Dorsomorphin Untruths You've Been Warned Around
Distribution and ecology. Endemic to south-eastern Brazil, in the states of Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro and S?o Paulo; in the Serra do Mar and Mantiequeira mountain chains (Figure ?(Figure1515). Figure 15. Distribution of Solanum verticillatum. Ecology. Solanum verticillatum Resminostat grows on the montane coastal forests (Mata Atl?ntica) as a small tree in forests and secondary growth from 700 to almost 2000 m elevation. Plants can be as large as 10 cm in diameter, and form part of the low canopy of these forests. Phenology. Most flowering specimens collected in the months of June and July; fruiting in November-January. Sporadic flowering and fruiting apparently occurs throughout the year, but a flowering peak occurs in the austral winter (May-August), which is also the drier season. Etymology. Named for the pseudo-verticillate nature of the stems, where many branches appear to arise from a set of closely spaced Dorsomorphin purchase nodes (Figure ?(Figure8F8F inset). Preliminary conservation status (IUCN 2014). Least Concern (LC); EOO 75, 516 km2 (LC); AOO 60 km2 (EN). Although only described here, Solanum verticillatum is known from many localities along the Serra do Mar, many of which are from within protected areas (e.g., Reserva Biol��gica do Alto da Serra de Paranapiacaba in S?o Paulo state and Reserva Ecol��gica de Maca�� de Cima, in Nova Friburgo, Rio de Janeiro state). Where it occurs, Solanum verticillatum is relatively common. Notes. Solanum verticillatum was considered a montane form of Solanum evonymoides by Knapp (2008); field collections in 2013 confirmed the distinctness of this species. Solanum evonymoides is known from coastal forests in Bahia and adjacent Espirito Santo, and eastern Minas Gerais and although morphologically similar to Solanum verticillatum is distinct in both habitat and in several morphological features. Staurosporine clinical trial Solanum verticillatum differs from Solanum evonymoides in its tree habit, branches that appear verticillate due to short internodes (Figure ?(Figure8F8F inset), smaller sweet-smelling flowers (