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Lithophragma
Family: Saxifragaceae
Lithophragma image
Gregory Gust
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Roy L. Taylor in Flora of North America (vol. 8)
Herbs, rhizomatous, not stoloniferous; caudex sometimes bearing bulbils. Flowering stems erect, leafy, 8-85 cm, stipitate-glandular. Leaves in basal rosette and cauline; cauline leaves (1-)2(-10), usually alternate (opposite in L. cymbalaria), unlobed, lobed, or palmately compound, sometimes with bulbils in axils; stipules present; petiole stipitate-glandular; blade rhombic or orbiculate to reniform, lobed, base cordate, hastate, rounded, ligulate, or cuneate, ultimate margins entire or toothed, apex obtuse or acute, surfaces often stipitate-glandular; venation palmate. Inflorescences compact or lax racemes, arising from axillary buds in basal rosette, 2-12(-25)-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary, (flowers sometimes replaced by bulbils), bracteate. Flowers: hypanthium partially adnate to proximal 1/2 to entire length of ovary, free from ovary 1-2 mm, green; sepals 5, green tinged with red; petals 5, white or pink; nectariferous tissue inconspicuous; stamens 10, (inserted on hypanthium, inner whorl attached proximal to point of petal insertion); filaments filiform; (anthers cordate); pistil 3-carpellate; ovary superior to 1/2 or almost completely inferior, 1-locular, carpels fully connate at ovaries; placentation parietal; styles 3; stigmas 3. Capsules 3-beaked. Seeds (50-200), usually dark brown, ovoid, smooth, wrinkled, or tuberculate. x = 7.
JANAS 26(1)
RHIZOMES: slender, with bulblets, without scales. LEAVES: basal and cauline, lobed to compound, fewer and smaller upward; blades more or less circular-cordate, the margin lobed to crenate INFLORESCENCE: racemes. FLOWERS: actinomorphic; hypanthium partly fused to ovary; sepals green, erect; petals lobed or toothed in ours; stamens 10; ovary less than half inferior in ours, unilocular; nectaries obscure; placentae 3, parietal; styles 3. FRUITS: 3-valved. SEEDS: smooth in ours. NOTES: 12 spp. in w N. Amer. (Greek: litho = rock + phragma = partition, from habitats). Taylor, D. 1965. Univ. Calif. Publs. Bot. 37:1-122. Generic names ending in -phragma- are considered of neuter, not feminine, gender. REFERENCES: Elvander, Patrick. 1992. Saxifragaceae. Ariz.-Nev. Acad. Sci. 26(1)2.
Species within checklist: Flora of the National Park Service, Intermountain Region
Lithophragma parviflorum
Image of Lithophragma parviflorum
Lithophragma tenellum
Image of Lithophragma tenellum
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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