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annual abronia, trans montane abronia, trans montane sand verbena

abronia, sand-verbena

Habit Plants annual, infrequently perennial. Herbs, annual or perennial, sometimes cespitose or appearing acaulescent, usually viscid-pubescent, from slender to stout taproot (extensively rhizomatous in Abronia bolackii).
Stems

decumbent to ascending, much branched, elongate, reddish at least basally, glandular-pubescent, rarely glabrous or viscid-pubescent.

prostrate to erect, unarmed, without glutinous bands on internodes.

Leaves

petiole 1–4.5 cm;

blade broadly ovate to orbiculate, 1–5 × 0.5–3 cm, margins entire or ± repand and undulate, surfaces glabrous or sparsely glandular-pubescent.

usually basal and cauline (all basal in A. bigelovii and A. nana), unequal in each pair, petiolate;

blade ± thick and succulent, base usually asymmetric.

Inflorescences

peduncle longer than subtending petiole;

bracts lanceolate to ovate, 3–10 × 1–5 mm, papery, puberulent to densely glandular-pubescent;

flowers 15–35.

axillary (appearing scapose in A. bigelovii and A. nana), pedunculate, capitate clusters, with peripheral flowers usually opening first;

receptacle slightly rounded to conic, without pedicel-like projections;

bracts persistent, not accrescent, 5–10, distinct, forming involucre, lanceolate to broadly ovate, thinly papery or scarious, translucent, occasionally thin and green.

Flowers

bisexual, chasmogamous;

perianth radially symmetric, funnelform or salverform, constricted distal to ovary, abruptly expanded to 5-lobed limb;

stamens 5–9, included;

styles included;

stigmas linear.

Perianth

tube greenish to coral pink, 6–18 mm, limb white to pale pink, 5–8 mm diam.

Fruits

winged, turbinate, 3–8 × 3–6 mm, coriaceous, apex broadly tapered to prominent beak;

wings (2–)5 (when 2, folded together) truncate distally with conspicuous dilations, cavities extending throughout.

winged or not, usually fusiform or turbinate, in profile rhombic, cordate, or obdeltate, coriaceous, glabrate to viscid puberulent;

wings 2–5, opaque, subtly veined, not or only slightly extending beyond apex or base of body, distal margins sometimes dilated and flattened, broader than lamina, interior hollow, forming cavity, or filled with spongy tissue;

sulci smooth or slightly rugose.

Abronia turbinata

Abronia

Phenology Flowering spring–fall.
Habitat Sandy soils, desert scrub
Elevation 900-2500 m (3000-8200 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
CA; NV; OR
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
North America; Mexico
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 20 (19 in the flora).

