Atriplex suckleyi

(Torrey) Rydberg

Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 1: 134. 1900.

Common names: Suckley’s orach
Endemic
Basionym: Endolepis suckleyi Torrey in War Department [U.S.], Pacif. Railr. Rep.,Atriplex dioica (Nuttall) J. F. Macbride 12(2): 47. 1860,1918
Synonyms: Atriplex endolepis S. Watson Atriplex ovata (Rydberg) F. E. Clements & E. G. Clements Endolepis dioica (Nuttall) Standley Endolepis ovata Rydberg Kochia dioica Nuttall Salsola dioica (Nuttall) Sprengel
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 345. Mentioned on page 326, 344.

Herbs, spreading, branching from base, (0.3–)0.5–3(–4) dm and as broad. Stems terete, often tinged with red, sparsely mealy or glabrous. Leaves numerous, alternate, sessile; blade lanceolate to elliptic or less commonly ovate, 7–35 × (2–)4–10(–11) mm, thick and succulent, base acute, margin entire, apex acute or acuminate, glaucous, sparsely farinose when young. Staminate flowers in small glomerules, these in distal axils or in short, dense or interrupted, mostly simple, terminal spikes, perianth cup-shaped, frequently pinkish, lobes each with fleshy crest. Pistillate flowers solitary or few in leaf axils, calyx within bracteoles of 3 or 4, entire or lobed, distinct, obtuse, hyaline sepals. Fruiting bracteoles small and difficult to find, sessile, ovate, 2 × 1.5 mm, membranous, united to apex, without appendages, scurfy, each pistil subtended by a perianth. Seeds brown, 1.5 × 1.2 mm.


Phenology: Flowering late summer–fall.
Habitat: Alkaline or saline, typically fine-textured substrates, often on shale or clay barrens, sometimes with other Atriplex spp., sagebrush, and grasses
Elevation: (400-)1200-2200 m

Distribution

V4 661-distribution-map.gif

Alta., Sask., Colo., Mont., N.Dak., S.Dak., Wyo.

Discussion

At specific rank, the epithet suckleyi clearly has priority. Stutz et al. (1993) resurrected Endolepis Torrey and placed within it two completely disparate species, E. dioica and E. covillei Standley [Atriplex covillei (Standley) J. F. Macbride]. The interpretation of the genus by Stutz et al. stands on the presence of perianth segments subtending the ovary within the fruiting bracteoles, lack of Kranz leaf anatomy, and other more equivocal characteristics. The shared features hardly indicate near affinity, however. The two taxa are otherwise grossly dissimilar. Fundamentally, the genus Endolepis as resurrected by H. C. Stutz et al. stands on the basis of a single character: the presence of perianth segments. Kranz anatomy rises and falls, both within subg. Atriplex and subg. Obione. Thus, coincidence of the non-Kranz criterion is subject to interpretation. Perianth segments subtending the ovary within the enclosing bracteoles, per se, appear to be of independent origin. And, the peculiar nature of the staminate calyx in A. suckleyi (a major determining condition in establishment of the genus Endolepis by Torrey) is not present in A. covillei. Certainly the two species included within Endolepis appear to be as closely allied to other species of Atriplex as they are to each other.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Atriplex suckleyi"
Stanley L. Welsh +
(Torrey) Rydberg +
Endolepis suckleyi +
Suckley’s orach +
Alta. +, Sask. +, Colo. +, Mont. +, N.Dak. +, S.Dak. +  and Wyo. +
(400-)1200-2200 m +
Alkaline or saline, typically fine-textured substrates, often on shale or clay barrens, sometimes with other Atriplex spp., sagebrush, and grasses +
Flowering late summer–fall. +
Mem. New York Bot. Gard. +
Atriplex endolepis +, Atriplex ovata +, Endolepis dioica +, Endolepis ovata +, Kochia dioica +  and Salsola dioica +
Atriplex suckleyi +
Atriplex sect. Endolepis +
species +