Xylosma benthamii
Xylosma benthamii, colloquially known as rompejato, is a species of flowering plant in the family Salicaceae, endemic across South America.
Description
Xylosma benthamii is a shrub or tree ranging from in height. Its trunk is typically armed with stout, branched, dark-colored spines up to long, although some descriptions note unarmed, smooth branches with slightly tuberculate bark. Younger branchlets may be puberulous or glabrous, while older stems develop dense lenticels and grayish corky bark. The foliage is variable but generally sparse and elliptic to sublanceolate, sometimes oblong or ovate, measuring in length and in width. Leaves are usually acuminate or shortly attenuate at the apex and attenuate at the base, with finely glandular-serrate margins bearing minute teeth; they are typically glabrous, though may show limited pubescence on the midrib beneath. Basal glands may be obvious, faint, or absent, and the petiole is short, around long. Venation includes 5–6 pairs of lateral nerves with slightly raised transverse veins and veinlets on both surfaces. Axillary buds are solitary, ovate-rounded, and densely pubescent.The species bears unisexual flowers, primarily male, in small axillary clusters of 4–10 per fascicle or short raceme, emerging from foliate or defoliate axils. These are supported on slender, short pedicels that measure, which are puberulent or minutely pubescent. The calyx has 4–5 ovate sepals with ciliolate margins; the sepals are glabrous outside but sometimes tomentose within. There is no corolla, and the floral disc is thick and glabrous, lobed, and often formed from coalescing glands aligned with the sepals. Male flowers contain 15–30 stamen with slender glabrous filaments and minute, ovate-rounded, basifixed anther that dehisce longitudinally. Female flowers, when present, exhibit a glabrous ovoid ovary with a short style and two divergent stigmas that are thickened below and dilated distally. The fruit is subglobose, ripening from cherry-red to blackish, measuring in diameter, and contains 2–4 ovoid-subtrigonous seeds, each about long.
Distribution
Xylosma benthamii is endemic to a wide range of countries, including Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela. In Colombia, it has been recorded in Amazonas, Antioquia, Caldas, Cauca, Chocó, Nariño, and Valle del Cauca. Venezuelan occurrences span Apure, Bogotá, Bolívar, Falcón, Guárico, Lara, Miranda, Monagas, and Portuguesa. In Bolivia, it is native to Beni and Santa Cruz, while in Brazil, its distribution extends from the northern states of Roraima, Pará, Amazonas, and Acre to Maranhão and Bahia in the northeast, Mato Grosso do Sul in the central-west region, and Minas Gerais in the southeast. Though not explicitly stated to be introduced outside of its native range, it has been preserved in Indonesia.Ecology
Xylosma benthamii is primarily a species of the wet tropical biome, inhabiting tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests across Andean and predominantly Amazonian regions. Its elevational range spans approximately, with records extending into lowland and montane forests, gallery forests, and forest edges transitioning into savanna and the Cerrado. In Ecuador’s wetland, it is particularly well adapted to seasonally flooded fringes of dry forest, forming part of transitional woody communities alongside Haematoxylum campechianum. These hydrologically dynamic habitats reflect the species’ ecological plasticity, allowing it to persist in flood-prone margins increasingly impacted by agricultural encroachment. In some dry forest communities, its dominance is notable, comprising up to 25% of the relative importance value, signaling a robust role in ecosystem structure and resilience.Taxonomy
Xylosma benthamii was first described by George Bentham in 1845 under the name Flacourtia prunifolia. In 1847, Edmond Tulasne reassigned the species as Flacurtia benthami, likely an erratum, later standardized to Flacourtia benthamii. The taxonomic placement shifted once more in 1862 when José Jerónimo Triana and Jules Émile Planchon transferred the species to the genus Xylosma, publishing it as Xylosma benthami, a name eventually corrected to the now-accepted Xylosma benthamii. Later, the genus underwent a grammatical gender concordance, initiated by William T. Stearn in 1992 when he questioned the genus’s gender, and finalized by Dan Henry Nicolson in 1994, although Xylosma benthamii was not subject to it because its epithet is a genitive noun, which remains unchanged regardless of gender. The collective number of synonyms across different sources is approximately 33.Historically, Xylosma benthamii was placed in Flacourtiaceae under older classification systems such as those of Cronquist and Takhtajan. Eventually, Flacourtiaceae, including this taxon, were reclassified into Salicaceae, a placement adopted by the APG III system and subsequently recognized by Plants of the World Online, though this classification remains disputed.
Etymology
Within its range, the plant goes by only a few common names, those being espinho-de-judeu, pustameira, and rompejato.The generic name Xylosma derives from, meaning "wood" or "tree," and, meaning "smell," overall referring to the aromatic wood found in some species. The specific epithet benthamii is in honor of George Bentham, who authored Flacourtia prunifolia.