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spreading chinchweed, spreading cinchweed

chinchweed

Habit Annuals, 1–30 cm (across); herbage not scented. Annuals or perennials, 1–120 cm (herbage often lemon or spicy scented).
Stems

prostrate to ascending (often mat-forming, densely leafy, especially distally), puberulent (in lines or throughout).

prostrate to erect, simple to much branched.

Leaves

linear to narrowly oblanceolate, 10–40 × 1.5–7 mm, margins with 4–12 pairs of setae 1–3 mm, faces glabrous (abaxial densely dotted with round oil-glands 0.1–0.3 mm).

cauline; opposite; usually sessile;

blades mostly linear to elliptic, oblanceolate, oblong, or obovate, margins usually setose-ciliate (mostly near bases), faces glabrous or hairy (abaxial and/or margins dotted with oil-glands).

Peduncles

1–2 mm.

Involucres

campanulate, cylindric, or ellipsoid.

campanulate, cylindric, ellipsoid, or fusiform, 2–8+ mm diam.

Receptacles

flat to hemispheric, smooth or pitted, epaleate.

Ray florets

5;

corollas 2.5–3.5 mm (scarcely surpassing phyllaries).

3–15[–21], pistillate, fertile (inserted on phyllary bases);

corollas yellow, often reddened abaxially (often drying white to purplish; laminae elliptic, entire or 2- or 3-lobed, glabrous or proximally glandular-puberulent).

Disc florets

3–17;

corollas 1.8–2.5 mm (2-lipped).

[1–]3–55[–100], usually bisexual;

corollas yellow (sometimes drying white to purplish), tubes shorter than narrowly funnelform throats, lobes (4–)5, deltate to lance-ovate (lobes ± equal and corollas actinomorphic, not 2-lipped, or lobes unequal with 3 or 4 forming an adaxial lip opposite 1-lobed lip and corollas zygomorphic, 2-lipped, all lobes glabrous or proximally glandular-puberulent; anther bases rounded or subcordate, apical appendages rounded or emarginate; styles included to long-exserted, branches ± papillose knobs).

Phyllaries

coherent (falling together), oblong to obovate, 5–8 × 1–3 mm (often dotted in submarginal rows and sometimes along midribs with elliptic oil-glands 0.1–0.3 mm).

3–15[–21] in 1 series (usually distinct, falling individually, each with a ray cypsela, sometimes cohering at bases, falling together as units enclosing all cypselae of a head; individually convex, indurate-keeled, narrowly to broadly hyaline-margined, apices often ciliolate, bearing oil-glands on margins and/or faces).

Calyculi

0.

Heads

borne singly or in congested, (leafy) cymiform arrays.

radiate, borne singly or in congested to open, cymiform arrays (peduncles usually bracteate).

Cypselae

2.5–4.5 mm, strigillose;

pappi of 2 (ray) or 5 (disc) lanceolate scales 1.5–2.5 mm.

(blackish or dark brown) cylindric to narrowly clavate, ribbed or angled, puberulent to pilose;

pappi persistent, usually of awns, bristles, or scales, sometimes coroniform.

x

= 12.

2n

= 24.

Pectis prostrata

Pectis

Phenology Flowering Jul–Nov.
Habitat Open sites in deserts, grasslands, oak-pine-juniper woodlands, roadsides
Elevation 0–2000 m (0–6600 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; FL; LA; NM; TX; Mexico; Central America; West Indies
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Pacific Islands (Galapagos Islands, Hawaii)
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

The development of roads and highways has created ideal habitats for Pectis prostrata. Its range appears to be expanding along the coasts of Florida; it was discovered in Louisiana relatively recently. It can be expected to spread along the Gulf Coast and perhaps northward along the Atlantic Coast as well. Autogamy has apparently assisted P. prostrata to spread rapidly as suitable new habitats have become available.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Species about 90 (13, including 1 hybrid, in the flora).

Pectis is unusual among Compositae in having the C4 photosynthetic pathway and the accompanying Kranz anatomy—leaves with vascular bundle sheath cells that contain numerous chloroplasts (B. N. Smith and B. L. Turner 1975). All of the closely related genera have the C3 pathway. The selective advantage imparted by C4 photosynthesis (greatly reduced photorespiration in bundle sheath cells) has enabled Pectis species to occupy a variety of hot, dry habitats including deserts, tropical and subtropical grasslands, arid scrublands, and tropical beaches. Some species of Pectis grow in hot desert areas of the western United States following summer precipitation.

