Asclepias cordifolia |
Asclepias macrotis |
|
---|---|---|
heart-leaf milkweed, purple milkweed |
long-hood milkweed, longhorn milkweed |
|
Habit | Herbs. | Subshrubs, densely cespitose. |
Stems | 1–20, ascending to spreading, unbranched, 25–100 cm, glabrous, glaucous, rhizomes absent. |
few–numerous, erect to ascending, branched at base, 10–35 cm, minutely puberulent with curved trichomes in a line to glabrate, not glaucous, rhizomatous. |
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. |
opposite, sessile, with 1 stipular colleter on each side of leaf base; blade filiform, 2.5–7 × 0.05–0.15 cm, membranous, base cuneate, margins revolute, apex acute, mucronate, venation obscure, surfaces glabrous, margins minutely ciliate at base, 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, 2–7-flowered; peduncle 0–0.8 cm, puberulent with curved trichomes, with 1 caducous bract at the base of each pedicel. |
Pedicels | 16–37 mm, sparsely pilose. |
6–10 mm, minutely puberulent with curved trichomes in a line. |
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; calyx lobes lanceolate, 2–2.5 mm, apex acute, glabrous; corolla greenish cream tinged with red, lobes reflexed with spreading tips, oval, 4–5 mm, apex acute, glabrous; gynostegial column 0.5–1 mm; fused anthers brown, cylindric, 1–1.5 mm, wings right-triangular, closed, apical appendages broadly ovate; corona segments cream to greenish cream, reddish brown at base or as a dorsal stripe, subsessile, conduplicate, 4–5 mm, exceeding style apex, apex truncate, long-caudate, crisped, with a proximal tooth on each side, hirtellous, internal appendage falcate, exserted, inflexed towards style apex, hirtellous; style apex shallowly depressed, green. |
Seeds | ovate, 8–9 × 5–7 mm, margin not winged, faces reticulate-rugulose; coma 3–3.5 cm. |
ovate, 6–8 × 2.5–4 mm, margin thickly winged, faces rugulose; coma 2–2.5 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, fusiform, 4.5–6 × 0.5–0.7 cm, apex attenuate, smooth, glabrous. |
2n | = 22. |
|
Asclepias cordifolia |
Asclepias macrotis |
|
Phenology | Flowering Mar–Jul(–Aug); fruiting Jun–Sep. | Flowering May–Oct; fruiting Jun–Oct. |
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. | Mesas, hills, slopes, flats, canyon rims and bottoms, arroyo margins, limestone, sandstone, shale, rhyolite, gypsum, caliche, cracks in bedrock, talus, gravel and sandy soils, oak, pine-oak, juniper, and pinyon-juniper woodlands, chaparral, shrubby grasslands, desert grasslands, prairies. |
Elevation | 50–2200(–2800) m. [160–7200(–9200) ft.] | 1100–2200 m. [3600–7200 ft.] |
Distribution |
CA; NV; OR
|
AZ; CO; NM; OK; TX; Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Sonora)
|
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.) |
With a suffruticose, cespitose, intricately branched habit, the only other milkweed with which Asclepias macrotis can be confused is the rarely encountered A. sperryi, which is restricted to the Big Bend region of Texas in the flora area. Although A. macrotis ranges across western Texas, it appears to be absent from Big Bend; no mixed populations of these species are known, and hybridization is neither known nor suspected. Its distribution in Colorado is limited to the southeastern corner of the state and in Oklahoma to the extreme tip of the Panhandle, in Cimarron County. In Arizona, it is more common but limited to the three southeastern counties: Cochise, Pima, and Santa Cruz. The elongate, curled apices of the corona segments are unique, and the small, drab flowers are quite elegant. (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) | Torrey in W. H. Emory: Rep. U.S. Mex. Bound. 2(1): 164, plate 45, fig. B. (1859) |
Web links |