Sedum rubiginosum Zika & B. L. Wilson, 2018

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-5325-1F2C-FF2D-DD86FC02F91B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sedum rubiginosum Zika & B. L. Wilson
status

sp. nov.

14. Sedum rubiginosum Zika & B. L. Wilson View in CoL , sp. nov. Figs. 1D–E View FIGURE 1 , 4C–D View FIGURE 4 , 11D View FIGURE 11 , 15E View FIGURE 15 , 24C–D View FIGURE 24 , 32A–F View FIGURE 32 , 43 View FIGURE 43

Differt haec species a Sedum kiersteadiae rosulis foliorum densis, floribus numerosioribus, sine vel reduci mucrone abaxiali subterminali, necnon foliis caulinis numerosis imbricatisque.

TYPE: — UNITED STATES. California: Tehama County, SE of Tedoc Mountain , 1490 m elevation, 5 July 2011 , P. F. Zika 25522 & J. K. Nelson (holotype, WTU; isotypes, CAS, OSC).

Rhizomes and stolons to 30 cm long, 2–11 mm diameter; sterile leafy shoots not numerous, rosettes 14–120 mm diameter. Rosette leaves often densely arranged without visible internodes, glaucous, at least when young, green to gray, orange to red, or purple, strongly flattened dorsiventrally, oblanceolate, cuneate, 9–72 × 5.5–20.5 mm, 2.5–5.5 mm thick, apices obtuse, or truncate or shallowly notched, rarely acute. Stem leaves ascending, slightly glaucous, at least when young, and colored like the rosette leaves, 8.5–26 × 3–10 mm, flattened, truncate at base, narrowly oblong to oblanceolate, apices acute or obtuse. Fertile stems green to pink, reddish or orange, 6–28.5 cm tall, nodding or bent in bud, erect in flower and fruit. Inflorescences 4.5–18 × 2.5–6.5 cm, usually densely-flowered, narrowly cylindrical or ellipsoidal panicle-like cymes with 7–17 branches, proximal branches ascending-erect, 12–75 mm long, solitary at inflorescence nodes. Inflorescence bracts resembling stem leaves, but smaller, 4–18 × 1–9 mm, base truncate, tips acute or blunt. Flowers 26–152 per inflorescence, fresh flower diameter 8–12 mm, flowers 5-merous, erect or spreading, calyx green, brown, or red, 2.5–3.4 × 2.4–4.1 mm, sepals fused basally 0.7–1.4 mm, free sepal tips 1.6–2.4 mm long, apex acute to obtuse. Fresh petals fused at base 1.1–2.1 mm; petals 5.0– 7.8 mm long, 1.9–3.2 mm wide at mid-length, pale to medium yellow, sometimes fading to white, midvein orange to red or pink (especially in bud), apices or bases often orange to pinkish or reddish, especially with age. Fresh petal blade v-shaped or trough-shaped in cross section, narrow, at half its length spreading 90° from floral axis, apex with or without a subterminal mucro, if present the mucro 0.05–0.15 mm. Stamens 10, when fresh shorter to longer than petals, filaments white to green or pale yellow, aging red, fresh anthers oblong, 1.1–1.45 × 0.5–0.65 mm, orange to dark red, aging red, orange, brown, or black, papillose at 20×. Nectaries shallowly crescent-shaped, sunken in middle, white to pale yellow, 0.5–1.2 × 0.1–0.3 mm. Ovaries 3.6–6(–7.3) mm, erect, fused 0.6–1.7 mm, maturing into 5 dark brown erect follicles, 5.2–9.2 mm, with erect to slightly curved style remnant forming a narrow beak 1.2–3.5 mm, follicles fused 1.7–3.0 mm at base, containing 9–26 seeds. Seeds medium to dark brown, oblanceolate, shiny, striate, 0.8–1.3 × 0.3–0.5 mm, including stipe 0.05–0.2 mm.

Paratypes: — UNITED STATES. CALIFORNIA. Tehama County: N of Tedoc Gap, 1415 m, 19 June 2011, Wilson & Coberly CWG-10 ( JEPS); Tedoc Mountain , 1450 m, 26 June 2013, Zika 26234 ( CHSC, JEPS, OSC); same site, 26 June 2013, Zika 26238 ( CAS, DAV, HSC, RSA, UCR) ; Little Red Mountain , 1355 m, 24 June 2014, J. K . Nelson 2014-067 & Tate, Rainbow ( OSC, WTU) .

Distribution and ecology: —Currently known from two population aggregates in northwestern Tehama County, California ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 ), in the southern Klamath Ranges ecoregion (Jepson eFlora 2017). Found on gentle to steep rocky slopes, and talus, at southeast, west, northwest, and northeast aspects, in full sun or partial shade of widely scattered pines, on dry reddish peridotite bedrock exposures, at elevations of 1350–1500 m. Associates included Arctostaphylos patula Greene , Aspidotis densa (Brack.) Lellinger , Calocedrus decurrens (Torr.) Florin , Elymus elymoides (Raf.) Swezey , Eriogonum libertini Reveal , E. nudum Benth. , Eriophyllum lanatum , Galium bolanderi A. Gray , Garrya congdonii Eastw. , Minuartia rosei (Maguire & Barneby) McNeill , Packera greenei (A. Gray) W.A. Weber & A. Lӧve , Phacelia corymbosa Jeps. , Pinus jeffreyi , P. sabiniana Douglas ex D. Don , Pyrola picta Sm. , Quercus vaccinifolia Kellogg , Streptanthus barbatus S. Watson , and S. tortuosus Kellogg.

Etymology: — Sedum rubiginosum , or Tedoc stonecrop, was named for the reddish colors found in the fresh and aged petals, as well as the rusty red anthers.

Notes: — Sedum rubiginosum ( Figs. 24 View FIGURE 24 , 32A–F View FIGURE 32 , 43 View FIGURE 43 ) shared many ecological and morphological characteristics of S. kiersteadiae . Both were found on serpentine soils and had a cylindrical inflorescence when well-developed, with red anthers, narrow yellow petals and pink to red colors at the base of the corolla, especially with age. Sedum rubiginosum had more robust growth when sheltered, denser rosettes, more stem leaves, and more flowers than S. kiersteadiae . Sedum rubiginosum was found well to the south of the known range of S. kiersteadiae ( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 ). Tedoc stonecrop occasionally produced cleistogamous flowers late in the flowering season.

P

Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

J

University of the Witwatersrand

K

Royal Botanic Gardens

WTU

University of Washington

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

OSC

Oregon State University

N

Nanjing University

JEPS

University of California

CHSC

California State University, Chico

DAV

UC Davis Center for Plant Diversity

HSC

Humboldt State University Herbarium

UCR

University of California

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