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spiny skeletonweed, thorn skeletonweed, thorny skeletonweed

Stems

branches 4–8 cm.

Leaves

proximal 3–7 cm.

Peduncles

1–4 mm.

Involucres

7–12 mm.

Calyculi

bractlets 4–8 × 1.5–2.5 mm, glabrous.

Cypselae

6–8 mm;

pappus bristles: the longer 7–11 mm, shorter 5–7 mm.

2n

= 16.

Pleiacanthus spinosus

Phenology Flowering Jul–Sep.
Habitat Open, sandy, gravelly washes and slopes, desert shrub, pinyon-juniper communities
Elevation 1500–2900 m (4900–9500 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CA; ID; MT; NV; OR; UT
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[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Pleiacanthus spinosus was first collected by Nuttall, who placed it in Lygodesmia. Rydberg elevated it to the genus level; his proposal was not taken up by others. The species remained in Lygodesmia until A. S. Tomb (1970) transferred it to Stephanomeria. Tomb made the transfer because P. spinosus has the same base chromosome number as Stephanomeria (x = 8) as well as similar echinate pollen grains (Tomb 1974; Tomb et al. 1974) and thereby differs from Lygodesmia, which has x = 9 and echinolophate pollen. Pleiacanthus spinosus also has morphologic traits not shared with any stephanomeria. These include dense, long tufts of wool in the ground-level axils of the bud scales of the stems, sharp-tipped branches and stems, and pappus bristles that are of two lengths and not plumose. Recent results of DNA sequencing studies of Stephanomeria and related North American genera showed that P. spinosus is not a member of the clade of all stephanomerias (J. Lee et al. 2002).

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

Source FNA vol. 19, p. 361.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Cichorieae > Pleiacanthus
Synonyms Lygodesmia spinosa, Stephanomeria spinosa
Name authority (Nuttall) Rydberg: Fl. Rocky Mts., 1069. (1917)
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