Maianthemum comaltepecense is a rare perennial, terrestrial herb found as an understory species in moist forests[1] and endemic[2] to southwest Mexico.[3]
Plants grow 10– tall[1] tall from branching rhizomes with roots only at the nodes. Stems are hairless, recurved and flexuous.
Plants have 4 or 5 (sometimes 6) leaves that are sessile or short stalked. Leaf blades are 3– long by 1– wide and lance- to egg-shaped with pointed tips and rounded bases.
4 to 12 flowers are set on a compound raceme with 1 or 2 flowers per node. The raceme is 1.5 to 4.5 cm long and flexuous.
Information on flower size and color not available. Fruits are 3-lobed, 6–9 mm across, ripening to purple with white spots.[1]
Maianthemum comaltepecense is known only from one population in Oaxaca, Mexico.
Found growing in moist, shaded oak forests at 2900 m. Mosses, lichens and ferns abundant.
The complex raceme of Maianthemum comaltepecense, with 2 flowers at some nodes, is similar to that of Maianthemum canadense and Maianthemum dilatatum, however the leaves are quite different and the distributions are well separated. Maianthemum scilloideum is similar and also found in Mexico, but plants are more robust, generally have 8 to 12 leaves per stem and the fruits are usually spherical and red at maturity.