Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Ericameria

Ericameria
Family: Asteraceae
Ericameria image
Max Licher
  • FNA
  • Resources
Lowell E. Urbatsch, Loran C. Anderson, Roland P. Roberts, Kurt M. Neubig in Flora of North America (vol. 20)
Shrubs (trees in Ericameria parishii var. parishii), 10-500 cm. Stems usually erect to ascending, rarely prostrate, fastigiately or intricately branched (bark typically tan to reddish brown, becoming gray, twigs usually green to gray or yellowish), glabrous or sparsely to densely hairy (often tomentose), often gland-dotted, sometimes resinous or stipitate-glandular. Leaves (mostly persistent) cauline (often crowded, axillary leaf fascicles sometimes present); petiolate or sessile; blades (green to grayish; midnerves obscure to prominent, sometimes with 2 collateral veins), cuneate, elliptic, filiform, lanceolate, linear, oblanceolate, obovate, or spatulate (adaxially sulcate, concave, or flat), margins entire (sometimes undulate or crisped; apices acute to rounded or retuse), faces glabrous or sparsely to densely hairy (often tomentose), often stipitate -glandular, sometimes gland-dotted or resinous. Heads radiate or discoid, borne singly or in cymiform or racemiform, sometimes highly branched and paniculiform or thyrsiform, arrays. Involucres campanulate, cylindric, hemispheric, obconic, or turbinate, (4-19+ ×) 2-18 mm. Phyllaries 8-60 in 2-7 series (often in vertical ranks), 1-nerved (midnerves obscure or evident, sometimes enlarged subapically and glandular) ovate, lanceolate, or elliptic, strongly unequal to subequal, outer often herbaceous or herbaceous-tipped, otherwise mostly chartaceous, (apices erect, spreading, or reflexed, acute or acuminate to cuspidate or obtuse), faces sometimes stipitate-glandular, often resinous. Receptacles slightly convex, pitted, epaleate. Ray florets 0, or 1-18, pistillate, fertile; corollas usually yellow (white in E. gilmanii and E. resinosa), (laminae elliptic to oblong, apices shallowly notched or toothed). Disc florets 4-70, bisexual, fertile; corollas usually yellow (white in E. gilmanii and E. resinosa), tubes shorter than narrowly funnelform to campanulate throats, lobes 5, erect to spreading or reflexed, deltate to triangular; style-branch appendages lanceolate to subulate. Cypselae (tan to reddish brown) usually prismatic, sometimes cylindric, ellipsoid, obconic, or turbinate, 5-12-ribbed, faces glabrous or sparsely to densely hairy, sometimes gland-dotted; pappi persistent or tardily falling, of 20-60 whitish or tan to reddish, subequal, fine, barbellate, apically attenuate bristles in

Two species, Ericameria juarezensis and E. martirensis, are known only from mountains in northern Baja California, Mexico. The plants inhabit rock outcrops and dry, stony or sandy substrates of western North America. Some taxa are widespread and codominant in scrub communities of that region; others have restricted distributions. Systematic and phylogenetic investigations have resulted in the expansion of Ericameria to include certain taxa previously assigned to Chrysothamnus as well as taxa treated in Haplopappus. Except for E. laricifolia, taxa in Texas previously included in Ericameria are but distantly related and have been excluded from the genus.

In the descriptions below, short-stipitate-glandular refers to hairs with stalks less than 1 / 2 as long as the diameter of the distal gland, long-stipitate-glandular to hairs with stalks clearly visible, 1-3-times longer than the diameter of the distal gland.

Species within checklist: Wild3600-2
Ericameria albida
Media resource of Ericameria albida
Map not
Available
Ericameria arborescens
Media resource of Ericameria arborescens
Map not
Available
Ericameria arizonica
Media resource of Ericameria arizonica
Map not
Available
Ericameria austrotexana
Media resource of Ericameria austrotexana
Map not
Available
Ericameria bloomeri
Media resource of Ericameria bloomeri
Map not
Available
Ericameria brachylepis
Media resource of Ericameria brachylepis
Map not
Available
Ericameria cervina
Media resource of Ericameria cervina
Map not
Available
Ericameria compacta
Media resource of Ericameria compacta
Map not
Available
Ericameria cooperi
Media resource of Ericameria cooperi
Map not
Available
Ericameria crispa
Media resource of Ericameria crispa
Map not
Available
Ericameria cuneata
Media resource of Ericameria cuneata
Map not
Available
Ericameria discoidea
Media resource of Ericameria discoidea
Map not
Available
Ericameria eremobia
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Ericameria ericoides
Media resource of Ericameria ericoides
Map not
Available
Ericameria fasciculata
Media resource of Ericameria fasciculata
Map not
Available
Ericameria gilmanii
Media resource of Ericameria gilmanii
Map not
Available
Ericameria greenei
Media resource of Ericameria greenei
Map not
Available
Ericameria juarezensis
Media resource of Ericameria juarezensis
Map not
Available
Ericameria laricifolia
Media resource of Ericameria laricifolia
Map not
Available
Ericameria lignumviridis
Media resource of Ericameria lignumviridis
Map not
Available
Ericameria linearifolia
Media resource of Ericameria linearifolia
Map not
Available
Ericameria linearis
Media resource of Ericameria linearis
Map not
Available
Ericameria martirensis
Media resource of Ericameria martirensis
Map not
Available
Ericameria microphylla
Media resource of Ericameria microphylla
Map not
Available
Ericameria monactis
Media resource of Ericameria monactis
Map not
Available
Ericameria nana
Media resource of Ericameria nana
Map not
Available
Ericameria nauseosa
Media resource of Ericameria nauseosa
Map not
Available
Ericameria obovata
Media resource of Ericameria obovata
Map not
Available
Ericameria ophitidis
Media resource of Ericameria ophitidis
Map not
Available
Ericameria palmeri
Media resource of Ericameria palmeri
Map not
Available
Ericameria paniculata
Media resource of Ericameria paniculata
Map not
Available
Ericameria parishii
Media resource of Ericameria parishii
Map not
Available
Ericameria parrasana
Media resource of Ericameria parrasana
Map not
Available
Ericameria parryi
Media resource of Ericameria parryi
Map not
Available
Ericameria pinifolia
Media resource of Ericameria pinifolia
Map not
Available
Ericameria purpusii
Media resource of Ericameria purpusii
Map not
Available
Ericameria resinosa
Media resource of Ericameria resinosa
Map not
Available
Ericameria suffruticosa
Media resource of Ericameria suffruticosa
Map not
Available
Ericameria teretifolia
Media resource of Ericameria teretifolia
Map not
Available
Ericameria watsonii
Media resource of Ericameria watsonii
Map not
Available
Ericameria winwardii
Media resource of Ericameria winwardii
Map not
Available
Ericameria x bolanderi
Media resource of Ericameria x bolanderi
Map not
Available
Ericameria x uintahensis
Media resource of Ericameria x uintahensis
Map not
Available
Ericameria x viscosa
Media resource of Ericameria x viscosa
Map not
Available
Ericameria zionis
Media resource of Ericameria zionis
Map not
Available
Ericameria ×bolanderi
Media resource of Ericameria ×bolanderi
Map not
Available
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.