Huberia (plant)
Huberia | |
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Huberia consimilis Baumgratz from Lagoa dos Gatos, Pernambuco, Brazil | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Rosids |
Order: | Myrtales |
Family: | Melastomataceae |
Genus: | Huberia DC. |
Synonyms | |
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Huberia is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Melastomataceae.[1][2]
Its native range is from Ecuador to Peru, eastern and southern Brazil.[1][3][4]
General description
[edit]Most are shrubs, the leaves are opposite (arranged), petiolate (has a leaf stalk) and are serrated. It flowers with 3 flowered cymes which have a long stipitate (stalk). The flowers are similar in form to Meriania species, but tetramerous (in four parts). The receptacle (the axis of a flower) is urceolate (shaped like an urn or pitcher) or lageniform (flask-shaped) and narrowed to the neck, sometimes costate alate (ribbed like a wing). The flower has 4 sepals which are broad, and 4 petals which are longer than the calyx and much contorted. It has 8 stamens, which have a dorsal appendage which is less developed. The anthers are incurved and elongated. It has a seed capsule that is 4-valved. The seeds are sometimes imbricate (tiled and overlapping), produced on both sides to an elongated wing. The seeds are also winged and pyramidal (in form).[5]
Taxonomy
[edit]The genus name of Huberia is in honour of François Huber (1750–1831) a Swiss entomologist who specialized in honey bees, and also his son Jean Pierre Huber.[6] Augustin Pyramus de Candolle was a close friend of Huber and wrote a biographer of him in 1832.[7][8] The genus was first described and published in Prodr. Vol.3 on page 167 in 1828.[1]
Known species
[edit]According to Kew:[1]
- Huberia bradeana Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia capixaba (R.Goldenb. & Reginato) Bochorny & Michelang.
- Huberia carvalhoi Baumgratz[9]
- Huberia cogniauxii Baumgratz
- Huberia comosa (R.Tav., Baumgratz & R.Goldenb.) Bochorny & Michelang.
- Huberia consimilis Baumgratz[9]
- Huberia cordifolia (Cogn.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia corymbosa (Cogn.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia edmundoi (Brade) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia espiritosantensis Baumgratz
- Huberia glazioviana Cogn.
- Huberia glutinosa (Cogn.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia hirsuta Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia huberioides (Brade) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia insignis (Cham.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia kollmannii (R.Goldenb. & R.Tav.) Bochorny & Michelang.
- Huberia laurina DC.
- Huberia limae (Brade) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia lumiarensis (Bochorny, Michelang. & R.Goldenb.) Bochorny
- Huberia magdalenensis (Brade) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia mestrealvarensis (D.T.Iglesias & R.Goldenb.) Bochorny & Michelang.
- Huberia minor Cogn.
- Huberia minutifolia Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia misteriosa Bochorny & R.Goldenb.[10]
- Huberia mourae (Cogn.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia nettoana Brade
- Huberia organensis (Saldanha & Cogn.) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia ovalifolia DC.
- Huberia parvifolia Cogn.
- Huberia peruviana Cogn.
- Huberia piranii Baumgratz
- Huberia semiserrata DC.
- Huberia sessilifolia R.Goldenb. & Michelang.
- Huberia souza-limae (Brade) Bochorny & R.Goldenb.
- Huberia staminodia Baumgratz
- Huberia triplinervis Cogn.
- Huberia weberbaueriana Baumgratz
The type species, Huberia semiserrata DC. is listed by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service on 21 March 2005.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Huberia DC. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
- ^ John J. Wurdack 138. Melastomataceae , p. 47, at Google Books
- ^ M.M. Grandtner and Julien Chevrette Dictionary of Trees, Volume 2: South America: Nomenclature, Taxonomy and Ecology (2013), p. 308, at Google Books
- ^ D. J. Mabberley The Plant-Book: A Portable Dictionary of the Vascular Plants, 2nd Edt. (1997), p. 348, at Google Books
- ^ Henri Baillon The Natural History of Plants, Volume 7 (1904), p. 21-59, at Google Books
- ^ Burkhardt, Lotte (2018). Verzeichnis eponymischer Pflanzennamen – Erweiterte Edition [Index of Eponymic Plant Names – Extended Edition] (pdf) (in German). Berlin: Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum, Freie Universität Berlin. doi:10.3372/epolist2018. ISBN 978-3-946292-26-5. S2CID 187926901. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
- ^ De Candolle, A.P. (October 1832). "The life and writings of Francis Huber". Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 14: 283–296 – via Google Books.
- ^ George Don A General History of the Dichlamydeous Plants, Comprising Complete ... (1832), p. 778, at Google Books
- ^ a b Baumgratz, Jose Fernando A. (January–March 2000). "Two New Species of Huberia (Melastomataceae: Merianieae) from Brazil". Brittonia. 52 (1): 24–33. Bibcode:2000Britt..52...24B. doi:10.2307/2666491. JSTOR 2666491. S2CID 1261270.
- ^ Bochorny, Thuane; Goldenberg, Renato (2019). "A new species of Huberia (Melastomataceae) from Espírito Santo, Brazil". Brittonia. 71 (4): 408–413. Bibcode:2019Britt..71..408B. doi:10.1007/s12228-019-09568-x. S2CID 255555503.
- ^ "Huberia semiserrata DC. GRIN-Global". npgsweb.ars-grin.gov. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
Other sources
[edit]- Applequist, W. L. 2014. Report of the Nomenclature Committee for Vascular Plants: 66. Taxon 63:1370. Note: should be treated as earlier homonym of Hubera Chaowasku
- Baumgratz, J. F. A. 2004. Sinopse de Huberia DC. (Melastomataceae:Merianieae). Revista Brasil. Bot. 27(3):545–561.
- Chaowasku, T. 2013. (7) Request for a binding decision on whether Huberia DC. (Melastomataceae) and Hubera Chaowasku (Annonaceae) are sufficiently alike to be confused. Taxon 62:412.