Dudleya formosa, known by the common name La Misión liveforever, is a species of perennial succulent plant endemic to the Guadalupe Valley in Baja California.[1] It is characterized by bright green leaves, red floral stems, and pink flowers.[2]

Dudleya formosa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Crassulaceae
Genus: Dudleya
Species:
D. formosa
Binomial name
Dudleya formosa
Moran, 1950

Description

edit

Morphology

edit

Dudleya formosa has a trailing caudex, 0.5 to 2.5 cm thick, becoming over 5 decimeters (dm) long, branching to form a loose, prostrate mound that can reach up to several hundred rosettes. Rosettes are flattish, 4 to 13 cm in diameter with around 10 to 20 leaves. Leaves are oblong to oblong-obovate, acute to obtuse with a sharp tip 0.5 mm long. Foliage is a bright green, and like other Dudleya the leaves are tinged with a red hue at the tips and margins.[3] Leaves are not glaucous. Measurements of the leaves put them at 2 to 8 cm long, 1 to 3 cm wide, and 3 to 6 mm thick.[2]

Delving further into D. formosa's leaf morphology, leaves are convex below (ventrally), and flat above (dorsally). Leaf margins are subacute. The base is 10 to 20 mm wide, and 1 to 4 mm high, but rarely, on rapidly growing stems, it is decurrent and up to 10 mm high.[2]

The peduncle is red, 4 to 15 cm high, and 3 to 6 mm thick, with foliage covering 2 to 5 cm. of the base. There are 10 to 17 bracts, which are close-set, horizontal, ovate to triangular lanceolate, cordate, and acute, with the lowermost being 8 to 21 mm long, and 4 to 12 mm wide. The inflorescence has a more pink hue, and is rather dense, being shaped somewhat flat-topped to hemispherical. It is 2 to 6 cm in diameter, with usually 3 to 7 close set branches that rebranch once or twice. The cincinni may be spreading or ascending, and up to 2 cm long, with 2 to 6 flowers. The pedicels are erect and stout, with the lowermost pedicels 1 to 3 mm long and 2 to 2.5 mm thick.[2]

Held on the pedicels are the flowers. The calyx is rounded below, 4 to 5 mm wide and 2 to 3 mm high, with sepals being triangular, acute, and 1 to 2 mm long, 2 to 3 mm wide. The sinuses, the cavity between the sepals, are broad and rounded. Petals are white and tinged with pink, or may have a bright red keel. The shape of the petals has them elliptic, acute, 8 to 9 mm long, 3 to 4 mm wide, expanding laterally from just below the middle, and 1 to 1.5 mm connate. Within the flower, the filaments are 5 to 6.5 mm long, adnate, with the epipetalous stamens slightly shorter than the antesepalous stamens. Anthers are red, and carpels are 6 to 7 mm high, with thin styles 2 to 2.5 mm long.[2]

The seeds of D. formosa are brown, ovoid, and 1 mm long. They are covered in longitudinal striations, characteristic of their genus.[2][3]

Taxonomy

edit

Taxonomic history and phylogeny

edit

Dudleya formosa was discovered in July 1945 by a Mr. Fred Wylie, who sent the specimen to the San Diego Natural History Museum. After the specimen was rediscovered by Mrs. Ethel B. Higgins, D. formosa was described by Reid Moran in the year 1950. Dr. Charles H. Uhl of Cornell University reports a haploid number of 17 chromosomes. D. formosa was initially placed under the subgenus Stylophyllum due to the spreading petals and carpels.[2] Since recent phylogenetic analysis has disregarded the existence of the subgenus Stylophyllum, D. formosa instead finds itself placed in a proposed clade Formosa, along with D. edulis and some members of D. attenuata.[4]

Characteristics

edit

Dudleya formosa finds itself distinguished from other members in its clade through its short and broad rosette leaves. The dense inflorescence, stout pedicels, and pink, spreading petals further separate it as a species.

Key for differentiating D. formosa from other Dudleya[2][3]
Species Leaf shape Leaf characteristics Peduncle height Inflorescence Petals Native to Baja California?
Dudleya formosa Short, broad Not glaucous or viscid 4 to 15 cm Dense White – pink, spreading Yes
Dudleya anomala Narrow Viscid 5 to 15 cm Open White, somewhat spreading Yes
Dudleya densiflora Long, slender Glaucous, more numerous 10 to 30 cm Dense White - pink, spreading No
Dudleya edulis Long, slender Waxy 10 to 50 cm Open White, spreading, but narrower Yes
Dudleya stolonifera Broad Not glaucous or viscid 2 to 25 cm Open Yellow, connate No
Dudleya traskiae Long, broad Glaucous, more numerous 20 to 50 cm - Bright yellow, less spreading No
Dudleya virens Long, broad Glaucous or not 6 to 70 cm Open White, spreading Yes (Guadalupe Island)
Dudleya viscida Long, slender Viscid, more numerous 15 to 70 cm - White – pink, somewhat spreading No

Hybrids

edit
  • Dudleya attenuata subsp. attenuata × D. formosa (Guadalupe Valley hybrid liveforever) - Occurs on the south side of the Guadalupe Valley northeast of Ensenada.[1]
  • Dudleya brittonii × D. formosa (Britton hybrid liveforever) - Confined to the mouth of the Rio Guadalupe north of Ensenada.[1]
  • Dudleya edulis × D. formosa (Guadalupe La Misión hybrid liveforever) - Occurs on the south side of the Guadalupe Valley.[1]

Distribution and habitat

edit

Dudleya formosa occurs in the Guadalupe Valley in far northwestern Baja California. It is particularly located around the vicinity of the town of La Misión. It occurs on north-facing cliffs on basaltic rock.[1][2]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Rebman, J. P.; Gibson, J.; Rich, K. (2016). "Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Baja California, Mexico" (PDF). San Diego Society of Natural History. 45: 133.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Moran, Reid (1950). "DUDLEYA FORMOSA, A NEW SPECIES FROM NORTHERN BAJA CALIFORNIA". Desert Plant Life. 22 (6): 65–68 – via crassulaceae.com.
  3. ^ a b c McCabe, Stephen Ward. "Dudleya, in Jepson eFlora". Jepson Flora Project (eds.). Jepson Herbarium. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  4. ^ Yost, J. M., Bontrager, M., McCabe, S. W., Burton, D., Simpson, M. G., Kay, K. M., & Ritter, M. (2013). Phylogenetic relationships and evolution in Dudleya (Crassulaceae). Systematic Botany, 38(4), 1096-1104.
edit

Pictures from CalPhotos