taxonID	type	description	language	source
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	description	Boechera perennans (S. Wats.) W. A. Weber subsp. spatifolia (Rydb.) Windham, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Arabis spatifolia Rydb., Fl. Rocky Mts. 361.1917. TYPE: U. S. A. COLORADO. Larimer Co.: Estes Park, 20 July 1903, G. E. Osterhout 2808 (HOLOTYPE: NY!; ISOTYPE: RM!). Boechera perennans (S. Wats.) W. A. Weber subsp. texana (Windham & Al-Shehbaz) Windham, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Boechera texana Windham & Al-Shehbaz, Harvard Pap. Bot. 11: 85.2006. TYPE: U. S. A. TEXAS. Culberson Co.: San Antonio Peak, Sierra Tinaja Pinta, 26 Apr 1961, R. C. Rollins & D. S. Correll 61142 (HOLOTYPE: GH!; ISOTYPE: LL!). Boechera perennans (S. Wats.) W. A. Weber subsp. zephyra (P. J. Alexander) Windham, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Boechera zephyra P. J. Alexander, Syst. Bot. 40: 594 – 595.2015. TYPE: U. S. A. NEW MEXICO. Otero Co.: Cornudas Mountains, NE side of Wind Mountain, 0.9 mi NE of the summit, 2.2 mi N of the Texas state line, 10 Apr 2010, P. J. Alexander 1136 (HOLOTYPE: NMC; ISOTYPES: BRY, DUKE!, MO, TEX, UC). The taxonomic situation in Boechera crandallii s. l. is only slightly less complex than that encountered in B. perennans s. l., but New Mexico is at the southeastern edge of its distribution and taxon diversity is relatively low here. Locally, the group includes three sexual diploid taxa currently treated under the specific names B. kelseyana Windham & Allphin (Windham et al. 2015), B. thompsonii (S. L. Welsh) N. H. Holmgren (see Holmgren 2005), and B. villosa Windham & Al-Shehbaz (see Windham & Al-Shehbaz 2006), plus an apomictic diploid hybrid between the first two. The recognition of these taxa as separate species greatly complicates the taxonomy of Boechera in the region because they are involved in numerous inter-clade hybridization events but are too similar for one to be able to determine morphologically which taxon was involved in the origin of a particular hybrid. A full taxonomic overview of B. crandallii s. l. (Windham et al., in prep.) cannot be completed prior to publication deadlines for the Flora of New Mexico so, to provide the necessary names, we here make the following new nomenclatural combinations: Boechera crandallii (B. L. Rob.) W. A. Weber subsp. kelseyana (Windham & Allphin) Windham & Allphin, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Boechera kelseyana Windham & Allphin, Syst. Bot. 40: 1041 – 1042. 2015. TYPE: U. S. A. ARIZONA. Apache Co.: SSE of Nazlini on bench of Red Mesa near Indian Route 27 ca. 2.35 road mi NW of its junction with Indian Route 26. (35.8752 N 109.4433 W; WGS 84 Datum), 6,825 ft. elev., in sandy duff soil under Juniperus on gentle NW-facing slope with Artemisia, Cercocarpus & Pinus nearby, 21 Apr 2001, M. D. Windham & D. Roth 2320 (HOLOTYPE: DUKE 398927!; ISOTYPES: ARIZ!, ASC!, ASU!, BRY!, GH!, MO!, NMC 77565!, NY!, RM!, RSA!, SJNM!, UC!, UNM!, UT!). Boechera crandallii (B. L. Rob.) W. A. Weber subsp. thompsonii (S. L. Welsh) Windham & Allphin, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Arabis thompsonii S. L. Welsh, Utah Fl., ed. 3.260.2003. TYPE: U. S. A. UTAH. San Juan Co.: south [according to labels on type specimens; incorrectly cited as “ north ” in protologue] of Beef Basin, head of South Canyon below Wild Cow Point (T 33 S, R 18 E, S 9), 2250 m elev., sandy soil in alcove, 5 Jun 1985, N. D. Atwood & B. Thompson 