Stebbinsoseris decipiens

(K. L. Chambers) K. L. Chambers

Amer. J. Bot. 78: 1025. 1991.

Common names: Santa Cruz silverpuffs
Endemic
Basionym: Microseris decipiens K. L. Chambers Contr. Dudley Herb. 4: 290, fig. 17. 1955
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 19. Treatment on page 347.

Peduncles 15–60 cm. Involucres 6–19 mm. Florets 10–80(–100); corollas yellow. Cypselae brown to purplish, narrowly truncate-fusiform, 5–8 mm, each filled by embryo or no more than distal 0.5 mm vacant, apices not enlarged at bases of pappi; pappi 7–10 mm, scale bodies 3–5 mm, faces glabrous, aristae 4–5 mm. 2n = 36.


Phenology: Flowering Apr–May.
Habitat: Sandy, shale, or serpentine soils, grasslands, coastal scrub, chaparral, closed-cone pine woods, roadsides
Elevation: 10–500 m

Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Morphologic and molecular evidence (K. L. Chambers 1955; C. Irmler et al. 1982; R. S. Wallace and R. K. Jansen 1990) proves that Stebbinsoseris decipiens is an allopolyploid derivative of the hybrid Microseris bigelovii × Uropappus lindleyi. It occurs in a limited area of central coastal California where the parental taxa are sympatric. Diploid hybrids between the parents, produced experimentally (Chambers), had irregular meiosis and were completely seed-sterile. The species is included in Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of California, ed. 6 (D. P. Tibor 2001).

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Stebbinsoseris decipiens"
Kenton L. Chambers +
(K. L. Chambers) K. L. Chambers +
Microseris decipiens +
Santa Cruz silverpuffs +
10–500 m +
Sandy, shale, or serpentine soils, grasslands, coastal scrub, chaparral, closed-cone pine woods, roadsides +
Flowering Apr–May. +
Amer. J. Bot. +
irmler1982a +
Microseris sect. Brachycarpa +  and Uropappus sect. Brachycarpa +
Stebbinsoseris decipiens +
Stebbinsoseris +
species +