Greasewood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:How to read a taxobox
How to read a taxobox
Greasewood
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae,
core eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Sarcobataceae
Genus: Sarcobatus
Nees (1839)
species

see text

Greasewood (Sarcobatus) is a genus of one or two species of flowering plants. Traditionally it has been treated in the family Chenopodiaceae, but the APG II system, of 2003, places it in the family Sarcobataceae.

The plants are deciduous shrubs growing to 0.5-3 m tall with spiny branches and succulent leaves, 10-40 mm long and 1-2 mm broad. The leaves are green, in contrast to the grey-green color of most of the other shrubs within its range.

Their area of distribution is western North America, from southeastern British Columbia and southwest Alberta, Canada, south through the drier regions of the United States (east to North Dakota and west Texas, west to central Washington and eastern California) to northern Mexico (Coahuila).

Greasewood is a halophyte, and is commonly found around the margins of playas. It is replaced by Iodine bush in extremely saline environments, such as hummocks within the playa itself. Greasewood does not grow exclusively in highly saline areas, but is most common on fine-grained soils in areas with a relatively high water table.

Species

The two species are not accepted as distinct by all authors; see the Flora of North America for further details.

  • Sarcobatus baileyi Coville (syn. Sarcobatus vermiculatus var. baileyi (Coville) Jepson). Nevada, endemic. Low shrub 0.5-1 m tall. Leaves hairy, 10-16 mm long.
  • Sarcobatus vermiculatus (Hook.) Torr.. Throughout the range of the genus. Shrub 1-5 m tall. Leaves hairless or only slightly hairy, 15-40 mm long.

The name Sarcobatus comes from Greek sarko (meaning flesh) and batos (meaning bramble), referring to the species' spiny branches and succulent leaves.

Although it can be grazed by animals that are adapted, grazing of greasewood by sheep and cattle can result in oxalate poisoning resulting in kidney failure [1]. The active agent can be either sodium oxalate or potassium oxalate. Sheep are the most vulnerable. Greasewood was commonly used for firewood by Native Americans and early settlers.

[edit] External links

In other languages