Marlon C Machado’s research while affiliated with State University of Feira de Santana and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (2)


Figure 1. Canonical axis 1 and 2 of a Canonical Variate Analysis of twelve populations in Mimosa series Cordistipulae based on 38 morphological characters. Axis 1 corresponds to 41.40% of the total variance and axis 2 corresponds to 18.9%. For legend codes, please see Table 3.
Figure 6. Morphology of species of Mimosa ser. Cordistipulae. The same structures are represented for all species. Mimosa leptantha: flowering branch (A1), one pinna (A2), leaflet (A3), stipule (A4); Mimosa minarum: flowering branch (B1), one pinna (B2), leaflet (B3), stipule (B4); Mimosa misera: flowering branch (C1), one pinna (C2), leaflet (C3), stipule (C4); and Mimosa setuligera: flowering Figure 6. Morphology of species of Mimosa ser. Cordistipulae. The same structures are represented for all species. Mimosa leptantha: flowering branch (A1), one pinna (A2), leaflet (A3), stipule (A4); Mimosa minarum: flowering branch (B1), one pinna (B2), leaflet (B3), stipule (B4); Mimosa misera: flowering branch (C1), one pinna (C2), leaflet (C3), stipule (C4); and Mimosa setuligera: flowering branch (D1), one pinna (D2), leaflet (D3), stipule (D4). All structures are drawn to the same scale: flowering branches, scale = 20 mm (A1,B1,C1,D1); pinnae, scale = 8.5 mm (A2,B2,C2,D2); leaflets, scale = 2.1 mm (A3,B3,C3,D3); and stipules, scale = 3.3 mm (A4,B4,C4,D4). Drawings are by Carla de Lima.
Sampling locations and vouchers for the populations included in a morphometric study of Mimosa series Cordistipulae. All locations are in Brazil, and vouchers are deposited at the Herbarium of the Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana (HUEFS).
Morphometric Investigation of a Species Complex in Mimosa Section Batocaulon Series Cordistipulae (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2025

·

82 Reads

Janaína G A Nascimento

·

Luciano P Queiroz

·

Marlon C Machado

·

Citation: Nascimento, J.G.A.; Queiroz, L.P.; Machado, M.C.; van den Berg, C. Morphometric Investigation of a Species Complex in Mimosa Section Batocaulon Series Cordistipulae (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae). Abstract: Mimosa series Cordistipulae was created by Barneby in 1991, embracing species diagnosed by their small subshrubby habit and the presence of gland-tipped setae and trimerous flowers. Most species are endemic to Northeastern Brazil, and some possess characters deemed diagnostic which nonetheless overlap, making species identification difficult. Our study aimed to test species circumscriptions and sets of characters that could be applied to unequivocally distinguish the species. Twelve populations (225 individuals) were collected at nine localities, encompassing the Brazilian vegetation types Caatinga, Campos Rupestres and Restinga. Linear measurements of 38 floral and vegetative characters were measured and analyzed using Canonical Variate Analysis and cluster analysis. The first two canonical axes explained 41.4% and 18.9% of the variation and separated two populations of the group recently described as a new species. Vegetative characters are more informative for species delimitation than flower characters, and most groups are distinguished primarily by the number of pinnae pairs, number of leaflets per pinna and length of the leaf rachis. The species displaying the highest morphological similarity are M. misera, M. leptantha and M. minarum. The traditional morphometric approach was capable of objectively dealing with a type of variation that would be difficult to interpret by purely examining herbarium specimens.

Download

Morphometric Investigation of a Species Complex in Mimosa Series Cordistipulae (Leguminosae, Mimosoideae)

November 2024

·

12 Reads

Mimosa series Cordistipulae was created by Barneby in 1991, embracing species diagnosed by the small subshrubby habit, presence of gland-tipped setae and trimerous flowers. Most species are endemic to Northeastern Brazil, and some possess characters deemed diagnostic which nonetheless overlap, making species identification difficult. Our study aimed to test species circumscriptions and sets of characters that could be applied to unequivocally distinguish the species. Twelve populations (225 individuals) were collected at nine localities, encompassing the Brazilian vegetation types Caatinga, Campos Rupestres and Restinga. Linear measurements of 38 floral and vegetative characters were measured and analyzed using Canonical Variates Analysis and Cluster Analysis. The first two canonical axes explained 41.4% and 18.9% of the variation and separated two populations of the group recently described as new species. Vegetative characters are more informative for species delimitation than flower characters, and most groups are distinguished primarily by the number of pinnae pairs, number of leaflets per pinna and length of the leaf rachis. The species displaying highest morphological similarity are M. misera, M. leptantha, and M. minarum. The traditional morphometric approach was capable to objectively deal with a type of variation that would be difficult to interpret by purely examining herbarium specimens.