Lomatium roseanum

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Adobe Parsley
Conservation status

Imperiled (TNC)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Apiales
Family: Apiaceae
Genus: Lomatium
Species: L. roseanum
Binomial name
Lomatium roseanum
Cronquist

Adobe parsley (Lomatium roseanum) also goes by the names of adobe lomatium and rose-flowered desert-parsely. It is a very rare plant of the Western U.S., known only from northwestern Nevada and southeastern Oregon, and which may also occur in northeastern California. The largest populations occur on the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge.[1] It is a member of the celery family, the Umbelliferae, and has yellow flowers.

Contents

[edit] Technical description

  • Plant perennial, long-lived, usually over 10 cm tall, glabrous, somewhat caulescent at the base.
  • Root tuberous, thick.
  • Leaves green, shiny, ternate, with ternate-pinnately dissected leaflets, the ultimate segments numerous and small (<1 cm); petiole dilated (flared out) and sheathing at the base.
  • Scapes (peduncles) ascending, arcuate (curved), 15-20 cm long.
  • Involucels with slender bractlets.
  • Flowers yellow, aging to whitish.
  • Fruit only very narrowly laterally winged; dorsal ribs wingless.[1][2]

[edit] Distribution, habitat, and ecology

The range of adobe parsley is extremely limited: it is known only from Washoe County in Nevada and nearby places in southeastern Oregon, where it has possibly already been extirpated. It is also suspected to exist in Humboldt County, Nevada. Fewer than 20 known populations exist, though these can be large.[1]

Adobe parsley lives in loose, rocky habitat. Specifically, it prefers dry basalt talus scree overlying clay soils. It associates with the low sagebrush community, and specific associates include Artemisia arbuscula, Poa secunda, Elymus elymoides, Arenaria aculeata, Phlox spp., Erigeron linearis, etc.[1]

The fire ecology of this plant is unknown for members of this genus. The low sagebrush community type within which adobe parsley lives generally lacks enough fuels to carry a fire. When it does burn, these non-fire adapted shrubs are usually killed and replaced by medusahead and cheatgrass, and re-establish low sagebrush vegetation through time (2 to 5 years) via seeds.[3]

[edit] Conservation status and threats

[edit] Field identification

Adobe parsley occurs between 5,750 ft. and 6,175 ft. above sea level. It flowers and may be most easily recognised in early spring, i.e., between April and June. It stands out because of its tuberous root, yellow flowers, and green shiny leaves.[1] It resembles L. hendersonii, which is found farther north, but is more robust (larger) and somewhat caulescent.[2]

[edit] Synonymy

Leptotaenia leibergii J.M. Coult. & Rose (1900) Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 7: 202, pl. 7.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Morefield, J.D. (25 June 2001). Lomatium roseanum. Nevada Rare Plant Atlas. Nevada Natural Heritage Program. Retrieved on [[28 March 2007]].
  2. ^ a b Cronquist, Arthur; Noel H. Holmgren & Patricia K. Holmgren (1997). "Apiaceae", Intermountain Flora: Vascular Plants of the Intermountain West, U.S.A. Volume Three, Part A: Subclass Rosidae (except Fabales), 412-413. 
  3. ^ Steinberg, Peter D. (2002). Artemisia arbuscula. Fire Effects Information System. USDA FS RMRS Fire Sciences Laboratory. Retrieved on [[28 March 2007]].

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