Antecedentes: La familia Apocynaceae está entre las 13 más diversas de México y su conocimiento taxonómico ha tenido una atención creciente con la implementación de filogenias y otras herramientas para resolver su sistemática. Con más de 10 años del último listado enfocado en la familia, resulta necesario actualizar el conocimiento sistemático del grupo. Pregunta: ¿Cómo se ha consolidado hasta nuestros días el conocimiento sistemático del grupo en México? ¿Cómo ha cambiado el número de géneros y especies de Apocynaceae en el país y su distribución geográfica por estado? Especie de estudio: Apocynaceae Sitio de estudio: México Método: Revisión de herbarios nacionales e internacionales, bases de datos y una búsqueda intensiva de literatura. Así como colectas en diferentes partes del país. Resultados: Apocynaceae presenta 52 géneros y 418 especies nativas, 204 de ellas endémicas. La subfamilia Asclepiadoideae destaca con 27 géneros y 314 especies. Los estados con más especies y endemismos son Oaxaca, Chiapas, Veracruz y Guerrero. Los estados con más microendemismos son Oaxaca (18 spp.), Chiapas y Jalisco (6 spp.), Baja California Sur y Veracruz (5 spp.). Se proporciona una clave de géneros y un listado actualizado. Conclusiones: Apocynaceae se ubica en el lugar número 12 de las familias más diversas del país. Esto reitera al país como un centro de diversidad del grupo. La integración de más estudios relacionados a la aplicación de herramientas filogenéticas, modelos de distribución y redes de interacción biológica permitirá entender mejor a la familia y proporcionar una historia natural más completa.
Two new species of Spigelia (Loganiaceae) from the states of Guerrero and Estado de Mexico are described here. This species represents a case of convergence with a species native to South America, Spigelia nicotianiiflora. With this addition, Mexico reaches a total of 22 species of the genus, of which more than 50% are endemic or microendemic. This places the country as the second highest area of diversity after Brazil. A map of the distribution in Mexico and a dichotomous key for Spigelia species with white corollas are included.
A new Mexican species of Spigelia (Loganiaceae), distributed in the states of Guerrero and Michoacán, is here described. The new species can be distinguished from the similar-looking S. humboldtiana by its corolla with innerly purple lobes, inserted stamens above the proximal half of the corolla tube and exserted style. With this contribution, Mexico reaches a total of 20 species, of which 50% are endemic, highlighting this country as a center of diversity for this genus. A dichotomous key for the species recorded in the states of Guerrero and Michoacán is included.
A new species of Matelea from central and southern México with green to black corollas and pubescent lobes is described here: Matelea ojadapantha. This taxon is morphologically similar to M. schaffneri and M. atrostellata but differs by the corolla and corona morphology and has a disjunct geographic distribution. Descriptions, illustrations, morphological comparisons, map of the distributions of this species as well as their conservation status is provided. This discovery highlights México as a center of diversity of the genus, as more than 70 species are currently known in the country. Furthermore, 60% of those species are endemic.
Abstract— The genus Spigelia (Loganiaceae) is a Neotropical genus that includes more than 80 species distributed from the United States to Argentina. Systematic studies of the group have rarely considered the carpological characters, so their taxonomic importance has not been analyzed in detail. The aim of this study is to analyze the morphological characteristics of these organs to provide more information for a better species separation and for a more robust infra-generic classification. We provide a detailed description of Spigelia fruits and seeds of the Mexican species since the country represents one of its main centers of diversification. Fruits and seed samples from 54 individuals across 14 species were measured and photographed to describe each one, maintaining as much detail as possible. With the morphological matrix a DFA, PCA, and a dendrogram using the NJ method was performed. The fruits and seeds of the Mexican Spigelia species proved to be taxonomically useful, allowing the differentiation of four main clusters of species separated by the size of the analyzed structures in the three analyses (DFA, PCA, NJ). The results show the variation in size and shape of the structures analyzed, which shows the taxonomic importance of fruits and seeds of the genus Spigelia. Our work represents an advance in the detailed knowledge of structures, which are rarely considered in the descriptions, and which allows us to have a separation of species. A taxonomic treatment and photographs of the fruits and seeds are also included.
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