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Atriplex argentea Nutt.
SILVERSCALE SALTBUSH
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Atriplex argentea
© Copyright Jennifer Larson 2012 · 2
Atriplex argentea

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Atriplex argentea
© Copyright Jennifer Larson 2012 · 2
Atriplex argentea
Atriplex argentea
© Copyright Jennifer Larson 2012 · 2
Atriplex argentea

Atriplex argentea
© Copyright Jennifer Larson 2012 · 2
Atriplex argentea

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FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Phaeosphaeriaceae  Stagonospora atriplicis @ BPI (1)

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FNA Vol. 4 Page 325, 328, 329, 347, Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 4 | Chenopodiaceae | Atriplex

25. Atriplex argentea Nuttall, Gen. N. Amer. Pl. 1: 198. 1818.

Silver orach

Obione argentea (Nuttall) Moquin-Tandon

Herbs , simple or freely branched, 0.5-6 dm; branches rather stout, angled, scurfy when young. Leaves often opposite proximally, petiolate or distal bracteate ones subsessile, blade lance-ovate, lanceolate, deltoid, or cordate, 5-75 × 4-50(-75) mm, base subhastate or obtuse to acute, margin entire or essentially so, sometimes closely repand-dentate, apex obtuse to acute or rounded, scurfy (glabrous). Flowers in axillary glomerules and terminal, interrupted spikes. Staminate flowers borne in distal axils, or in short dense spikes or panicles, or intermixed with pistillate, with 4-5-parted calyx. Fruiting bracteoles sessile, subsessile, or stipitate (stipe 0.5-5 mm), cuneate-orbicular, (2.5-)4-11.2 × 2-8.8 (-14 ) mm, margin foliaceous below apex, subentire or dentate to laciniate, face smooth, tuberculate, or crested, processes sometimes again toothed, teeth then aligned with axis of process. Seeds brown, 1.5-2 mm wide; radicle superior or lateral. 2 n = 18, 36, 54.

Varieties 5 (5 in the flora): North America, Mexico.

Herbarium materials have tended to represent a catchall for annual specimens not readily assignable to other taxa. Indeed, the distinguishing features of the Atriplex argentea complex are shared singly and often in combination with other taxa. Only by use of combinations of features can this taxon be defined. Those features, with much variation, center around the broad, typically ovate to deltoid leaf blades (often definitely 3-veined) and more-or-less compressed, sessile to subsessile (or short stipitate), fruiting bracteoles on which the marginal processes, or teeth, are mainly aligned with the plane compression, and with the faces quite smooth to variously appendaged. Still some specimens are apparently intermediate with other species, especially with the closely allied A. saccaria , with which it is at least partially sympatric.

Updated: 2024-05-06 14:35:24 gmt
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