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big pyxie, common pyxie-moss, flowering pixiemoss

diapensia family

Stems

commonly elongate and creeping, sometimes compact and short-creeping or not creeping, glabrous or sparsely hairy;

internodes usually 1+ mm.

erect to decumbent or prostrate.

Leaves

blades narrowly oblanceolate to lanceolate, 3.5–7(–10) mm, herbaceous, those of fertile shoots ciliate along proximal margins, adaxial surface usually white-pilose on proximal 1/5–1/3.

basal and cauline, alternate or opposite, simple;

stipules absent;

petiole present or absent;

blade margins entire or dentate-serrate.

Inflorescences

terminal racemes or solitary flowers.

Flowers

calyx pinkish;

corolla lobes 3–5 mm.

bisexual;

perianth and androecium hypogynous;

sepals 5, connate proximally or distinct;

petals 5, connate proximally or distinct;

stamens 5, antisepalous or basally connate into ring, epipetalous, alternating with staminodes;

anthers transversely or longitudinally dehiscent;

staminodes absent or 5, scalelike or spatulate;

pistils 1, 3-carpellate;

ovary superior, 3-locular;

placentation axile;

ovules usually anatropous, sometimes axile, hemitropous, campylotropous, or amphitropous, bitegmic, tenuinucellate;

styles 1, terminal;

stigmas 1, slightly 3-lobed to unlobed and capitate [disciform].

Fruits

capsular, dehiscence loculicidal.

Seeds

10–30, brown, cylindric;

embryo straight to curved;

endosperm copious, fleshy.

Perennial

herbs or subshrubs, evergreen, rhizomatous and/or stems creeping and adventitiously rooted, sometimes taprooted, ecto- and endotrophically mycorrhizal.

2n

= 12.

Pyxidanthera barbulata

Diapensiaceae

Phenology Flowering Mar–May.
Habitat Pine savannas and barrens (commonly with Pinus rigida, sometimes with Quercus marilandica and Q. ilicifolia), pine flatwoods, pocosin margins, streamhead ecotones, edges of sandhill seepage bogs (with Pinus serotina and P. palustris, usually with Aristida stricta and Vaccinium crassifolium), depressions, primarily mesic to hydric sites, wet sands and peaty sands, sometimes submesic sands, usually with permanently or seasonally high water table, often with Sphagnum
Elevation 10-200 m (0-700 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
NC; NJ; NY; SC; VA
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
North America; Europe; Asia
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

There are no current or historical records of Pyxidanthera barbulata from Delaware or Maryland, where habitats exist that seem comparable to those where the species occurs north and south.

Pyxidanthera barbulata is in the Center for Plant Conservation’s National Collection of Endangered Plants.

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

Genera 5, species 14 (4 genera, 6 species in the flora).

In addition to the four genera treated here, one other genus completes the family: Berneuxia Decaisne, with one species in the Sino-Himalayan Mountains. Diapensia lapponica and its sister D. obovata, as a pair, are circumboreal in distribution; all of the other species of the family are narrowly distributed. A phylogenetic analysis based on morphology and molecular data from four genes (K. Rönblom and A. A. Anderberg 2002) indicated that Galax is sister to all other genera; Pyxidanthera is sister to the remaining genera at the next higher node; relationships among Berneuxia, Diapensia, and Shortia are unresolved. In this interpretation, the “inverted-eucamptodromous” venation pattern shared by Diapensia and Pyxidanthera (H. T. Murphy and J. W. Hardin 1976) was perhaps developed in parallel.

Leaves of Diapensia, Galax, and some Shortia species become reddish to purplish or orange-bronze (anthocyanic) in the fall and winter. The colored leaves of Galax are gathered in the fall for the florist trade. Leaves of all genera of Diapensiaceae sequester large amounts of aluminum (L. Schultz, pers. comm.), an unusual characteristic for temperate plants.

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

Key
1. Leaf blades subpalmately veined; inflorescences compact racemes; corollas 3.5-8 mm; anthers 1-locular, transversely dehiscent.
Galax
1. Leaf blades pinnately veined or appearing 1-veined; inflorescences solitary flowers; corollas 14-25 mm or 2-10 mm; anthers 2-locular, transversely or longitudinally dehiscent
→ 2
2. Herbs, scapose; stems unbranched, erect; leaves basal, 30-80 mm, blade orbiculate to elliptic-orbiculate or ovate-oblong to ovate, pinnately veined; corollas 14-25 mm; anthers longitudinally dehiscent; staminodes present.
Shortia
2. Subshrubs, caulescent; stems branched, mostly prostrate to decumbent; leaves cauline, 2-15 mm, blade lanceolate or narrowly oblanceolate to ovate, ovate-lanceolate, obovate, narrowly spatulate, or slightly falcate, appearing 1-veined; corollas 2-10 mm; anthers transversely or longitudinally dehiscent; staminodes absent or vestigial
→ 3
3. Leaves often densely congested, alternate, blade apex minutely apiculate; inflorescences sessile; anthers transversely dehiscent.
Pyxidanthera
3. Leaves densely imbricate or in compact whorls, blade apex acute or obtuse (not apiculate); inflorescences pedicellate to subsessile; anthers longitudinally dehiscent.
Diapensia
Source FNA vol. 8, p. 336. FNA vol. 8, p. 332. Author: Guy L. Nesom.
Parent taxa Diapensiaceae > Pyxidanthera
Sibling taxa
P. brevifolia
Subordinate taxa
Diapensia, Galax, Pyxidanthera, Shortia
Name authority Michaux: Fl. Bor.-Amer. 1: 152, plate 17. 1803 , Lindley
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