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Vascular Plants of California
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Stutzia covillei
COVILLE'S ORACH


Higher Taxonomy
Family: ChenopodiaceaeView DescriptionDichotomous Key
Common Name: GOOSEFOOT FAMILY
Habit: Annual to shrub; hairs simple, stellate, or glandular; plants in several genera scaly, mealy, or powdery from collapsed glands; monoecious, dioecious, with bisexual flowers, or with both bisexual and unisexual flowers. Stem: occasionally fleshy. Leaf: blade simple, generally alternate, occasionally fleshy or reduced to scales, veins pinnate; stipules 0. Inflorescence: raceme, spike, catkin-like, spheric head, axillary clusters of flowers, 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, generally green; calyx parts (1)3--5, or 0 in pistillate flowers, free or fused basally (or +- throughout), leaf-like in texture, membranous, or fleshy, deciduous or not, often strongly modified in fruit; corolla 0; stamens 1--5, opposite sepals, filaments free, equal; anthers 4-chambered; ovary superior (1/2-inferior), chamber 1; ovule 1; styles, stigmas 1--4 (or stigmas sessile). Fruit: achene or utricle, generally falling 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.
Genera In Family: 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. Note: Nitrophila treated in Amaranthaceae, Sarcobatus treated in Sarcobataceae. Key to genera revised by Elizabeth H. Zacharias to incorporate Extriplex and Stutzia, 2 genera segregated from Atriplex. Native spp. of Kochia now treated in Neokochia. Chenopodiaceae often treated now within a more broadly circumscribed Amaranthaceae (Morales-Briones et al. 2021).
eFlora Treatment Author: Mihai Costea, family description, key to genera, revised by Thomas J. Rosatti & Elizabeth H. Zacharias, except as noted
Scientific Editor: Bruce G. Baldwin, David J. Keil, Thomas J. Rosatti, Margriet Wetherwax.
Genus: StutziaView Description 


Habit: Monoecious annual, generally scaly. Leaf: alternate, distal +- reduced; blade entire to lobed; non-Kranz. Inflorescence: axillary or terminal. Staminate Inflorescence: spheric cluster in distal axils, dense or interrupted spikes, often mixed with pistillate flowers; bracts 0. Pistillate Inflorescence: solitary or 2--6 in axils of midstem leaves; bracts 2 per fruit, enlarged in age, fused to above middle [fused to top], generally compressed, generally sessile or stipitate, falling with fruit. Staminate Flower: calyx lobes 5; stamens 5. Pistillate Flower: calyx present; stigmas 2. Seed: generally erect.
Etymology: (Howard Stutz, North American geneticist who resurrected Endolepis Torr., 1918--2010) Note: Previously included in Atriplex.
eFlora Treatment Author: Elizabeth H. Zacharias, as part of Atriplex
Reference: Zacharias & Baldwin 2010 Syst Bot 35(4):839--857.
Stutzia covillei (Standl.) E.H. Zacharias
NATIVE
Habit: Annual 1--4.5 dm. Stem: many-branched from base, +- striate, green, glabrous to sparsely fine-scaly. Leaf: blades 10--40 mm, lanceolate to deltate, fleshy, brittle in age, base tapered to hastate. Pistillate Inflorescence: bracts in fruit 5--20 mm, fused proximally, lanceolate to deltate, smooth or tubercled, base 2-lobed. Pistillate Flower: calyx lobes(1)3(5), translucent. Seed: 1--1.5 mm, brown. Chromosomes: 2n=18.
Ecology: Saline soils, flats; Elevation: < 2100 m. Bioregional Distribution: SnJV, SNE, DMoj; Distribution Outside California: Nevada. Flowering Time: Apr--Aug
Synonyms: Atriplex covillei (Standl.) J.F. Macbr.; Atriplex phyllostegia (Torr. ex S. Watson) S. Watson sensu TJM (1993), in part
Jepson eFlora Author: Elizabeth H. Zacharias, as part of Atriplex
Reference: Zacharias & Baldwin 2010 Syst Bot 35(4):839--857.
Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange)

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Botanical illustration including Stutzia covillei

botanical illustration including Stutzia covillei

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Citation for this treatment: Elizabeth H. Zacharias, as part of Atriplex 2012, Stutzia covillei, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=95111, accessed on April 16, 2024.

Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on April 16, 2024.

Stutzia covillei
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©2018 Neal Kramer
Stutzia covillei
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©2016 Steve Matson
Stutzia covillei
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©2013 Neal Kramer
Stutzia covillei
click for enlargement
©2018 Neal Kramer
Stutzia covillei
click for enlargement
©2011 Steve Matson

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Geographic subdivisions for Stutzia covillei:
SnJV, SNE, DMoj
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map of distribution 1
(Note: any qualifiers in the taxon distribution description, such as 'northern', 'southern', 'adjacent' etc., are not reflected in the map above, and in some cases indication of a taxon in a subdivision is based on a single collection or author-verified occurence).





 

Data provided by the participants of the  Consortium of California Herbaria.
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Blue markers indicate specimens that map to one of the expected Jepson geographic subdivisions (see left map). Purple markers indicate specimens collected from a garden, greenhouse, or other non-wild location.
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CCH collections by month

Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
Species do not include records of infraspecific taxa, if there are more than 1 infraspecific taxon in CA.
Blue line denotes eFlora flowering time (fruiting time in some monocot genera).