Cleomella plocasperma: taxon details and analytics
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Phylum
- Tracheophyta
- Class
- Magnoliopsida
- Order
- Brassicales
- Family
- Cleomaceae
- Genus
- Cleomella
- Species
- Cleomella plocasperma
- Scientific Name
- Cleomella plocasperma
Summary description from Wikipedia:
Cleomella plocasperma
Cleomella plocasperma is a species of flowering plant in the cleome family known by the common name twisted cleomella and alkali stinkweed. It is native to the Great Basin and Mojave Desert in the western United States, where it grows mainly in wet, alkaline soils such as those around hot springs. There is a disjunct population in the Bruneau Valley of southwestern Idaho. It grows with other halophytic species such as saltgrass and greasewood. This is an annual herb producing a smooth, hairless stem which divides into several erect or upright branches which may exceed half a meter tall. The sparse leaves are each split into three narrow leaflets. The flowers occur in a raceme at the top of each stem branch. Each flower has four yellow petals and several long stamens which may be over a centimeter long. The fruit is a capsule with large lobes. It hangs at the tip of the remaining flower receptacle.
...Cleomella plocasperma in languages:
- English
- Twisted Cleomella
Images from inaturalist.org observations:
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Parent Taxon
Sibling Taxa
- Cleomella angustifolia
- Cleomella arborea
- Cleomella brevipes
- Cleomella californica
- Cleomella hillmanii
- Cleomella jaliscensis
- Cleomella jonesii
- Cleomella longipes
- Cleomella lutea
- Cleomella mexicana
- Cleomella multicaulis
- Cleomella obtusifolia
- Cleomella palmeri
- Cleomella palmeriana
- Cleomella parviflora
- Cleomella perennis
- Cleomella platycarpa
- Cleomella plocasperma
- Cleomella refracta
- Cleomella serrulata

























































