11154 (HOLOTYPE: BRY 288242!; ISOTYPE: BRY 510589!). Boechera crandallii (B. L. Rob.) W. A. Weber subsp. villosa (Windham & Al-Shehbaz) Windham & Allphin, comb. et stat. nov. BASIONYM: Boechera villosa Windham & Al-Shehbaz, Harvard Pap. Bot. 11: 86 – 87. TYPE: U. S. A. NEW MEXICO. Taos Co.: Sangre de Cristo Mts., bottom of Rio Grande Canyon, 2 mi N of confluence with Red River, 6800 ft, pinyon-juniper woodland on Quaternary basalt, 17 May 1979, W. L. Baker 1113 (HOLOTYPE: NMC 51277!). Inter-clade apomictic hybrids. — In addition to the four sexual Boechera species and their intra-clade apomictic derivatives discussed above, the Flora of New Mexico will recognize seven exclusively apomictic species arising from hybridization between or among divergent clades. These consist of four previously named hybrid species [B. consanguinea (Greene) Windham & Al-Shehbaz, B. lignifera (A. Nelson) W. A. Weber, B. gracilenta (Greene) Windham & Al-Shehbaz], and B. selbyi (Rydb.) W. A. Weber] plus three new species (B. austromontana, B. pseudoconsanguinea, and B. quadrangulensis) described below. Boechera consanguinea was treated as a distinct species by Al-Shehbaz and Windham (2010), who hypothesized that it represented an apomictic hybrid between B. fendleri (herein B. perennans subsp. fendleri) and B. retrofracta (Graham) Á. Löve & D. Löve. Recently obtained simple sequence repeat (SSR) DNA data analyzed using the Boechera Microsatellite Website (Li et al. 2017) disprove this hypothesis. These analyses reveal that B. consanguinea is a trigenomic apomictic triploid incorporating genomes from B. perennans subsp. gracilipes, B. retrofracta, and B. exilis (A. Nelson) Dorn (recently shown to be distinct from B. retrofracta; Schilling et al. 2018). This is a unique combination of genomes, and it is clear from our studies that B. consanguinea (represented in our DNA analyses — data not shown here — by the holotype at NDG plus 47 other specimens scattered from Colorado to California) is one of the most successful hybrids in the genus. As such, it will be maintained as a separate species in the Flora of New Mexico. Based on integrated morphological, cytological, and microsatellite DNA analyses, Windham et al. (2015) separated specimens previously identified as Boechera lignifera into two species, B. lignifera s. s. and B. kelseyana (herein called B. crandallii subsp. kelseyana). All New Mexican plants attributed to B. lignifera by Al-Shehbaz and Windham (2010) represent B. crandallii subsp. kelseyana. However, B. lignifera s. s. occurs within 2.3 km of the New Mexico border (Windham et al. 2015) and will almost certainly be found in the state. Therefore, B. lignifera s. s., now known to be an apomictic diploid hybrid between B. exilis and B. crandallii subsp. thompsonii (Windham et al., in prep.) will be included in the Flora of New Mexico.	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	description	Boechera austromontana Windham & Allphin, sp. nov. (Fig. 1). TYPE: U. S. A. COLORADO. Archuleta Co.: SSE of Pagosa Springs near edge of Kenney Flats along Forest Route 006 B ca. 0.4 road mi NE of its intersection with US Route 84 (37.1078 N 106.9145 W; WGS 84 Datum), 7,700 ft. elev., in duff-covered clay loam on gentle, SE-facing slope with Quercus, Pinus, Delphinium, Berberis, Lupinus & Antennaria, 14 May 2014, M. D. Windham 4182 & P. J. Alexander (HOLOTYPE: DUKE 405276!; ISOTYPES: ASU!, BRY!, COLO!, GH!, MO!, NMC!, NY!, UC!, UNM!, US!, UT!, UTC!). Most like Boechera