Asclepias cordifolia |
Asclepias linaria |
|
---|---|---|
heart-leaf milkweed, purple milkweed |
hierba del cuervo, needle leaf milkweed, pineneedle milkweed |
|
Habit | Herbs. | Shrubs, crown rounded. |
Stems | 1–20, ascending to spreading, unbranched, 25–100 cm, glabrous, glaucous, rhizomes absent. |
few–numerous, erect, branched, especially distally, 30–70 cm, woody, bark brown to gray, twigs puberulent with curved trichomes, not glaucous, rhizomes absent. |
Leaves | opposite, sessile, stipular colleters absent; blade ovate to lanceolate, 3.5–11 × 1.8–8 cm, chartaceous, base cordate, clasping, margins entire, apex acute, mucronate, venation brochidodromous to eucamptodromous, surfaces glabrous, glaucous, margins minutely ciliate, laminar colleters absent. |
eventually caducous, alternate, spiral to irregular, sessile, with 1 stipular colleter on each side of leaf base; blade linear, needlelike, 1.5–4 × 0.1–0.15 cm, chartaceous, base cuneate, margins revolute, apex acute, mucronate, venation obscure, sparsely pilosulous to glabrate, laminar colleters absent. |
Inflorescences | terminal, branched, sometimes also extra-axillary at upper nodes, pedunculate, 5–20-flowered; peduncle 0.3–6.5 cm, apically sparsely pilose to glabrate, with few bracts. |
extra-axillary, sessile or pedunculate, 9–30-flowered; peduncle 0–2.5 cm, puberulent with curved trichomes to pilosulous, with 1 caducous bract at the base of each pedicel. |
Pedicels | 16–37 mm, sparsely pilose. |
10–14 mm, pilosulous. |
Flowers | erect to pendent; calyx lobes elliptic to lanceolate, 3–5 mm, apex acute, pilose; corolla red-violet, lobes reflexed with spreading tips, oval, 6–7 mm, apex acute, glabrous; gynostegial column 1–1.5 mm; fused anthers brown, cylindric, 1.5–2 mm, wings right-triangular, open at tip, apical appendages deltoid; corona segments white, tinged pink to red-violet at base, sessile, tubular, 2–3 mm, exceeded by style apex, base saccate, apex truncate, oblique, glabrous, internal appendage absent; style apex shallowly depressed, pink to red-violet. |
erect to pendent; calyx lobes lanceolate to ovate, 2–3 mm, apex acute, sparsely pilosulous to glabrate; corolla green to cream, often tinged red or purple, lobes reflexed with spreading tips, elliptic, 3.5–5 mm, apex acute, glabrous abaxially, minutely hirtellous at base adaxially, 1 margin ciliate; gynostegial column 0.2–0.5 mm; fused anthers brown, obconic, 1–1.5 mm, wings right-triangular, closed, apical appendages ovate, erose; corona segments cream, sometimes with greenish or purplish dorsal stripe, subsessile or sessile, cupulate, 2.5–3 mm, exceeding style apex, apex obtuse to rounded, glabrous, internal appendage rod-shaped, slightly exserted, glabrous; style apex shallowly depressed, green. |
Seeds | ovate, 8–9 × 5–7 mm, margin not winged, faces reticulate-rugulose; coma 3–3.5 cm. |
naviculate, ovate, 5–6 × 3–4 mm, margin very narrowly winged, faces rugulose, the concave one conspicuously so; coma 1.5–2 cm. |
Follicles | erect on upcurved pedicels, lance-ovoid, 7.5–10.5 × 1.5–1.8 cm, apex long-acuminate, smooth, glabrous, glaucous. |
erect on upcurved pedicels, ovoid, 3.5–5 × 0.6–1 cm, apex acuminate, smooth, glabrous. |
2n | = 22. |
= 22. |
Asclepias cordifolia |
Asclepias linaria |
|
Phenology | Flowering Mar–Jul(–Aug); fruiting Jun–Sep. | Flowering and fruiting year-round. |
Habitat | Hillsides, canyons, ridge tops, streamsides, seeps, basalt, serpentine, gabbro, granite, shale, limestone, talus slopes, gravel, alluvium, oak woodlands, mixed evergreen, douglas-fir, pine, pine-oak, and riparian forests, chaparral, timberline meadows, grasslands. | Canyons, cliffs, arroyos, ridges, slopes, bedrock crevices, rhyolite, granite, gneiss, conglomerate, rocky, sandy, and gravel soils, pine-oak forests, oak, pinyon-juniper woodlands, chaparral, desert scrub, desert grasslands, riparian woodlands and forests. |
Elevation | 50–2200(–2800) m. [160–7200(–9200) ft.] | 800–1900 m. [2600–6200 ft.] |
Distribution |
CA; NV; OR
|
AZ; NM; Mexico
|
Discussion | Fresh leaves and stems of Asclepias cordifolia are often slightly or strongly colored bluish, grayish, or purplish. This is one of the few American species of Asclepias with cavitate corona segments that lack adaxial appendages. Such species were segregated along with diverse African species in Gomphocarpus R. Brown, a polyphyletic segregate (M. Fishbein et al. 2011; D. Chuba et al. 2017). Asclepias cordifolia is a distinctive species unlike any other within its range. It is phylogenetically and geographically isolated, although not highly derived morphologically. In Nevada, A. cordifolia is restricted to the Sierra Nevada, in Carson City, Douglas, and Washoe counties. Its range extends to northern California and southwestern Oregon. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Asclepias linaria is arguably the most distinctive milkweed species in the Americas. It is the only species with woody stems and the only one to form hemispherical shrubs with needlelike leaves. Small plants with few stems are easily mistaken for seedling conifers. This species is widespread and occupies a great variety of habitats in Mexico. It enters the flora area in southeastern Arizona and in southwestern New Mexico only in the Peloncillo Mountains (Hidalgo County); its occurrence in the flora area is evidently relictual. In the region, it is restricted to lower reaches of protected canyons that ameliorate aridity and freezing temperatures, sites that harbor other tropical and subtropical species reaching their northern limits. The plants are often quite floriferous and attract an abundance of Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 14. | FNA vol. 14. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Acerates cordifolia, Gomphocarpus cordifolius | |
Name authority | (Bentham) Jepson: Fl. W. Calif., 384. (1901) | Cavanilles: Icon. 1: 42, plate 57. (1791) |
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