Sedum eastwoodiae
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.368.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03888A7D-5309-1F03-FF2D-DF5DFC24F82E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sedum eastwoodiae |
status |
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3. Sedum eastwoodiae View in CoL (Britton in Britton & Rose 1903: 31) Berger (1930: 451). Figs. 26–27 View FIGURE 26 View FIGURE 27 .
Gormania eastwoodiae Britton View in CoL in Britton & Rose (1903: 31). Cotyledon mendocinoana Fedde View in CoL in Schumann & Fedde (1904: 828). Sedum laxum View in CoL (Britton in Britton & Rose 1903: 29) Berger (1930: 451) subsp. eastwoodiae (Britton) Clausen (1975: 398) View in CoL . Sedum laxum (Britton) A.Berger var. eastwoodiae (Britton) Ohba (2007: 889) View in CoL .
Type:— UNITED STATES. California: northern Mendocino Co., Red Mountain , August 1902, A . Eastwood s.n. (lectotype, designated by Clausen [1942: 39], CAS; isolectotype, NY) .
Britton (in Britton & Rose 1903) listed only one gathering of Gormania eastwoodiae , neither noting the location of replicates nor choosing one as a holotype. Clausen (1942) in effect lectotypified the CAS material as the holotype, and it was superior to the isotype at NY. His lectotype choice was probably influenced by correspondence at NY with Eastwood, dated 30 August 1903, which showed that the CAS collection was seen by Britton and then returned to Eastwood at CAS.
Additional specimens examined: — UNITED STATES. CALIFORNIA. Mendocino County: Red Mountain , 1097 m, 14 July 1962, Hutchison 909 ( JEPS, SD) ; same site, 1175 m, 14 July 1962, Hutchison 911 ( JEPS, RSA) ; same site, 1070 m, 14 July 1970, Clausen 70-68 ( BH) , and Clausen 70-69 ( BH) ; same site, 1045 m, 18 July 1970, Clausen 70-84 ( BH) ; same site, 1110 m, 19 June 1976, Denton 3940 ( WTU) ; same site, 1025 m, 24 June 1977, Denton 4099 ( OSC, WTU) ; same site, 1240 m, 3 July 2012, Wilson & Otting CWG-117 ( OSC) .
Distribution and ecology: —A narrow endemic on rocky serpentine slopes of Red Mountain and adjacent Little Red Mountain in Mendocino County, California, in the Outer North Coast Ranges ecoregion (Jepson eFlora 2017), at elevations of 600–1240 m ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ).
Notes:— Sedum eastwoodiae ( Fig. 26 View FIGURE 26 ) flowering stems were short, and the plants formed extensive mats of sterile rosettes. The rosette leaves were acute to obtuse, rarely notched. Stem leaves were suborbicular and slightly clasping. The sepals were relatively short; the petals ascending, bright pink, sometimes broadly edged with white, and had acute tips. The fresh anthers were dark red, aging black.
Sedum eastwoodiae was often treated as a subspecies of S. laxum (e.g., Denton 1982), and the two species had similar bright pink flowers and dark red anthers. However, S. laxum had more acuminate and stiffly erect petal tips. Sedum eastwoodiae had suborbicular stem leaves resembling those of S. flavidum and S. laxum subsp. heckneri , though the stem leaves of the latter were often larger. Sedum eastwoodiae shared with S. flavidum acute, slightly spreading petals, and a tetraploid chromosome count. The pallid flowers of S. flavidum were relatively shorter and wider than the pink flowers of S. eastwoodiae . The morphology of S. eastwoodiae , S. flavidum , and S. laxum were compared in Table 6.
Sedum eastwoodiae was identified as a candidate for federal endangered species status on 15 December 1980 (Federal Register Volume 45, page 82479). A listing petition was denied on 18 September 2014 by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (Federal Register Volume 79, pages 56029–56040) .
A |
Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum |
CAS |
California Academy of Sciences |
NY |
William and Lynda Steere Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden |
JEPS |
University of California |
SD |
San Diego Natural History Museum |
BH |
L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Cornell University |
WTU |
University of Washington |
OSC |
Oregon State University |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Sedum eastwoodiae
Zika, Peter F., Wilson, Barbara L., Brainerd, Richard E., Otting, Nick, Darington, Steven, Knaus, Brian J. & Nelson, Julie Kierstead 2018 |
Gormania eastwoodiae
Ohba, H. 2007: ) |
Clausen, R. T. 1975: ) |
Berger, A. 1930: 451 |
Schumann, K. & Fedde, F. 1904: 828 |
Britton, N. L. & Rose, J. N. 1903: 31 |
Britton, N. L. & Rose, J. N. 1903: 29 |