!), syn. nov. = Macrochordion maculata (L.B.Sm.) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989, syn. nov. = Aechmea chlorophylla L.B.Sm., Smithsonian Misc. Collect. 126:14, 227, f. 108. 1955. Type: Brazil, Espírito Santo, Sta Teresa, 6.viii.1940, Foster 830 (Holotype: GH!, Isotype: US! photo), syn. nov. = Macrochordion chlorophylla (L.B.Sm.) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989, syn. nov. Description: HERB epiphytic, rupicolous or terrestrial, 30–80.5 cm high. ROSETTE funnelform or wide-funnelform, with 15–30 leaves. LEAF SHEATHS 10–20 ¥ 2.5– 10.5 cm, elliptic to narrow–elliptic, adaxial surface vinaceous, abaxial surface green or sometimes reddish; LEAF BLADES 17–112.5 ¥ 2–5.5 cm, linear, concolorous green or sometimes concolorous reddish, apex acute or obtuse, apiculate, margins serrate or densely serrate; spines castaneous, 1–3 mm long. INFLORESCENCE with spike 3.5–12.5 ¥ 1.5–4 cm; peduncle green or reddish, 27–73.5 cm long, white floccose; peduncle bracts imbricate or subdense, divergent toward the apex of the peduncle, entire or denticulate toward the apex, dark pink or red, 6.5– 14 ¥ 2–4 cm, apex acute or acuminate. FLOWERS 2.2– 2.8 cm long. FLORAL BRACTS 1–2.3 ¥ 1.5–2 cm, ovate or widely ovate, shorter to about equaling the sepals, coriaceous with thin apex, reddish or castaneous, white floccose or apressed lepidote, apex obtuse or emarginate, apiculate. SEPALS 8–14 ¥ 4–8 mm, distinctly asymmetric, connate near the base or sometimes to the middle, yellow, yellow–greenish or reddish, covered with white appressed scales, apex obtuse, muticous or minutely apiculate. PETALS 17–23 ¥ 5–6 mm, lingulate, yellow, apex obtuse, erect or slightly divergent; fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. STAMENS with filaments 9–16 mm long; anthers 5–9 mm long. STIGMA c. 2 mm long. OVARY c. 5 mm long, bearing a distinct epigynous tube; ovules c. 0.5 mm long. FRUITS greenish; seeds c. 4 mm long, pale brown. Distribution and habitat: Aechmea lamarchei is distributed in Minas Gerais and inland areas of Espírito Santo state (Fig. 4B). It grows at 500–1700 m altitude, in dense ombrophile forest, semi-deciduous forest and campos rupestres. Conservation status: Least Concern (IUCN, 2001). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 19 Figure 7. Aechmea lamarchei A, habit. B, detail of leaf margin. C, flower with floral bract. D, floral bract. E, sepals. F, petal and stamens. A, B, E, F (Faria et al. 161). C, D (Irwin et al. 29141). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 20 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Specimens examined: BRAZIL, ESPÍRITO SANTO – CACHOEIRO DE ITAPEMIRIM: Vargem Alta, Morro de Sal, 2.ix.1948, Brade 19414 (RB); id., 16.viii.1981, Ferreira 1836 (RB). CAPARAÓ: Fazenda Laranja da Terra, 11.viii.1972, Heringer 12163 (HB). CARIACICA: 31.i.1986, Seidel 1024 (RB). DOMINGOS MARTINS: 9.vii.1939, Foster 176 (GH, R); id., in cultivation, REBIO de Sapitanduva, 2.viii.1992, Hatschbach 57141 (MBM); id., without date, G. Hatschbach 58052 (MBM); id., próximo à cidade de Campinho, 27.viii.1974, Martinelli 415 (RB); id., 12.ix.1975, Martinelli 771 (RB); id., rod. BR 262, próximo ao Rio Araguaia, 12.x.1992, Hatschbach et al. 57996 (MBM). ITARANA: Jatiboca, Fazenda Stuhr, 7.viii.2002, Kollmann et al. 5671 (MBML). MARECHAL FLORIANO: Fazenda do Sr. Bullbach, próximo a Todos os Santos, 9.ii.1975, Martinelli & Gurken 560 (RB); id., Sítio de Almir Bresson, 27.vi.1994, Gomes 