Some specimens are intermediate for the char-acteristics that distinguish Ambrosia deltoidea and A. chenopodiifolia. The type of A. deltoidea may be better treated as conspecific with that of A. chenopodiifolia.
FNA 2008, Benson and Darrow 1981, Kearney and Peebles 1969, Wiggins 1964
Common Name: triangle bur ragweed Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Subshrub General: Shrub with numerous ascending to erect stems 30-80 cm from a woody base; rounded or flat topped; dark brown branches, ridged, strongly resinous. Leaves: Numerous, mostly alternate, on petioles 5-12 mm, blades deltate to lance-deltate, 12-25 mm long by 5-12 mm wide, cuneate to truncate bases, toothed margins, densely tomentose below, white or pale; above sparsely tomentulose, dark green. Flowers: Pistillate heads clustered, 2-3 florets, in terminal racemes or panicles; staminate heads crowded on peduncles 0.5-3 mm, more or less cup shaped involucres, 4-8 mm in diameter, tomentulose; 12-30 florets. Fruits: Burs broadly ellipsoidal to globose, 3-6 mm, usually stipitate-glandular, spines 15-30, scattered, 1-3 mm, tips straight, sometimes uncinate, distinctly flattened. Ecology: Found in sandy washes, on alluvial plains, on gravelly or rocky slopes from 1,000-3,000 ft (305-914 m); flowers December-May. Notes: Fruiting heads resemble cockleburs, only the spines are strongly flattened with plane of leaves. Abundant shrub among Parkinsonia and Prosopis in the Sonoran desert scrub communities. This species is often considered the dominant bursage of the Arizona Upland, while A. dumosa is found in the lower Colorado and Mohavean types. A. deltoidea is often found on the moister margins of gullies and other surface water features, while A. dumosa is confined to finer and drier soils. Ethnobotany: Unknown, but other species in the genera have many uses. Etymology: Ambrosia is Greek for food of the gods, while deltoidea means triangular, like the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet, delta. Synonyms: Franseria deltoidea Editor: SBuckley, 2010