Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2019-12-30
Page range: 291–295
Abstract views: 20
PDF downloaded: 2

Magnolia dixonii (M. subsect. Talauma, Magnoliaceae) rediscovered at Tesoro Escondido Reserve in the biogeographic Chocó of Ecuador

Reserva Tesoro Escondido, Fundación de Conservación Jocotoco. Lizardo García E09-104 y Andrés Xaura, Quito, Ecuador
Reserva Tesoro Escondido, Fundación de Conservación Jocotoco. Lizardo García E09-104 y Andrés Xaura, Quito, Ecuador
Universidad Estatal Amazónica, Paso lateral, km 2.5 vía a Napo, Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador
Universidad Estatal Amazónica, Paso lateral, km 2.5 vía a Napo, Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador
Instituto de Botánica (Herbario IBUG), Departamento de Botánica y Zoología, Universidad de Guadalajara, Las Agujas, Zapopan, km15, carr. Guadalajara-Nogales, Jalisco, México
Esmeraldas Critically Endangered Magnoliids

Abstract

Magnolia dixonii (Little 1969: 457) Govaerts in Frodin & Govaerts (1996: 70) has been rediscovered by botanists and conservationists in November, 2017, at the Tesoro Escondido Reserve, a private reserve conserving 2000 ha of primary rainforest in the highly threatened Ecuadorian Chocó, protecting critically endangered species such as the Ecuadorian brown-headed spider monkey (Ateles fusciceps fusciceps). Magnolia dixonii had not been seen in the half a century since its discovery at Hoja Blanca-Gualpi, Esmeraldas Province, northwestern Ecuador.