TL;DR: The following new species of Melastomataceae from Peru and Bolivia are described:Tibouchina wasshausenii, Miconia rimachii, and Topobea pascoensis.
Abstract: The following new species of Melastomataceae from Peru and Bolivia are described:Tibouchina wasshausenii, Miconia rimachii, M. boomii, M. histothrix, M. thysanophylla, and Topobea pascoensis.
TL;DR: The results confirm the preliminary ideas that Blakea and Topobea do not differ enough to enable the creation of these genera on the basis of their wood anatomy, and support Wurdack's suggestion that the Blakeeae are closest to the genera Loreya and Bellucia, and perhaps should be merged with the Miconieae.
Abstract: The present paper deals with the wood anatomy of the Blakeeae (Melastomataceae). Generic descriptions of the secondary xylem of Blakea, Topobea, and Huilaea are given and compared with data on 16 genera of the Miconieae. Numerical pattern detection was undertaken. The results confirm our preliminary ideas that Blakea and Topobea do not differ enough to enable the separation of these genera on the basis of their wood anatomy. Within the Miconieae it is not possible to separate the genera. However, some anatomical differences between the two tribes were found. The genus Huilaea seems to belong in the Blakeeae although it also shows similarities with the Miconieae. Wurdack’s suggestion (pers. comm.) that the Blakeeae are closest to the genera Loreya and Bellucia, and perhaps should be merged with the Miconieae, is supported to some degree.
TL;DR: A regional synopsis of the genus Blakea is presented that recognizes 33 species in Mexico and Central America and proposes four new species and one new generic transfer that are proposed in the context of a regional synopsis.
Abstract: A regional synopsis of the genus Blakea is presented that recognizes 33 species in Mexico and Central America This summary includes a key, distributional and phenological information, notes on morphological variation, and discussions that provide rationale for relegating six binomials to synonymy Descriptions and diagnoses are presented for four new species of Blakea (B coloradensis, B darcyana, and B perforata from Panama; and B wilsoniorum from southern Costa Rica and Panama) Analysis of the type specimens and recently collected flowering material of Topobea storkii necessitates its transfer to Blakea Three other species (B cuatrecasii, B repens, and B subconnata var obtusa), all of which were previously known from Andean South America, are reported from Panama for the first time Blakea, with approximately 100 species, is one of two berry-fruited genera comprising the natural neotropical tribe Blakeeae (Almeda, 1990) It is best represented in wet montane regions from southern Mexico and the West Indies to Bolivia and Brazil Although northwestern South America is undoubtedly the center of species richness for Blakea (Wurdack, 1973), southern Central America is clearly the area of focal importance for unusual diversity in floral morphology This floral diversity reflects adaptations to a broad array of important pollinators in the region, including rodents, buzzing bees, and hummingbirds (Almeda, 1990; Lumer, 1981; Lumer & Schoer, 1986) For a woody genus with showy, often spectacular, flowers, it is surprising that Blakea has escaped the attention of serious students until recently The genus has not been treated in its entirety since Cogniaux's (1891) familial monograph Even the most recent floristic treatments of the family Melastomataceae for the Mesoamerican region appeared over 30 years ago (Gleason, 1958; Standley, 1924, 1938; Standley & Williams, 1963; Winkler, 1965) when many areas were still little-explored and poorly known botanically The account presented here is a precursor to the treatment that will appear in Flora Mesoamericana Four new species and one new generic transfer are proposed in the context of a regional synopsis This summary also includes a key to the 33 recognized species, distributional and phenological information, notes on variation, and discussions that provide rationale for relegating previously recognized species to synonymy
TL;DR: A synoptic taxonomic history of Blakea and Topobea is presented with special attention given to characters used to combine or separate them and a revised generic key is provided to accommodate anomalous or unusual Mesoamerican species.
Abstract: Blakea P. Browne and Topobea Aublet, the two currently recognized genera in the Blakeeae have been variously combined and segregated during their long history. A synoptic taxonomic history of these genera is presented with special attention given to characters used to combine or separate them. In keeping with traditional generic concepts, Blakea and Topobea are maintained and a revised generic key is provided to accommodate anomalous or unusual Mesoamerican species. Descriptions, diagnostic illustrations, discussions, and distribution maps are presented for four new species of Blakea (B. gregii, B. hammelii, and B. herrerae from Panama; and B. scarlatina from Costa Rica and Nicaragua) and three new species of Topobea {T. fragrant issima, T. hexandra, and T. suaveolens from Panama). The study of recently collected flowering material of B. crassifolia and B. parvifolia necessitates their transfer to Topobea and the adoption of a new name, T. caliginosa, for the narrow Panamanian endemic previously known as B. micrantha. Received February 2, 1990. Accepted March 14, 1990.