Phyllanthus caroliniensis subsp. saxicola

(Small) G. L. Webster

Contr. Gray Herb. 176: 46. 1955.

Common names: Rock Carolina leafflower
Basionym: Phyllanthus saxicola Small Bull. New York Bot. Gard. 3: 428. 1905
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 12. Treatment on page 339. Mentioned on page 336, 340.
Revision as of 19:52, 16 December 2019 by FNA>Volume Importer

Stems usually with 0–5 lateral branches, these usually unbranched, usually sparsely to densely scabridulous, sometimes glabrous. Leaf blades: both surfaces glabrous or scabridulous; vein reticulum obscure or invisible abaxially. Cymules with 1–2 staminate and 1–2 pistillate flowers. Pistillate flowers: sepals oblong to spatulate, 0.7–0.9 × (0.2–)0.3–0.5(–0.7) mm, apex rounded to subacute; nectary annular, unlobed or 6-lobed, enclosing ovary basally.


Phenology: Flowering and fruiting spring–early winter.
Habitat: Pinewoods, hammocks, flatwoods, prairies, disturbed areas, over limestone.
Elevation: 0–10 m.

Distribution

V12 332-distribution-map.jpg

Fla., West Indies (Bahamas, Greater Antilles).

Discussion

Subspecies saxicola is a variable entity and some plants can be difficult to distinguish from subsp. caroliniensis. Most plants of subsp. saxicola look quite distinct with their limited branching and generally smaller leaves (although leaf sizes overlap). They usually also can be recognized by their scabridulous stems, but occasional populations are glabrous. The obscure leaf venation and wider pistillate sepals are diagnostic. In the flora area, subsp. saxicola is restricted to southern peninsular Florida from Charlotte County south and is allopatric with subsp. caroliniensis. J. K. Small (1933) called this taxon Phyllanthus pruinosus Poeppig ex A. Richard, a synonym of P. discolor Poeppig ex Sprengel, a species restricted to Cuba.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Geoffrey A. Levin +
(Small) G. L. Webster +
Phyllanthus saxicola +
Rock Carolina leafflower +
Fla. +, West Indies (Bahamas +  and Greater Antilles). +
0–10 m. +
Pinewoods, hammocks, flatwoods, prairies, disturbed areas, over limestone. +
Flowering and fruiting spring–early winter. +
Contr. Gray Herb. +
Illustrated +
Reverchonia +
Phyllanthus caroliniensis subsp. saxicola +
Phyllanthus caroliniensis +
subspecies +