grahamii (Lehm.) Windham & Al-Shehbaz s. s. but differing (see Fig. 2) in having 1) mature fruits mostly ascending (vs. divaricate-descending or pendent), 2) basal leaves with sessile to subsessile trichomes with appressed branches (rays), at least some of these malpighiaceous with two, ± equal rays diverging at 180 ° (vs. short stalked, ± spreading, mostly 3 - to 4 - rayed and none malpighiaceous), 3) middle cauline leaves generally glabrous (vs. sparsely hirsute), and 4) sepals glabrous or, if exhibiting a few trichomes (<20 %), these 2 - rayed (vs. 3 - to 4 - rayed). Plants mostly short-lived perennials, the caudices branched or unbranched, rarely woody and usually not raised above ground level, producing a cluster of ± decumbent rosette leaves distally, these largely deciduous in fruiting individuals. Rosette leaves oblanceolate, 18 – 40 × 3.8 – 8 mm, entire or slightly dentate, with enlarged, simple, spurred, and 2 - rayed cilia to 0.8 mm long extending from petiole to proximal half (sometimes all) of blade margins; rosette blade surfaces appressed pubescent with subsessile, predominantly (60 – 90 %) 2 - rayed trichomes to 0.8 mm long and lesser numbers (10 – 40 %) of 3 - rayed trichomes. Sterile short shoots with tuft of ascending leaves often present, the leaves narrowly oblanceolate, 30 – 53 × 3.5 – 7 mm, similar to rosette leaves except with fewer (<5 %) simple cilia and a somewhat higher density (5 – 15 per mm 2) of surface trichomes. Fertile stems 1 (2 – 4) per caudex branch, terminal or arising laterally below sterile short shoot, 3 – 7 dm long, 1.1 – 2.8 mm in diameter at base, lower parts glabrous or occasionally with a variable mixture of simple and 2 - rayed, mostly spreading trichomes to 0.6 mm long; upper parts of stems glabrous. Cauline leaves 7 – 28, those at the middle of the stem predominantly glabrous, the uppermost with auricles 0.8 – 3.2 mm long. Inflorescences simple racemes or sparingly branched, the main axis 12 – 34 - flowered, not secund; lowermost fruiting pedicels 8 – 16 mm long, ascending, straight or gently up-curved distally, glabrous (rarely with sparse trichomes). Flowers: sepals 3.0 – 5.4 mm long, greenish to dull lavender, predominantly glabrous but, when sparsely hirsute (<20 %), the trichomes 2 - rayed (a few simple); petals 6 – 9 × 0.9 – 1.6 mm, mostly pale lavender, glabrous; anthers cream-colored, producing variable percentages of malformed and well-formed pollen grains, the latter mostly ovoid-spheroid and averaging 20 μm wide with 4 or more asymmetrically arranged apertures; ovaries glabrous, usually with 40 – 84 ovules per fruit, forming seeds apomictically through both diplosporous and aposporous pathways in the type collection. Fruits (the largest) 4.2 – 8.0 cm × 1.5 – 2.0 mm at maturity, ascending, curved slightly downward or straight, glabrous; styles 0.15 – 0.4 mm long. Seeds in two irregular rows near center of fruit, 1.2 – 1.7 × 0.7 – 1.1 mm, with pale marginal wing 0.15 – 0.3 mm wide, the wing continuous from funiculus along radicle side for 2 / 3 of circumference (rarely confined to distal 1 / 2). Chromosome number (from the type collection) 2 n = 14, with variable pairing during microsporogenesis (ranging from 14 univalents to 7 bivalents). Paratypes. ARIZONA. Coconino Co.: Big Springs, North Rim, Grand Canyon National Park, Machina & Huisinga 2432 [ASC 70958]. COLORADO. Archuleta Co.: FS Road 006 ca. 1 / 2 mi from US 84 ca. 14 mi S of Pagosa Springs (37 ° 06 ' 29 cN 106 ° 54 ' 50 " W), Heil & Heil 21882 [SJNM 46443]. Conejos Co.: 3.3 mi W of Aspen Glade Campground along highway from Antonito to Chama, Mosquin & Mosquin 4575 [DAO 599488]; Conejos Campground, campsite # 12, on S side of F. R. 250 in bottom of Conejos River Canyon ± 5.6 mi NW of jct. with CO Hwy 17, ± 0.15 mi WNW of Spectacle Lake, Alexander 761 [DUKE, MO NMC]; Conejos Campground, along Conejos River ca. 4 mi NW of junction with Cumbres Pass Road, Weber 7845 [GH]. NEW MEXICO. Taos Co.: W base of the Taos Mountains along an unlabeled forest road, ± 3 mi S of Questa, ± 1.2 mi NE of Lama, Alexander 615 [DUKE 398992, NMC 78599]. UTAH. Kane Co.: W of Long Valley Junction along Strawberry Creek near UT 14 ca. 0.78 km WSW of Cold Spring (37 ° 30 ' 29 " N 112 ° 37 ' 18 " W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham 3600 [DUKE 400113]	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	distribution	Distribution, Habitat and Phenology. — Boechera austromontana is known from northern Arizona and New Mexico, as well as southern Colorado and Utah. It favors clay loam soils in open pine-oak woodland or semiriparian habitats at elevations of 2300 – 2700 m. The species blooms from early May to early July and produces mature seeds in July and August.	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	etymology	Etymology and additional comments. — The specific epithet chosen is a combination of austro - (southern) and montana (mountain), highlighting its exclusive occurrence in the southern Rocky Mountain region. Although future studies may reveal a broader distribution, B. austromontana does not appear to overlap with B. grahamii, which occurs to the north and east and has not been collected south of El Paso County, Colorado. In addition to the characters mentioned in the diagnosis above, one other morphological trend can help distinguish B. austromontana from B. grahamii. In the latter species, a single flowering stem arises from the center of each fertile leaf rosette and sterile short shoots with tufted ascending leaves are absent. By contrast, about half of the B. austromontana plants observed have sterile short shoots terminating the caudex branches and, in these cases, the flowering stem (occasionally more than one) arises lateral to the short shoot (between the decumbent rosette leaves and the ascending leaf tuft). A new hybrid species segregated from Boechera consanguinea. — Microsatellite DNA analyses of Boechera collections from the Four Corners region reveal that some specimens previously identified as B. consanguinea by Windham and Al-Shehbaz (2007 a) cannot be classified as such given their divergent parentage. Typical specimens of B. consanguinea are stable, apomictic triploids containing genomes from B. exilis, B. perennans subsp. gracilipes, and B. retrofracta (Windham et al., in prep.). However, there are a few populations from northern New Mexico and Arizona in which the B. retrofracta genetic contribution is replaced by a genome from B. crandallii subsp. kelseyana. To acknowledge this genomic difference, we herein name this newly documented hybrid: Boechera pseudoconsanguinea Windham & Allphin, sp. nov. (Fig. 3). TYPE: U. S. A. NEW MEXICO. San Juan Co.: NE of Aztec in Hart Canyon on slope above Hart Canyon Road (Route 2770) ca. 1.0 road mi ESE of its intersection with U. S. Route 550 (36.8672 N 107.9328 W; WGS 84 Datum), 5925 ft. elev., among cobbles (igneous) in sandy alluvial soil on NW-facing slope with Artemisia, Juniperus, Yucca, Pleuraphis & Aristida, 15 May 2014, Windham 4187, Allphin & Alexander (HOLOTYPE: DUKE 406710!; ISOTYPES: BRY!, COLO!, GH!, MO!, NY!, NMC!, RM!, US!, UT!, UTC!). Most similar to Boechera consanguinea but differing (see Fig. 4) in having 1) mature fruits widely pendent with their bases positioned 6.5 – 15 mm from rachises (vs. closely pendent with bases positioned 1 – 6 mm from rachises), 2) basal leaves mostly entire (vs. denticulate), 3) shorter sepals (2.5 – 3.5 vs. 3.3 – 5.1 mm at full anthesis), and 4) less pubescent fruiting pedicels (<25 % pubescent and these with <20 trichomes attached to the visible surfaces vs.> 90 % pubescent with 20 – 140 trichomes). Plants mostly short-lived perennials, the caudices usually unbranched, non-woody and not raised above ground level, producing a cluster of rosette leaves distally, these mostly deciduous in fruiting individuals, the caudices lacking crowded, persistent leaf bases. Rosette leaves oblanceolate, 20 – 48 × 3.5 – 7 mm, entire or denticulate with 1 – 2 pairs of teeth to 0.2 mm, most with enlarged, simple and 2 - rayed cilia (and often a few 3 – 4 - rayed) to 0.7 mm near petiole base; rosette leaf blades subappressed pubescent, the abaxial surfaces with 3 – 8 - rayed trichomes to 0.4 mm (4 - to 6 - rayed always present). Sterile short shoots with tuft of ascending leaves rare, when present the leaves narrowly oblanceolate, 40 – 60 × 4 – 7 mm, otherwise similar to rosette leaves. Fertile stems 1 (rarely 2) per caudex branch, mostly terminal but occasionally arising laterally below sterile short shoot, 4 – 7 dm tall, 1.2 – 4 mm in diameter at base, lower internodes moderately pubescent with 2 – 6 - rayed trichomes to 1 mm (3 - to 5 - rayed always present); uppermost internodes and rachises usually glabrous. Cauline leaves 9 – 38, most pubescent with 2 – 7 - rayed trichomes to 0.3 mm (4 - and 5 - rayed always present), the uppermost occasionally glabrous, all but the lowermost with auricles 0.9 – 2.5 mm. Inflorescences simple racemes, rarely sparingly branched, the main axis 14 – 45 - flowered, not secund; lowermost fruiting pedicels 13 – 17 mm, perpendicular to slightly descending, gently downcurved distally, most glabrous but a few with 4 – 7 - rayed trichomes concentrated distally. Flowers: sepals 2.5 – 3.5 mm, mostly dull lavender, with trichomes similar to those of rosette leaf surfaces; petals 5 – 7.5 × 0.8 – 1.2 mm, whitish but turning pale laven- der with age, glabrous; anthers cream-colored, producing variable percentages of malformed and well-formed pollen grains, the latter mostly ovoid-spheroid and averaging 22 μm wide with 4 or more asymmetrically arranged apertures; ovaries glabrous, usually with 52 – 80 ovules per fruit, forming seeds apomictically through diplospory. Fruits 4.8 – 5.6 cm × 1.6 – 2.1 mm at maturity, straight to curved downward, pendent, bases of lower fruits positioned 6.5 – 15 mm from rachises, all glabrous; styles 0.15 – 0.3 mm. Seeds in two irregular rows near center of fruit, 1.1 – 1.5 × 0.8 – 1.2 mm; marginal wing ± continuous or from funiculus along cotyledon side for 2 / 3 of circumference and most prominent distally, to 0.25 mm wide. Chromosome number (from the type collection) n = 2 n = 21, with variable pairing during microsporogenesis (ranging from 21 univalents to 7 trivalents). Paratypes. ARIZONA. Navajo Co.: Skeleton Mesa W of Keet Seel Ruins (UTM Zone 12 S: 4068948 N by 544256 E), Rink & Bungart 3105 [NY]. NEW MEXICO. Rio Arriba Co.: SSW of Lybrook below mesa near head of Blanco Wash (36 ° 13 ʹ 19 ʺ N 107 ° 34 ʹ 12 ʺ W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham 3069 [DUKE 400844]. San Juan Co.: NE of Aztec in Hart Canyon on slope above Road 2770 ca. 1.0 road mi E of its junction with U. S. Route 550 (36.8683 N 107.9332 W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham et al. 3945 [DUKE 404003].	