Cuscuta pentagona |
Cuscuta campestris |
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field dodder, five-angled dodder |
field dodder |
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Habit | Parasitic, twining, annual or perennial herbs, with very slender, pinkish-yellow to white, glabrous stems, often forming large mats. | |
Leaves | Leaves reduced to tiny scales. |
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Flowers | Flowers in small clusters, on pedicels about equal to the calyx; calyx not fleshy, 1.5-3 mm. long, shallowly cup-shaped, the 5 lobes broadly ovate-triangular, overlapping slightly at the base; corolla equaling the calyx, persistent, the tube broadly bell-shaped, slightly longer than the 5 spreading to reflexed, lanceolate, acute lobes; stamens 5, inserted just below the sinuses of the tube, exerted, the filaments exceeding the small anthers; obovate-oblong scales covering the base of the filaments are conspicuously fringed above, joined about 1/3 their lengths; styles 2, 1 mm. long; ovary superior, 2-celled. |
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Fruits | Capsule depressed-globose, 2.5-3 mm. long. |
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Cuscuta pentagona |
Cuscuta campestris |
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Flowering time | July-September | June-September |
Habitat | Parasitic on a variety of hosts. | Shores, floodplains, roadsides, ditches, fields, and other disturbed areas. |
Distribution | Occurring chiefly east of the Cascades crest and in the Columbia River Gorge in Washington; British Columbia to California, east to the Atlantic Coast.
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Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington; southern British Columbia to California, east to Utah and Texas; also in eastern North America.
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Origin | Introduced | Native |
Conservation status | Not of concern | Not of concern |
Sibling taxa | ||
Web links |
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