Dudleya greenei
{{Short description|Species of succulent}}
{{Distinguish|Dudleya virens}}
{{Speciesbox
| image = Greene's dudleya imported from iNaturalist photo 20020748 on 21 December 2021.jpg
| status = G3
| status_system = TNC
| genus = Dudleya
| species = greenei
| authority = Rose
| range_map = Dudleya greenei range map.png
| range_map_caption = Natural range of Dudleya greenei
| synonyms = * Cotyledon greenei (Rose) Clokey
- Dudleya echeverioides Johanss.
- Dudleya hoffmannii Johanss.
- Dudleya regalis Johanss.
- Echeveria greenei (Rose) A.Berger
| synonyms_ref = {{Cite POWO|id=85588-2|title=Dudleya greenei|access-date=8 April 2022}}
}}
Dudleya greenei is a perennial species of succulent plant known by the common names Greene's liveforever, or Greene's dudleya. It is endemic to the Channel Islands of California, where it grows along the cliffs of four of the eight islands. It is a highly variable plant,McCabe, S. (1997). Dudleya gnoma (Crassulaceae): A new species from Santa Rosa Island. Madroño 44 48-58. presenting with multiple forms and varying levels of ploidy. Taxonomically, this species is an insular segregate of Dudleya caespitosa,{{Cite journal|last=Moran|first=Reid|title=Dudleya greenei|url=http://floranorthamerica.org/Dudleya_greenei|journal=Flora of North America|publisher=Flora of North America Association|volume=8|pages=179, 189}} and was placed as a stopgap taxon by Reid Moran in his 1951 thesis on the genus. It is characterized by white or green leaf rosettes, loomed over by inflorescences bearing pale yellow to white flowers.{{Cite web|last=McCabe|first=Stephen Ward|date=2012|title=Dudleya greenei|url=https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=23659|url-status=live|access-date=20 December 2021|website=Jepson eFlora|publisher=Jepson Flora Project (eds.)|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210908040355/https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=23659 |archive-date=2021-09-08 }} It is a member of the subgenus Dudleya, as it cannot be propagated from leaf cuttings, does not grow from a corm, and has tight petals.
Description
= Morphology =
File:Greene's dudleya imported from iNaturalist photo 35476236 on 20 December 2021.jpg
This species of Dudleya may or may not be caespitose; it can form clumps up to 1 meter wide. It may have anywhere from 1 to 100+ rosettes. Each rosette can range anywhere from 5 to 46 cm wide. The caudex is 2 to 5 cm wide, and may become elongated. Unlike the nearby D. candelabrum, the caudex is not swollen at the base. The leaves are evergreen, and are 3 to 22 cm long, 1 to 3.5 cm wide, and 4 to 8 mm thick. The leaf shape is variable. They may be covered in a white epicuticular wax, or present green. The base of the leaf is generally 1 to 3 cm wide, and may wound red or yellow when detached from the stem. The tip of the leaf is generally acute, while the margins of the leaves generally have 0 to 1 angles between the upper and lower leaf surfaces.File:Greene's dudleya imported from iNaturalist photo 134764950 on 20 December 2021.jpg
The peduncle is 4.5 to 50 cm tall, and 3 to 5 mm wide. There are typically 3 first degree branches on the inflorescence, which may rebranch 0 to 2 more times. The terminal branches are 1 to 9 cm long, and hold 2 to 15 flowers. The bracts are 10 to 30 mm long, and 5 to 12 mm wide. The bracts are shaped lanceolate to oblong, and are more or less thick; they are also not bent backwards (reflexed). The pedicels are 1 to 5 mm long.
The flower has sepals 1.5 to 5 mm long, shaped deltate. The petals are 8 to 12 mm long, 3 to 5 mm wide, and are connate (fused to form a tubular corolla) 1.5 to 2.5 mm. The petals are shaped elliptic, have an acute apex, and are pale yellow to more or less white (especially white on the margins). The pistils are connivent and erect.
