Ceanothus pauciflorus
Ceanothus pauciflorus, known by the common name Mojave ceanothus, is a species of flowering shrub in the buckthorn family, Rhamnaceae. It is native to the Southwestern United States and Mexico, where it grows primarily in shrubland communities at moderate to high elevations. It is characterized by oppositely arranged leaves, corky stipules and white flowers. It was formerly known as Ceanothus greggii.
Description
Ceanothus pauciflorus is a many-branched shrub with woody parts that are gray in color and somewhat woolly. The flowers bloom in spring. Blooms are considered highly fragrant. C. pauciflorus is eagerly browsed by livestock and wild ungulates such as mule deer and desert bighorn sheep.Morphology
This species is a shrub, around 0.2 to 4 m tall. The stem is ascending to erect, and generally branches from at or near the base. The twigs are colored a pale gray to more or less white, and are densely puberulent to short-tomentose. The evergreen leaves are arranged oppositely, on a petiole 1 to 3 mm long, and with a leaf blade 5 to 20 mm long by 3 to 19 mm wide. The adaxial surface of the leaf is concave, colored gray-green to yellow-green, and puberulent, becoming glabrous in age. The abaxial surface of the leaf is convex, colored gray-green, and is glabrous or has short, curly hairs. The tip of the leaf is generally shaped acute to obtuse. The margins of the leaf may have teeth. The stipule is a knob-like structure.The inflorescence is a small cluster of many white flowers on short lateral branches. The fruit is a horned capsule a few millimeters wide which bursts explosively to expel the three seeds inside, which require thermal scarification from wildfire before they can germinate.
Taxonomy
This species is a member of the Ceanothus subgenus Cerastes.Classification
This species was originally discovered to science by Spanish botanists Martín Sessé y Lacasta and José Mariano Mociño on an expedition to western Mexico in 1790 to 1791. It was later described as Ceanothus pauciflorus by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1825, based on the illustrations made by Sessé and Mociño expedition. Sessé and Mociño also collected a flowering specimen of Ceanothus, later determined to be Ceanothus pauciflorus.Because Ceanothus pauciflorus was the first description of the plant, subsequent descriptions were reduced to synonyms. It was named by Asa Gray of Harvard University in 1853 as Ceanothus greggii in honor of its collector, Josiah Gregg, who found the plant in 1847 at the site of the Battle of Buena Vista in the Mexican state of Coahuila during the Mexican–American War. Edward Lee Greene named it as Ceanothus vestitus, but recent taxonomic analysis finds that C. vestitus does not have enough morphological evidence to warrant a separate taxon from C. pauciflorus.