Holodiscus microphyllus var. sericeus

F. A. Ley

Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 70: 283. 1943.

Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 420. Mentioned on page 421.

Short-shoot leaf surfaces sessile- and/or stipitate-glandular (often obscured by hairs), abaxial white, sometimes silvery white, veins, intercostal regions, and margins obscured by hairs, densely sericeous, white granular deposits sparse, adaxial white short-villous. Inflorescences 2–6 × 1–4 cm. Pedicels 2–3 mm. Flowers: nectar disc sparsely white-hirsute; sepals densely white-tomentose, usually eglandular; petal base abaxially with few, scattered long hairs.


Phenology: Flowering Apr-–Jun.
Habitat: Rock outcrops, often limestone, sandy loam soil derived from diorite, margins of ponderosa pine woodlands, Jeffrey pine forests, pinyon pine-juniper woodlands
Elevation: 1500–3000 m

Distribution

V9 708-distribution-map.jpg

Ariz., Calif., Nev., Mexico (Baja California).

Discussion

The unusually dense, white to silvery white, sericeous indumentum that characterizes var. sericeus is found only in northwestern Arizona, extreme southern Nevada, some desert mountains of southern California, and northern Baja California, Mexico. In this region, var. microphyllus also occurs but its populations are usually disjunct. The primary problem in distinguishing var. sericeus arises when specimens actually belong to var. microphyllus but are abaxially off-white to light gray and tomentose to villous.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Richard Lis +
F. A. Ley +
Holodiscus +
Ariz. +, Calif. +, Nev. +  and Mexico (Baja California). +
1500–3000 m +
Rock outcrops, often limestone, sandy loam soil derived from diorite, margins of ponderosa pine woodlands, Jeffrey pine forests, pinyon pine-juniper woodlands +
Flowering Apr-–Jun. +
Bull. Torrey Bot. Club +
Holodiscus discolor subsp. microphyllus +  and H. discolor var. microphyllus +
Holodiscus microphyllus var. sericeus +
Holodiscus microphyllus +
variety +