Taxonomy
As defined by botanist Reid Moran, this species is an insular segregate of the Dudleya caespitosa complex. It is an extremely variable species that appears somewhat different on each island. There are little characteristics that can unambiguously separate D. greenei and D. caespitosa, although there are extreme, unmatched characteristics on both sides, such as out-curved petals and numerous rosettes leaves in D. greenei and red petals and thin leaves in D. caespitosa. The chromosome number is n = 34, 51, making it tetraploid and hexaploid in respect to the basic chromosome number of the genus.{{Cite journal|last=Moran|first=Reid V.|date=1951|title=A Revision of Dudleya (Crassulaceae)|journal=Dissertation (Unpublished)|publisher=University of California|pages=}}
= Taxonomic history =
The first collection of this plant was made by Edward Lee Greene in 1886, on Santa Cruz Island in the Channel Islands of California. In their 1903 work on the North American Crassulaceae, Joseph Nelson Rose and Nathaniel Lord Britton circumscribed the genus Dudleya. The species Dudleya greenei was described off of Greene's collection by Rose.{{Cite journal|last1=Rose|first1=Joseph Nelson|last2=Britton|first2=Nathaniel Lord|date=1903|title=New or Noteworthy North American Crassulaceae|journal=Bulletin of the New York Botanical Garden|volume=3|pages=17}}
in 1932, botanist Donald A. Johansen, writing in his "Contributions Toward a Monograph of the Genus Dudleya," published within the Cactus and Succulent Society of America's journal, described two new species from the Channel Islands based on collections made by Ralph Hoffmann, a naturalist and explorer of the islands who passed away the same year after an accident on San Miguel Island. Hoffmann made several collections of Dudleya from San Miguel Island, its adjacent islets, and Santa Rosa Island.{{Cite journal|last=Johansen|first=Donald A.|date=November 1932|title=Contributions Toward a Monograph of the Genus Dudleya -- III|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_cactus-and-succulent-journal_1932-11_4_5/page/287|journal=Cactus and Succulent Journal|publisher=Cactus and Succulent Society of America|volume=4|issue=5|pages=287|via=archive.org}}{{Cite journal|last=Johansen|first=Donald A.|date=September 1932|title=Contributions Toward a Monograph of the Genus Dudleya -- II|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_cactus-and-succulent-journal_1932-09_4_3/page/243|journal=Cactus and Succulent Journal|publisher=Cactus and Succulent Society of America|volume=4|issue=3|pages=243|via=archive.org}}
Johansen named Dudleya hoffmannii and Dudleya regalis from collections by Hoffmann on Prince Island, which is off of San Miguel Island. D. regalis was noted as distinct for its white flowers and size and number of rosettes. The specific epithet of D. regalis is a reference to the name of the island, and also due to their "regal" appearance described by Johansen. D. hoffmannii, named in honor of Hoffmann a few months after his fatal fall, was noted for its similarities to Dudleya septentrionalis (now Dudleya farinosa) and Dudleya helleri (now Dudleya caespitosa).
In 1935, Johansen named Dudleya echeverioides based on specimens collected in 1930 by the late Hoffmann on Santa Rosa Island. Johansen recognized D. echeverioides as being unusually distinct based on the sweetly-scented flowers, that he described as having an odor "unmistakably resembling that of woodland violets." The specific epithet was named after the plant's appearance to other succulents in the genus Echeveria.{{Cite journal|last=Johansen|first=Donald A.|date=February 1935|title=Contributions Toward a Monograph of the Genus Dudleya -- VI|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_cactus-and-succulent-journal_1935-02_6_8/page/122|journal=Cactus and Succulent Journal|publisher=Cactus and Succulent Society of America|volume=6|issue=8|pages=122|via=archive.org}}
Reid Moran, working on the taxonomy of the genus for his 1951 dissertation, revisited several of the new plants named by Johansen. Moran found D. hoffmannii to be similar to D. farinosa, corroborating Johansen's report. Gentry also reported the plants as D. farinosa. Moran recognized that D. regalis differed from D. hoffmannii with its narrower green leaves, more complex inflorescences, and more spreading petals. However, when in the field, Moran found both of these plants as well as ones with various combinations of their character. As all plants studied cytologically were revealed to be hexaploid, and with the plants intermingling both morphologically and being interfertile, the segregation of both entities was dropped in favor of placing them under D. greenei.
Plants matching the description of the odorous flowers of D. echeverioides could not be located by Moran, and with an apparent loss of the type specimen and a lack of an illustration, the original description made no distinction as to why the plant would be morphologically different from D. greenei. Moran then subsequently combined it with D. greenei.
Although Moran kept D. greenei alive as a taxon as "a matter of temporary convenience," he never published his 1951 dissertation, and thus this species has remained valid into the 21st century.
Distribution and habitat
This species is distributed throughout the northern Channel Islands: Santa Cruz, San Miguel, and Santa Rosa islands with the exception of Anacapa. Plants on Anacapa are D. caespitosa. It is found on coastal cliffs and rock outcrops. Tetraploid representatives of this species are also present on Catalina Island. However, some plants with campanulate flowers on Catalina may be of hybrid origin between Dudleya greenei and Dudleya virens subsp. insularis.{{Cite journal|last1=Uhl|first1=Charles H.|last2=Moran|first2=Reid V.|date=July 1953|title=The Cytotaxonomy of Dudleya and Hasseanthus|journal=American Journal of Botany|volume=40|issue=7 |pages=495–502|doi=10.1002/j.1537-2197.1953.tb06510.x |bibcode=1953AmJB...40..492U }}{{Cite journal |last=Moran |first=Reid |date=1995 |title=The Subspecies of Dudleya virens (Crassulaceae) |journal=Haseltonia |volume=3 |pages=1–9 |quote=Thomson (1993: 198) described D. sproulii from plants he said were brought from Catalina long before by Fred Sproul. A plant of it Thomson sent Dr. Uhl proved to be triploid. The chromosome number and the ascending petals (his Plate 47: 4) together suggest that this may be a hybrid of the diploid D. virens insularis with tetraploid D. greenei, as indeed Thomson thought possible.}}
Conservation
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/get_JM_treatment.pl?3284,3295,3321 Jepson Manual Treatment - Dudleya greenei]
- [http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=DUGR USDA Plants Profile; Dudleya greenei]
- [http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/cgi/img_query?query_src=photos_index&where-taxon=Dudleya+greenei Dudleya greenei - Photo gallery]
{{Taxonbar|from=Q5227044}}
Category:Endemic flora of California
Category:Natural history of the Channel Islands of California
Category:Natural history of the California chaparral and woodlands