Petalonyx thurberi subsp. thurberi |
Petalonyx |
|||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thurber's sandpaper plant |
sandpaper-plant |
|||||||||||||
Habit | Plants to 8 dm; branches of current season to 45 cm; hairs on inflorescence-bearing stems stiff, ± retrorse. | Subshrubs or shrubs; trichomes (1) pointed with surfaces ± smooth, notched, or antrorsely barbed, and (2) retrorsely barbed along shaft and at apex. | ||||||||||||
Stems | erect or spreading. |
|||||||||||||
Leaves | to 45 × 15 mm. |
cauline; petiole present or absent; blade ovate, elliptic, lanceolate, or falcate, unlobed, margins dentate, serrate, crenate, or entire. |
||||||||||||
Inflorescences | racemes or panicles; peduncle inconspicuous. |
|||||||||||||
Pedicels | not elongating in fruit. |
|||||||||||||
Flowers | petals to 6.5 mm; stamens 6–10 mm; style 5–11 mm. |
hypanthium adnate to ovary proximally, free distally; perianth whorls differentiated; sepals green, connate basally, lanceolate, shorter than petals; petals white, distinct or connate, spatulate or obovate, erect proximally, spreading to divaricate distally (corolla salverform or appearing so), glabrous except hairy abaxially on midribs; nectary distal on ovary; stamens 5, exserted, filaments monomorphic, filiform, longer than anthers; anthers without distal connective extension; staminodes absent [present]; pistil pseudomonomerous, placenta subapical; stigma lingulate, 2-lobed, papillate. |
||||||||||||
Fruits | cypselae, ±clavate, straight; sepals persistent. |
|||||||||||||
Seeds | 1, ovoid. |
|||||||||||||
x | = 23. |
|||||||||||||
2n | = 46. |
|||||||||||||
Petalonyx thurberi subsp. thurberi |
Petalonyx |
|||||||||||||
Phenology | Flowering Mar–Nov. | |||||||||||||
Habitat | Sandy washes, sand dunes. | |||||||||||||
Elevation | 10–1600 m. (0–5200 ft.) | |||||||||||||
Distribution |
AZ; CA; NV; Mexico (Baja California, Sonora) |
w United States; n Mexico |
||||||||||||
Discussion | Species 5 (4 in the flora). Petalonyx belongs to subfam. Gronovioideae, which is characterized by relatively small flowers that have five stamens, one ovule, and indehiscent fruits. Petalonyx is most closely related to a clade that consists of Cevallia, Fuertesia Urban, and Gronovia Linnaeus (L. Hufford et al. 2003). Petalonyx crenatus A. Gray ex S. Watson, from Coahuila, Mexico, is the only species of the genus known only from outside the flora area; it can be distinguished from the species treated here by having two anther-bearing stamens and three shorter staminodes, rather than having five anther-bearing stamens. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
|||||||||||||
Key |
|
|||||||||||||
Source | FNA vol. 12, p. 545. | FNA vol. 12, p. 543. | ||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||||||||||
Name authority | unknown | A. Gray: Pl. Nov. Thurb., 319. (1854) | ||||||||||||
Web links |