2022 (VIES). STA LEOPOLDINA: Timbuí Seco, 8.vii.1988, Krause s.n. (MBML 5013). STA MARIA DE JETIBÁ: São José do Rio Claro, propriedade Luzineide Butke, 5.viii.2001, Santos et al. 19 (MBML). STA TERESA: in cultivation, Museu de Biologia Mello Leitão, 28.ix.1998, Fernandes 2571, 2572, 2573, 2574 (MBML); Sta Teresa, divisa com município de Sta Leopoldina, cabeceira do rio Novo, 7.xi.1986, Martinelli et al. 11886 (RB); Sta Teresa, Estação Biológica da Caixa D’água, 19.v.1998, Fernandes 2510 (MBML); id., in cultivation, UFRJ, 2.ix.2005, Wendt et al. 385 (RFA); Sta Teresa, Estação Biológica de Sta Lúcia, 20.viii.1985, Boone 701 (NY, MBML); id., 25.viii.1986, Martinelli et al. 11617 (RB); id., 31.viii.1998, Varassin 78 (MBML, RFA); id., 7.xii.2000, Wendt et al. 390, 391 (RFA); id., 26 ix.2002, Faria et al. 49, 50 (RFA); id., 13.viii.2003, Faria et al. 161 (RFA); Sta Teresa, Fazenda Tabajara: 28.xi.1985, Piziolo 249 (CEPEC, NY, MBML); Sta Teresa, mata ao redor da pousada Paradiso, 28.ix.2002, Faria et al. 70 (RFA); Sta Teresa, pátio do Museu de Biologia Mello Leitão, 27.viii.1985, Fernandes 1441 (MBML); id., 27.viii.1986, Fernandes 1439 (MBML); Sta Teresa, Pedra da Onça, propriedade de Antônio Rocon, 13.vi.2000, Demuner et al. 1103 (MBML); Sta Teresa, Penha, 21.viii.1984, Boone 304 (MBML), id., 8.viii.1988, Loss &. Santos s.n. (MBML 5043); Sta Teresa, São João de Petrópolis, Colégio Agrotécnico, 19°49′S 40°43′W, 16.vii.1968, Gottsberger 18-16768 (SP); Sta Teresa, Valsugana Velha, 16.ix.1985, Boone 769 (NY, MBML); id., 5.ix.2001, Kollman & Bausen 4531 (MBML); id., 14.ix.2001, Kollman & Bausen 4565 (MBML). MINAS GERAIS – ABRE CAMPO: 1° Distrito, Fazenda Cachoeira, 20°14′16″S 42°29′31″W, 21.xii.2000, Pereira 29/59 (RFA). CAETÉ: Serra da Piedade, 26.viii.1987, without collector (BHCB); id., 1.vi.2001, Mota & Marques 325 (BHCB). CARANGOLA: Fazenda da Grama, c. 5 km north of ‘Mato Virgem’, 4.ii.1930, Mexia 4316a (GH, US). CARATINGA: Fazenda Montes Claros, 19.iv.1984, Andrade & Lopes 148 (BHCB). CATAS ALTAS: Serra do Caraça, 15.iii.1998, Vasconcelos s.n. (BHCB 41412). CONCEIÇÃO DO MATO DENTRO: Serra do Cipó, north of Belo Horizonte, vii.1940, Foster 630, 637 (GH, US). CORONEL FABRICIANO: Mata do Limoeiro, 15.x.1950, Magalhães 5838 (US). CORONEL PACHECO: 6.viii.1945, Heringer 1968 (SP). DESCOBERTO: Reserva Biológica da Represa do Grama, 24.vi.2000, Salimena et al. 196 (CESJ); id., 19.vii.2001, Castro 531 (CESJ); id., 23.iii.2002, Forzza et al. 2114 (CESJ). DIONÍSIO: Fazenda do José Gomes, 19°49′44″S 42°40′02″W, 8.vi.2000, Temponi et al. 121 (VIC). FERVEDOURO: Parque Estadual da Serra do Brigadeiro, 15.iv.1993, Leme et al. 2172 (SEL); id., 13.iv.1995, Paula 1032 (VIC), id., 21.vi.1996, Paula 1130 (VIC); Fervedouro, Reserva Municipal do Córrego da Água Limpa, 42°21′S 20°46′W, 6.viii.1989, Leoni 832 (RB); id., 18.viii.1992, Nahoum s.n. (SEL 076176). ILHÉU: Fazenda da Tabunha, 18.viii. 1930, Mexia 4972 (F, GH, MO, US, VIC). JEQUERI: área de inundação da Usina de Providência, 19.xi.1997, Salino 3763 (BHCB). LEOPOLDINA: 25.xi.1978, Seidel 783 (HB). MARLIÉRIA: Parque Estadual Rio Doce, 2.vii.1993, Borba & Costa s.n. (BHCB 30674). OURO BRANCO: Serra do Ouro Branco, 20.xi.2002, Paula s.n. (VIC 27382). RIO POMBA: estrada Rio Pomba a Barbacena, 21.vii.1969, Braga 60 (RB). RIO VERMELHO: trilha Alto da Serra do Ambrósio, c. 8 km de Coluna, 18°9′92″S 42°58′15″W, 1.viii. 2000, Costa & Fiaschi 387 (SP). SANTANA DO RIACHO: Serra do Cipó, próximo km 127, 