Family: Crassulaceae |
Herbs, perennial, not viviparous, 7-10 dm, glabrous. Stems above ground (caudex) or underground (corm), usually erect, simple or 2-branched at apex, rarely with lateral vegetative branches, often fleshy; floral stems annual, from rosette leaf axil, simple or branched, overtopping rosette, with scattered smaller leaves. Leaves persistent or withering in early summer, drying persistent and often covering caudex for years, densely crowded in basal or terminal rosette, alternate, subclasping basally, petiolate or sessile; blade linear to orbiculate, nearly laminar to terete or subglobose, 0.2-30 cm, fleshy, base not spurred, margins entire, not ciliate; veins entering margins. Inflorescences lateral cymes, 2+-cincinnate. Pedicels present. Flowers (usually odorless), erect to pendent, 5-merous; sepals connate basally, all alike, shorter than petals; petals erect and forming cylindric to 5-gonal tube or spreading from near middle, connate basally or to middle, white, yellow, orange, or red; nectary disc truncate, wider than tall; stamens 10; filaments adnate to corolla base; pistils erect or ascending to spreading, nearly distinct; ovary base rounded; styles shorter than ovary. Fruits erect to spreading. Seeds narrowly ovoid, longitudinally ribbed, finely cross-ribbed. x = 17. Dudleya is distinguished by its erect sepals usually connivent to the corolla and its corolla convolute in bud, rarely imbricate. The epipetalous stamens are mostly shorter and adnate higher than the episepalous ones and are not reflexed. The center of distribution for all three subgenera of Dudleya is near the coast north and south of San Diego, California. Because this area is now largely urban, many of the endemics are more or less threatened: M. W. Skinner and B. M. Pavlik (1994) listed 27 species and subspecies of Dudleya as to some degree rare and endangered. However, most species, including narrow endemics, are abundant where they do grow.
PLANT: Glabrous perennials. LEAVES: alternate, subclasping, entire, in dense basal rosettes. FLORAL STEMS: lateral, overtopping rosettes, annual, with scattered smaller leaves; cymes of 2-several one-sided branches. FLOWERS: 5-merous, in ours odorless; sepals equal, nearly separate, erect; petals convolute in bud, united below, in ours erect to form tube; stamens 10, on corolla base, included; pistils not narrowed at base, in ours erect. FOLLICLES: many-seeded. SEEDS: narrowly ovoid, brown, striate, to 1 mm long. X = 17. NOTES: Ca. 50 spp., sw OR and s NV to s Baja C. and nw Son., Mex. (for W. R. Dudley). REFERENCES: Moran, Reid. 1994. Bixaceae. J. Ariz. - Nev. Acad. Sci. Volume 27, 190-194. |