TL;DR: The species excluded from Angostura are recognized as species of Conchocarpus and the following 21 new taxa are described: C. grandis from Amazonian Brazil, all are native to the coastal forests of eastern Brazil.
Abstract: Angostura Roem. & Schult. as understood by Engler is defined more narrowly here. The species excluded from Angostura are recognized as species of ConchocarpusJ. C. Mikan. Three new species of Angostura (A. alipes Kallunki from Ecuador, A. quinquefolia Kallunki from Pari and Maranhao, Brazil, and A. simplex Kallunki from western Amazonas, Brazil, and San Martin, Peru) are described, and three new combinations in this genus are made. In Conchocarpus, 24 new combinations are made, and the following 21 new taxa are described: C. bellus Kallunki, C. cauliflorus Pirani, C. concinnus Kallunki, C. cuneifolius var. confertus Kallunki, C. cyrtanthus Kallunki, C. dasyanthus Kallunki, C. diadematus Pirani, C. fissicalyx Pirani, C. furcatus Kallunki, C. gaudichaudianus subsp. bahiensis Kallunki, C. grandis Kallunki, C. hirsutus Pirani, C. inopinatus Pirani, C. insignis Pirani, C. longipes Kallunki, C. mastigophorus Kallunki, C. modestus Kallunki, C. oppositifolius Kallunki, C. punctatus Kallunki, C. santosii Pirani & Kallunki, and C. sordidus Kallunki. With the exception of C. grandis from Amazonian Brazil, all are native to the coastal forests of eastern Brazil. As a result, seven species of Angostura and 45 of Conchocarpus are recognized. Keys to the taxa of both genera are provided. Lectotypes are designated for Cusparia grandiflora Engl., C. macrocarpa Engl., C. paniculata Engl., C. toxicaria Engl., Galipea odoratissima Lindl., and Lasiostemum silvestre Nees & Mart. and an epitype for Galipea elegans A. St.-Hil. The new combination, Rauia nodosa (Engl.) Kallunki, is made for Cusparia nodosa. The tribe Cusparieae DC. and subtribe Cuspariinae Engl., based on the illegitimate generic name Cusparia Humb., are renamed Galipeeae Kallunki and Galipeinae Kallunki.
TL;DR: Phylogenetic analyses of chloroplast gene sequences support the monophyly of the Surianaceae sensu Cronquist and provide evidence of an affinity with the Polygalaceae and Fabaceae.
TL;DR: A phylogenetic analysis of Almeidea is performed, using a broader sampling of Galipeee and other Neotropical Rutaceae, the first such study focused on this subtribe, and showed Galipeinae as monophyletic, with the species of AlMEidea also monophylets and nested in a clade with a group of species of Conchocarpus, a non-monophyletics group.
Abstract: Subtribe Galipeinae (tribe Galipeeae, subfamily Rutoideae) is the most diverse group of Neotropical Rutaceae, with 28 genera and approximately 130 species. One of its genera is Almeidea, whose species are morphologically similar to those of the genus Conchocarpus. Species of Almeidea occur in the Atlantic Rain Forest of Eastern Brazil, with one species (Almeidea rubra) also present in Bolivia. The objective of this study was to perform a phylogenetic analysis of Almeidea, using a broader sampling of Galipeinae and other Neotropical Rutaceae, the first such study focused on this subtribe. To achieve this objective, morphological data and molecular data from the nuclear markers ITS-1 and ITS-2 and the plastid markers trnL-trnF and rps16 were obtained. Representatives of eight genera of Galipeinae and three genera of Pilocarpinae (included also in Galipeeae) and Hortia (closely related to Galipeeae) were used. Five species of Almeidea and seven of Conchocarpus were included, given the morphological proximity between these two genera. Individual (for each molecular marker) and combined phylogenetic analyses were made, using parsimony and Bayesian inference as optimization criteria. Results showed Galipeinae as monophyletic, with the species of Almeidea also monophyletic (supported by the presence of pantocolporate pollen) and nested in a clade with a group of species of Conchocarpus, a non-monophyletic group. Additionally, C. concinnus appeared in a group with Andreadoxa, Erythrochiton, and Neoraputia, other members of Galipeinae. As a result, Conchocarpus would be monophyletic only with the exclusion of a group of species related to C. concinnus and with the inclusion of all species of Almeidea with the group of species of Conchocarpus that includes its type species, C. macrophyllus. Thus, species of Almeidea are transferred to Conchocarpus, and the new combinations are made here.
TL;DR: The fractionation guided by evaluation of the anticholinesterase activity of the ethanolic stems extract from C. fontanesianus afforded the alkaloids dictamnine, γ-fagarine, skimianine, and 2-phenyl-1-methyl-4-quinolone, as well as the coumarin marmesin.
Abstract: Conchocarpus fontanesianus (A. St.-Hill.) Kallunki & Pirani, Rutaceae, popularly known as pitaguara, is a native and endemic tree from Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro States, Brazil. Based in the information that anticholinesterasic derivatives could act as new prototypes to treatment of Alzheimer disease, this work describes the fractionation guided by evaluation of the anticholinesterase activity of the ethanolic stems extract from C. fontanesianus. This procedure afforded the alkaloids dictamnine (1), γ-fagarine (2), skimianine (3), and 2-phenyl-1-methyl-4-quinolone (4), as well as the coumarin marmesin (5).
TL;DR: Two new species of Rutaceae, Conchocarpus hamadryadicus Pirani & Kallunki and C. minutiflorus Groppo & Pirani are described and illustrated and their main diagnostic features are delineated.
Abstract: Two new species of Rutaceae, Conchocarpus hamadryadicus Pirani & Kallunki and C. minutiflorus Groppo & Pirani are described and illustrated. Both are known so far only from small remnants of forests, the former in the caatinga dominium in Bahia, the latter in moist forests near Santa Teresa, Espirito Santo, Brazil. Their main diagnostic features are delineated, and their relationships to other species of Conchocarpus are discussed. Because Rauia racemosa Nees & Mart. can no longer be recognised as a synonym of Conchocarpus fontanesianus (A. St.-Hil.) Kallunki & Pirani, a new combination, C. racemosus (Nees & Mart.) Kallunki & Pirani, is provided, with comments.