Francisca ElyFresia TorresJuan Gaviria2026-03-222026-03-222005https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/56789Citaciones: 1Monochaetum meridense (H.Karst.) Naudin is a widely distributed shrub of the South American Andes, however, the studies carried out for this species are restricted to a few morphological descriptions and floristic surveys. This motivated the authors to describe the leaf structure, and if possible, to relate it with the species habitat and distribution along a gradient in the Sierra Nevada of Merida, a relatively undisturbed mountain range that comprises cloud forests, upper montane-forests (bosques parameros) and paramo vegetation. M. meridense grows between 2.400-3.400 m asl, it presents a thin cuticle, a scarce content of schlerenchyma, lax spongy parenchyma and vein pattern, characters that depict M. meridense as a mesophyte, however, the tall and thickened anticlinal walls of the upper epidermic cells, along with the well differentiated mesophyll and compact palisade parenchyma, suggest a heliophyte conduct and explain the species preference for sunny environments along this gradient, in which no significant differences were observed among the individuals growing at different altitudes.enMelastomataceaeCloud forestMontane ecologyShrubBiologyKarstVegetation (pathology)HabitatGeographyEcologyLeaf morphology and anatomy of Monochaetum meridense (Melastomataceae)article