- Minuartia decumbens
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Minuartia decumbens Conservation status Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae (unranked): Angiosperms (unranked): Eudicots (unranked): Core eudicots Order: Caryophyllales Family: Caryophyllaceae Genus: Minuartia Species: M. decumbens Binomial name Minuartia decumbens
T.W.Nelson & J.P.NelsonMinuartia decumbens is a rare species of flowering plant in the pink family known by the common names The Lassics sandwort and Lassicus stitchwort. It is endemic to California, where it is known from only a single occurrence in the isolated inland mountains of the North Coast Ranges in Trinity County near the Humboldt County line. The species was described in 1981 from the type specimen observed on Mule Ridge in a string of peaks known as The Lassics.[1] It grows in the serpentine soils of the mountain forests among Jeffrey Pines. This is a low, mat-forming perennial herb growing a in a clump a few centimeters high from a thin, woody taproot. The narrow, rigid, sometimes needle-like leaves are under a centimeter long and no more than 2 millimeters wide. The tiny flowers have purple-tipped sepals a few millimeters long and five white petals which are slightly smaller.
References
- ^ Nelson, T. W. & J. P. Nelson. (1981). A new species of Minuartia (Caryophyllaceae) from northwest California. Brittonia 33:2 162-4.
External links
Categories:- NatureServe Critically Imperiled species
- Minuartia
- Endemic flora of California
- Plants described in 1981
- Caryophyllales stubs
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