- Sidalcea oregana var. calva
taxobox
name = Wenatchee Mountains Checker-mallow
status = EN
regnum =Plantae
unranked_divisio =Angiosperms
unranked_classis =Eudicots
unranked_ordo =Rosids
ordo =Malvales
familia =Malvaceae
genus = "Sidalcea "
species = "S. oregana""'
subspecies = "S. o." var. "calva"
trinomial = "Sidalcea oregana" var. "calva"
trinomial_authority = C.L.Hitchc.|The Wenatchee Mountains Checker-mallow ("Sidalcea oregana" var. "calva") is a very rare flowering plant that occurs only in five locations in the
Wenatchee Mountains ofChelan County, Washington ,USA . The plant has been placed on theEndangered species list. It is the rarest known plant in Washington state."S. oregana" var. "calva" is a perennial herb in the mallow family
Malvaceae . The species has a stouttaproot that branches at the rootcrown and gives rise to several stems that are 20 to 150 centimeters (8 to 60 inches) tall. Plant stems vary fromglabrous (lacking hairs and glands) topubescent (hairy) orstellate (with star-shaped hairs) below and are finely stellate above. The leaves are somewhat thick and fleshy with long petioles (leaf stalks). The leaves are dimorphic (have two forms) with the lower (basal) leaves having more shallow lobes. The flowers have light- to deep pink petals 1 to 2 centimeters (0.4 to 0.8 inch) long. The flowers are borne on stalks ranging from 1 to 10 millimeters (0.04 to 0.4 inch) in length. The calyx (outer whorl of floral parts) ranges from uniformly finely stellate to bristly with a mixture of longer, simple to four-rayed, spreading hairs sometimes as long as 2.5 to 3 millimeters (0.1 to 0.12 inch).The
inflorescence (arrangement of the flowers) consists of one to several loosely floweredraceme s (stalked flowers arranged along a single stem) "S. oregana" var. "calva" is similar in appearance to "S. oregana" var. "procera", which occurs in the same geographic region. "S. oregana" var. "calva" can be distinguished from var. "procera" by the presence of the hairs on the margins of the calyx lobes and by its large, somewhat fleshy, basal leaves, which are smooth to the touch on both surfaces.The historical range covered an area of approximately 17.7 by 4.8 kilometers (11 by 3 miles), extending southsoutheasterly from Leavenworth, Washington, to the area now known as Camas Meadows. Most of the historical records of this species are based upon occurrences in the Icicle and
Peshastin Creek watersheds.External links
* [http://ecos.fws.gov/docs/recovery_plans/2004/041001a.pdf US Fish & Wildlife Service Recovery Plan]
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