Chaenactis nevii |
Chaenactis |
|||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
John Day pincushion, John Day's pincushion, Nevius' chaenactis |
chaenactis, dusty-maidens, false-yarrow, pincushion |
|||||||||
Habit | Plants 10–30 cm; proximal indument greenish to grayish, stipitate-glandular and, sometimes, sparsely arachnoid or villous. | Annuals, biennials, perennials, or subshrubs, (2–)5–70(–200) cm (taprooted). | ||||||||
Stems | mostly 1–3; branches mainly distal. |
erect to prostrate, usually branched. |
||||||||
Leaves | basal (withering) and cauline, 2–5 cm; largest blades ± elliptic, ± plane to 3-dimensional, not succulent, 1–2-pinnately lobed; primary lobes mostly 3–8 pairs, ± remote, ultimate lobes ± plane to involute. |
basal and/or cauline (smaller and sparser distally except in C. cusickii); alternate; usually petiolate; blades deltate, elliptic, linear, oblanceolate, or ovate (plane or ± 3-dimensional), (0–)1–4-pinnately (rarely -subpalmately) lobed, ultimate margins entire, faces glabrous or hairy, often stipitate-glandular or gland-dotted. |
||||||||
Peduncles | 1–6 cm, distally stipitate-glandular and, sometimes, ± arachnoid to villous. |
|||||||||
Involucres | ± hemispheric to campanulate. |
hemispheric to obconic or broadly cylindric, (3–)5–15[–25] mm diam. |
||||||||
Receptacles | convex to ± flat, pitted and/or knobby, usually epaleate (paleae 3–10+ in C. carphoclinia). |
|||||||||
Florets | corollas bright yellow, 4–6.5 mm; peripheral corollas ± erect, actinomorphic, scarcely enlarged. |
|||||||||
Ray florets | 0 (sometimes simulated by enlarged peripheral disc corollas). |
|||||||||
Disc florets | 8–70+, bisexual, fertile (diurnal with anthers exserted except in C. macrantha); corollas white, pinkish, cream, or yellow, tubes shorter than cylindric or funnelform throats, lobes 5, deltate to ± lanceolate (sometimes enlarged, unequal; style-branch appendages blunt, obscure). |
|||||||||
Phyllaries | longest 6–9 mm; outer predominantly stipitate-glandular and, sometimes, ± arachnoid to villous in fruit, apices ± erect, acute, rigid. |
5–21+ in 1–2(–3) series (subequal to unequal). |
||||||||
Heads | mostly 3–9 per stem. |
discoid or ± radiant, borne singly or in (terminal) ± cymiform arrays (erect in bud except C. macrantha). |
||||||||
Cypselae | 3.5–6 mm (compressed); pappi 0 or coroniform (of ± 10 scales, longest 0.1–0.5 mm). |
clavate to ± cylindric or compressed, obscurely 8–20-angled, faces scabrous and strigose to densely sericeous (usually eglandular); pappi usually persistent, of (1–)4–20, distinct, ± erose scales in 1–4 series (equal or unequal, outer then shorter, scales usually fewer and/or shorter on peripheral cypselae, midnerves obscure), sometimes 0 or coroniform. |
||||||||
x | = ? (n = 6, 8, plus polyploids and dysploid numbers). |
|||||||||
2n | = 12. |
|||||||||
Chaenactis nevii |
Chaenactis |
|||||||||
Phenology | Flowering late Apr–mid July. | |||||||||
Habitat | Nearly barren, heavy clay soils from volcanic ash and tuff, sometimes disturbed or moist sites | |||||||||
Elevation | 400–1000 m (1300–3300 ft) | |||||||||
Distribution |
OR
|
w North America; nw Mexico |
||||||||
Discussion | Chaenactis nevii is known from the John Day Basin area in Gilliam, Grant, Jefferson, Wasco, and Wheeler counties. This odd and isolated species combines traits of C. artemisiifolia (sect. Acarphaea) and C. glabriuscula, and might be descended from their common ancestor. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species 18 (17 in the flora). Chaenactis species grow in arid to alpine or Mediterranean climates, usually in open, unstable or early seral habitats (loose sand, scree, talus, shrink-swell clay, fire-adapted vegetation, recent disturbances). Some annual species have been grown in gardens in the eastern United States. Differences in induments are key to distinguishing some Chaenactis species. Unless otherwise noted in descriptions and key leads, assume for any given plant that indument of proximal leaves and adjacent proximal portions of stems (“proximal indument”) is similar; indument of distal leaves is, likewise, similar to indument of stem portions from which they arise; peduncle indument is denser distally than proximally; and distal peduncle indument is similar to proximal phyllary indument. Unless otherwise noted, phyllary traits apply to the outer series only. Pappus scales may be equal, subequal, or unequal; unequal scales may intergrade (here said to be in gradually unequal series) or may form two, more or less uniform, shorter and longer series (here said to be in abruptly unequal series); subequal scales are said to be in subequal series. Excellent illustrations of most Chaenactis species appeared in L. Abrams and R. S. Ferris (1923–1960, vol. 4) and A. Cronquist (1955). Section Acarphaea is distinctive by its farinose indument and base chromosome number of 8, among other traits; it could prove to be a separate, convergent genus. Natural and artificial hybrids have been documented among some members of sect. Chaenactis (see further discussion there). Reports of hybrids among species of the other two sections are few and doubtful. Chaenactis appears to be most closely related to the monotypic Dimeresia and Orochaenactis, which B. G. Baldwin et al. (2002) treated together as a narrowly circumscribed tribe, Chaenactideae. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
||||||||
Key |
|
|||||||||
Source | FNA vol. 21, p. 411. | FNA vol. 21, p. 400. | ||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||||||
Name authority | A. Gray: Proc. Amer Acad. Arts 19: 30. (1883) | de Candolle: in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle, Prodr. 5: 659. (1836) | ||||||||
Web links |