Asclepias curassavica |
Asclepias welshii |
|
|---|---|---|
|
blood flower, bloodflower milkweed, hierba de la cucaracha, tropical milkweed, wild ipecacuanha |
Welsh's milkweed |
|
| Habit | Subshrubs or herbs. | Herbs. |
| Stems | 1–several, erect, sparsely to moderately branched, 30–150 cm, minutely pilosulous in a line to glabrate, not glaucous, rhizomes absent. |
1–20, erect to ascending, unbranched, 35–100 cm, densely tomentose to glabrate, not glaucous, rhizomatous. |
| Leaves | persistent or gradually caducous from the base, opposite, petiolate, with 1 or 2 stipular colleters on each side of petiole on a ciliate interpetiolar ridge; petiole 4–25 mm, puberulent with curved trichomes in a line to glabrate; blade elliptic or oval to linear, 4–18 × 0.3–4.5 cm, membranous, base cuneate, margins entire, apex acute to acuminate to attenuate, venation eucamptodromous to faintly brochidodromous, surfaces sparsely puberulent with curved trichomes on veins abaxially, sparsely puberulent with curved trichomes on veins to glabrate adaxially, margins ciliate, laminar colleters absent. |
subopposite to opposite (alternate), sessile or petiolate, stipular colleters absent; petiole 0–8 mm, tomentose to glabrate; blade oblong or obovate to oval or ovate, 4.5–14.5 × 2–8 cm, subsucculent, base rounded to cordate, margins entire, apex rounded or truncate to emarginate or acute, mucronate, venation brochidodromous, secondary veins orthogonal, surfaces tomentose to glabrate, margins eciliate, 0–10 laminar colleters. |
| Inflorescences | extra-axillary, pedunculate, 5–22-flowered; peduncle 0.5–8 cm, puberulent with curved trichomes in a line, with 1 caducous bract at the base of each pedicel. |
extra-axillary from upper nodes, pedunculate, 22–80-flowered; peduncle 2.5–6 cm, densely tomentose, with 1 caducous bract at the base of each pedicel. |
| Pedicels | 7–20 mm, puberulent with curved trichomes. |
10–15 mm, densely pilose to tomentose. |
| Flowers | erect; calyx lobes linear-lanceolate, 3–4 mm, apex acute, puberulent with curved trichomes; corolla red, sometimes yellow in throat (to wholly orange or yellow in cultivars), lobes reflexed with spreading tips, elliptic to oval, 6–9 mm, apex acute, glabrous abaxially, minutely papillose at base adaxially; gynostegial column 2–2.5 mm; fused anthers yellowish green to tan, cylindric, 1.5–2 mm, wings narrowly right-triangular, closed, apical appendages deltoid; corona segments yellow to orange, stipitate, tubular, dorsally somewhat flattened, 3.5–4 mm, exceeding style apex, apex obtuse to acute, glabrous, internal appendage falcate, exserted, arching over style apex, glabrous; style apex shallowly depressed, yellow. |
erect to pendent; calyx lobes linear, 5–6 mm, apex acute, densely pilose to tomentose; corolla ochroleucous or tan to red-violet, lobes reflexed with spreading tips, oval to oblong, 5.5–6.5 mm, apex acute, densely tomentose abaxially, glabrous adaxially; gynostegial column 1–1.5 mm; fused anthers green to tan, obconic, 1.5 mm, wings triangular, widest at middle, closed, apical appendages ovate; corona segments cream to ochroleucous, sometimes green at base, shiny, stipitate, tubular, dorsally flattened, 2.5–3.5 mm, exceeding style apex, apex truncate, glabrous, internal appendage falcate with acicular tip, exserted, sharply inflexed over style apex, glabrous; style apex shallowly depressed, green. |
| Seeds | ovate, 6–7 × 4–5 mm, margin winged, faces minutely rugulose to smooth; coma 2.5–3 cm. |
oval, 18–20 × 9–10 mm, margin winged, faces minutely rugulose; coma 4–4.5 cm. |
| Follicles | erect on straight pedicels, fusiform, 6–10 × 0.5–1.2 cm, apex acuminate to attenuate, smooth, glabrous. |
pendulous on spreading pedicels, ellipsoid, 5–7 × 1.7–3 cm, apex acuminate, softly muricate, densely to thinly tomentose. |
| 2n | = 22. |
|
Asclepias curassavica |
Asclepias welshii |
|
| Phenology | Flowering and fruiting year-round. | Flowering May–Sep; fruiting Jun–Oct. |
| Habitat | Disturbed areas, fields, orchards, and gardens, canal banks, ditches, streamsides, wet prairies, marshes, swamps, coastal dunes, sandy soils. | Active orange to red sand dunes, adjacent to pinyon-juniper and pine woodlands. |
| Elevation | 0–100 m. [0–300 ft.] | 1400–1900 m. [4600–6200 ft.] |
| Distribution |
CA; FL; LA; TX; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies [Introduced in North America; introduced also to Old World tropics]
|
AZ; UT |
| Discussion | Asclepias curassavica is the only non-native Asclepias species naturalized in the flora area. It is very commonly cultivated, originally for its strikingly colored flowers and their attraction of Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera. Recently, they have been valued also as a host plant for monarch butterflies. Cultivars with pure orange or pure yellow flowers are readily available. The species develops rapidly from seed and can be grown as an annual (in the horticultural sense) anywhere in the region. Though often described as an annual, like all species of Asclepias, it has a perennial habit. It may persist through mild winters at least as far north as Oklahoma but has only become established in frost-free areas of the southern United States. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
With respect to the number of populations, Asclepias welshii is the most endangered Asclepias in the flora area and is federally listed as threatened in the United States. Most of the populations are remote and relatively secure; however, the most accessible population in a Utah park has been subject to the impacts of off-road vehicle recreation. Leaves and stems of A. welshii emerge densely tomentose, but the lower portions of the plants become sand blasted and smooth as the season progresses. The species is strongly rhizomatous, as befits its shifting substrate. Seedlings and sprouts from rhizomes often bear narrowly linear leaves that differ so strongly from the foliage of more robust stems that they are not easily attributed to this species. Similar heterophylly is found in A. arenaria, A. erosa, and other milkweeds of sandy substrates. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
| Parent taxa | ||
| Sibling taxa | ||
| Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 215. (1753) | N. H. Holmgren & P. K. Holmgren: Brittonia 31: 110, fig. 1. (1979) |
| Source | FNA vol. 14. | FNA vol. 14. |
| Web links | ||