View source for Jamesia ← Jamesia You do not have permission to edit this page, for the following reason: The action you have requested is limited to users in the group: Users. You can view and copy the source of this page. {{Treatment/ID |accepted_name=Jamesia |accepted_authority=Torrey & A. Gray |publications={{Treatment/Publication |title=Fl. N. Amer. |place=1: 593. 1840 |year=1840 }} |common_names=Cliffbush;waxflower |basionyms= |synonyms= |hierarchy=Hydrangeaceae;Jamesia |hierarchy_nav=<div class="higher-taxa"><div class="higher-taxon"><small>family</small>[[Hydrangeaceae]]</div><div class="higher-taxon"><small>genus</small>[[Jamesia]]</div></div> |etymology=For Edwin P. James, 1797–1861, American physician and naturalist on the Stephen Harriman Long expeditions of 1819 & 1820 |volume=Volume 12 |mention_page=page 462, 463 |treatment_page=page 464 }}<!-- --><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Shrubs.</b> Stems ascending or spreading. <b>Bark</b> exfoliating in sheets, strips, or strings. <b>Branches</b> ascending, spreading, or descending; twigs with simple trichomes. <b>Leaves</b> deciduous, opposite; petiole present; blade ovate or broadly ovate to obovate, rhombic, or suborbiculate, herbaceous, margins usually crenate to dentate, rarely entire, plane; venation pinnate. <b>Inflorescences</b> terminal, cymes, 2–35-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary; peduncle absent or present. <b>Pedicels</b> present. <b>Flowers</b> bisexual; perianth and androecium perigynous; hypanthium completely adnate to ovary, hemispheric, not ribbed in fruit; sepals persistent, 4–5, erect, lanceolate to narrowly ovate, sparsely to densely strigose, canescent, or sericeous; petals 4–5, imbricate, spreading, white or pink, obovate or oblanceolate, base clawed, sometimes obscurely, surfaces hairy; stamens 8 or 10; filaments distinct, dorsiventrally flattened, gradually or abruptly tapered from base to narrow apex, apex not 2-lobed; anthers depressed-ovate; pistil 3–5-carpellate, ovary to 1/2 inferior, partially 3–5-locular initially, becoming 1-locular; placentation axile proximally, parietal distally; styles persistent, (2–)3–5, distinct. <b>Capsules</b> ovoid or conic, indurate, dehiscence basipetally septicidal to middle of fruit. <b>Seeds</b> 25–50 per locule, orangish brown or tan, ellipsoid. <b>x</b> = 16.</span><!-- -->{{Treatment/Body |distribution=United States;n Mexico. |discussion=<p>Species 2 (2 in the flora).</p><!-- --><p>This treatment of <i>Jamesia</i> is essentially an adaptation of that by N. H. Holmgren and P. K. Holmgren (1989).</p><!-- --><p>Fossil leaves referred to <i>Jamesia</i> have been identified in Oligocene sediments from Colorado and Montana; the identity of material from the latter site is ambiguous (N. H. Holmgren and P. K. Holmgren 1989).</p><!-- --><p>In the key and descriptions that follow, tooth number is per leaf.</p> |tables= |references={{Treatment/Reference |id=holmgren1989a |text=Holmgren, N. H. and P. K. Holmgren. 1989. A taxonomic study of Jamesia (Hydrangeaceae). Brittonia 41: 335–350. }} }}<!-- --><div class="treatment-key"> ==Key== <div class="treatment-key-group"> {| class="wikitable fna-keytable" |-id=key-0-1 |1 |Sepals 5; petals 5; stamens 10; inflorescences usually 3–35-flowered, cymose, rarely 1–2-flowered on lateral branches; leaf blade margins (5–)9–51(–69)-toothed. |[[Jamesia americana|Jamesia americana]] |-id=key-0-1 |1 |Sepals 4; petals 4; stamens 8; inflorescences (1–)3-flowered; leaf blade margins usually 3–13(–16)-toothed, rarely entire. |[[Jamesia tetrapetala|Jamesia tetrapetala]] |} </div></div><!-- -->{{#Taxon: name=Jamesia |author=Craig C. Freeman |authority=Torrey & A. Gray |rank=genus |parent rank=family |synonyms= |basionyms= |family=Hydrangeaceae |distribution=United States;n Mexico. |reference=holmgren1989a |publication title=Fl. N. Amer. |publication year=1840 |special status= |source xml=https://bibilujan@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/bb6b7e3a7de7d3b7888a1ad48c7fd8f5c722d8d6/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V12/V12_455.xml |genus=Jamesia }}<!-- -->[[Category:Treatment]][[Category:Hydrangeaceae]] Templates used on this page: Template:Hydrangeaceae (view source) Template:Treatment/AuthorLink (view source) Template:Treatment/Body (view source) Template:Treatment/Body/Maps (view source) Template:Treatment/ID (view source) Template:Treatment/Publication (view source) Template:Treatment/Reference (view source) Return to Jamesia.