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Chamisso's starwort, Matted starwort

Habit Plants perennial, dioecious, forming dense cushions to 10 cm or more diam., with branching caudex, arising from taproot.
Stems

branched, 4-angled, 1–4 cm, glabrous;

branches erect or ascending, thickly clothed with marcescent leaves.

Leaves

sessile;

basal blades oblanceolate to obovate or elliptic, 3–5 × 1–1.5 mm, succulent, base cuneate, margins entire, apex acute or abruptly acuminate to obtuse, glabrous;

cauline shorter.

Inflorescences

solitary-flowered in axils of foliage leaves;

bract 1, foliaceous, ca. 1 mm.

Pedicels

1–5 mm, glabrous.

Flowers

unisexual, 3–4 mm diam.;

sepals 5, 3-veined, keeled, 2.5–3 mm, margins narrow, apex acute, glabrous or with sparse, short, glandular pubescence;

petals absent;

stamens 10, shorter than sepals;

styles 3, erect, becoming outwardly curved, ca. 1 mm;

staminate flowers with brownish, peglike, conspicuous nectaries alternating with and attached to base of stamens;

pistillate flowers with well-developed but nonfunctional stamens and nectaries.

Capsules

straw colored, broadly ovoid, ca. 3 × 2 mm, ca. equaling sepals, apex obtuse, opening by 3 valves, each of which splits into 2;

carpophore absent.

Seeds

1, brown, broadly reniform with thickened rim, ca. 1.1 mm diam., finely verrucate.

2n

= 26.

Stellaria dicranoides

Phenology Flowering summer.
Habitat Arctic screes, fellfields, gravelly tundra, rocky knolls on wide variety of rock types
Elevation 300-1700 m (1000-5600 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AK; YT; Asia (Russian Far East)
Discussion

Stellaria dicranoides is of uncertain generic position. Many workers have placed it in the genus Arenaria. The absence of petals deprives us of a key character separating Stellaria from Arenaria. The ovate capsule with its three valves, each tardily dehiscent into two, suggests Arenaria or Minuartia. However, the chromosome number of 2n = 26 is more often associated with Stellaria. The single large seed, which fills the capsule, is unusual. In its floral structure, including its large nectaries and unisexual flowers, S. dicranoides closely resembles the European M. (Cherleria) sedoides (Linnaeus) Hiern. In fact, Chamisso, who first described this species, placed it in the genus Cherleria.

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

Source FNA vol. 5, p. 105.
Parent taxa Caryophyllaceae > subfam. Alsinoideae > Stellaria
Sibling taxa
S. alaskana, S. alsine, S. americana, S. borealis, S. calycantha, S. corei, S. crassifolia, S. crispa, S. cuspidata, S. fontinalis, S. graminea, S. holostea, S. humifusa, S. irrigua, S. littoralis, S. longifolia, S. longipes, S. media, S. neglecta, S. nitens, S. obtusa, S. pallida, S. palustris, S. parva, S. porsildii, S. pubera, S. ruscifolia, S. umbellata
Synonyms Cherleria dicranoides, Arenaria chamissonis, Arenaria dicranoides
Name authority (Chamisso & Schlechtendal) Fenzl: in C. F. von Ledebour, Fl. Ross. 1: 395. (1842)
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