Myrcia sellowiana O.Berg

  • Filed As

    Myrtaceae
    Myrcia sellowiana O.Berg

  • Collector(s)

    G. Eiten 8468 with Liene T. Eiten, 31 Aug 1968

  • Location

    Brazil. Mato Grosso. Barra do Garças Mun. Serra do Roncador. 235 km along new road NNE of village of Xavantina. (25 km due S of Royal Society-Royal Geographic Society Base Camp.) At "Lagoa do Sucuri".

  • Habitat

    Circular grove a few meters wide of cerrado scrub on raised drained gray silt soil. [See label for further habitat description.].

  • Description

    Tree 3 ½ m tall. Petals, filaments & styles white, anthers buff. All specimens of this n° from one tree. Phenology of specimen: Flower.

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 00906476

    Occurrence ID: 378968a8-81d3-4a48-8a28-7a18a3e87b6b

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    Send comments on this specimen record

  • Kingdom

    Plantae

  • Division

    Magnoliophyta

  • Order

    Myrtales

  • Family

    Myrtaceae

  • All Determinations

    Myrcia sellowiana O.Berg det C. E. B. Proença, 1993
    Note: Duplicate specimen at herb. INPA--256429 identified as such. Also, at herv. SP--127788, FUEL--15656, and UB--132264

    Myrcia DC. det L. R. Landrum, 1980
    Note: Duplicate specimen at herb. MO--3218642 identified as such.

  • Region

    South America

  • Country

    Brazil

  • State/Province

    Mato Grosso

  • County/Municipio

    Barra do Garças Mun.

  • Locality

    Serra do Roncador. 235 km along new road NNE of village of Xavantina. (25 km due S of Royal Society-Royal Geographic Society Base Camp.) At "Lagoa do Sucuri".

  • Elevation

    Alt. 450 m. (1476 ft.)

  • Coordinates

    -12.85, -51.75

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

/Yì i^rci <*-
c/'eJ-- L R. LomJvzì i
Municipio de Barra do Gargas: ^35 km along new road NNE of
village of XAVANTINA. (25 km due S of Royal Society-
Royal Geographic Society Base Camp. Base Camp is at 12°51’S. 51°45’W.)
Alt. ca. 450 m.	"Lagoa do Sucuri*1. 31 -Hig 1968
(Area of 10 km radius around Base Camp is situated on crest of the Serra do
Roncador, a gently-sloped divide between Xingu drainage (via Rio Suiá Migu)
to west and Araguáia drainage (via Rio das Mortes) to east. The yet undissected
few-km wide crest is flat or gently rolling with a few low lateritic scarps and
ridges. Brook valleys with very gentle to moderately steep slopes. Base Camp
area is exactly at climatic boundary between Amazonian forest region and central
Brazil “cerrado” region (savanna sens. lat.). North-western half of area is covered
with the outer edge of the continuous Amazonian forest, here a slightly semide-
ciduous dry mesophytic forest 15-18 m tall on the upland, taller along the
seasonally dry brooks. Southeastern half of area has, on the upland, xeromorphic
semideciduous cerrado, in the form of medium-tall open scrub or tree-and-scrub
?woodland, with evergreen gallery forests 20-30 m tall along the permanent brooks.
Usually a band of seasonally marshy grassy campo, a few meters to a few tens
of meters wide, borders the gallery forests, separating them from the cerrado,
but where the campo is lacking, the cerrado grades directly into gallery forest
through a narrow band of its arboreal form, “cerradüo”. The campos usually
have scattered circular groves of cerrado scrub several meters in diameter on
slightly raised soil, each with a termite mound. On the upland the cerrado region
grades into the continuous dry forest region through a few-km wide ecotone of
cerradSo. Underlying rock is various kinds of sandstone, giving rise to slightly
clayey fine-sandy deep latosols, sterile and reddish or yellowish-tan with almost
no humus on upland under cerrado, and dark red with more clay under dry
forest. In restricted areas under cerrado, small laterite blocks or quartz pebbles
may form a thin permeable subsurface layer, or the upper soil layer may be
purely of laterite pebbles. Valley soils are deep light gray fine sand with little
or no clay, sterile on drier upper slopes, black with humus in upper layer on
moister or soaking lower slopes and floors. Shales underlie soils in a few valleys.
At this date the Base Camp region has not yet been settled; the forests are virgin;
the cerrado and campo are uncut and ungrazed, but have been subjected to ground
fires set by Indians every 3-5 years. In the cerrado, these infrequent fires
temporarily reduce density of the lower shrubs but otherwise have no eaect
on the physiognomy.)
Habitat of this n.°: Circular grove a few meters wide of
cerrado scrub on raised drained gray silt soil«
(This hummock is at lower edge of a soaking grassy
campo that borders a gallery forest«)
(This n2; tree 3 l/2 m tall. Petals, filaments
& styles white, anthers buff. All specimens of
this nc from one tree.
leg. George Eiten & Liene T. Eiten, n.° 8468
Distributed by the Instituto de Botanica, Süo Paulo
FLORA OF BRAZIL
STATE OF MATO GROSSO
SERRA DO RONCADOR *
00906476