Mentzelia albicaulis |
Mentzelia laciniata |
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small flower blazing star, small-flower evening star, white stem blazing star, white-stem evening star, white-stem stick-leaf |
cut-leaf blazingstar |
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Habit | Plants wandlike or candelabra-form, (2–)10–40(–50) cm. | Plants biennial, bushlike or candelabra-form. |
Stems | solitary, erect, straight; branches distal or along entire stem, distal or proximal longest, antrorse, straight; hairy. |
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Leaves | blade 52–112 × (5.4–)8.3–25 mm, widest intersinus distance 1.4–4 mm; proximal oblanceolate or elliptic, margins pinnatisect, lobes 8–20, slightly antrorse, 4.2–7.4(–10.7) mm; distal oblanceolate, elliptic, or lanceolate, base not clasping, margins usually pinnatisect, sometimes pinnate, especially near apex, lobes 8–18, slightly antrorse, 3–10.8 mm; abaxial surface with simple grappling-hook, complex grappling-hook, and needlelike trichomes, adaxial surface with needlelike trichomes. |
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Basal leaves | persisting; petiole present or absent; blade linear-lanceolate to linear, margins deeply to shallowly lobed. |
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Cauline leaves | petiole absent; blade ovate-lanceolate to linear, to 15 cm, margins deeply to shallowly lobed or entire. |
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Bracts | green, ovate to linear, 3.7–8.6 × 0.8–3.9 mm, width 1/6–2/3 length, not concealing capsule, margins 3-lobed or entire, lateral lobes never prominent. |
margins usually entire, rarely pinnate. |
Flowers | sepals 1–5 mm; petals orange proximally, yellow distally, 3–7(–8) mm, apex usually acute, rarely retuse; stamens 20+, 3–5 mm, filaments monomorphic, filiform, unlobed; styles 2–5 mm. |
petals golden yellow, 14–23.8(–26) × 3.8–7.4 mm, apex acute to rounded, glabrous abaxially; stamens golden yellow, 5 outermost petaloid, filaments narrowly spatulate to elliptic, slightly clawed, 12–20.4 × 2.5–4.9 mm, usually without, rarely with, anthers, second whorl with anthers; anthers straight after dehiscence, epidermis smooth; styles 9.2–17.7 mm. |
Capsules | clavate, 8–28(–35) × 1.5–3.5 mm, longest capsules usually 15+ mm, axillary curved to 180° at maturity, usually inconspicuously longitudinally ribbed. |
cylindric, 12–20.2 × 4.5–8.1 mm, base tapering, not longitudinally ridged. |
Seeds | 10–30, in 2+ rows distal to mid fruit, dark brown or tan, moderately to densely dark-mottled, usually irregularly polygonal, occasionally triangular prisms proximal to mid fruit, surface tuberculate under 10x magnification; recurved flap over hilum absent; seed coat cell outer periclinal wall domed, domes on seed edges more than 1/2 as tall as wide at maturity. |
coat anticlinal cell walls sinuous, papillae 5–14 per cell. |
2n | = 54, 72. |
= 20. |
Mentzelia albicaulis |
Mentzelia laciniata |
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Phenology | Flowering Mar–Aug. | Flowering Jun–Sep. |
Habitat | Sand dunes, gravel fans, washes, desert scrub, sagebrush or antelope bitterbrush scrub, open ponderosa pine woodlands, pinyon/juniper woodlands. | Dry hillsides, roadcuts, roadsides, sandy or clayey soils. |
Elevation | 0–2300 m. (0–7500 ft.) | 1400–2300 m. (4600–7500 ft.) |
Distribution |
AZ; CA; CO; ID; MT; NE; NM; NV; OR; SD; TX; UT; WA; WY; BC; SK; Mexico (Baja California, Chihuahua, Sonora)
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CO; NM |
Discussion | Mentzelia albicaulis is the most widespread species in sect. Trachyphytum and exhibits extensive morphological variation. Most populations of M. albicaulis are octoploid; however, hexaploids from southern California that have been called M. mojavensis and occasionally M. californica are also treated here as M. albicaulis. Two tetraploids in sect. Trachyphytum, M. montana and M. obscura, also have been treated previously as M. albicaulis (N. H. Holmgren et al. 2005). Both exhibit morphological forms and distributions overlapping with M. albicaulis. However, in most cases these species can be distinguished without chromosome counts, and their distinctiveness has been supported by phylogenetic analyses (J. M. Brokaw and L. Hufford 2010b). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Mentzelia laciniata is found in southwestern Colorado and northwestern New Mexico, where it does not extend as far west as the Chuska Mountains. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 12, p. 534. | FNA vol. 12, p. 517. |
Parent taxa | Loasaceae > Mentzelia > sect. Trachyphytum | Loasaceae > Mentzelia > sect. Bartonia |
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Bartonia albicaulis, M. mojavensis | Touterea laciniata |
Name authority | (Douglas) Douglas ex Torrey & A. Gray: Fl. N. Amer. 1: 534. (1840) | (Rydberg) J. Darlington: Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 21: 173. (1934) |
Web links |