Hulsea vestita subsp. callicarpha

(H. M. Hall) Wilken

Aliso 7: 413. 1972.

Common names: Beautiful hulsea
Endemic
Basionym: Hulsea vestita var. callicarpha H. M. Hall Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. 1: 129. 1902
Synonyms: Hulsea callicarpha
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 21. Treatment on page 399.

Plants 40–100 cm. Leaves: proximal blades 3–8 cm, margins entire or undulate (sometimes weakly lobed near apices), faces densely lanate to woolly; cauline leaves (on proximal 1/4 of stems) lance-oblong to ovate (1.5–3 cm). Heads 1–3. Involucres obconic, 10–15 mm diam. Phyllaries 8–12 mm, outer narrowly obovate to lanceolate, apices acuminate. Ray florets 16–25; laminae yellow, sometimes red-tinged distally, 8–10 mm. Disc corollas yellow. Cypselae 5–7 mm; pappus scales subequal, 1.5–2 mm. 2n = 38.


Phenology: Flowering late spring–summer.
Habitat: Rocky slopes, talus, and flats, conifer forests, sometimes chaparral, on granitic and metamorphic substrates
Elevation: 1300–2500 m

Discussion

Subspecies callicarpha grows in the Palomar, San Jacinto, and Santa Rosa mountains.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Dieter H. Wilken +
(H. M. Hall) Wilken +
Hulsea vestita var. callicarpha +
Beautiful hulsea +
1300–2500 m +
Rocky slopes, talus, and flats, conifer forests, sometimes chaparral, on granitic and metamorphic substrates +
Flowering late spring–summer. +
Hulsea callicarpha +
Hulsea vestita subsp. callicarpha +
Hulsea vestita +
subspecies +