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Biodiversity International Journal

Research Article Volume 2 Issue 5

First record of Alophia drummondii (Iridaceae) for the Paraíba state and Caatinga vegetation, Brazilian northeastern

José Iranildo Miranda de Melo,1 Ana Paula Araújo,2 Fernanda Kalina da Silva Monteiro,3 Marcio Gleisson Medeiros Gonçalves,4 Débora Coelho Moura2

1Department of Biology, Center of Biological Sciences and Health, State University of Paraiba-UEPB, Brazil
2Department of Geography, Federal University of Campina Grande-UFCG, Brazil
3Department of Biology, Federal Rural University of Pernambuco-UFRPE, Brazil
4Petroleum Engineering Academic Unit, Center of Science and Technology, Federal University of Campina Grande-UFCG, Brazil

Correspondence: José Iranildo Miranda de Melo, Department of Biology, Center of Biological Sciences and Health, State University of Paraiba, Bairro Universitário, 58429-500, Campina Grande, Paraíba, Brazil

Received: May 16, 2018 | Published: September 5, 2018

Citation: Melo JIMD, Araújo AP, Monteiro FKDS, et al. First record of Alophia drummondii (Iridaceae) for the Paraíba state and Caatinga vegetation, Brazilian northeastern. Biodiversity Int J. 2018;2(5):385-387. DOI: 10.15406/bij.2018.02.00090

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Abstract

Alophia drummondii(Graham) R. Foster (Iridaceae), species previously reported only from Pernambuco state in Cerrado vegetation is identified first time at Paraiba state in Caatinga vegetation, Brazil. The identification was based on literature reports, including the protologue of the basyonim. The present study includes description of species, its habitat and phenology data as well as current geographical distribution.

Keywords: Asparagales, caatinga vegetation, monocots, new record

Introduction

Iridaceae Juss. is included in the order Asparagales1 and consist of 66 genera and about 2,030 species. Presenting cosmopolitan distribution within South America and South Africa being their main centers of diversity.2 In Brazil, the family is represented by 198 species in 22 genera, of which 111 species and five genera are endemic to the country, mainly in the phytogeographical domains of the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado and Pampa.3 Alophia drummondii a herbaceous, shrub in some of their genera, with subterranean stem, rhizome or bulb; corms or bulbs with fibrous or membranous cataphylls, brown to red or purple. Its leaves are unifacial, equitant, dystic or spiral, cylindrical or flat, linear to ensiform, plicated or not, parallel-invigorating, invaginating at the base. The scapes are cylindrical or flattened, papillose or carrying one too many bracts foliaceous in their extension. The inflorescences may be spikes or monochasial cymes, exceptionally solitary flowers, terminal or axillary, pedunculate or sessile. Flowers showy, ephemeral, trimerous, diclamideous; free or connate tepals, petalloid; stamens 3, opposed to external tepals, fillaments free or connate, sometimes adnate to the perianth; anthers linear, oblong or sagittal, rimose or rarely poricidal; ovary inferior, usually trilocular, rarely unilocular, pluriovulate, axillary or rarely parietal placentation; styles 3, free or partially united, usually petalloid, apical or lateral stigmas. The fruits are loculicidal capsules carrying one to many seeds per locule. Seeds globose or pyramidal.4,5  Alophia belongs to the Trimezieae tribe and occurs predominantly in temperate regions of the Americas,2,6 being represented by five species7 two of them recorded in Brazil: A. drummondii (Graham) R. Foster and A. medusae (Baker) Goldblatt, both associated to the phytogeographical domain of the Cerrado.3 This genus differs from the others of this family by panduriform anthers, with marginal sporangia and broad connective and stigmatic branches curved, almost in circles.6 Considering that several species of Iridaceae are used for commercial purposes, there are still few studies focusing their native representatives, especially in the Brazilian northeast region. This work revealed the first record of the genus Alophia (Iridaceae) for the state of Paraíba, Northeast Brazil, through A. drummondii that is also being recorded for the first time in the phytogeographic domain of Caatinga. 