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	distribution	Distribution, Habitat and Phenology. — Boechera pseudoconsanguinea currently is known from a single population in northern Arizona (Navajo Co.) and two populations in northern New Mexico (Rio Arriba and San Juan Cos.). It occurs in sandy alluvial soils, typically associated with Artemisia and Juniperus at elevations of 1750 – 2300 m. The species blooms from early April to late May and produces mature seeds in June and July.	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	etymology	Etymology. — The epithet references its similarity to, and initial confusion with, Boechera consanguinea. A new hybrid species segregated from Boechera duchesnensis. — In the Flora of North America treatment of Boechera, Al-Shehbaz and Windham (2010) broadly defined B. duchesnensis to encompass a diversity of pubescent-fruited hybrid populations that were thought to include a genome from B. formosa (herein called B. pulchra subsp. pallens). Subsequent work has revealed that typical B. duchesnensis is a stable apomictic diploid hybrid between B. pulchra subsp. pallens and B. crandallii subsp. thompsonii (Allphin & Windham, in prep.). These studies also indicate that B. duchesnensis s. s. is confined to the Uintah Basin in northern Utah. Specimens previously attributed to B. duchesnensis from the Four Corners region are stable apomictic triploids containing genomes from B. pulchra subsp. pallens, B. crandallii subsp. kelseyana, and B. perennans subsp. perennans. Analyses conducted using the Boechera Microsatellite Website (Li et al. 2017) indicate that this trigenomic triploid arose in the Four Corners region through hybridization between B. pulchra subsp. pallens (a sexual diploid) and an apomictic diploid lineage belonging to B. gracilenta s. l. (Windham et al., unpubl.). Here we name this newly documented hybrid as: Boechera quadrangulensis Windham & Allphin, sp. nov. (Fig. 5). TYPE: U. S. A. NEW MEXICO. San Juan Co.: NE of Aztec in Hart Canyon on slope above Hart Canyon Road (Route 2770) ca. 1.0 road mi ESE of its intersection with U. S. Route 550 (36.8672 N 107.9328 W; WGS 84 Datum), 5925 ft. elev., among cobbles (igneous) in sandy alluvial soil on NW-facing slope with Artemisia, Juniperus, Yucca, Pleuraphis & Aristida, 15 May 2014 Windham 4186, Allphin & Alexander (HOLOTYPE: DUKE 405280!;	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	description	ISOTYPES: ASU!, COLO!, GH!, MO!, NMC!, NY!, UNM!, UT!). Most similar to Boechera duchesnensis but differing (see Fig. 6) in having 1) ovaries with few or rarely no trichomes (vs. relatively abundant and always present) that are sporadically distributed (vs. concentrated distally), 2) petals with mostly non-flaring, pale lavender blades (vs. flaring and usually whitish), 3) fruits with largely deciduous (vs. persistent) trichomes and some ovules clearly biseriate (vs. irregular to uniseriate), 4) middle cauline leaves usually wider (> 2 vs. <2 mm) with fewer trichomes (<25 vs.