Cuphea pulchra Moricand (1847: 168)

Facco, Marlon Garlet & Cavalcanti, Taciana Barbosa, 2023, Taxonomic Revision of Cuphea sect. Trispermum s. l. (Lythraceae), Phytotaxa 588 (1), pp. 1921-1935 : 1921-1935

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.588.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7751574

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0382DB75-FC0E-056F-05AA-D9590A81FA67

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cuphea pulchra Moricand (1847: 168)
status

 

18. Cuphea pulchra Moricand (1847: 168) View in CoL View at ENA .

Lectotype (designated by Graham 1990: 27):— BRAZIL, Bahia, “ Serra Jacobina [approx. -11.189, -40.500]”, 1836, Blanchet 2603 ( G [00227320] image!, isolectotypes BM image!, BR, F image!, G [00227321] image!, K [2 sheets]!, NY image!, OXF image!, P [2 sheets] image!, W [3 sheets] image!). Figs. 14H–N View FIGURE 14 , 15A–G View FIGURE 15 , 24 View FIGURE 24 GoogleMaps .

Cuphea coccinea Martius View in CoL ex Koehne (1882: 405), nom. nud., pro syn.

Subshrubs to shrubs 40–200 cm tall; stems erect, indumentum pubescent, eglandular trichomes short, <0.5 mm long, erect or with curved apices, mixed with glandular trichomes ca. 0.5 mm long, sometimes one-armed appressed trichomes present or glandular trichomes absent; internodes 0.5–4 cm long; brachyblasts absent. Leaves opposite, chartaceous to coriaceous, sessile, rare petiole ca. 1 mm long, blades 10–55 × 7–21 mm, ovate to ovate-oblong, rarely elliptic or orbicular, apex acute, rarely obtuse or cuspidate, base subcordate to cordate, rarely obtuse, margin subrevolute to revolute, indumentum strigose on both surfaces, with one-armed trichomes, indumentum pubescent concentrated on the veins, sometimes glandular trichomes present; brochidodromous. Racemes 5–20 cm long, bracteose to frondosebracteose, simple to compound, usually contracted at apex of branches; bracts 2–30 × 1.2–15 mm, subequal pairs, ovate to oblong-ovate, similar to leaves in indumentum. Flowers alternate; pedicels 3–8 mm long; bracteoles 0.4–1.2 mm long, broad-ovate, rarely suborbicular; floral tubes (15–) 17–24 mm long; spur obtuse, saccate to galeate, deflexed; outer surface red-orange, apex yellow-green, indumentum pubescent, mixed with glandular trichomes; inner surface villous behind the stamens, dense-pilose around the ovary; petals 0 or 6, red-orange, subequal, two dorsal 3.5–4.2 x 3–4 mm, broad-obovate, four ventral 3–4.8 × 2.2–3 mm, broad-obovate to broad-elliptic; stamens free in the upper third of the floral tube, five antesepalous exserted, four antepetalous subexserted; pistil 16–23 mm long; ovary sparsely pilose to glabrous; style pilose; ovules 3–8; nectary 1.5 × 1.7–2 mm, deflexed. Seeds 3–4, 2.1–3 × 2–2.9 mm, obovate to suborbicular, apex truncate to slightly retuse, base acute to obtuse, margin obtuse.

Phenology: —Collected with flowers and fruits all year round.

Distribution and habitat: — Brazil, in the states of Bahia, Minas Gerais, Pernambuco, and Sergipe ( Fig. 24 View FIGURE 24 ); cerrado sensu stricto, “campos rupestres”, rocky riverbanks, openings in hillside forests, gallery forest edges, and open “caatinga”; 200–1600 m elev.

Conservation status: — Cuphea pulchra was categorized as Least Concern (LC) due to its wide geographic distribution.

Cuphea pulchra is easily recognized by the generally shrubby habit ( Fig. 14H View FIGURE 14 ), up to 2 m tall, and the multiflorous racemes contracted at the apex of the branches ( Figs. 14J View FIGURE 14 , 15B View FIGURE 15 ), with long, red-orange floral tubes, (15–) 17–24 mm long. Individuals are typically apetalous. However, populations with six orange-red petals ( Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 ) were discovered in the state of Bahia, Brazil, and described as C. pulchra var. corollata ( Cavalcanti & Graham 2005) . Cuphea pulchra is recorded expressively in Bahia, forming dense populations in the Chapada Diamantina region, and with less frequency in the other states where it occurs.

Cuphea pulchra was classified in C. sect. Melvilla subsect. Pachycalyx by the long and robust floral tubes, a distinctive characteristic of the section, and by the low number of ovules, non-ciliate sepals, and South American distribution ( Koehne 1877 , 1903). Morphological and palynological studies by Graham (1990) and Graham & Cavalcanti (1999a) suggested that C. pulchra was closely related to C. sect. Trispermum by possessing several significant characters from this section. In the molecular phylogenetic analyses by Graham et al. (2006) and Barber et al. (2010), C. pulchra var. pulchra appeared in the “ Trispermum clade”.

Graham et al. (2006) commented that the large, colorful floral tubes found in the paraphyletic C. sect. Melvilla are convergent, certainly related to selection for large bees and bird pollination. According to photographic records ( Holderbaum 2013, Pongiluppi 2017), populations of C. pulchra in Chapada Diamantina, Bahia, are visited by hummingbirds.

Key to the varieties of Cuphea pulchra View in CoL View at ENA

1. Petals absent ................................................................................................................................................... C. pulchra var. pulchra View in CoL

- Petals 6, red-orange ...................................................................................................................................... C. pulchra var. corollata View in CoL

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Myrtales

Family

Lythraceae

Genus

Cuphea

Loc

Cuphea pulchra Moricand (1847: 168)

Facco, Marlon Garlet & Cavalcanti, Taciana Barbosa 2023
2023
Loc

Cuphea coccinea

Koehne, E. 1882: 405
1882
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