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California mesquite mistletoe, desert mistletoe, mesquite mistletoe

Habit Subshrubs, pendent, 1–5(–20) dm, dioecious.
Stems

grayish green to reddish green (in full sun), densely hairy, hairs silvery white, closely appressed, becoming glabrate;

internodes terete, 10–20(–30) × 1–1.7(–2.5) mm.

Leaves

grayish green, scalelike;

blade triangular, 1.5–3 mm, apex acute;

basal phyllotaxy transverse or median.

Flowers

petals 3(–4), 1–2 mm.

Berries

white, translucent yellowish, pinkish, orange-red, or maroon, globose, 3–6 × 3–6 mm, glabrous.

Staminate

inflorescence 5–25 mm, peduncle with 1(–2) internodes, each 0.5–3 mm;

fertile internodes (1–)2–3(–5), each 6–14-flowered, biseriate, flowers 1–3 per column.

Pistillate

inflorescences 5–10 mm, elongating in fruit;

peduncle with 1(–2) internodes, each 0.5–3 mm;

fertile internodes (1–)2–4(–6), each 2-flowered, flowers 1 per bract.

2n

= 28.

Phoradendron californicum

Phenology Flowering late fall–winter.
Habitat Desert scrub or washes with mesquite or acacia.
Elevation 0–1800 m. (0–5900 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CA; NV; UT; Mexico (Baja California, Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, Sonora)
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Discussion

Phoradendron californicum, like P. juniperinum, bears only scalelike leaves, but this character has evolved independently in the two species (V. E. T. M. Ashworth 2000). Phoradendron californicum differs by its different hosts (legumes versus conifers) and inflorescences with more than one fertile internode. Molecular data indicate that P. californicum is not part of the acataphyllous Boreales group in the sense of W. Trelease (1916) but allied with cataphyllous tropical species (Ashworth). Varieties and host races have been proposed but these are not recognized in the most recent monograph of the genus (J. Kuijt 2003). In addition to its primary hosts, Prosopis, Senegalia, and Vachellia, Phoradendron californicum has also been recorded from a number of other hosts including Condalia, Dalea, Ebenopsis, Havardia, Larrea, Olneya, Parkinsonia, and sometimes is hyperparasitic on Psittacanthus.

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

Source FNA vol. 12, p. 435.
Parent taxa Viscaceae > Phoradendron
Sibling taxa
P. bolleanum, P. capitellatum, P. juniperinum, P. leucarpum, P. rubrum, P. villosum
Synonyms P. californicum var. distans, P. californicum var. leucocarpum
Name authority Nuttall: J. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, n. s. 1: 185. (1848)
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