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CHENOPODIACEAE GOOSEFOOT FAMILY

Mihai Costea, family description, key to genera

Annual to shrub; hairs simple, stellate or glandular; plants generally scaly, mealy, or powdery from collapsed glands; generally monoecious.
Stem: occasionally fleshy.
Leaf: blade simple, generally alternate, occasionally fleshy or reduced to scales, veins pinnate; stipules 0.
Inflorescence: raceme, spike, catkin-like, spheric heads, or flowers 1; bracts 0–5, herbaceous, generally persistent or strongly modified in fruit, wings, tubercles or spines present or 0.
Flower: bisexual or unisexual, small, green; calyx parts (1)3–5, or 0 in pistillate flowers, free or fused basally, leaf-like in texture, membranous or fleshy, deciduous or not, generally strongly modified in fruit; corolla 0; stamens 1–5, opposite to calyx parts, filaments free, equal; anthers 4-chambered; ovary superior (1/2-inferior), chamber 1; ovule 1; styles, stigmas 1–4.
Fruit: achene or utricle, generally with persistent calyx or bracts.
Seed: 1, small, lenticular to spheric; seed coat smooth to finely dotted, warty, net-like, or prickly, margin occasionally winged.
100 genera, 1500 species: worldwide, especially deserts, saline or alkaline soils; some cultivated for food (Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris, beet, Swiss chard; Spinacia oleracea L., spinach; Chenopodium quinoa Willd., quinoa); and some worldwide, naturalized ruderal or noxious agricultural weeds. Nitrophila treated in Amaranthaceae, Sarcobatus treated in Sarcobataceae. —Scientific Editors: Douglas H. Goldman, Bruce G. Baldwin.

Key to Chenopodiaceae

ATRIPLEX SALTBUSH, ORACH

Elizabeth H. Zacharias

Generally monoecious annual, to generally dioecious shrub, generally scaly.
Leaf: generally alternate, distal ± reduced; blade entire to variously dentate or lobed.
Inflorescence: axillary or terminal.
Staminate inflorescence: spheric cluster to spike-like or panicle; bracts 0.
Pistillate inflorescence: cluster to spike- or panicle-like, occasionally 1; bracts 2 per fruit, enlarged in age, free to variously fused, generally compressed, generally sessile, falling with fruit (or not).
Staminate flower: calyx lobes 3–5; stamens 3–5.
Pistillate flower: calyx generally ± 0; stigmas 2.
Seed: generally erect.
± 250 species: temperate to subtrop worldwide. (Latin: name derived from Greek) [Welsh 2003 FNANM 4:322–381] Generally in alkaline or saline soils; some weedy; some accumulate selenium. Bract descriptions refer to 2 bracts surrounding flower, enlarging in fruit. Australian Atriplex crassipes J.M. Black possibly in SCo. In revised taxonomy, too late for full treatment here, Atriplex californica, Atriplex joaquinana moved to Extriplex, Atriplex covillei to Stutzia, both new genera [Zacharias & Baldwin 2010 Syst Bot 35(4):839–857].

Key to Atriplex

A. rosea L. TUMBLING ORACH
NATURALIZED
Annual, erect, 4–15 dm.
Stem: erect; branches ascending, smooth, generally ± glabrous.
Leaf: blade 10–60 mm, 4–30 mm wide, ovate to lanceolate, firm, coarsely wavy- dentate, distally entire, densely fine-scaly abaxially, ± green adaxially, base tapered; persistent.
Pistillate inflorescence: bracts in fruit sessile to short-stalked, 4–8 mm, fused proximally, diamond-shaped to deltate, hard, dentate, tubercled (smooth).
Seed: 2–2.5 mm, brown or black.
2n=18. Common. Open, disturbed places, fields; < 2500 m. California (uncommon Desert); to eastern North America; native to Eurasia. Jul–Oct [Online Interchange]

Previous taxon: Atriplex pusilla
Next taxon: Atriplex semibaccata

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Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) [year] Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM.html [accessed on month, day, year]
Citation for an individual treatment: [Author of taxon treatment] [year]. [Taxon name] in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, [URL for treatment]. Accessed on [month, day, year].

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Bioregions in which taxon occurs Markers link to CCH specimen records. If the markers are obscured, reload the page [or change window size and reload]. Yellow markers indicate records that may provide evidence for eFlora range revision or may have georeferencing or identification issues.
map of distribution 1

Chart based on elevation range in Manual and elevations and coordinates of CCH records.
Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria.
Note: About half of the CCH records include both elevation and coordinates.
Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria.
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CCH collections by month

Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
Species do not include records of infraspecific taxa.
Blue line denotes Manual flowering time.