“…The Myrtaceae family has 3.800 at 5.800 species, distributed in 150 genera, occurring mainly in tropical and subtropical regions of the world, with diversity centers in Australia, Southeast Asia, and America. Their species are taxonomically complex, have many components, and scarcity of studies (Seraglio et al 2018, Rodrigues et al 2020, Souza et al 2020. This family has some fruits with economic potential but still unimpressive because they remain appreciated as wild plants or commercialized on a small scale (Seraglio et al 2018).…”