15.vii.1977, Martinelli 2631 (RB, UB). STA BÁRBARA: Brumal, Fazenda Bocaina, 23.v.1997, Vasconcelos s.n. (BHCB 42717); Sta Bárbara, Serra do Caraça, 16.iv.1933, Mello Barreto 2113 (BHCB); id., 7.vii.1974, Reitz 7650 (HBR); id., 24.v.1987, Paula s.n. (BHCB 9739); id., 2.x.1998, Mota et al. s.n. (BHCB 43448); id., caminho para a gruta do Padre Caio, 23.v.1987, Zappi & Scatena 10972 (SPF); Sta Bárbara, Parque Nacional do Caraça, caminho para a cascatona, 24.iv.1990, Leme et al. 1546 (RB); Sta Bárbara, Serra do Caraça, caminho para a Capelinha, SW de Catas Altas, 20°5′S 43°27′W, 18.ii.1991, Arbo et al. 5309 (CTES, SPF, US); Sta Bárbara, Serra do Caraça, próximo ao colégio do Caraça, 19.vii.1977, Martinelli 2687 (RB, US); Serra do Espinhaço, base of Serra do Caraça, 26.i.1971, Irwin et al. 29141 (UB); Serra do Espinhaço, c. 17 km of Serro, on road to Diamantina, 27.ii.1968, Irwin et al. 20994 (UB); Vale do Rio Piranga, estrada entre Porto Firme e Guaraciaba, 12.x.1996, Palhais & Paula 44 (VIC). VIÇOSA: Agricultural College lands, 24.vi.1930, Mexia 4789-a (GH); id., in cultivation on Horto Botânico da UFV, 29.vi.1979, Vidal et al. 482 (VIC); id., 13.vi.1985, Vidal & Vidal s.n. (VIC 9386); id., 15.vii.1995, Paula © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 1043 (VIC); id., 5.vii.1999, Paula & Goldschmidt s.n. (VIC 23647). Notes: In the original descriptions of A. chlorophylla and A. maculata, Smith (1955) proposed an affinity of both species with A. bromeliifolia. Multivariate analyses, however, showed that A. bromeliifolia is distinguishable and that there is a close relationship between A. chlorophylla, A. maculata and A. lamarchei. The difficulties to distinguishing these three taxa morphologically were already noted in the work of Smith & Downs (1979). Most of the diagnostic characters presented for A. lamarchei in the key to species of subgenus Macrochordion can also be observed in A. chlorophylla and/or in A. maculata (e.g. leaf blade shape, inflorescence indument type, floral bract apex, length of fusion among sepals). We also ascertained that the measures (length and wide) of leaves, leaf blade spines, inflorescences, sepals and petals of A. chlorophylla herbarium specimens examined fit into those described for A. lamarchei. Leaves and peduncle bracts spotted with red, a diagnostic character cited for A. maculata in the Smith & Downs (1979) key, is not clearly defined in the morphological description of this species, which mentions dense and coarse purple spots only on the internal face of the sheaths. Purple sheaths, however, are commonly observed in the subgenus. Other characters employed by Smith & Downs (1979) to distinguish A. lamarchei from A. chlorophylla and A. maculata have been shown to be variable and of dubious interpretation. The white lanate inflorescence cited for A. lamarchei was not observed in herbarium material examined in this study. Instead, we observed floccose to apressed lepidote inflorescences and these characters are cited in the key to identify A. maculata and A. chlorophylla, respectively. Leaf blades linear vs. ligulate, used in the key to differentiate A. lamarchei from A. chlorophylla and A. maculata is not adequate (the three species show linear blades). The distinction between lacerate (cited for A. chlorohylla) and fimbriate petal appendages (cited for A. lamarchei and A. maculata) were not detected in our study and all scales were classified as fimbriate. The connation of the appendages to the