Juncus confusus |
|
---|---|
Colorado rush |
|
Habit | Plants perennial, 20–50 cm tall, cespitose, stems with 0–5 strong ridges visible on one side. |
Leaves | thin and wiry; blade flat and slightly inrolled; auricles soft and thin distally, 0.3–0.8 mm; dull, rounded or acute; dirty white to translucent. |
Inflorescences | cymes, 0.5–2.5 cm, usually dense and small. |
Flowers | tepals 6, with broad medium brown stripes flanking a green midvein; tepal tips acuminate; erect; equal or subequal; stamens 6; filaments 0.7–1.1 mm; anthers 0.5–0.7 mm; styles 0.05–0.2 mm. |
Capsules | 2.5–3.5 mm; shorter than or equaling tepals, brown to dark brown; apex notched, crested, 3-chambered. |
Seeds | 0.4–0.5 × 0.2–0.3 mm, apiculate, longitudinally ridged. |
2n | =80. |
Juncus confusus |
|
Distribution | |
Discussion | Seasonally moist or wet meadows, springs, swales, shores, ditches. 800–2700 m. BR, BW, ECas, Owy, Sisk. CA, NV, ID, WA; north to British Columbia, east to SD, southeast to NM. Native. This species is often confused with Juncus occidentalis, which shares the brown-striped tepals and crested capsules but does not grow east of the Cascades. Where they overlap in southwestern Oregon and California, they are separable by the internal structure of the capsules: three-chambered in J. confusus and one-chambered in J. occidentalis. |
Source | Flora of Oregon, volume 1, page 274 Peter Zika |
Sibling taxa | |
Web links |
|