Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2020-08-12
Page range: 187–195
Abstract views: 29
PDF downloaded: 35

Magnolia ottoi (Magnoliaceae) a new species from Purulhá, Baja Verapaz, Guatemala: conservation and Mayan Q’eqchi ‘ ethnotaxonomy

Herbario IBUG, Laboratorio de Ecosistemática, Instituto de Botánica, Departamento de Botánica y Zoología, Universidad de Guadalajara, Camino Ing. Ramón Padilla Sánchez 2100, Nextipac, Zapopan CP 45221, Jalisco, Mexico.
Experimental Station of Orchids of Guatemala, 1 Avenida 5-28 Zona 1, Cobán Alta Verapaz 16001, Guatemala C.A. Herbarium BIGU, Escuela de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas y Farmacia Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Zona 12, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Experimental Station of Orchids of Guatemala, 1 Avenida 5-28 Zona 1, Cobán Alta Verapaz 16001, Guatemala C.A. Herbarium BIGU, Escuela de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas y Farmacia Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Zona 12, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Herbarium BIGU, Escuela de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas y Farmacia Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Zona 12, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Magnolia subsect. Talauma Magnolia steyermarkii Magnolia quetzal Magnolia ottoi Magnolia atlantida Magnolia cochranei Magnolia lacandonica Magnolia perezfarrerae Mayan Q’eqchi’ Magnoliids

Abstract

A new species of Magnolia subsect. Talauma (“jomcoj”), Magnolia ottoi, is described and illustrated. The conservation status of this new species is proposed as critically endangered (CR) according to IUCN criteria. An identification key and a map with the distribution of the new species and other species of Magnolia subsect. Talauma from Guatemala and neighboring areas (Honduras and Chiapas, México) is also presented. Our field research also unveiled the Mayan Q’eqchi’ ancestral taxonomic knowledge which differentiates magnolias of two different subsections, Magnolia and Talauma, based on wood quality and properties. They consistently distinguished them as “coj” and “jomcoj” respectively.