petals (slightly above the base cited for A. lamarchei, at the base for A. chlorophylla and above the base, near the middle of the claw for A. maculata) also leads to misinterpretation. We observed that, in all these species, the fimbriate scales are inserted well above the base of the petals and approximately halfway along the lateral folds. Another character employed by Smith & Downs (1979) to distinguish these taxa was the length of fusion among the sepals (half connate for A. lamarchei, approximately half connate for A. maculata and connate at base for A. chlorophylla). Examina- 21 tion of herbarium material, however, showed considerable variation of this character within A. lamarchei. Considering that these species have been hard to distinguish from each other historically, and the close relationships suggested among them by the multivariate analysis, we propose A. chlorophylla and A. maculata as synonyms of A. lamarchei. We consider the coriaceous, ovate to widely ovate floral bracts with obtuse or emarginate thin apices and the large flowers > 2 cm (Fig. 7C, D) relevant to identify A. lamarchei (these characters are also present in A. chlorophylla and A. maculata) and to distinguish this species from other taxa of the subgenus. 4. Aechmea maasii Gouda & W.Till, Bromelia 4(1): 4. 1997 (Figs 8A–F, 10I, J) Type: Brazil, Espírito Santo, Linhares, Reserva Florestal Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), 1992 (bloomed in cultivation at University of Utrecht Botanic Gardens, xi. 1995), Maas s.n. (Holotype: U not seen, Isotypes: CVRD!, WU! photo). Description: HERB epiphytic or terrestrial, 30.5–75 cm high. ROSETTE funnelform, wide-funnelform or tubulose with 20–25 leaves. LEAF SHEATHS 7.5–21 ¥ 4.5– 12.5 cm, orbicular to transversely elliptic, adaxial surface vinaceous, abaxial surface green. LEAF BLADES 22.5–44.5 ¥ 2–5 cm, linear, concolorous green or sometimes yellowish, apex obtuse or acute, apiculate, margins serrate or densely serrate; spines castaneous, 1–3 mm long. INFLORESCENCE with spike 3.5–9 ¥ 1.5–3.5 cm; peduncle green or reddish, 25.5– 70 cm long, white floccose; peduncle bracts imbricate or subdense, erect or divergent toward the apex of the peduncle, margins entire or denticulate toward the apex, red, 6–15 ¥ 1.5–3 cm, apex acuminate. FLOWERS 1.8–2.1 cm long. FLORAL BRACTS 8–12 ¥ 13–16 mm, depressed ovate, shorter than the sepals, coriaceous, castaneous or green with apex and margins reddish, densely white floccose, apex truncate, apiculate. SEPALS 9–11 ¥ 5–7 mm, distinctly asymmetric, connate near the base, yellow, yellow–greenish or reddish, covered with white appressed scales, apex obtuse, muticous or minutely apiculate. PETALS 15–17 ¥ 4–5 mm, lingulate, yellow, apex obtuse, erect or slightly divergent; fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. STAMENS with filaments 9–13 mm long; anthers 4.5–5 mm long. STIGMA 1–2 mm long. OVARY 3–4 mm long, bearing a distinct epigynous tube, ovules 0.5–1 mm long. FRUITS globose, red; seeds c. 4 mm long, pale brown. Distribution and habitat: Aechmea maasii occurs in coastal areas of Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro states (Fig. 4C). It grows at 5–100 m altitude, in herbaceous, shrubby and wooded restingas and florestas de tabuleiros. Conservation status: Vulnerable (IUCN, 2001). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 22 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Figure 8. Aechmea maasii. A, habit. B, detail of leaf margin. C, flower with floral bract. D, floral bract. E, sepals. F, petal and stamens. A, B (Faria 177). C–F (Faria 147). