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Xingu State Park vascular plant survey: filling the gaps

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Abstract

Located in the southeastern limit of the Amazon biome, the Xingu State Park (PEX) was identified as a knowledge gap, leading to a floristic and vegetation survey of the area. During this work, 463 species distributed in 295 genera and 111 families of vascular plants were recorded, including dozens of new records for the state of Mato Grosso and at least five species new to science. Seven vegetation types were found, among which the Open Ombrophilous forest and the “Várzea” (floodplain) and lake vegetation showed the highest species richness. The vegetation of the Alto Xingu River was hitherto undocumented although this area is subject to strong deforestation pressure for cattle ranching from the southwest and soybean cultivation from the southeast, and is currently a focus of international attention due to the plans for the Belo Monte hydroelectric plant downriver in the state of Pará. When compared with a survey of the neighbouring Cristalino State Park, there was remarkably little overlap in vegetation types and plant species, highlighting the importance of increasing the intensity of plant surveys and collections in the Amazon including protected areas, so as to address the many, vast lacunae in our understanding of this biodiverse and threatened biome. Historic and geographic factors have polarized research in Brazil such that the Amazonian biome lags behind the eastern part of the country in terms of plant knowledge, and this type of initiative helps in providing much needed data to address this situation.

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Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Dr Alexandre Milaré Batistella, Nicola Laventi e Jones Moraes from the Environment Secretary of Mato Grosso (SEMA) for technical and logistic support; Vinicius Marini, supervisor of the PEX for his great contribution before and during fieldwork; Fundação Ecológica Cristalino for long-term collaboration and logistic support; Mato Grosso State University—Alta Floresta (HERBAM) and Rio de Janeiro Botanic Gardens for logistic support and housing the collections; the Brazilian Research Council (CNPq) for processing the collecting permit EXC000435/2010-4 and SEMA for the authorization 006/2010 (Technical responsibility annotation ART 2010/03069 by CRBio-1 No. 023.244/01-D); the Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia Herbário Virtual da Flora e dos Fungos (INCT-HVFF) for the download of collecting points; the dedicated fieldwork colleagues Alex F. Forte, Denis R. Silva and Lucio F. Lindolfo for all their hard work and sharing the good times. Plant identifications were kindly provided by the following specialists: Gwil Lewis, Steve Renvoize, Ana Cláudia Araújo, Paulo G. Windisch, Elizabeth M. Woodgyer, Gill Challen, Terry Pennington, Renato Goldenberg, Jefferson Prado, Rosângela Simão-Bianchini, João Floriano B. Pastore, Iain Prance, Henk van der Werff, David Goyder, Sara Edwards, Ada Benelli, Adriana Lobão, Lana Sylvestre, Tarciso Filgueiras, M. Silvia Ferruci, M. Mercedes Arbo, Marcus Nadruz Coelho and Jomar G. Jardim. Tim Wilkinson from the GIS Team at RBG, Kew kindly prepared the map. We would also like to thank the anonymous reviewers who helped us improve the manuscript. RCF has a productivity grant from CNPq.

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Correspondence to Daniela C. Zappi.

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Zappi, D.C., Milliken, W., Lopes, C.R.A.S. et al. Xingu State Park vascular plant survey: filling the gaps. Braz. J. Bot 39, 751–778 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40415-016-0262-2

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