Eriogonum microthecum |
Eriogonum microthecum var. simpsonii |
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slender buckwheat, slender wild buckwheat |
Simpson's buckwheat, Simpson's wild buckwheat |
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Habit | Subshrubs or shrubs, erect to spreading, not scapose, 0.2–1.5 × (0.6–)1–13(–16) dm, white- to tannish-tomentose, floccose, or glabrous. | Shrubs, (1–)2–15 × 4–16 dm. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | spreading to erect, typically without persistent leaf bases, up to 1/2 height of plant; caudex stems absent or spreading; aerial flowering stems erect to spreading, slender, solid, not fistulose, 0.05–1.5 dm, lanate, tomentose, floccose, subglabrous, or glabrous. |
caudex absent; aerial flowering stems 0.2–0.7 dm, densely lanate to tomentose, sometimes floccose, rarely glabrous. |
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Leaves | cauline, 1 per node or fasciculate; petiole 0.1–0.5 cm, tomentose to floccose or glabrous; blade usually elliptic, sometimes linear to obovate, 0.3–3.5 × (0.07–)0.1–1.2 cm, tomentose abaxially, less so or glabrous adaxially, margins occasionally revolute. |
blade narrowly elliptic, 0.5–1.8(–2.5) × 0.1–0.2 cm, densely whitish-tomentose abaxially, mostly whitish-floccose adaxially, margins revolute or nearly so. |
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Inflorescences | cymose, compact, often flat-topped, 0.5–6(–12) × 1–10(–13) cm; branches dichotomous, whitish-lanate to brownish- or reddish-tomentose to floccose or glabrate, infrequently green or gray and subglabrous or glabrous; bracts 3, scalelike, linear to triangular, 1–5 mm. |
(1.5–)2–4(–6) cm; branches tomentose to floccose, rarely subglabrous or glabrous. |
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Peduncles | absent or mostly erect, slender, 0.3–1.5 cm, tomentose to floccose. |
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Involucres | 1 per node, turbinate, (1.5–)2–3.5(–4) × 1.3–2.5(–3) mm, tomentose, floccose, subglabrous, or glabrous; teeth 5, erect, (0.3–)0.5–1(–1.7) mm. |
2–3 mm, tomentose to floccose or subglabrous. |
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Flowers | 1.5–3(–4) mm; perianth yellow or white to pink, orange, rose, red, or occasionally cream, glabrous; tepals connate proximal 1/5–2/5, essentially monomorphic, oblong to obovate; stamens usually exserted, 2.5–4 mm; filaments sparsely to densely puberulent proximally. |
2–3 mm; perianth white to pink or rose. |
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Achenes | brown, 1.5–3 mm, glabrous. |
2–3 mm. |
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Eriogonum microthecum |
Eriogonum microthecum var. simpsonii |
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Phenology | Flowering Jun–Oct. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Clayey to gravelly or occasionally sandy washes, flats and slopes, mixed grassland, saltbush, blackbrush, and sagebrush communities, pinyon-juniper and montane conifer woodlands | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 1400-2300 m (4600-7500 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AZ; CA; CO; ID; MT; NM; NV; OR; UT; WA; WY
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AZ; CA; CO; ID; MT; NM; NV; UT; WY |
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Discussion | Varieties 13 (13 in the flora). Eriogonum microthecum is used as browse by deer and to a lesser degree by cattle and sheep. Some forms are now in cultivation. The species is reportedly used by the Piute of Nevada in the treatment of tuberculosis, lameness, rheumatism, and bladder trouble (P. Train et al. 1941). S. A. Weber and P. D. Seaman (1985) stated that A. F. Whiting found the plants being used as a tea by the Havasupai in northern Arizona. Members of E. microthecum are food plants for subspecies of the rare pallid blue butterfly (Euphilotes pallescens). Also found on this species is the cythera metalmark (Apodemia mormo cythera). Some authors have referred E. effusum to this species, even though the ranges of the two species do not overlap and intermediates are unknown. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Variety simpsonii is the common expression of the species in the southern part of the species’ range. It occurs in northern Arizona, southeastern California, western and south-central Colorado, central and southern Nevada, northern New Mexico, Utah, and southwestern Wyoming. Populations most similar to the type occur mainly on the Colorado Plateau in northern New Mexico, southern Colorado, and in northeastern Arizona and southwestern Utah; these are low shrubs usually less than 3 dm tall with thinly tomentose to floccose leaf blades, flowering stems, and inflorescence branches. As such, these plants resemble, and are sometimes confused with, small forms of Eriogonum leptophyllum. In east-central and northeastern Utah, and in northwestern Colorado, there are similar plants but, unlike the more southern phase with its tightly revolute, linear leaf blades, here the leaf blades are somewhat broader and tend to be glabrous. These plants are outwardly similar to E. microthecum var. phoeniceum. Similar depauperate individuals are found elsewhere, most notably in east-central Nevada where the plants have even broader leaf blades and instead of being dark green the plants are light green and whitish. Such plants are found on clayey substrates and will either key out here or, with some difficulty, to var. lapidicola. The variety is disjunct in the Salmon River Valley of Lemhi County, Idaho (Reveal & Welsh 4485 & 4486, BRY, NY, UTC) and in Beaverhead County, Montana (Shelly & King 1150, MONTU). These populations are found in close association with known Native American villages and may well have been introduced in pre-Columbian times as var. simpsonii is known to have been used in certain rites associated with “witchcraft.” West of the Colorado Plateau, in northwestern New Mexico and across the northern tier of counties in Arizona, plants are tall, open shrubs. This expression is common throughout the southern portion of the Great Basin and on the desert ranges of eastern California. At its extreme, the expression is markedly different from that represented by the type of the variety, but there is a complete intergradation from one to the other, and no attempt is made here to parse them into taxonomic entities. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 5, p. 242. | FNA vol. 5, p. 244. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | Polygonaceae > subfam. Eriogonoideae > Eriogonum > subg. Eucycla | Polygonaceae > subfam. Eriogonoideae > Eriogonum > subg. Eucycla > Eriogonum microthecum | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | E. simpsonii, E. microthecum var. foliosum, E. microthecum var. macdougalii | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Nuttall: Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 4: 15. (1848) | (Bentham) Reveal: Taxon 32: 293. (1983) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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