Leaves and phyllaries in all Pectis species are dotted with embedded pellucid glands (here called oil-glands). In some species, the liquid within the schizogenous cavities includes a mixture of strongly scented monoterpenes; in other species the gland contents have little or no aroma. Herbage containing strongly scented essential oils are described as “lemon-scented” when citral is the predominant compound and “spicy-scented” when other oils are predominant. For most taxa the odor (or lack thereof) of the crushed herbage is a readily apparent field characteristic. Unfortunately, labels of most herbarium specimens lack information on odor. Intact glands on herbarium specimens may retain liquid contents for years; odors may change as the specimens age. On living specimens, the glands are translucent; on herbarium specimens, they tend to be golden brown or blackish. The glands probably function as a deterrent to herbivores, including insects.

Ray florets of Pectis are inserted directly onto the bases of the phyllaries, and the phyllaries and ray cypselae tend to fall together when the heads shatter at maturity. The numbers of phyllaries and ray florets per Pectis capitulum vary along the Fibonacci series and rarely deviate from the sequence (i.e., in Pectis, the modal numbers of phyllaries and rays are 3, 5, 8, 13, and 21).

Pectis coulteri Harvey & A. Gray has been attributed in floras to California and Arizona on the basis of the ambiguously labeled type collection (“California,” without locality or date, T. Coulter 331, holotype TCD) and speculations as to its origin. This species is known to occur only from central Sonora to northern Sinaloa, Mexico, and has never been documented in the United States. The type was probably collected in Sonora (D. J. Keil 1975).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Ray florets (7–)8–13(–15)
→ 2
1. Ray florets 3–5
→ 5
2. Heads in congested or open, cymiform arrays; peduncles 1–40 mm
→ 3
2. Heads borne singly or in open, cymiform arrays; peduncles 20–160 mm
→ 4
3. Pappi of disc cypselae usually of 16–24 subplumose bristles, rarely coroniform; cypselae strigillose to short-pilose (hair tips curled, bulbous)
P. papposa
3. Pappi of disc cypselae coroniform and/or of 1–7 scabrid awns or bristles; cypselae strigillose (hair tips straight, forked)
P. angustifolia
4. Perennials (rhizomatous); heads borne singly; peduncles 30–160 mm; ray florets (8–)13(–15)
P. longipes
4. Annuals (taprooted); heads borne singly or in open, (leafy) cymiform arrays; ray florets 8(–13)
P. rusbyi
5. Disc corollas not 2-lipped (actinomorphic, lobes equal, 4 or all 5 each bearing an oil-gland); leaf margins with 0–1 pairs of setae; pappi coroniform or of awns
→ 6
5. Disc corollas ± 2-lipped (zygomorphic, lobes not bearing oil-glands); leaf margins with 1–12 pairs of setae; pappi usually of bristles, scales, or awns, sometimes coroniform plus 0–3 awns or bristles (P. filipes)
→ 7
6. Perennials; ray corollas 6–11 mm
P. imberbis
6. Annuals; ray corollas 2–3 mm
P. linifolia
7. Phyllaries coherent (at least at bases, falling together as units enclosing all cypselae of a head)
→ 8
7. Phyllaries distinct (spreading and falling individually, each with a ray cypsela)
→ 10
8. Ray florets 3(–4)
P. cylindrica
8. Ray florets 5
→ 9
9. Peduncles 1–2 mm; pappi of lanceolate scales (ovaries usually forming cypselae)
P. prostrata
9. Peduncles 5–25 mm; pappi of slender, aristate scales (pericarps darkening, not swelling, ovules abortive)
P. ×floridana
10. Leaves oblong-oblanceolate to obovate; herbage not scented
P. humifusa
10. Leaves linear, linear-oblanceolate, narrowly elliptic, or narrowly linear; herbage lemon-scented or spicy-scented
→ 11
11. Peduncles 0–1 mm
P. linearifolia
11. Peduncles 3–65 mm
→ 12
12. Pappi of 0–5, antrorsely scabrid bristles or slender scales 1–2 mm plus 0–5, entire or irregularly lacerate scales 0.2–0.7 mm; Florida
P. glaucescens
12. Pappi of 0–3 awns 3–4 mm, usually with a crown of shorter scales; sw United States
P. filipes
Source FNA vol. 21, p. 224. FNA vol. 21, p. 222. Author: David J. Keil.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Heliantheae > subtribe Pectidinae > Pectis Asteraceae > tribe Heliantheae > subtribe Pectidinae
Sibling taxa
P. angustifolia, P. cylindrica, P. filipes, P. glaucescens, P. humifusa, P. imberbis, P. linearifolia, P. linifolia, P. longipes, P. papposa, P. rusbyi, P. ×floridana
Subordinate taxa
P. angustifolia, P. cylindrica, P. filipes, P. glaucescens, P. humifusa, P. imberbis, P. linearifolia, P. linifolia, P. longipes, P. papposa, P. prostrata, P. rusbyi, P. ×floridana
Name authority Cavanilles: Icon. 4: 12, plate 324. (1797) Linnaeus: Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 2: 1221. (1759)
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