Perityle quinqueflora

(Steyermark) Shinners

SouthW. Naturalist 4: 205. 1959.

Common names: Five-flower rock daisy
Endemic
Basionym: Laphamia quinqueflora Steyermark Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 19: 392. 1932
Synonyms: Pappothrix quinqueflora (Steyermark) Everly
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 21. Treatment on page 318. Mentioned on page 319.

Plants 7–30 cm (often densely leafy); usually glabrate or puberulent, sometimes hirtellous. Leaves: petioles 5–8(–12) mm; blades reniform to cordate, 8–20(–33) × 8–20(–33) mm, margins subentire, dentate-toothed, or shallow-lobed. Heads in corymbiform arrays, 7–8(–9) × 2–3 mm. Peduncles 2–10(–15) mm. Involucres cylindric to narrowly campanulate. Phyllaries 5–6, linear-lanceolate, 5–6(–9) × (1–)1.3–1.7 mm. Disc florets 5–6(–8); corollas yellow, tubes 1–1.3 mm, throats tubular, 2–2.3(–2.8) mm, lobes 0.5–1 mm. Cypselae 1.9–2(–2.9) mm; pappi of 25–30 bristles 0.6–2.5(–3.5) mm. 2n = 34.


Phenology: Flowering spring–fall.
Habitat: Crevices of limestone (rarely igneous) rock in high canyons, bluffs, and caprock
Elevation: 1200–2500 m

Discussion

Perityle quinqueflora grows in mountains of west-central trans-Pecos Texas and adjacent New Mexico. Possibly P. quinqueflora and the similar P. rupestris var. rupestris have both evolved from a widespread common ancestor resembling P. cernua.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Perityle quinqueflora"
Sharon C. Yarborough +  and A. Michael Powell +
(Steyermark) Shinners +
Laphamia quinqueflora +
Five-flower rock daisy +
N.Mex. +  and Tex. +
1200–2500 m +
Crevices of limestone (rarely igneous) rock in high canyons, bluffs, and caprock +
Flowering spring–fall. +
SouthW. Naturalist +
Pappothrix quinqueflora +
Perityle quinqueflora +
Perityle sect. Pappothrix +
species +