Amaranthus deflexus |
Amaranthus albus |
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Argentina amaranth |
white pigweed, tumbleweed |
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Habit | Annual herb, glabrous or becoming glabrous, or sticky-pubescent; stems typically erect or rarely nearly prostrate, up to 1 m, usually heavily branched, typically green, or white when dry, somewhat to greatly woolly towards ends of stems. | |
Leaves | Leaves alternate, petiolate, petiole 5-40 mm; blade obovate to narrowly spoon-shaped, base narrowly cuneate, apex obtuse to acute, margins entire and may be flat or occasionally wavy; cauline leaves 40-80 mm long and 15-30 mm broad, usually deciduous and replaced by axillary leaves, 7-20 mm long and 3-10 mm broad. |
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Inflorescence | Inflorescence a cymose axillary cluster, green, 3-flowered; bracts 1, 1.5-4 mm, generally 1.5-2 times the perianth, linear-lanceolate to awl-shaped, tip somewhat spined. |
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Flowers | Staminate flowers dispersed among pistillate flowers, perianth parts 3, stamens 3, filaments free, anthers 4-locular; pistillate flowers perianth parts 3, to 2 mm, oblong-lanceolate to linear, tip acute, stigmas 3 and erect, ovary ovoid, styles absent. |
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Fruit | Utricles dehiscing along a fissure encircling the whole fruit, 1.5-2 mm, larger than or equal to perianth, ellipsoid-ovoid, greenish white to brown, wrinkled especially near tip; seed approximately 1 mm, lenticular, reddish brown, smooth, shiny. |
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Amaranthus deflexus |
Amaranthus albus |
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Flowering time | July-September | June-September |
Habitat | Open, disturbed areas. | Dry, disturbed areas. |
Distribution | Occurring east of the Cascades crest in Washingotn, where known only from Whitman County; Washington to California; also in eastern North America.
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Occurring chiefly east of the Cascades crest in Washington; British Columbia to California, east across much of North America to the Atlantic Coast.
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Origin | Introduced from South America | Introduced from tropical America |
Conservation status | Not of concern | Not of concern |
Sibling taxa | ||
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