> 25 per mm 2) on abaxial surfaces, and 5) mature fruits mostly horizontal to divaricate-descending (vs. divaricate-ascending); differing from B. pulchra subsp. pallens (its pubescent-fruited parent) by the fruit trichome characters indicated above as well as having fewer trichomes (<10 vs.> 10 per mm 2) on rachises; differing from B. gracilenta s. l. (its apomictic diploid, glabrous-fruited parent) by having sparse to abundant trichomes on> 90 % of ovaries at anthesis and 30 – 150 (vs. mostly <30) trichomes on lowermost fruiting pedicels, these trichomes often concentrated distally (vs. widely scattered). Plants long- to short-lived perennials, the caudices mostly branched, usually somewhat woody and often raised above ground level, producing a cluster of rosette leaves distally, these largely deciduous in fruiting individuals. Rosette leaves oblanceolate, 20 – 56 × 4.2 – 8.5 mm, entire or dentate with 1 – 2 pairs of teeth to 0.8 mm, often with enlarged, simple and / or 2 – 4 - rayed cilia (2 - rayed always present) to 0.9 mm near petiole base; rosette leaf blades subappressed pubescent, the abaxial surfaces with 3 – 8 - rayed trichomes to 0.3 mm long (5 - and 6 - rayed trichomes always present). Sterile short shoots with tuft of ascending leaves often present, the leaves narrowly oblanceolate, 16 – 52 × 1.7 – 5.8 mm, similar to rosette leaves except the cilia often larger (to 1.3 mm) and extending farther up the petiole. Fertile stems 1 (2 – 7) per caudex branch, terminal or arising laterally below sterile short shoot, 1.5 – 6 dm long, 1 – 3 mm in diameter at base, lower parts moderately pubescent with mostly 2 – 6 - rayed trichomes to 1 mm; upper parts of stems with scattered, 2 – 8 - rayed trichomes (some 5 - rayed always present). Cauline leaves 6 – 15, all pubescent with 2 – 9 - rayed trichomes to 0.4 mm (5 - and 6 - rayed trichomes always present), the uppermost (> 95 %) with auricles 0.2 – 2 mm. Inflorescences simple racemes or sparingly branched, the main axis 7 – 31 - flowered, not secund; lowermost fruiting pedicels 6 – 21 mm, divaricate-ascending to horizontal (rarely slightly descending), straight or gently down-curved distally, with 3 – 10 - rayed trichomes concentrated distally (5 -, 6 -, and 7 - rayed trichomes always present). Flowers: sepals 2.5 – 4.5 mm, mostly dull lavender, with trichomes similar to those of the fruiting pedicels; petals 5 – 10 × 1 – 3 mm, usually pale lavender but darkening with age, glabrous; anthers cream-colored, producing variable percentages of well-formed and malformed pollen grains, the former mostly ovoid-spheroid and averaging 25 μm wide with 4 or more asymmetrically arranged apertures; ovaries (> 90 %) with at least a few, sporadicallydistributed trichomes, usually with 30 – 56 ovules per fruit, forming seeds apomictically predominantly through diplospory. Fruits (the largest) 3.2 – 6.0 cm × 1.3 – 2.1 mm at maturity, ± horizontal to slightly descending, gently curved downward to straight,> 50 % with a few 3 – 10 - rayed trichomes on distal 1 / 3 of valve surfaces, not extending to replum; styles 0.3 – 0.8 mm long. Seeds in two irregular rows near center of fruit, ca. 1.5 – 0.8 mm, with pale marginal wing up to 0.2 mm wide, wing continuous except near funiculus. Chromosome number (from the type collection) n = 2 n = 21, with variable pairing during microsporogenesis (but most cells exhibiting 21 univalents). Paratypes. ARIZONA. Apache Co.: Carrizo Mountains; between Red Goat Spring and Tse abeii Point ca. 1.5 mi S of Red Goat Spring, Clifford AC- 63 [SJNM 14726]. Coconino Co.: top of Leche-E Rock, Jenness s. n. [ASC 53203]; U. S. 