Horkelia congesta var. congesta |
Horkelia congesta |
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Sierra horkelia |
shaggy horkelia, Sierra horkelia |
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Habit | Plants tufted or rosette-forming, green to grayish green. | |||||
Stems | ± erect, usually greenish, rarely reddish, 3–5 dm, hairs 3 mm proximally. |
ascending to erect, 1.5–5 dm, hairs 2–3 mm proximally, glands dense distally. |
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Basal leaves | 6–15 × 1.5–3 cm; leaflets 3–6 per side, narrowly cuneate, 10–20 × 2–4(–6) mm, 1/5–1/3 as wide as long. |
± planar, (3–)4–15 × 1–3 cm, usually villous at least abaxially, often densely so; stipules entire, deeply 2-lobed, or pinnately divided into 3–5 linear lobes; leaflets 2–6 per side, ± separate, narrowly cuneate or lanceolate-elliptic to oblong, 5–20 × (1–)2–5(–6) mm, 1/5–1/2 as wide as long, divided 1/6–1/4 or less to midrib into (0–)3(–5) ± ovate teeth 1–2 mm wide, these restricted to apex. |
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Cauline leaves | 3–7; stipules divided 3/4+ into linear to linear-lanceolate lobes. |
2–7; stipules 5–25(–30) mm, divided 3/4+ into linear or linear-lanceolate lobes, or incompletely divided or divided no more than 2/3 into lanceolate, often acuminate teeth. |
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Inflorescences | composed of ± corymbiform clusters to capitate glomerules. |
open to congested, flowers usually arranged in ± capitate glomerules or corymbiform clusters. |
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Pedicels | 1–3(–6) mm. |
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Flowers | epicalyx bractlets linear to lanceolate, 2–3 mm; hypanthium ± 1/2 as deep as wide; petals (3–)4–6 × (2–)3–5 mm; styles 1.5–2 mm. |
8–16 mm diam.; epicalyx bractlets linear to lanceolate or narrowly elliptic, 1–3 × 0.3–0.8 mm, ± 2/3 length of sepals; hypanthium 2–2.5 × 3–4.5 mm, ± 1/2 to nearly as deep as wide, interior usually glabrous, sometimes sparsely pilose; sepals spreading, abaxially green, 2–4.5 mm; petals white to cream, ± obovate, (2.5–)3–6 × (1.5–)2–5 mm, apex ± rounded to ± emarginate; filaments (0.5–)1–2 × (0.2–)0.4–0.6 mm, anthers 0.4–0.7(–1) mm; carpels (6–)10–15(–20), styles 1.5–3 mm. |
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Achenes | brown, 1.6–2.2 mm, faintly rugose. |
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Horkelia congesta var. congesta |
Horkelia congesta |
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Phenology | Flowering spring–summer. | |||||
Habitat | Wet to dry remnant prairies, generally near valley bottoms, or on balds of low hills in oak-conifer woodlands, generally on volcanic soil | |||||
Elevation | 80–700 m (300–2300 ft) | |||||
Distribution |
OR |
CA; OR
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Discussion | Of conservation concern. Variety congesta is a component of the vanishing Willamette Prairie flora in western Oregon (T. N. Kaye, unpubl.). The variety has been extirpated from the northern part of its range in Marion, Polk, and Washington counties, and only isolated populations remain in the southern Willamette Valley, primarily in Lane County, and in the Umpqua Valley in Douglas County. A specimen from northern Josephine County (Beach 509, UC) is also referable to var. congesta, and two historic collections from the Rogue River Valley in Jackson County are intermediate between var. congesta and var. nemorosa. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Varieties 2 (2 in the flora). As discussed by D. D. Keck (1938) and analyzed by T. N. Kaye (unpubl., Oregon Dept. of Agriculture, 1995), Horkelia congesta comprises three population clusters that form a latitudinal gradient in Oregon west of the Cascade Range, transitioning to H. tridentata in the mountains of California. Populations of H. congesta in remnant prairies in the Willamette Valley (probably including the type of H. hirsuta Lindley) have relatively tall, erect stems, pectinate stipules, relatively numerous, narrow leaflets, openly branched inflorescences with flowers in corymbiform clusters, and clawed petals 5–6 × 4–5 mm. In contrast, populations centered in rocky serpentine flats within the Illinois River drainage in Josephine County, which were described by Keck as subsp. nemorosa, tend to have shorter ascending stems, less divided stipules, fewer and broader leaflets, more capitate inflorescences, and scarcely clawed petals 3–4 × 2–3 mm. The differences between these two extremes are blurred by populations from the Umpqua Valley in Douglas County (the probable type locality of H. congesta), as well as scattered populations in northern Jackson and Josephine counties. Based on morphometric analyses of 19 characters, Kaye concluded that the Umpqua material overlapped slightly with plants from the Willamette Valley, while the Josephine County populations clustered separately. He retained the Umpqua and Willamette valley populations as subsp. congesta, with mid stem stipule features of greatest diagnostic value. This taxonomic conclusion is adopted here, with a change of rank from subspecies to variety. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 9, p. 268. | FNA vol. 9, p. 267. | ||||
Parent taxa | ||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||
Synonyms | H. hirsuta | Potentilla congesta | ||||
Name authority | unknown | Douglas ex Hooker: Bot. Mag. 56: plate 2880. (1829) | ||||
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