Difference between revisions of "Perityle stansburyi"
Contr. Gray Herb. 56: 39. 1918.
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|common_names=Stansbury’s rock daisy | |common_names=Stansbury’s rock daisy | ||
− | |basionyms={{Treatment/ID/ | + | |basionyms={{Treatment/ID/Basionym |
|name=Laphamia stansburii | |name=Laphamia stansburii | ||
|authority=A. Gray | |authority=A. Gray | ||
+ | |rank=species | ||
+ | |publication_title=Smithsonian Contr. Knowl. | ||
+ | |publication_place=3(5): 101. 1852 | ||
}} | }} | ||
|synonyms= | |synonyms= | ||
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|elevation=1200–2600 m | |elevation=1200–2600 m | ||
|distribution=Nev.;Utah. | |distribution=Nev.;Utah. | ||
− | |discussion=<p>Perityle stansburii with its large habit, relatively broad leaves, radiate heads, bristle pappus, chromosome number, and wide distribution, fills most expectations as the ancestral taxon of the group of related species called the “southwestern alliance.” This natural assemblage of taxa, which is thought to have evolved through geographic displacement and subsequent genetic differentiation, includes P. congesta, P. gracilis, P. intricata, P. inyoensis, P. megalocephala, P. specuicola, P. tenella, and P. villosa. These taxa, which are found mostly to the south and west of P. stansburii, all have rayless heads and may or may not have pappus bristles. In western and northwestern Utah and adjacent Nevada, P. stansburii occurs in crevices of rock exposures.</p> | + | |discussion=<p><i>Perityle</i> stansburii with its large habit, relatively broad leaves, radiate heads, bristle pappus, chromosome number, and wide distribution, fills most expectations as the ancestral taxon of the group of related species called the “southwestern alliance.” This natural assemblage of taxa, which is thought to have evolved through geographic displacement and subsequent genetic differentiation, includes <i>P. congesta</i>, <i>P. gracilis</i>, <i>P. intricata</i>, <i>P. inyoensis</i>, <i>P. megalocephala</i>, <i>P. specuicola</i>, <i>P. tenella</i>, and <i>P. villosa</i>. These taxa, which are found mostly to the south and west of P. stansburii, all have rayless heads and may or may not have pappus bristles. In western and northwestern Utah and adjacent <i>Nevada</i>, P. stansburii occurs in crevices of rock exposures.</p> |
|tables= | |tables= | ||
|references= | |references= | ||
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-->{{#Taxon: | -->{{#Taxon: | ||
name=Perityle stansburyi | name=Perityle stansburyi | ||
− | |||
|authority=(A. Gray) J. F. Macbride | |authority=(A. Gray) J. F. Macbride | ||
|rank=species | |rank=species | ||
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|publication year=1918 | |publication year=1918 | ||
|special status= | |special status= | ||
− | |source xml=https:// | + | |source xml=https://bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation/src/2e0870ddd59836b60bcf96646a41e87ea5a5943a/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V19-20-21/V21_809.xml |
|tribe=Asteraceae tribe Heliantheae | |tribe=Asteraceae tribe Heliantheae | ||
|subtribe=Asteraceae (tribe Heliantheae) subtribe Peritylinae | |subtribe=Asteraceae (tribe Heliantheae) subtribe Peritylinae |
Latest revision as of 20:14, 5 November 2020
Perennials or subshrubs, 7–45 cm (often dense clumps to 60 cm across); hirtellous. Leaves: petioles 3–10 mm; blades subdeltate, suborbiculate, or subovate, 3–14 × 3–15 mm, margins usually 2–5-lobed or serrate, sometimes subentire or 3-lobed. Heads borne singly or in corymbiform arrays, 7–8 × 5–9 mm. Peduncles 5–60 mm. Involucres campanulate. Phyllaries 14–22, lanceolate to broadly oblanceolate, 5–6 × 1–2 mm. Ray florets 6–14; corollas yellow, laminae 3–6 × 1.2–3 mm. Disc florets 60–80; corollas yellow, tubes 1.2–1.5 mm, throats tubular to subfunnelform, 2.4–3 mm, lobes 0.4–0.6 mm. Cypselae narrowly oblanceolate, 2–3.5 mm, margins thin-calloused, short-hairy; pappi of single, ± stout bristles 2.5–4 mm plus crowns of vestigial, hyaline scales. 2n = 34.
Phenology: Flowering spring–fall.
Habitat: Rock crevices
Elevation: 1200–2600 m
Discussion
Perityle stansburii with its large habit, relatively broad leaves, radiate heads, bristle pappus, chromosome number, and wide distribution, fills most expectations as the ancestral taxon of the group of related species called the “southwestern alliance.” This natural assemblage of taxa, which is thought to have evolved through geographic displacement and subsequent genetic differentiation, includes P. congesta, P. gracilis, P. intricata, P. inyoensis, P. megalocephala, P. specuicola, P. tenella, and P. villosa. These taxa, which are found mostly to the south and west of P. stansburii, all have rayless heads and may or may not have pappus bristles. In western and northwestern Utah and adjacent Nevada, P. stansburii occurs in crevices of rock exposures.
Selected References
None.