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S. S. Tillett (1967) stated that Abronia umbellata is sufficiently similar to the inland A. villosa that without information regarding locality some specimens would be very difficult to identify. He also considered A. umbellata subsp. alba (Eastwood) Munz, subsp. platyphylla (Standley) Munz, and subsp. variabilis (Standley) Munz, A. insularis Standley, and A. neurophylla Standley to be introgressive hybrids of A. umbellata with A. maritima.

The name Abronia gracilis Bentham has appeared in regional floras and treatments of Nyctaginaceae since Standley’s continental treatment (1918). S. S. Tillett (1967) stated that the taxon was reported for San Diego County, California, but cited no documenting specimens. I. L. Wiggins (F. Shreve and I. L. Wiggins 1964) considered only A. gracilis subsp. platyphylla (Standley) Ferris to enter the United States, in San Diego County, an entity considered by Tillett to be an intergrade between A. umbellata and A. maritima. The distinctions among A. gracilis, A. umbellata, and A. villosa are subtle at best, and the group is in need of careful study.

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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
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Flora of North America Vol. 4: 62, 67, 68 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
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Description

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Plants annual. Stems prostrate, much branched in large plants, forming loose mats, elongate, glandular-pubescent or glabrous. Leaves: petiole 1-6 cm; blade ovate, elliptic, or rhombic, 1.5-6.8 × 0.8-4.7 cm, margins entire to ± repand and undulate, surfaces glandular-puberulent to glandular-villous, usually ± glaucous. Inflorescences: peduncle longer than subtending petiole; bracts lanceolate to ovate, 5-7 × 3-5 mm, papery, glandular-puberulent to viscid-villous; flowers 8-27. Perianth: tube magenta to greenish, 6.5-18 mm, limb magenta, 6-16 mm diam., throat surrounded by white to yellowish white eyespot. Fruits ± obdeltate in profile, 6-12 × 6-16(-24) mm, indurate, smooth, not rugose veined, apex beaklike; wings 5, not folded, poorly to very well developed, from slightly shorter than beaklike apex of body to prolonged beyond beak, thin, without cavities.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of North America Vol. 4: 62, 67, 68 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Flora of North America Editorial Committee
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eFloras.org
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Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Abronia umbellata Lam. Tab. Encyc. 1: 469. 1791
Tricratus admirabilis I/Her.; Willd. Sp. PI. 1: 807. 1797.
Abronia californica Raeusch. Nom. Bot. ed. 3. 191. 1797.
Abronia rotundifolia Gaertn. Fruct. 3: 181. 1807.
Abronia glauca Menzies; Hook. Exot. Fl. pi. 194, as synonym. 1827.
Abronia rosea Hartw.; Baxter, in Loud. Hort. Brit. Suppl. 479, hyponym. 1850.
Perennial; stems slender, prostrate, 2-10 dm. long, sparsely or much branched, succulent, often tinged with red, viscid-puberulent or glabrous, the internodes usually longer than the leaves; petioles slender, 1-5 cm. long, viscid-puberulent or glabrous; leaf -blades irregular in outline, oval-ovate, rhombic-oval, oval, ovate, lance-elliptic, or lance-oblong, 1.5-7 cm. long, 0.5-3.5 cm. wide, rounded to very acute at the base, rounded or obtuse at the apex, entire or subsinuate* succulent, sparsely viscid-puberulent or glabrous; peduncles slender, 3-15 mm. long, viscid-puberulent or glabrate; bracts lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, 5-7 mm. long. acute to attenuate, scarious, viscid-puberulent; flowers numerous, the perianth 12-16 mm.
long, the tube yellowishgreen, viscid-puberulent, the limb 8-10 mm. broad, rose-purple; fruit
about 1 cm. long and wide, viscidvillous or puberulent above, the body indurate, 1-3-costate
in the angles, usually 5-winged, the wings coriaceous, truncate or narrowed upward, not pro*
longed above the body, slightly narrowed toward the base; seed elliptic-oblong, 3-5 mm. long, brown.
Type locality: Described from specimens cultivated at Paris, grown from seeds brought from Monterey, California.
Distribution: Sandy seashores, California, from Marin County to Los Angeles County.
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bibliographic citation
Paul Carpenter Standley. 1918. (CHENOPODIALES); ALLIONIACEAE. North American flora. vol 21(3). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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Abronia umbellata

provided by wikipedia EN

Abronia umbellata (pink sand verbena) is a flowering annual plant which is native to western North America. Other common names include beach sand verbena and purple sand verbena.

Distribution

This plant is generally found in sandy, well-drained soil in areas with low precipitation, it can become a striking carpet-like groundcover in undisturbed areas after winter rains. Pink sand verbena tolerates seaside conditions and is found on the west coast of North America from British Columbia, Canada to Baja California, Mexico. Sand verbena is typically found on beaches and sand dunes, below the coastal sage scrub, blooming throughout most of the year.[2][3]

Description

Abronia umbellata is a prostrate annual with thick, succulent leaves (leaves occur few to many and are slender, ovate to diamond-shape with stems as long as leaf blades, stems are often hairy) and pink to purple colored flowers with white centers. Flowers occur in clusters subtended by 5-8 lanceolate bracts. The flowers do not have petals, but the calyx lobes are cleft giving the appearance of 10-16 petals. The limbs of the perianth is bright colored sometimes to purplish magenta and the tube can be green or red but always-glandular pubescent. The tube includes one pistil and three stamens.[4]

A. umbellata frequently hybridizes with other species of Abronia, including A. maritima. Its flower is fragrant at night and attracts moths. The foliage can be deciduous based on environmental stress. This plant is sometimes used in California in native plant gardening.[5]

History in Europe

Originally described in 1793 by the French botanist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck,[6] Abronia umbellata was collected in 1786 from Monterey, California by the gardener Jean Nicolas Collignon of the French La Pérouse expedition, which had stopped at the capital of Alta California as part of a journey of scientific exploration spanning the Pacific Ocean. While Collignon and his shipmates perished in a wreck near Vanikoro in the Solomon Islands, some of his collection had previously been shipped back to France during a stop at the Portuguese-held Macao, including the seeds of A. umbellata. They were planted at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, and Lamarck eventually named their descendants A. umbellata, making this species the first Californian flower that does not occur outside of western North America that was described in the scientific fashion of Linnaeus.[7]

References

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Abronia umbellata: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Abronia umbellata (pink sand verbena) is a flowering annual plant which is native to western North America. Other common names include beach sand verbena and purple sand verbena.

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