TREATMENT FROM THE JEPSON MANUAL (1993) |
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Jepson Interchange (more information) |
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©Copyright 1993 by the Regents of the University of California
For up-to-date information about California vascular plants, visit the Jepson eFlora. |
AND IS MAINTAINED FOR ARCHIVAL PURPOSES ONLY |
Annual, perennial herb, shrub, glabrous or hairy
Stem prostrate to erect
Leaves simple, generally basal and cauline, alternate, opposite, or whorled, rarely fleshy; stipules 0, conspicuous, or small and deciduous
Inflorescence: cyme, cluster, or flower solitary, axillary
Flower generally bisexual, small, radial; calyx persistent, sepals 45, generally free; corolla 0 or small; stamens 510, sometimes petal-like, attached to hypanthium, filaments free or fused at base; nectary a ring; ovary superior, chambers 110, placentas generally axile, styles 1 or 35, generally free
Fruit: generally capsule, generally loculicidal
Seeds 1 or more per chamber, sometimes with arils
Genera in family: 14 genera, 95 species: generally tropical, subtropical, especially Africa.
Annual, perennial herb, glabrous to puberulent
Stem prostrate to ascending, slender; branches many
Leaves generally whorled, linear to oblanceolate; stipules 0
Inflorescence: umbel, cluster, or flower solitary; pedicel slender
Flower: sepals 5, ± petal-like, persistent, midrib generally green, margins white-scarious; petals 0; stamens 3, alternate ovary chambers or 5, alternate sepals (rarely 10); ovary ± ovate, chambers 35, styles 35, linear
Fruit thin, included in calyx
Seeds many, reniform, smooth, ridged, or tubercled, red-brown; aril short
Species in genus: 20 species: tropical, subtropical
Etymology: (Greek: soft plant)
Introduced |
Annual, glabrous, glaucous
Stem ± erect, < 20 cm
Leaves in whorls of 410, 315 mm, generally 1 mm wide, linear
Inflorescence: umbel; flowers 1several; peduncle = or > slender pedicels; bracts minute, margins translucent
Flower: sepals 5, 11.5 mm; stamens 5, alternate sepals, 1 mm; stigmas 3, sessile
Fruit ± round
Seed 0.30.4 mm, faintly keeled and net-sculptured, brown
Chromosomes: 2n=18
Ecology: Uncommon. Seasonal pools, sandy washes, flats, slopes
Elevation: < 1700 m.
Bioregional distribution: San Jacinto Mountains, Desert
Distribution outside California: to Texas, Mexico, tropical; native to Old World
Flowering time: SepMar