Sedum laxum

Zika, Peter F., Wilson, Barbara L., Brainerd, Richard E., Otting, Nick, Darington, Steven, Knaus, Brian J. & Nelson, Julie Kierstead, 2018, A review of Sedum section Gormania (Crassulaceae) in western North America, Phytotaxa 368 (1), pp. 448-450 : 448-450

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.368.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03888A7D-5331-1F38-FF2D-D9B6FE37FCBA

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sedum laxum
status

 

6a. Sedum laxum View in CoL (Britton in Britton & Rose 1903: 29) Berger (1930: 451) subsp. heckneri ( Peck 1937: 121) Clausen (1942: 39) . Figs. 4A View FIGURE 4 , 6D View FIGURE 6 , 30 View FIGURE 30

Sedum heckneri Peck (1937: 121) View in CoL . Sedum laxum (Britton) A.Berger var. heckneri (M.Peck) Ohba (2007: 889) View in CoL .

Type: — UNITED STATES. California: Siskiyou Co., [published in error in the protolog as Jackson Co. , Oregon, see Clausen (1975: 391)], dry cliff along [Middle Fork] Applegate River, 4 miles above mouth of Carberry Creek , 26 June 1931, M. E . Peck 16421 (holotype, WILLU) .

Additional specimens examined: — UNITED STATES. CALIFORNIA. Del Norte County: NW of Cedar Camp Spring , 1220 m, 8 June 1983, Imper s.n. ( WTU) ; Six Rivers National Forest , S of Flint Valley, 1340 m, 27 July 1982, Imper s.n. ( WTU) ; Six Rivers National Forest , N of Bluff Creek, 823 m, 30 July 1982, Imper s.n. ( WTU) . Humboldt County: S of Grizzly Camp , 1370 m, 5 September 1948, Tracy 18190 ( SD, UC, WTU) ; Klamath River , 305 m, June 1901, Chandler 1439 ( UC) ; S of Somes Bar , 21 June 1954, Hitchcock 20219 ( WS) ; Willow Creek Canyon, 305 m, 3 July 1944, Tracy 17488 ( UC) ; near Aikens Campground , 170 m, 25 June 1976, Denton 3976 ( WTU) ; SW of Hoopa , 260 m, 25 June 1976, Denton 3974 ( WTU) ; N of Hoopa , 240 m, 25 June 1976, Denton 3975 ( WTU) ; Salmon Summit , 1770 m, 30 July 1935, Tracy 14363 ( UC, WTU) ; Hoopa , 425 m, 4 July 2012, Wilson, Otting & Darington CWG-119 ( OSC, “ SRNF,” WTU) ; E of Weitchpec , 137 m, 29 June 2013, Wilson et al. CWG-236 ( HSC) ; road to E-Ne-Nuk Campground , 122 m, 29 June 2013, Wilson et al. CWG-237 ( JEPS) . Siskiyou County: E of Forks of Salmon , 26 June 1937, Eastwood & Howell 5056 ( CAS) ; N Fork Salmon River , 675 m, 19 June 2014, Wilson 18109 & Otting ( OSC) ; Whites Gulch , 770 m, 19 June 2014, Wilson 18108 & Otting ( OSC) ; N of Clear Creek , 22 May 1961, Hutchison 2036 ( JEPS) ; near Upper Devils Peak , 1342 m, 7 August 1979, Clifton 12757 ( UC) ; SW of mouth of Carberry Creek , 700 m, 4 July 1976, Denton 4014 ( OSC, WTU) ; Middle Fork of Applegate River , 760 m, 5 August 1962, Hutchison 958 ( BH, SD) ; same site, 670 m, 4 July 1976, Denton 4016 ( WTU) ; same site, 670 m, 11 July 1991, Kagan 7-11-91-01 ( OSC) ; same site, 19 July 2011, Zika 25641 ( CAS, RSA) ; Slater Butte , 1067 m, 4 June 1947, Detling 6120 ( ORE) ; Salmon Mountains, N of Hancock Lake , 2105 m, 11 July 1969, Oettinger 988 ( RSA) ; Middle Fork of Applegate River, Whiskey Creek trail, 915 m, Rolle s.n. ( OSC) ; Siskiyou Mountains , NW of Abney Butte, 675 m, 19 July 2011, Zika 25640 ( BH, HSC, SD, UCR) ; Antenna Ridge , 1305 m, 12 July 2014, Otting 3841 ( HSC, SOC, UBC, WTU) . OREGON. Jackson County: Whiskey Peak, 1931, Nye s.n. ( ORE) ; Upper China Gulch , May 1984, Rolle s.n. ( OSC) ; Carberry Creek, Steve Fork , 790 m, 12 June 1991, Zika 11199 ( BH, OSC) ; Siskiyou Mountains , SE of Steve Peak, 830 m, 19 July 2011, Zika 25653 ( BH, CAS, OSC, RSA, UCR, WTU) ; E of Steve Peak , 780 m, 19 July 2011, Zika 25652 ( CAS, GH, MICH, RM, RSA, UC, WTU). Josephine County: above China Flat , 1095 m, August 1962, Hutchison 956 ( BH, JEPS) ; Slickrock Creek , 900 m, August 1962, Hutchison 955 ( JEPS) ; Wingdam Gulch , 1 August 1980, Garcia 185 ( OSC) ; Whiskey Peak , July 1932, Nye 5 ( ORE) .

