Log In
New Account
Sitemap
Home
Search
Search Collections
Map Search
Images
Image Browser
Search Images
Digitization
Interactive Tools
Dynamic Checklist
Dynamic Key
Other SEINet Portals
Arizona - New Mexico Chapter
Consortium of Midwest Herbaria
Intermountain Region Herbaria Network (IRHN)
Mid-Atlantic Herbaria
North American Network of Small Herbaria
Northern Great Plains Herbaria
Madrean Archipelago Biodiversity Assessment (MABA) - Flora
Red de Herbarios del Noroeste de México (northern Mexico)
SERNEC - Southeastern USA
Physaria pachyphylla
Family:
Brassicaceae
Thick-Leaf Bladderpod
FNA
Resources
Steve L. O´Kane Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 7)
Perennials;
caudex usually simple, rarely branched, (loosely mounded, rosette-like growth); densely (silvery or gray) pubescent, trichomes (sessile), 5-rayed, rays bifurcate, slightly fused near base of main rays, (tuberculate throughout, less over umbo).
Stems
several from base, decumbent to prostrate, (well-exserted beyond basal leaves), 0.2-0.5 dm.
Basal leaves:
(petiole differentiated from blade); blade (slightly cupped, leathery, nearly 1 mm thick), oblanceolate to orbicular, 1.2-2 cm, margins entire, (apex acute).
Cauline leaves:
blade spatulate, similar to basal.
Racemes
dense, (subumbellate).
Fruiting pedicels
(ascending, curved), 5-7 mm.
Flowers:
sepals (pale yellow), elliptic to oblong, 3.5-4.0 mm, (median pair somewhat thickened apically, cucullate); petals lingulate, 5-6 mm.
Fruits
globose or ellipsoid, slightly inflated (with slight apical constriction), 3-6 mm; valves pubescent, trichomes closely appressed; ovules 8 per ovary; style 1-3 mm (shorter than mature fruit).
Seeds
plump, (oblong).
Flowering Jun-Jul. Barren areas of mixed white, pink, or reddish limestone and diatomaceous earth; of conservation concern; 1300-1600 m; Mont.
Physaria pachyphylla
is known from the Pryor Mountain Desert near the Wyoming state line.
Open Interactive Map
Click to Display
13 Total Images
This project made possible by
National Science Foundation Award EF 1702516
Powered by
Symbiota