Asclepias linaria

Cavanilles

Icon. 1: 42, plate 57. 1791.

Common names: Pine-needle milkweed hierba del cuervo
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 14.
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Shrubs, crown rounded. Stems few–numerous, erect, branched, especially distally, 30–70 cm, woody, bark brown to gray, twigs puberulent with curved trichomes, not glaucous, rhi­zomes absent. Leaves eventually caducous, alternate, spiral to irregular, sessile, with 1 stipular colleter on each side of leaf base; blade linear, needlelike, 1.5–4 × 0.1–0.15 cm, chartaceous, base cuneate, margins revolute, apex acute, mucronate, venation obscure, sparsely pilosulous to glabrate, laminar colleters absent. Inflorescences extra-axillary, sessile or pedunculate, 9–30-flowered; peduncle 0–2.5 cm, puberulent with curved trichomes to pilosulous, with 1 caducous bract at the base of each pedicel. Pedicels 10–14 mm, pilos­ulous. Flowers erect to pendent; calyx lobes lance­olate to ovate, 2–3 mm, apex acute, sparsely pilosulous to gla­brate; corolla green to cream, often tinged red or purple, lobes reflexed with spreading tips, elliptic, 3.5–5 mm, apex acute, glabrous abaxially, minutely hirtellous at base adaxially, 1 margin ciliate; gynostegial column 0.2–0.5 mm; fused anthers brown, obconic, 1–1.5 mm, wings right-triangular, closed, apical appendages ovate, erose; corona segments cream, sometimes with greenish or purplish dorsal stripe, subsessile or sessile, cupulate, 2.5–3 mm, exceeding style apex, apex obtuse to rounded, glabrous, internal appendage rod-shaped, slightly exserted, glabrous; style apex shallowly depressed, green. Follicles erect on upcurved pedicels, ovoid, 3.5–5 × 0.6–1 cm, apex acuminate, smooth, glabrous. Seeds naviculate, ovate, 5–6 × 3–4 mm, margin very narrowly winged, faces rugulose, the concave one conspicuously so; coma 1.5–2 cm. 2n = 22.


Phenology: Flowering and fruiting year-round.
Habitat: Canyons, cliffs, arroyos, ridges, slopes, bedrock crevices, rhyolite, gran­ite, gneiss, conglomerate, rocky, sandy, and gravel soils, pine-oak forests, oak, pinyon-juniper woodlands, chap­arral, desert scrub, desert grasslands, riparian woodlands and forests.
Elevation: 800–1900 m.

Discussion

Asclepias linaria is arguably the most distinctive milk­weed species in the Americas. It is the only species with woody stems and the only one to form hemispherical shrubs with needlelike leaves. Small plants with few stems are easily mistaken for seedling conifers. This species is widespread and occupies a great variety of habitats in Mexico. It enters the flora area in southeastern Arizona and in southwestern New Mexico only in the Peloncillo Mountains (Hidalgo County); its occurrence in the flora area is evidently relictual. In the region, it is restricted to lower reaches of protected canyons that ameliorate aridity and freezing temperatures, sites that harbor other tropical and subtropical species reaching their northern limits. The plants are often quite floriferous and attract an abundance of Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Asclepias linaria"
Mark Fishbein +
Cavanilles +
Pine-needle milkweed +  and hierba del cuervo +
Ariz. +, N.Mex. +  and Mexico. +
800–1900 m. +
Canyons, cliffs, arroyos, ridges, slopes, Canyons, cliffs, arroyos, ridges, slopes, bedrock crevices, rhyolite, granite, gneiss, conglomerate, rocky, sandy, and gravel soils, pine-oak forests, oak, pinyon-juniper woodlands, chaparral, desert scrub, desert grasslands, riparian woodlands and forests.rasslands, riparian woodlands and forests. +
Flowering and fruiting year-round. +
Acerates +, Anantherix +, Asclepiodella +, Asclepiodora +, Biventraria +, Oxypteryx +, Podostemma +, Podostigma +  and Solanoa +
Asclepias linaria +
Asclepias +
species +