- Ambrosia dumosa
Taxobox
name = "Ambrosia dumosa"
image_width = 240px
regnum =Plant ae
divisio =Magnoliophyta
classis =Magnoliopsida
ordo =Asterales
familia =Asteraceae
genus = "Ambrosia"
species = "A. dumosa"
binomial = "Ambrosia dumosa"binomial_authority = (A.Gray) W.W.Payne
"Ambrosia dumosa", the burro-weed or white bursage, is a common constituent of the creosote-bush scrub community throughout the Mojave desert of California, Nevada, and Utah and the Sonoran Desert of Arizona and northwestern Mexico. "Ambrosia dumosa" has been studied to determine allelopathic interactions with creosote bush, "
Larrea tridentata ", which produces a chemical that inhibits the growth of "A. dumosa". Other studies have suggested that "A. dumosa" roots produce a chemical that causes them to grow away from conspecific roots, preventing competition for water resources. In addition to burrow-weed, "A. dumosa" is also commonly called bur sage, burro weed, and burro bush.Morphology
"A. dumosa" is a highly branched shrub 20 to 90 cm in height. The younger stems are covered with soft gray-white hairs. Approximately obvate leaves are 1 to 3 times pinnately compound or deeply lobed and generally clustered on short branches. The leaves are 0.5 to 4 cm long and also covered in soft gray-white hairs. Its inflorescence is yellow with staminate and pistallate heads on a single plant (
monoecious ). Staminate heads have many flowers and are 3 to 5 mm in diameter with a 5 to 8 lobedinvolucre . Pistillate heads are 2 flowered and lack corolla."A. dumosa" has spherical bur-like fruits ranging in color from golden to purple to brown. Along with microscopic hairs, the fruit has 12 to 35 flat and straight spines which are 5 to 9 mm in length and scattered over the surface.
"A. dumosa" becomes dormant during drought, losing all of its leaves to prevent water loss by transpiration. During this time it can still be recognized by the presence of longitudinal stripes on smaller stems.
Like other
ragweed s, wind blown pollen from burro-weed may be highly allergenic.Sources
* [http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/get_JM_treatment.pl?609,648,655 Jepson Manual Treatment: "Ambrosia dumosa"]
*Schoenerr, Allen A. (1992). "A Natural History of California". Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-06922-6
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