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

Atriplex matamorensis

Atriplex matamorensis A. Nelson  
Family: Amaranthaceae
Matamoros Saltbush
Atriplex matamorensis image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Stanley L. Welsh in Flora of North America (vol. 4)
Herbs, dioecious, from woody taproot, erect or ascending, branching at base, sparsely branched distally or simple, 1-4 dm, woody at base somewhat scurfy. Stems terete, slender, densely leafy, rather sparsely and closely scurfy. Leaves possibly Kranz type (difficult to determine), mostly opposite; blade oblong or oblong-lanceolate, 2-5 mm, subequal to internodes, broadest at middle, apex acute, densely grayish scurfy. Pistillate flowers solitary or in small, axillary glomerules in stout leafy spikes. Fruiting bracteoles sessile, suborbiculate, strongly compressed, 2-3 mm and broad, united to beyond middle, dentate to near base, triangular teeth acute, terminal 1 longest, faces 3-veined, scurfy. Seeds yellowish, 1 mm wide.

Flowering summer and fall. Saline soils, coastal areas, often along roadsides, other disturbed areas; 0-50 m; Tex.; Mexico.

The quelite cenizo is a very distinctive, small, bushy perennial with numerous, ascending branches and tiny leaves. It is here tentatively placed adjacent to the other dioecious, herbaceous perennial, Atriplex watsonii, from which it differs in many ways (compare descriptions). Possibly its near relatives are in adjacent Mexico, which is beyond the consideration of the present paper; certainly it is one of the most distinctive of the herbaceous taxa. According to H. M. Hall and F. E. Clements (1923), the relationships of this species lie with A. watsonii, but it is more closely similar to A. elegans in the strongly compressed, nearly orbicular, and evenly dentate bracteoles. However, both A. watsonii and A. matamorensis have opposite leaves and share the feature of the pericarp being dilated around the thickened stigma bases.

Atriplex matamorensis
Open Interactive Map
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Madison Marzullo
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Atriplex matamorensis image
Click to Display
96 Total Media
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.