Difference between revisions of "Nolina cismontana"

Dice

Novon 5: 162. 1995.

Common names: Chaparral nolina chaparral beargrass
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 26. Treatment on page 420. Mentioned on page 416, 421.
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Latest revision as of 21:18, 5 November 2020

Plants caulescent; rosettes from woody, branched caudices and forming small colonies. Stems to 3 dm, occasionally to 15 dm. Leaves 30–90 per rosette; blade wiry, upright, or lax, 50–140 cm × 12–30 mm, occasionally glaucous; bases broad, spoon-shaped, 30–85 mm; margins serrulate, not filiferous. Scape 4–15 dm, 14–35 mm diam. at base. Inflorescences compound paniculate, 9–18 dm × 10–40 cm; bracts persistent, conspicuous; bractlets laciniate. Flowers: tepals 2–5 mm; fertile stamens: filaments 2–4 mm, anthers to 1.2 mm; infertile stamens: filaments 1–1.2 mm, anthers 0.4–0.6 mm; pedicel erect, proximal to joint to 2 mm, distal to joint 1–3 mm. Capsules thin-walled, 8.2–11.2 × 9–12 mm, notched basally and apically. Seeds reddish brown, ovoid, bursting ovary wall, 4–5  3–4 mm.


Phenology: Flowering early–mid spring.
Habitat: Rocky hillsides in dry chaparral of coastal mountains
Elevation: 200–1300 m

Discussion

Of conservation concern.

P. A. Munz and J. C. Roos (1950) mistakenly believed that this coastal entity was the basis of Nolina parryi S. Watson (J. C. Dice 1988). Dice determined that it is not “typical” N. parryi and is sufficiently distinct to recognize separately. Few populations of N. cismontana exist, and they are of conservation concern.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.