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 23 Figure 9. Aechmea triangularis. A, habit. B, flower with floral bract. C, floral bract. D, sepals. E, petal and stamens. (Wendt et al. 392). © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 24 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 AECHMEA SUBGENUS MACROCHORDION 25 Figure 10. Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion taxa. A, B, Aechmea alba (Faria et al. 139); C, D, Aechmea bromeliifolia var. bromeliifolia (Faria & Sousa 148): inflorescences and flowers. E, F, Aechmea bromeliifolia var. albobracteata (Faria & Versieux 171); G, H, Aechmea lamarchei (Faria et al. 161, 212, respectively): habit and detailed inflorescences. I, J, Aechmea maasii (Faria 177); K, L, Aechmea triangularis (Wendt et al. 392): detailed inflorescences and flowers. All photographs by the authors, except A. bromeliifolia var. albobracteata by L. M. Versieux. 䉳 Specimens examined: BRAZIL, ESPÍRITO SANTO – ALFREDO CHAVES: 18.vii. 1990, Marbach 09 (VIES). ARACRUZ: Comboios, 7.i.1992, Pereira et al. 2528 (VIES); id., 8.i.1992, Pereira et al. 2570 (VIES); id., 28.vii.1992, Pereira et al. 3629 (VIES); Aracruz, Retiro, 29.iv.1992, Pereira et al. 3352 (VIES); id., 6.v.1992, Pereira et al. 3398 (VIES); Aracruz, Vila do Riacho, área 106 da Aracruz Celulose S.A., 19.ii.1992, Pereira et al. 2733 (VIES). CONCEIÇÃO DA BARRA: área 126 da Aracruz Celulose S.A., 26.ii.1992, Pereira et al. 2874 (VIES); id., área 213 da Aracruz Celulose S.A., 24.iii.1992, Pereira et al. 3037 (VIES); id., 25.iii.1992, Pereira et al. 3069 (VIES); id., área 157 da Aracruz Celulose S.A., 27.iii.1992, Pereira et al. 3263 (VIES); id., área 100 da Aracruz Celulose S.A., 25.viii.1992, Pereira et al. 3758 (VIES); Conceição da Barra, Itaúnas, 20.v.1999, Hatschbach et al. 69179 (MBM). GUARAPARI: Parque Estadual Paulo César Vinha, 25.iii. 1991, Gomes 1482 (VIES); id., 9.vii.1991, Gomes 1678 (VIES); id., 22.i.1998, Gomes 2399 (VIES); id., 28.vi.1998, Gomes 2431 (VIES); Guarapari, praia do Morro, 30.viii.1974, Martinelli & Gurken 479 (RB); Guarapari, restinga de Setiba, 26.vii.1990, Pereira 2146 (VIES). ITAPEMIRIM: 10.viii.1980, Gurken 6 (HB); id., cultivada por L. C. Gurken, 6.vii.2001, Faria et al. 41 (RFA); Itapemirim, in cultivation, UFRJ, Faria 147 (RFA); Itapemirim, estrada Marataízes–Piúma, c. de 4 km ao norte da ponte sobre o Rio Itapemirim, 20°58′16″S 40°48′42″W, 21.vi.1996, Mello-Silva et al. 1191 (SPF). LINHARES: Reserva Biológica de Comboios, 21.iii.1991, Gomes 1470, 1473 (VIES); Linhares, Reserva Florestal Cia. Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), 30.i.1972, Sucre 8287 (RB); id., 1.ii.1972, Sucre 8395 (RB); id., 17.i.1975, Peixoto & Peixoto 392 (RB); id., 10.v.1977, Martinelli et al. 1901 (RB); id., 27.ix.1978, Martinelli 5007 (RB); id., 17.xii.1981, Lima 1714 (RB); id., 20.iv.1983, Farney et al. 287 (RB); id., 15.ix.1987, Martinelli 12207 (RB); id., 17.ix.1987, Martinelli 12221 (RB); id., 18.ix.1987, Martinelli 12237 (RB); id., 22.ii.2000, Folli 3576 (CVRD); id. 29.vi.2000, Folli 3643 (CVRD); id., 11.ix.2001, Folli 4046 (CVRD); id., 16.x.2001, Folli 4095 (CVRD, SEL); id., 17.xii.2001, Folli 4153 (CVRD); id., 18.ix.2003, Folli 4606 (CVRD); id., 30.vii.2004, Folli 4887 (CVRD); Linhares, Reserva Florestal de Linhares, 23.ii.1999, Folli 3355 (CVRD); id., 24.ii.1999, Folli 