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basket-grass, bear-grass, turkey-beard

Habit Herbs, perennial, from stout, tuberous, woody rhizomes ending in weakly developed, tunicate bulbs; offshoots not flowering for several years, then dying after fruiting; roots cordlike, thick.
Stems

erect, simple, robust.

Leaves

persistent, mostly basal, spiral, arching, dilated proximally, reduced distally;

blade filiform-linear, keeled, rigid, margins serrulate, apex wiry pointed, densely tufted.

Inflorescences

at first corymbose, becoming elongate, terminal-racemose, densely flowered, bracteate.

Flowers

erect or spreading, semirotate;

perianth hypogynous;

tepals persistent, 6, spreading, distinct, creamy white, 5–7-veined, oblong or obovate, equal to subequal, claws absent, tepal nectaries absent;

stamens 6, weakly epitepalous, divergent, distinct, 3–4 mm;

filaments distinct, subulate, dilated proximally;

anthers dorsifixed, versatile, 2-locular (not confluent), extrorse;

gynoecium weakly syncarpous;

ovary superior, 3-locular;

septal nectaries absent;

styles persistent, 3, recurved, distinct;

stigmas papillate along adaxial apex;

pedicel spreading or erect, 3–5 cm.

Fruits

capsular, 3-lobed, globular to ovoid, dehiscence loculicidal.

Seeds

2–4 per locule, greenish brown, wingless, oblong-fusiform, 3-angled, 3–4 mm, glossy.

x

= 15.

Xerophyllum

Distribution
from USDA
w North America; e North America
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species 2 (2 in the flora).

Xerophyllum, an endemic genus with one species in eastern and one in western North America, is distinct from other melanthoid genera with which it has long been associated (J. D. Ambrose 1975, 1980; P. Goldblatt 1995; C. Sterling 1980; M. Takahashi and S. Kawano 1989; F. H. Utech 1978c) and has recently been segregated in the tribe Xerophylleae S. Watson within the Melanthiaceae sensu stricto (M. N. Tamura 1998; W. B. Zomlefer 1997b), or in the monotypic family Xerophyllaceae (A. L. Takhtajan 1994, 1997).

Xerophyllum tenax and X. asphodeloides are both cultivated for their showy, white racemes. Any given offshoot plant may not flower for several years, but ultimately an unbranched, strongly bracteate, flowering stalk is produced which, along with the surrounding leaves, dies after fruiting.

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

Key
1. Stems (0.8–)1.2–1.8(–2) m; leaf blade 2–8(–10) dm × 2–4(–6) mm; racemes 5–7 dm; w Cordilleras.
X. tenax
1. Stems (0.5–)0.8–1(–1.5) m; leaf blade 3–5 dm × 1–2.5 mm; racemes 1.5–3 dm; e mountains and coastal pine barrens
X. asphodeloides
Source FNA vol. 26, p. 71. Author: Frederick H. Utech.
Parent taxa Liliaceae
Subordinate taxa
X. asphodeloides, X. tenax
Name authority Michaux: Fl. Bor.-Amer. 1: 210. (1803)
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