All Floras      Advanced Search
FNA Vol. 7 Page 697, 698 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 7 | Brassicaceae | Stanleya

5a. Stanleya pinnata (Pursh) Britton var. pinnata

Stanleya arcuata Rydberg; S. canescens Rydberg; S. fruticosa Nuttall; S. glauca Rydberg; S. heterophylla Nuttall; S. pinnata subsp. inyoensis Munz & J. C. Roos; S. pinnata var. inyoensis (Munz & J. C. Roos) Reveal; S. pinnatifida Nuttall

Cauline leaves: blade oblanceolate to broadly lanceolate, margins (at least proximal ones) lyrate-pinnatifid or runcinate. Flowers: sepals 9-16 mm; petals 10-20 mm, claw 5-10 mm; gynophore 10-28 mm, pubescent basally. Fruits 3-9 cm; ovules 22-38 per ovary. Seeds 2.5-4 mm. 2n = 28, 56.

Flowering Apr-Sep. Prairie hills, chalk bluffs, shale slopes, talus, sagebrush and mixed shrub communities, pinyon-juniper areas, selenium-rich areas, barren hillsides, sandstone breaks and cliffs, dry sandy or gravelly washes, sand dunes, canyon bottoms, soils derived from limestone, sandstone, basaltic, and volcanic rocks; 200-2500 m; Ariz., Calif., Colo., Idaho, Kans., Mont., Nev., N.Mex., N.Dak., Oreg., S.Dak., Utah, Wyo.

Subshrubby or shrubby forms of var. pinnata were recognized as a distinct var. or subsp. inyoensis. Although such growth forms occur primarily in southern California, western Nevada, and southwestern Utah, they occur sporadically throughout the species range, especially in desert habitats with sand dunes.


 

Related Objects  
  • Distribution Map
  • Map

     |  eFlora Home |  People Search  |  Help  |  ActKey  |  Hu Cards  |  Glossary  |