3357 (CVRD); id., 27.ii.1999, Folli 3500 (CVRD); id., 9.xii.1999, Folli 3528 (CVRD); id., 31.v.2000, Folli 3593 (CVRD); Linhares, Reserva Florestal de Sooretama, 9.viii.1965, Belém 1518 (UB); id., 11.vii.1969, Sucre 5452 (RB); id., 15.v.1977, Martinelli et al. 2075 (RB); id., 12.v.1985, Martinelli et al. 10989 (RB); Linhares, Regência, 19.ix.1991, Gomes 1610 (VIES). SÃO MATEUS: 4.x.1964, Seidel 529 (HBR); id., ligação BR 101 a Ponta do Ipiranga, 14.x.1992, Hatschbach et al. 58056 (MBM); id., 10.xi.1993, Hatschbach & Silva 60071 (CEPEC, MBM). SERRA: Bicanga, 6.v.1993, Pereira 4551 (VIES); id., 27.v.1993, Pereira et al. 4563 (VIES). RIO DE JANEIRO – BÚZIOS: x.2002, Wendt et al. 443 (RFA); id., in cultivation, UFRJ, 5.ix.2003, Faria 177, 178 (RFA). CABO FRIO: 17.vii.1967, Pereira 10607 (HB); id., in cultivation, Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 30.xii.1997, Berg s.n. (SEL 078423); Cabo Frio, Morro do Gavião, 13.x.1968, Sucre 3918 (RB); Cabo Frio, south-west of Armação de Búzios, 3.ii.1995, Till et al. 11131 (WU). CASIMIRO DE ABREU: distrito de Barra de São João, 1953, SegadasVianna et al. 277 (R); id., 5.ix.1953, Segadas-Vianna et al. 967-I (GH, R, RB); id., 3.vii.1963, Andrade & Emmerich 1590 (R); id., 14.viii.1986, Costa et al. 7 (RB). MACAÉ: restinga de Macaé, 30.ix.1974, Martinelli & Gurken 506 (RB). SAQUAREMA: 12.ix.1986, Farney & Caruso 1183 (R, RB); id., 9.viii.2003, Faria et al. 149 (RFA); id., Ipitangas, 8.ix.1987, G. Martinelli et al. 12185 (RB). Notes: In the original description, Gouda & Till (1997) proposed an affinity of A. maasii with A. bromeliifolia and A. triangularis. Phenetic analyses, however, indicate that A. maasii is closely related to A. alba and A. lamarchei (Figs 1, 2). Aechmea maasii shows a great ecological plasticity and phenotypic variation in vegetative structures (Scarano et al., 2002, 2009), but can be characterized by the flowers with yellow corollas and depressed ovate, truncate–apiculate and densely floccose floral bracts (Figs 8D, 10I, J). The species is also characterized by its restricted distribution in areas of Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro states (Fig. 4C). Aechmea maasii resembles A. alba and A. lamarchei in having leaf spines ⱕ 3 mm long, obtuse, distinctly asymmetric sepals, lingulate petals with obtuse apices and fimbriate ligulae approximately halfway along the lateral folds (Fig. 8B, E, F). 5. Aechmea triangularis L.B.Sm., Smithsonian Misc. Collect. 126: 19, 224, f. 106. 1955 (Figs 9A–E, 10K, L) © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162, 1–27 26 A. P. G. DE FARIA ET AL. Type: Brazil, Espírito Santo, Sta Teresa, 7.viii.1940 (bloomed in cultivation 22.iv.1941), Foster 829 (Holotype: GH!, Isotype: GH!). = Macrochordion triangularis (L.B.Sm.) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989. H.E.Luther & E.Sieff, Selbyana 15 (1):65. 1994, pro syn. = Aechmea kautskyana E. Pereira & L.B.Sm., Bradea 3: 46–7, 49. 1980. Type: Brazil, Espírito Santo, Conceição do Castelo, Forno Grande, 8.viii.1979, Kautsky 643 (Holotype HB!, Isotype US! photo), syn. nov. = Macrochordion kaustyana (E. Pereira & L.B.Sm.) L.B.Sm. & W.J.Kress, Phytologia 66(1): 77. 