Leucospora

Leucospora multifida, known variously as Obi-Wan conobea, narrow-leaved paleseed, cliff conobea, cut-leaved conobea, or much-cleft conobea, is an annual herb in the plantain family, Plantaginaceae, and the only species in the North American genus Leucospora.[2][3][4][1]

Leucospora multifida
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Plantaginaceae
Genus: Leucospora
Nutt.
Species:
L. multifida
Binomial name
Leucospora multifida
(Michx.) Nutt.
Synonyms[1]
  • Conobea multifida (Michx.) Benth.
  • Stemodia multifida (Michx.) Spreng.
  • Capraria multifida Michx.
  • Capraria multiflora Steud.
  • Sutera multifida (Michx.) Walp.

Taxonomy and naming

The genus Leucospora, from the Greek for "white-seeded", was named in 1834 by English botanist Thomas Nuttall.[2][5] Its sole species (as of July 2019), now known as Leucospora multifida, was first described in 1803 by French botanist André Michaux as Capraria multifida.[6] The epithet multifida is Greek for "cleft many times", in reference to the shape of its leaves.[2] It has since been placed in several different genera, including Leucospora, Stemodia, Sutera, and Conobea, the latter from which several of its vernacular names originate.[6]

While one of its names, Obi-Wan conobea, a reference to the Star Wars character Obi-Wan Kenobi, is sometimes considered purely a joke snuck into the 1994 edition of the Plants of the Chicago Region, it was a name in use by regional botanists at the time, "the kind of jocular lingo that arises among field botanists working in humid, hot summer sun and bedeviled by all manner of unpleasant flying and crawling things".[2]

Description

Obi-wan conobea is a small plant, growing to around 20 cm (8 in) tall, with glandular-hairy foliage.[7] Its deeply dissected leaves may be alternate, opposite, or whorled.[2][7] The axillary flowers are borne on pedicels. Each pale, lavender flower is tubular, around 6 mm (14 in) with 5 lobes. It flowers in the mid-summer to fall.[2][7]

Distribution and habitat

The core of its native range is the midwestern United States, including most of Illinois and Missouri, extending west to Nebraska, south to Texas, and east to Ohio, with scattered occurrences beyond, where it may be adventive.[3][8]

Leucospora multifida is a facultative wetland or obligate wetland plant across its range.[9] It grows on sandy, gravelly, and marly soils in ditches, swales, and receding shorelines of rivers and streams.[2]

gollark: No, this is also not possible unless you just somehow reverse the last bit.
gollark: Well, we can brute force each bit separately I think.
gollark: Oh. Hmm. It isn't 32 bits of output.
gollark: The entire hash is a few tens of arithmetic operations in total, and there are 2^32 possible outputs, so it should be bruteforceable quite fast.
gollark: Or I guess not, due to multiplication.

References

  1. "Leucospora Nutt". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanical Gardens Kew. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  2. Wilhelm, Gerould; Rericha, Laura (2017). Flora of the Chicago Region: A Floristic and Ecological Synthesis. Indiana Academy of Sciences.
  3. "Leucospora multifida". Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  4. Brouillet L, Desmet P, Coursol F, Meades SJ, Favreau M, Anions M, Bélisle P, Gendreau C, Shorthouse D, and contributors (2010+). "Leucospora multifida". data.canadensys.net. Database of Vascular Plants of Canada (VASCAN). Retrieved 27 July 2019.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  5. "Leucospora Nutt". ipni.org. International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  6. "Capraria multifida Michx". ipni.org. International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  7. "Obe-Wan-Conobea (Leucospora multifida)". www.illinoiswildflowers.info. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  8. Weakley, Alan S. (2018), Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States, working draft of 20 August 2018, University of North Carolina Herbarium, North Carolina Botanical Garden, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  9. "NWPL Species v3.3-f9b". wetland-plants.usace.army.mil. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.