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. 2017 Aug 8;7:7493. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-07398-z

Figure 1.

Figure 1

(a) Map of the Carajás National Forest. Forest boundary is indicated with the purple line. The patchy light green areas are deforestation areas used for agriculture and cattle pastures. Intense green color is a mountain rain forest. Paler green areas within the Forest are savannahs and granitic inselbergs. Established open-pit mines and the ongoing mine explorations are indicated by the red and yellow dots, respectively. (b) Location of the populations used in this study. (c) Distribution of I. cavalcantei (red flowers) and I. marabaensis (lilac flowers). The purple dot indicates the location where putative interspecies hybrids were found in 2016. (d) From left to right, flower of a representative I. cavalcantei individual, flower of a putative hybrid, and flower of I. marabaensis. Bar = 2 cm. (e) Leaves from I. cavalcantei (upper leaf, from Canga N4), I. marabaensis (lower leaf, from S11 Plateau). Individuals of I. marabaensis from populations N5, N6, N8 and Tarzan have narrow lanceolate leaves (middle leaf). Bar = 1 cm.