Material and methods

The specimen was obtained from the municipality of Soledade (Figure 1), a semi-arid region in the state of Paraíba, northeastern Brazil. Soledade (07º03'26"S, 36º21'46"W) has a maximum of 521meters and is limited to the municipalities of Olivedos (North), Boa Vista and Gurjão (South), Juazeirinho (West) and Pocinhos (East). Soledade is located in the geoenvironmental unit of the Borborema Plateau, under the Alto Pajeú Terrain, in the region locally called “Cariri Velhos Range”, which originated from geological processes occurred since the Tertiary period,8,9 being located in the intermediate region of the Campina Grande municipality. It has a territorial extension of 560,042km², with a population estimated in 2017 of 14,987 inhabitants, having a demographic density of 24.53 inhabitants per km².10 Its predominant climate is BSh – hot and dry tropical climate11 presenting an average annual temperature of 25ºC and relative humidity of approximately 65% ​.12 The geological base of the municipality consists of outcropping of granitic and gneiss rocks with quartz intrusions, which undergo mechanical wear from physical weathering and due to the thermal amplitude, causes the contraction and expansion of the rock.13 The exploitation of the Granite-gneiss is used as ornamental rock, being destined to the external commerce of the municipality (Campina Grande and João Pessoa municipalities), aspect that threatens the local biodiversity. The predominant soils are: vertisols, and luvisols, but are also common soil eutrophics, low-developed, shallow or very shallow littoral neosoils and rock outcrops of the Granitoid Complex (Gneisses and Granites are the most common), in the form of large "lajedos" or disaggregated blocks.14‒16 The municipality of Soledade is situated at the area of the Paraíba River basin, the Taperoá River sub-basin. The water courses show intermittent flow regime and the dendritic drainage pattern15 and the Caatinga is the vegetative type of the region, characterized by intertropical xeromorphic domain and classified as a complex formation.

Figure 1 Location of the municipality of Soledade, Paraiba state, Brazilian northeastern.

Results and discussion

Alophia drummondii (Graham) R. Foster, Contr. Gray Herb. 155:34. 1945. Figure 2A-C.Cypella drummondii Graham. Type: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (?). Drummond s.n., s.d., apparently lost. Herbs, ca. 60cm high; bulbs ca. 2.4cm long. Leaves 1-3per plant, 25-40×0.2-1cm, linear to narrow-lanceolate, membranaceous. Scape ca. 40cm long, simple or branched, presenting 1-3 bracts, linear, the first bract ca. 35×1.4cm, the others ca. 3.5×0.4cm. 2-4 flowers, lax; peduncle ca. 9 cm long; spates ca. 5.4×1.3cm. Flowers purple; obovate outer tepals, ca. 2.2×1.3cm, apex rounded to truncate, brownish-brown grooves in the median-basal region; internal tepals ca. 1.5×0.8cm, involutes, rounded apex, yellowish base with brown grooves, medium white whitish third with purple grooves; fillaments purple, ca. 2mm long, attached to the base; anthers purple, ca. 8mm long, oblong; ovary ca. 5cm long, ovate; purple styles, ca. 6mm long; bifid stigmas, filiform segments ca. 3mm long. Capsule oblong, ca. 1.5×0.8cm; seeds ca. 2.5×2mm. Examined specimen:Brazil. Paraíba: Soledade, Sítio Malhada Vermelha, 21-VII-2017, fl., A.P.A. Alves & D. C. Moura 03 (ACAM1 ).Distribution, habitat and reproductive phenology: A. drummondii occurs from the United States of America and Mexico to South America.17 In Brazil, it was previously recorded only for the state of Pernambuco, northeastern region, associated to the Cerrado vegetation.3 In Paraíba state, the species was found in an open area at the Caatinga vegetation flowering and fruiting in July.

Figure 2 Alophia drummondii (Graham) R. Foster. (A) Habit. (B) Flower. (C) Fruit.

1Herbarium not indexed to Index Herbariorum.

Conclusion

This new record reinforces the importance of the accomplishment of botanical collections especially in areas still scarcely known from the floristic and taxonomic point of view as is the case of the semi-arid region of the Brazilian Northeast (Caatinga vegetation), evidencing that the region called “Cariri” is an important center of floristic diversity.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank to Erimágna de Morais Rodrigues for preparing the map of the study area. JIM Melo thanks CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico) for the Research Productivity Grant (PQ-2 Proc. n. 303867/2015-9).

Conflict of interest

There is no conflict of interest to declare regarding the publication of this paper.

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