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brownplume wirelettuce, few-flower wirelettuce, prairie skeletonplant, wire-lettuce

desert wirelettuce, flowering-straw, rush pink, sawtooth wirelettuce

Habit Perennials, 20–50 cm (caudices woody). Perennials, 10–20(–25) cm (rhizomes stout).
Stems

1–5+, divaricately and intricately branched (often forming dense bushes), usually glabrous, rarely tomentose.

erect or ascending, glabrous or weakly scabrous-puberulent.

Leaves

withered at flowering;

basal blades linear-lanceolate, runcinate, 3–7 cm, margins pinnately lobed (faces glabrous);

cauline much reduced and bractlike.

usually withered at flowering;

basal blades narrowly lanceolate, markedly runcinate, 3–7 cm, margins pinnately lobed (faces glabrous or weakly scabrous-puberulent);

cauline much reduced, bractlike.

Peduncles

3–10 mm.

10–50 mm (usually minutely bracteolate).

Involucres

8–11 mm (phyllaries 4–6, glabrous).

9–12(–13) mm (phyllaries 5–6, glabrous).

Florets

5–6.

5–6.

Calyculi

of appressed bractlets.

of appressed bractlets (unequal, lengths to 1/2 phyllaries).

Heads

borne singly along branches.

borne singly on branch tips.

Cypselae

tan, 3.5–5 mm, faces tuberculate, grooved;

pappi of 15–20, usually tan, rarely white, bristles (connate in groups of 2–4, bases persistent), plumose on distal 80%.

tan, 3–5 mm, faces smooth to slightly bumpy, grooved;

pappi of 15–25, white bristles (persistent), wholly plumose.

2n

= 16.

= 16.

Stephanomeria pauciflora

Stephanomeria runcinata

Phenology Flowering May–Sep. Flowering June–Sep.
Habitat Sandy, gravelly washes and slopes in desert shrub communities, juniper woodlands, open, sandy short-grass plains Open sandy places, eroded siltstones, clay flats, alkali soils
Elevation 200–1500 m (700–4900 ft) 600–1800 m (2000–5900 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CA; CO; KS; NM; NV; OK; TX; UT; WY; Mexico (Chihuahua, Sonora)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
CO; MT; ND; NE; UT; WY; AB; SK
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Stephanomeria pauciflora generally grows as an intricately branched, often rounded bush. Occasional plants, usually from Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and southern Utah, have long, flexuous stems and branches, an architecture that resembles one of the typical forms of S. tenuifolia. Some plants of S. pauciflora have white pappi, also typical of S. tenuifolia. It is not known if these plants represent uncommon and unusual individuals or if they are from populations in which all plants have those traits. It is also not known whether such plants of S. pauciflora grow near populations of S. tenuifolia; if so, they may result from interspecific hybridization. That is a possibility; experimental hybrid plants produced by crossing individuals from the two species were about 20% fertile. Such fertility suggests the species are sufficiently compatible that fully fertile segregants with variously intermediate morphologies could be expected where they hybridize in nature. The experimental crosses were made reciprocally between S. pauciflora from Riverside County, California (L. D. Gottlieb 6653), and S. tenuifolia from Wheeler County, Oregon (L. D. Gottlieb 6692); specimens of the six F1 hybrid plants that were produced are deposited at DAV. Plants of S. pauciflora that are densely tomentose throughout are occasionally found, particularly in the deserts of California and Nevada, and have been named S. cinerea or S. pauciflora var. parishii.

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

Stephanomeria runcinata grows in the upper Great Plains and adjacent intermontane valleys.

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

Source FNA vol. 19, p. 356. FNA vol. 19, p. 357.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Cichorieae > Stephanomeria Asteraceae > tribe Cichorieae > Stephanomeria
Sibling taxa
S. cichoriacea, S. diegensis, S. elata, S. exigua, S. fluminea, S. lactucina, S. malheurensis, S. paniculata, S. parryi, S. runcinata, S. tenuifolia, S. thurberi, S. virgata
S. cichoriacea, S. diegensis, S. elata, S. exigua, S. fluminea, S. lactucina, S. malheurensis, S. paniculata, S. parryi, S. pauciflora, S. tenuifolia, S. thurberi, S. virgata
Synonyms Prenanthes pauciflora, S. cinerea, S. lygodesmoides, S. pauciflora var. parishii
Name authority (Torrey) A. Nelson: in J. M. Coulter and A. Nelson, New Man. Bot. Centr. Rocky Mt., 588. (1909) Nuttall: Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., n. s. 7: 428. (1841)
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