Rhinotropis |
Rhinotropis subspinosa |
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milkwort |
spiny milkwort, spiny or cushion or showy milkwort |
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Habit | Herbs, perennial, subshrubs, or shrubs, single- or multi-stemmed, with or without thorns, then as modified tips of racemes. | Subshrubs or shrubs, multi-stemmed, 0.5–2.5(–6) dm. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | usually sprawling to erect, sometimes prostrate or decumbent, usually not glaucous, pubescent or glabrous. |
prostrate to erect, sometimes glaucous, at least when young, glabrous or pubescent, hairs spreading to slightly incurved. |
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Leaves | alternate; sessile, subsessile, or petiolate; usually not strongly dimorphic; blade surfaces pubescent or glabrous. |
subsessile to petiolate, petiole to 1(–2) mm; blade obovate or elliptic, 4–31 × 0.8–11 mm, base cuneate, apex rounded or acute, surfaces densely to sparsely pubescent or subglabrous, hairs spreading to slightly incurved. |
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Racemes | terminal, sometimes reduced to (1 or)2–few flowers, 3–12.5 cm; rachis thorn-tipped; peduncle 0.1–0.5 cm; bracts usually deciduous, rarely persistent, elliptic, ovate, or lanceolate. |
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Inflorescences | terminal or leaf-opposed, sometimes appearing axillary if poorly developed, racemes, sometimes reduced and appearing fasciculate or aggregated into pseudopanicles; peduncle present or absent; bracts deciduous to subpersistent or persistent. |
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Pedicels | present. |
(1.5–)3.5–10(–20.5) mm, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Flowers | cream, yellowish green,yellow, white, pink, rose, or purple, cleistogamous usually absent, sometimes present (in R. californica and R. lindheimeri), (2.4–)3.5–14.5 mm; sepals deciduous or persistent (when persistent, usually only upper; all persistent in R. rusbyi), sometimes appearing very slightly connate basally, pubescent or glabrous; wings deciduous, 2.5–12.5 mm, glabrous or pubescent; keel usually beaked with unlobed projection, beak sometimes reduced or obscure (rarely on all flowers unless cleistogamous, and then inflorescence usually proximal), keel glabrous or pubescent; stamens usually 7 or 8, rarely 9 (in R. acanthoclada), in chasmogamous flowers, fewer in cleistogamous flowers, not grouped; ovary 2-loculed. |
pink to rose, wings (and other sepals) sometimes light green, distal keel yellow or green, (6–)8–12(–13) mm; sepals deciduous, ovate, elliptic, or lanceolate, 2–7.2 mm, glabrous or pubescent; wings obovate to elliptic-obovate, (5–)7–11.5(–12.2) × (2.3–)3–5.2(–5.9) mm, glabrous or pubescent; keel (5.4–)6.2–10.5 mm, sac glabrous, beak oblong, 1–3 × 0.9–1.5 mm, glabrous. |
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Fruits | capsules, dehiscent, margins winged or not, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Capsules | ellipsoid to obovoid, 4.3–8.8(–10) × 3.7–7.3 mm, base cuneate to rounded, margins with narrow, entire or slightly erose wing, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Seeds | pubescent to subglabrous, arillate. |
3.3–4.9 mm, ± evenly and moderately densely pubescent, occasionally with glabrate patches; aril 1.2–3.1 mm, lobes to 1/2 length of seed. |
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x | = 9. |
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2n | = 18, 36. |
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Rhinotropis |
Rhinotropis subspinosa |
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Phenology | Flowering spring–mid summer. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Gravelly soils derived from limestone, shale, lava, or tuff, or crevices of soft calcareous rocks on eroded hills, open slopes and flats, in desert scrub, open pinyon-juniper woodlands, mountain brush, ponderosa pine woodlands. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 1300–2400 m. [4300–7900 ft.] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution | w United States; sc United States; Mexico; Central America (Guatemala) |
AZ; CA; CO; NM; NV; UT
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Discussion | Species 17 (12 in the flora). Of the 17 species of Rhinotropis ranging from the southwestern United States and/or Mexico, only R. purpusii (Brandegee) J. R. Abbott extends into Guatemala. Of all the genera treated here, this is the only one that has been monographed within the last 100 years (T. L. Wendt 1978). Rhinotropis is probably sister to the Caribbean clade Phlebotaenia Grisebach, and appears to be fairly closely related also to the pantropical (although predominantly neotropical) genus Securidaca Linnaeus. Rhinotropis is largely endemic to arid regions but some species (R. californica) occur in mesic areas. The flower beak is a cylindric, conic, or contorted non-fimbriate hollow projection from the lower (or central) apex of the keel region. It is highly reduced or absent in some species. The other diagnostic features of Rhinotropis are also not monothetic across all species. Many species have the upper sepal persistent in fruit and the other sepals, including the wings (and the corolla), deciduous. Unlike other North American Polygalaceae, species of Rhinotropis often have five petals; the lateral petals are much reduced, linear, and adnate for most of their length to the staminal column; additionally, several species are shrubs and a few have thorn-tipped inflorescence axes. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Polygala section rhinotropis | Polygalasubspinosa s. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (S. F. Blake) J. R. Abbott: J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 5: 134. (2011) | (S. Watson) J. R. Abbott: J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 5: 135. (2011) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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