Log In
New Account
Sitemap
Home
Specimen Search
Search Collections
Map Search
Exsiccati Search
Images
Image Browser
Search Images
Flora Projects
Arizona
New Mexico
Colorado Plateau
Plant Atlas of Arizona (PAPAZ)
Sonoran Desert
Teaching Checklists
Agency Floras
NPS - Intermountain
USFWS - Region 2
BLM Flora
Coronado NF
Tonto NF
Dynamic Floras
Dynamic Checklist
Dynamic Key
Additional Websites
New Mexico Flores
Plant Atlas Project of Arizona (PAPAZ)
Southwest Colorado Wildflowers
Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness
Consortium of Midwest Herbaria
Consortium of Southern Rocky Mountain Herbaria
Intermountain Region Herbaria Network (IRHN)
Mid-Atlantic Herbaria
North American Network of Small Herbaria (NANSH)
Northern Great Plains Herbaria
Red de Herbarios del Noroeste de México (northern Mexico)
SERNEC - Southeastern USA
Texas Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria (TORCH)
Resources
Symbiota Docs
Video Tutorials
Collections in SEINet
Joining a Portal
Suaeda tampicensis
(Standl.) Standl.
(redirected from:
Dondia tampicensis
Standl.)
Family:
Amaranthaceae
Coastal Seepweed
[
Dondia tampicensis
Standl.]
FNA
Resources
Stanley L. Welsh, Clifford W. Crompton & Steven E. Clemants in Flora of North America (vol. 4)
Subshrubs or suffrutescent perennials,
spreading, 2-10 dm.
Stems
ascending or decumbent, stoutly branched, woody stems brown to gray-brown, herbaceous stems green or glaucous, densely tomentulose, leaf scars ± knobby; branches spreading.
Leaves
densely spreading, subsessile to short-petiolate; petiole ± 1 mm; blade glaucous, linear to oblanceolate, subcylindric, (3-)7-22 × 0.5-1.5 mm, apex acuminate to slightly apiculate, glabrous.
Glomes
usually confined to distal branches, 1-5-flowered; branches 1-3 mm diam., as thick as vegetative ones; bracts leaflike in shape, green, not glaucous, 1-5 mm.
Flowers
usually bisexual; perianth 1.5-2 mm diam.; perianth segments proximally connate, ± glabrous; ovary ± vase-shaped with distal necklike extension; stigmas 3.
Seeds
usually horizontal, 0.8-1 mm; seed coat black. Flowering spring-fall. Coastal sandy areas, saline flats, clay dunes; 1-30 m; Tex.; Mexico (Tamaulipas); West Indies.
Open Interactive Map
Madison Marzullo
University of Florida Herbarium
Click to Display
28 Total Images
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (
DBI 9983132
,
BRC 0237418
,
DBI 0743827
,
DBI 0847966
)
Powered by
Symbiota