89, 10 mi S of Page, Nash & Nash 70 [ASU 55985]; Cape Solitude, near rim of Grand Canyon, Bowers et al. 1682 [ARIZ 222921]. Navajo Co.: jct. of Little Capitan Valley road and road cutting through Comb Ridge (36 ° 47 ʹ 32 ʺ N 110 ° 05 ʹ 27 ʺ W), Heil & Clifford 16352 [SJNM 37460]; ca. 3 mi N of Kayenta on US 163, ca. 2 mi E of Chaistla Butte along Little Capitan Valley near Porros Dikes (36 ° 46 ʹ 48 ʺ N 110 ° 10 ʹ 02 ʺ W), Heil & Clifford 16299 [SJNM 37413]. COLORADO. Montezuma Co.: Ute Mtn. Indian Res. 5 mi S of Towaoc and 4 mi W of Highway 666, Porter 1767 [SJNM 4714]. NEW MEXICO. Rio Arriba Co.: ca. 2 mi W of Floyd Miles # 1 well site, top of mesa, Heil 8706 [SJNM 21277]. Sandoval Co.: S of Lybrook on mesa near head of Escrito Canyon ca. 3.16 km SSE of Escrito Spring (36.2065 N 107.5618 W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham 3067 [ARIZ, ASC, BRY, DUKE 405275]. San Juan Co.: San Juan College Nature Trail, Jenksin [Jenkins?] et al. 25 [SJNM 8630]; NNE of Aztec on slope above Animas River floodplain near Ruins Road ca. 3.1 road mi NE of its junction with State Route 516 (36.8622 N 107.9798 W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham et al. 3942 [DUKE 403974]; Navajo Nation, ca. 4.5 mi SW of Shiprock Diatreme (T 28 N, R 19 W), Clifford 18263 [SJNM 40119]; B-Square Ranch; Hammond Canal (T 29 N, R 12 W, S 30, SE), Heil 12984 [SJNM 31217]; Navajo Indian Reservation; Beclahbito Dome ca. 1.75 mi S of trading post (T 30 N, R 21 W), Clifford 01 - 197 [SJNM 40129]; Chaco Canyon National Monument; on mesa W from South Gap, Hastings s. n. [ARIZ 47484.2]. UTAH. Grand Co.: NW of Moab near base of Courthouse Rock (38 ° 42 ʹ 01 ʺ N 109 ° 43 ʹ 17 ʺ W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham et al. 99 - 045 [DUKE 400773, MO, NMC, UT]; 8 mi W of Dead Horse Point, Cottam 12139 [UT 71294]. Kane Co.: Hurricane Wash, 35 mi SE of Escalante (T 39 S, R 7 E, S 26; SW), Albee 1260 [UT 80022]. San Juan Co.: E of Bluff along small canyon tributary of San Juan River ca. 3.89 km E of Sunbonnet Rock (37 ° 17 ʹ 09 ʺ N 109 ° 30 ʹ 12 ʺ W; WGS 84 Datum), Windham 3366 [BRY, DUKE 400710, MO, NMC, UT]; Navajo Nation: Road 480 to ca. 1 mi S of Lake Powell along Piute Canyon (37 ° 08 ʹ 47 ʺ N 110 ° 41 ʹ 58 ʺ W), Heil et al. 18437 [SJNM 41811]. Wayne Co.: VABM 6190 - Clyde (1 mi SW); T 28 S, R 16 E, S 14), Welsh & Holland 21942 [RM 364692].	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	distribution	Distribution, Habitat and Phenology. — Boechera quadrangulensis is known from northern Arizona and New Mexico, as well as southern Colorado and Utah. It favors sandy loam soils in pinyon-juniper woodland or sagebrush flats at elevations of 1150 – 2300 m. The species blooms from early April to early June and produces mature seeds in July and August.	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
03FB87AAFFDFFFD2CF79FF6D9E9EFEEE.taxon	etymology	Etymology. — The epithet is a combination of quadranguli- (having four angles / corners), and - ensis (from), highlighting its exclusive occurrence in what is known as the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States.	en	Windham, Michael D., Pryer, Kathleen M., Allphin, Loreen (2022): An Overview Of New Mexican Boechera (Brassicaceae) Including Three New Species And Thirteen New Nomenclatural Combinations. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 16 (1): 9-24, DOI: 10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216, URL: https://doi.org/10.17348/jbrit.v16.i1.1216
