Acanthomintha duttonii

Acanthomintha duttonii

Critically Imperiled  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Lamiaceae
Genus: Acanthomintha
Species: A. duttonii
Binomial name
Acanthomintha duttonii
(Abrams) Jokerst

Acanthomintha duttonii is a species of annual plant endemic to San Mateo County, California in the Lamiaceae family. It is commonly called San Mateo Thornmint or Dutton's acanthomintha and is found growing on Serpentine soils near the Crystal Springs Reservoir in a six-mile (10 km) long strip on the east side of Montara Mountain at elevations of approximately 150 to 300 meters.

Distribution

This rare annual species of wildflower has populations that fluctuates yearly with recorded population ranges from 50,000 plants to as few as 5,000 plants and is considered critically endangered [1] due to the species narrow range of growing conditions and the fragmented nature of the populations over the limited habitat and by the encroachment of urban development.[2] The species is named in honor of Harry Arnold Dutton (1873–1957), who, in 1949, located a patch of another rare plant Cupressus abramsiana on nearby Butano Ridge.[3]

Description

All Acanthomintha species

All four thornmint species are aromatic annual wildflowers native to the state of California in the USA. The species have square stems that are erect growing. The leaves are petioled with leaf veins conspicuous and the leaf margins are often spiny. The Inflorescences of the Acanthomintha genus are described as "head-like, in terminal clusters" by the genus authority James D. Jokerst.[4] The flowers of this entire genus are like, most mints, two-lipped forming a tube with five sepals and the stamens enclosed within the zygomorphic petals. The bracts in the inflorescence have marginal spines,[4] thus the basis of the common name ‘thornmints’. All Acanthomintha have the upper three lobes of its calyx acuminate and the lower two lobes oblong in shape; furthermore, all Acanthomintha corollae are funnel shaped and white with occasional tinting of purple. Each Acanthomintha species has four stamens, with the upper two reduced. Thornmint styles are slender and their fruit is ovoid in shape with a smooth exterior texture.

Acanthomintha duttonii

A. duttonii has a stem which is generally unbranched and less than twenty centimeters in length; the stem may present short hairs or none at all. Leaves of this species are eight to twelve millimeters in length, lanceolate to obovate in shape. The margins of this spiny leaf are occasionally serrate. The terminal inflorescences have bracts of about five to eleven millimeters; moreover, these bracts are ovate and green at the flower, with five or seven marginal spines, each three to seven millimeters. The virtually hairless to sparse short haired calyx is five to eight millimeters in length, while the corolla is 12 to 16 millimeters in extent. The white corolla is often tinged lavender in color; the corolla throat is cream colored and its upper lip is hooded, while the longer lower lip is reflexed and three-lobed. The upper lip is more diminutive than the lower, and is entire and shallowly hooded. The flower bracts are broadly ovate in shape with puberulent hairs and shiny. The bracts have seven to nine spines each. The anthers are short and hairy. The style is glabrous. Plants bloom in April into late June, with each flower when fertilized producing four nut-like seeds. Plants are self-fertile. A. duttonii upper stamens are fertile, while the other species have sterile upper stamans. The presence of these fertile upper stamens is used to separate it as a different species from Acanthomintha obovata, in the past A. duttonii was referred to as subspecies of A. obovata (Acanthomintha obovata ssp. duttonii).

Distribution and habitat

This species is normally associated with serpentine soils in grassland communities that are generally species-rich for serpentine soils; the area they are growing in on the San Francisco Peninsula also contains sloping chaparral. Other species that grow in the same area include Nasella pulchra, Lolium multiflorum, Delphinium hesperium, and Hemizonia congesta var. luzulifolia. The range of this species is sharply limited within a portion of central San Mateo County on the eastern lower slopes of the Santa Cruz Mountains.[5] Specific plant communities where this species is found are chaparral as well as foothill or valley grasslands. San Mateo thornmint populations occupy slopes or flatland with deep, heavy clay soil inclusions. The single remaining large population, in Edgewood County Park, is a relict of a more extensive colony damaged by off road motor-vehicle use. There is an introduced population at Pulgas Ridge Open Space Preserve,[6] and native fragments along the lower slopes above Crystal Springs Reservoir in a six-mile-long (10 km) fragmented strip that includes the Edgewood colony.

This species is only known to grow on serpentine soils. Serpentine soils normally provide an inhospitable environment for most plants. Several factors contribute to serpentine soils being inhospitable to plant growth including a low calcium-magnesium ratio, lack of essential nutrients namely nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus, and high concentrations of heavy metals. Many species that have adapted to grow on serpentine soils are not adapted to compete with other plants and do not survive well under competition in other soils that tend to have denser plant numbers; in serpentine soils plant densities are lower resulting in less direct competition for resources like light and water.

Conservation

This species became state of California listed as endangered in July 1979 and federally listed as endangered on October 18, 1989. The state of California lists San Mateo Thornmint as "rare, threatened, or endangered in California" under List 1B.1, and further classifies this plant as "seriously endangered in California". A state of California endangerment rank of S1.1 has been assigned, implying that there are fewer than six occurrences, fewer than 1000 individuals or fewer than 2000 acres (8 km²). In the case of A. duttonii, the criteria of occurrences and area may both be present. A global rank of G1 (Critically imperilled globally) has been attached to this wildflower.

Significant threats to the limited population of A. duttonii exist due to continuing urbanization of the San Francisco Peninsula, an inherently fragmented population and off road vehicle use.[7] Two and possibly three colonies of San Mateo Thornmint have been eradicated in the last two decades by off road vehicle use and road maintenance crews.

References

  1. Jokerst, J.D. 1991. A revision of Acanthomintha obovata (Lamiaceae) and a key to the taxa of Acanthomintha. Madroño. 38: 278-286.
  2. Andrew Kratter, Report of endangered species search and vegetative survey of the Polhemus Property at the northeast corner of the intersection of Ralston Avenue and State Route 92, San Mateo, Earth Metrics file reference 7649W0, prepared for San Mateo County, California, July, 1989
  3. Charters, Michael L. "California Plant Names: D". California Plant Names: Latin and Greek Meanings and Derivations. Archived from the original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-23.
  4. 1 2 Jepson Manual, University of California Press (1993)
  5. California Department of Fish and Game, California Natural Diversity Data Base, San Mateo and Woodside quadrangles
  6. Pavlik, B., E. Espeland and F. Wittman. 1992. Creating new populations of Acanthomintha duttonii. II: Reintroduction at Pulgas Ridge, California Department of Fish and Game, 35 pp
  7. Recovery Plan for Serpentine Soil Species of the San Francisco Bay Area, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Portland, Oregon, September 30, 1998
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