Mature to near-mature fruits are usually required for identification of Abronia species because of the variation of vegetative structures within each taxon. Abronia appears to be in a state of active evolution. Cross-pollination readily occurs in the greenhouse, producing a variety of hybrids. Hybridization occasionally occurs in the field.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Limb of perianth yellow or deep purplish red; plants perennial; stems prostrate, in vigorous plants forming large mats; seashores
→ 2
1. Limb of perianth white to magenta, never yellow or deep purplish red; plants annual or perennial; stems, when present, erect, ascending to prostrate, and then sometimes forming mats; mostly inland
→ 3
2. Limb of perianth yellow
A. latifolia
2. Limb of perianth deep purplish red
A. maritima
3. Plants perennial, acaulescent or nearly so, usually cespitose, rarely with short-branched aerial caudices; leaves all basal; inflorescences not prominently axillary, appearing scapose; wings on fruit not dilated
→ 4
3. Plants annual or perennial, usually caulescent, infrequently cespitose; stems elongate, rarely with short internodes; leaves basal and cauline (basal leaves sometimes absent on older plants); inflorescences prominently axillary; wings on fruit dilated or not
→ 5
4. Leaf blade 5 or more times as long as wide
A. bigelovii
4. Leaf blade less than 3 times as long as wide
A. nana
5. Fruits 2(-3)-winged; wings sometimes partially folded together, interior spongy filled
A. pogonantha
5. Fruits (2-)3-5-winged, or wings absent, if 2-winged, wings usually folded together, interior sometimes hollow, forming cavities
→ 6
6. Flowers 1-5 per inflorescence; peduncles shorter than subtending petioles
A. alpina
6. Flowers 6-80 per inflorescence; peduncles longer than subtending petioles
→ 7
7. Fruit wings (if present) thin, without cavities; fruits usually as wide as long
→ 8
7. Fruit wings (if present) compressed but appearing thick, cavity extending throughout interior of wings; fruits seldom as wide as long
→ 10
8. Fruit bodies coriaceous; wings (2-)3-5, if 2 then wings folded together to form single deep groove
A. mellifera
8. Fruit bodies indurate; wings 3-5 (rarely absent), not folded together
→ 9
9. Fruit bodies ± rugose-veined, seldom smooth; inland
A. villosa
9. Fruit bodies smooth, not rugose-veined; coastal
A. umbellata
10. Fruit wings dilated distally and flattened perpendicular to plane of lamina
→ 11
10. Wings of fruit not dilated distally, or wings absent
→ 15
11. Plants usually annual, occasionally perennial
→ 12
11. Plants perennial
→ 13
12. Perianth limb magenta to pale pink, infrequently pale rose; leaf blades mostly ovate to elliptic
A. angustifolia
12. Perianth limb white to pale pink; leaf blades broadly ovate to ± orbicu- late
A. turbinata
13. Perianth limb pale pink to light magenta; inflorescence bracts acute to attenutate at apex; fruits 4-7 mm; calcareous or gypseous soils
A. carletonii
13. Perianth limb white or greenish white; inflorescence bracts acute to obtuse or rounded at apex; fruits 5-12 mm; usually sandy or gravelly soils, sometimes gypseous
→ 14
14. Stems arising from a taproot; fruits 5-12 mm; flowers 25-75 per head; sandy soils, intermountain west
A. elliptica
14. Stems arising from long cordlike rhizomes; fruits 5-7 mm; flowers 15-25 per head; gypseous sandy or gravelly soils, nw New Mexico
A. bolackii
15. Wings of fruit absent
A. argillosa
15. Wings of fruit usually present (reduced to lobes in A. ammophila)
→ 16
16. Fruits stiffly coriaceous to indurate
→ 17
16. Fruits scarious
→ 18
17. Leaf blades 1-2.5 cm; fruits 4-6 mm, ± rhombic or fusiform in profile, tapered at both ends; peripheral fruits not or only slightly distorted
A. ammophila
17. Leaf blades usually 3-12 cm; fruits 5-12 mm, ± heart-shaped in profile (when wings not distorted), tapered at base, beaked within broad notch at apex; peripheral fruits often distorted and S-shaped in lateral view
A. fragrans
18. Fruit bodies smooth, reticulate veined at apex, ± 2 times as long as wide
A. ameliae
18. Fruit bodies sometimes rugose, not reticulate veined at apex; fruits 0.7-2 times as long as wide
A. macrocarpa
Source FNA vol. 4, p. 66. FNA vol. 4, p. 61. Author: Leo A. Galloway.
Parent taxa Nyctaginaceae > Abronia Nyctaginaceae
Sibling taxa
A. alpina, A. ameliae, A. ammophila, A. angustifolia, A. argillosa, A. bigelovii, A. bolackii, A. carletonii, A. elliptica, A. fragrans, A. latifolia, A. macrocarpa, A. maritima, A. mellifera, A. nana, A. pogonantha, A. umbellata, A. villosa
Subordinate taxa
A. alpina, A. ameliae, A. ammophila, A. angustifolia, A. argillosa, A. bigelovii, A. bolackii, A. carletonii, A. elliptica, A. fragrans, A. latifolia, A. macrocarpa, A. maritima, A. mellifera, A. nana, A. pogonantha, A. turbinata, A. umbellata, A. villosa
Synonyms Tricratus
Name authority Torrey ex S. Watson: Botany (Fortieth Parallel), 285, plate 31, figs. 1–5, 8, 9. (1871) Jussieu: Gen. Pl., 448. (1789)
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