Distribution and ecology: — Sedum laxum subsp. heckneri ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ) ranged from Jackson County, Oregon, to Humboldt County, California, at lower elevations, in the Klamath Ranges ecoregion, and the northern edge of the Outer North Coast Ranges in California (Jepson eFlora 2017). Most populations were on rocky slopes, rubble, and cliffs, at elevations of 190–2104 m. Some colonies were on slopes with seasonal subsurface water flow. It was also found on roadcuts, which other Sedum section Gormania infrequently colonized. Some populations disappeared in recent years.

The chromosome voucher Goodspeed s.n. (BH 81412) cited by Clausen (1942), and in Table 3, had the morphology and cytology of Sedum laxum subsp. heckneri , not S. eastwoodiae . The herbarium label location (“Mendocino Co.”) appeared to be an error (see Results).

Notes: — Sedum laxum subsp. heckneri ( Fig. 30 View FIGURE 30 ) had blue-green or pinkish foliage. The stem leaves were usually suborbicular (rarely oblong), usually reflexed or spreading, with clasping, auriculate bases. The sides of the stem leaves were often planar, but were often oriented slightly downward, giving the whole leaf a saddle-like shape. A few plants in the Applegate River drainage rarely had oblong, somewhat reflexed stem leaves. The sepals were relatively short and often acuminate. The petals were acuminate and pink with white margins, and erect or nearly so at anthesis. The fresh anthers were red to dark red, senescing black.

The chromosome counts, flowers and inflorescences of Sedum laxum subsp. heckneri were identical to those of subsp. laxum . S. laxum subsp. heckneri was distinguished by reflexed, suborbicular, auriculate stem leaves. Stem leaves of subsp. laxum were elliptic to oblong, ascending to spreading, and truncate-based, not auriculate, though sometimes decurrent. The two subspecies of S. laxum were allopatric ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ).

Sedum laxum subsp. heckneri had acuminate slender erect petals 7–13 mm, and the stems were often elongate, (9) 13–29 cm tall. In these characters it differed from S. eastwoodiae , which had relatively broader, more acute and ascending petals 4–9 mm, and stems 4–13 cm tall. The two were allopatric ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ) and had different ploidy levels ( Table 3), though they shared similar-shaped stem leaves and pink flowers ( Table 6). In addition to the differences emphasized in the key, the inflorescences of subsp. heckneri , in all but depauperate plants, were much larger than the inflorescences of S. eastwoodiae .

M

Botanische Staatssammlung München

E

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

WILLU

Willamette University

WTU

University of Washington

S

Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History

N

Nanjing University

SD

San Diego Natural History Museum

UC

Upjohn Culture Collection

WS

Washington State University

OSC

Oregon State University

HSC

Humboldt State University Herbarium

JEPS

University of California

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

BH

L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Cornell University

ORE

University of Oregon

UCR

University of California

SOC

Southern Oregon University

UBC

University of British Columbia

GH

Harvard University - Gray Herbarium

MICH

University of Michigan

RM

McGill University, Redpath Museum

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Saxifragales

Family

Crassulaceae

Genus

Sedum

Loc

Sedum laxum

Zika, Peter F., Wilson, Barbara L., Brainerd, Richard E., Otting, Nick, Darington, Steven, Knaus, Brian J. & Nelson, Julie Kierstead 2018
2018
Loc

Sedum heckneri

Ohba, H. 2007: )
Peck, M. E. 1937: )
1937
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