Pisonia capitata |
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Mexican devil's-claws |
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Habit | Shrubs or small trees, to 6 m; branches dense, spreading at right angles, usually armed with stout, recurved spines 7–14 mm. |
Stems | arching, velvety when young, glabrate later. |
Leaf | blades broadly obovate or suborbiculate, 2–6 × 2–6 cm, base rounded or broadly cuneate, apex rounded, rarely subacute. |
Inflorescences | [staminate inflorescences subglobose, dense, 1–2 cm diam.]; pistillate inflorescences densely subglobose at anthesis, more open in age; branches divaricate or ascending; fruiting pedicel 0.5–2 cm. |
Perianths | [perianth of staminate flowers deep red, broadly campanulate, 2–3 mm, densely and shortly viscid-villous]; perianth of pistillate flowers greenish, often blushed with red, 2–2.5 mm, densely puberulent. |
Fruits | clavate, 7–10 × 3–4 mm, densely puberulent between glandular ribs, glands extending entire length of fruits. |
Pisonia capitata |
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Phenology | Flowering winter–early spring. |
Habitat | Protected clefts on rhyolitic soils in arid scrub [tropical deciduous forests, thickets, along watercourses] |
Elevation | 0-1100 m (0-3600 ft) |
Distribution |
AZ; nw Mexico
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Discussion | Pisonia capitata is represented in the flora by a single, possibly clonal, population of a few pistillate plants in south-central Arizona several hundred kilometers north of known populations in Sonora, perhaps originating from a freak event of bird dispersal. Plants are not known to have set seed. As noted above, pistillate plants of Pisonia capitata and P. aculeata exhibit no apparent differences, nor are there apparent vegetative differences between the species. That plants known in the flora truly represent P. aculeata is an assumption based on geography. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 4, p. 73. |
Parent taxa | Nyctaginaceae > Pisonia |
Sibling taxa | |
Synonyms | Cryptocarpus capitatus |
Name authority | (S. Watson) Standley: Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 13: 388. (1911) |
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