1989, syn. nov. Description: HERB epiphytic, 23.5–50 cm high. ROSETTE funnelform or wide-funnelform with 15–20 leaves. LEAF SHEATHS 8–18 ¥ 4.5–20 cm, orbicular to elliptic, adaxial surface purple, abaxial surface green. LEAF BLADES 10–72 ¥ 1.5–6 cm, linear or linear triangular, concolorous green, sometimes purple spotted, apex caudate, recurved, margins serrate or sparsely serrate; spines black, 3–7 mm long. INFLORESCENCE with spike 3–6 ¥ 2–3 cm; peduncle vinaceous, 20–41 cm long, white floccose; peduncle bracts subdense and divergent, margins denticulate toward the apex, dark pink or red, 4–7.5 ¥ 1.3–3 cm, apex acute or acuminate. FLOWERS 1.6–2 cm long. FLORAL BRACTS 8–11 ¥ 11–13 mm, depressed ovate, shorter than the sepals, coriaceous, red to the middle and castaneous toward the apex, white floccose, apex truncate, apiculate. SEPALS 6–8 ¥ 4 mm, symmetric or slightly asymmetric, connate to the middle, vinaceous or castaneous with red margins, covered with white appressed scales, apex emarginate, minutely apiculate. PETALS 12–16 ¥ 4 mm, spatulate, dark blue with white base, apex emarginate, erect; fimbriate ligulae about halfway along the lateral folds. STAMENS with filaments c. 1 cm long; anthers 4–5 mm long. STIGMA c. 1 mm long. OVARY c. 4 mm long, bearing a short epigynous tube, ovules c. 0.5 mm long. FRUITS and seeds not observed. Distribution and habitat: Aechmea triangularis is endemic to Espírito Santo state (Fig. 4D) and is poorly represented in herbarium collections. It grows at 650–1000 m altitude, in dense ombrophile forest. Conservation status: Endangered (IUCN, 2001). Specimens examined: BRAZIL, ESPÍRITO SANTO – NOVA LOMBARDIA: divisa com mata do IBDF, 31.x.1984, Hoffmann 228 (MBML). STA LEOPOLDINA: cabeceira do Rio Bonito, divisa com município de Sta Teresa, 12.xii.1988, Fernandes 2284 (MBML). STA TERESA: Estação Biológica de Sta Lúcia, 18.xii.1998, Varassin et al. 59 (MBML); id., 23.iii.1999 Varassin et al. 66 (MBML); id., 7.xii.2000, Wendt et al. 392 (RFA). VARGEM ALTA: 21.xii.1976, Pereira s.n. (HB 65953). Notes: Aechmea triangularis is the most distinctive taxon in Aechmea subgenus Macrochordion and can be easily recognized by both vegetative (e.g. leaves with caudate and recurvate apices) and reproductive (e.g. dark blue corolla) characters (Figs 9A, 10K, L). As noted by Pereira (1980) on the original description, A. kautskyana also has blue petals. The author, however, stressed the presence of dimorphic leaf blades as a relevant character in considering A. kautskyana distinct from A. triangularis. Differences between inner and outer leaf blades were also observed in some herbarium and living specimens of A. triangularis. This characteristic, however, is not present in young plants as occurs in true dimorphic leaves. In mature plants of A. triangularis, the inner leaves of the rosette are narrower and suddenly become broader, and the same seems to occur in A. kaustskyana. Until this study, A. kaustkyana remained known only from the type specimen. The close morphological similarity indicated in the phenetic analyses (Figs 1, 2) supports the synonymy proposed for these species. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank the Brazilian Forestry Service (IBAMA) and the Brazilian Research Council (CNPq) for the field collection permits; the numerous colleagues who assisted us with plant collection; H. Luther, who provided some of the plant material; L.O.F. de Sousa and L.M. Versieux for miscellaneous help; G. Gonçalves for the drawings; the US National Science Foundation (DEB-0129446) for funding; the Brazilian Council for Graduate Studies (CAPES) for a research grant to A. P. G. de Faria; and CNPq for a productivity grant to T. Wendt. 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