Camassia quamash subsp. intermedia |
Camassia |
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camas, quamash |
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Habit | Herbs, perennial, from bulbs. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bulbs | solitary or clustered, tunicate, ovoid to globose; tunic black or brown. |
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Leaves | 6–13 mm wide, not glaucous. |
basal, appearing whorled; blade linear, keeled. |
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Inflorescences | appearing terminal, racemose, bracteate; bracts sterile or subtending flowers, narrowly lanceolate. |
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Flowers | usually zygomorphic; tepals withering separately after anthesis, pale bluish violet, each usually 5- or 7-veined, occasionally 3-veined in outer whorls, 20–35 × 5 mm; anthers bright yellow, 5–7 mm; fruiting pedicel strongly incurving, with capsules closely appressed to raceme axes, 35–60 mm. |
actinomorphic or zygomorphic; tepals 6, persistent, ± equal in 2 whorls of 3, distinct, violet, blue, or white, each 3–9-veined, lanceolate, ± twisted in drying; stamens 6; filaments inserted on receptacles at base of tepals, slender; anthers versatile, dehiscence introrse; ovary 3-locular, septal nectaries present, ovules 6–36; style filiform; stigma 3-lobed; pedicel spreading to incurving-erect in fruit. |
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Fruits | capsular, ovoid to ellipsoid or subglobose, dehiscence loculicidal. |
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Capsules | 7–19 mm. |
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Seeds | 6–10 per locule. |
6–36, lustrous black, obpyriform to ovoid-ellipsoid, 2–4 mm. |
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x | = 15. |
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Camassia quamash subsp. intermedia |
Camassia |
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Phenology | Flowering mid–late spring. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Fields, pastures | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 300–1000 m (1000–3300 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
OR |
North America |
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Discussion | Species 6 (6 in the flora). Cmassia has been associated with other western North American genera of Liliaceae such as Schoenolirion, Hastingsia, and especially Chlorogalum (F. Speta 1998; M. Pfosser and F. Speta 1999), but recent molecular evidence (D. J. Bogler and B. B. Simpson 1996; M. F. Fay and M. W. Chase 1996) suggests that it may be related instead to the Agavaceae. Furthermore, the bimodal, 2n = 30 karyology of Camassia (A. Fernandez and J. R. Davina 1991) is similar to that of Agavaceae (D. Satô 1935) and not that of Chlorogalum. Camassia bulbs have been an important food staple for native Americans, especially in the Pacific Northwest (G. R. Downing and L. S. Furniss 1968; N. J. Turner and H. V. Kuhnlein 1983), where bulbs were dug and traded on large encampment meadows. Similarity to the poisonous bulbs of Zigadenus (“death camas”) is a concern where ranges of the two genera overlap. Several Camassia species are cultivated and represent a major horticultural contribution from the native flora. Variation and intergradation of C. angusta and C. scilloides have been reviewed by T. A. Ranker and A. F. Schnabel (1986), as well as J. A. Steyermark (1961), R. O. Erickson (1941), and F. W. Gould (1942). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 26, p. 305. | FNA vol. 26, p. 303. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Name authority | Gould: Amer. Midl. Naturalist 28: 734, figs. 7, 10c. (1942) | Lindley: Edwards’s Bot. Reg. 18: plate 1486. (1832) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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