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Thamnosma montanum Torr. & Fr??m.  
Family: Rutaceae
Thamnosma montanum image
  • SW Field Guide
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Kearney and Peebles 1969, McDougall 1873
Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Subshrub General: Shrubby, spinescent perennials, herbage yellowish, thickly gland-dotted. Leaves: Narrow, fleshy, gland-dotted, linear-spatulate, alternate, entire, few, early deciduous. Flowers: Dark blue, narrowly funnelform or urn-shaped, borne in small racemose or cymose clusters, style exserted. Fruits: Capsule deeply 2-lobed, the stipe of the capsule longer than the calyx. Seeds 4-6 mm long, smooth or somewhat wrinkled. Ecology: Found from 4,500 ft or below, on desert mesas and slopes, (1372 m); flowering February-April. Distribution: s UT, s NV, se CA, AZ; Sonora, and Baja Calif., MEX. Ethnobotany: Used as an emetic, for painful abdomen, taken as a laxative, for chest pains, colds, rubbed on open wounds, taken as a hallucinogen, as an aid in hunting, used to keep snakes away, used by women as a douche, smoked for colds, taken for smallpox, gonorrhea, and as a tonic. Etymology: Thamnosma is from the Greek for odorous shrub, while montana means mountain. Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley 2010, LCrumbacher 2011
Thamnosma montanum
Open Interactive Map
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
Thamnosma montanum image
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The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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