Eryngium cuneifolium: taxon details and analytics
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Phylum
- Tracheophyta
- Class
- Magnoliopsida
- Order
- Apiales
- Family
- Apiaceae
- Genus
- Eryngium
- Species
- Eryngium cuneifolium
- Scientific Name
- Eryngium cuneifolium
Summary description from Wikipedia:
Eryngium cuneifolium
Eryngium cuneifolium is a rare species of flowering plant in the carrot family known by the common names wedgeleaf eryngo, wedge-leaved button-snakeroot, and simply snakeroot. It is endemic to the state of Florida in the United States where it is known only from Highlands County. It is one of many rare species that can be found only on the Lake Wales Ridge, an area of high endemism. It was federally listed as an endangered species of the United States in 1987.
This is an erect perennial herb growing 20 to 66 centimeters in maximum height. The woody taproot may be over 20 centimeters long. The distinctive leaves are wedge-shaped with usually three bristle-tipped teeth at the tips. The basal leaves are largest and there are a few smaller ones along the erect flowering stem. The herbage is aromatic. The inflorescence is a compound umbel of several dense headlike clusters of flowers. Each individual flower has five sharp-pointed sepals, making the clusters bristly. The flowers have white, or possibly blue, or greenish flowers. Blooming occurs in July through January, but especially August through October.
This is a plant of the Florida scrub. It grows in bare stretches of white sand, including gaps in the rosemary and sand pine scrub and in blowouts. The land is dry and the bare, sunny gaps in the scrub are maintained by periodic wildfire. Other plants in the habitat include silk bay (Persea humilis), scrub palmetto (Sabal etonia), eastern prickly pear (Opuntia humifusa), and several species of oak.
There are 19 known occurrences of this plant, all within one Florida county. Eight are on protected land, such as the Lake Wales Ridge Wildlife Area. The other 11 are on private, unprotected land. Their status is not certain, but four of these occurrences are believed extirpated or on the verge of destruction. Remaining stretches of Florida scrub such as that inhabited by the snakeroot are vulnerable to destruction. Much of it has been consumed for development and for agriculture, especially citrus groves. Habitat that remains is in a fragmented condition. In many areas, including some of the protected regions, the land is not properly managed to maintain the natural habitat. The Florida scrub is a fire-prone landscape and many of the plants require fire every few decades to thrive. This snakeroot, for example, requires periodic disturbance such as fire to clear out tall and woody vegetation that grows up around it and blocks the sun. The plant requires wide open habitat for survival, and plants located farther from other shrubs grow more successfully. Fire suppression, which is practiced to prevent property damage, prevents this disturbance and leads to overgrowth of the scrub.
This species also needs fire in order to germinate, because excessive leaf litter and lichen cover on the ground inhibit this process. The snakeroot population skyrockets after the scrub is burned, and its survival, growth, and fecundity are increased. During fire, the plant is destroyed, but its soil seed bank is exposed for germination, and many seedlings occur. The plant has a limited capacity for dispersal, and most seeds end up in the ground near the parent plant. Germination also may be inhibited by the scrub rosemary, which produces allelopathic compounds.
...Eryngium cuneifolium in languages:
- English
- wedge-leaved button-snakeroot
- English
- wedgeleaf eryngo
Images from inaturalist.org observations:
We recommend you sign up for this excellent, free service.
Parent Taxon
Sibling Taxa
- Eryngium agavifolium
- Eryngium alismifolium
- Eryngium alpinum
- Eryngium alternatum
- Eryngium amethystinum
- Eryngium amorginum
- Eryngium aquaticum
- Eryngium aquifolium
- Eryngium arenosum
- Eryngium argyreum
- Eryngium aristulatum
- Eryngium armatum
- Eryngium aromaticum
- Eryngium articulatum
- Eryngium atlanticum
- Eryngium baldwinii
- Eryngium barrelieri
- Eryngium beecheyanum
- Eryngium billardierei
- Eryngium billardieri
- Eryngium bithynicum
- Eryngium bonplandii
- Eryngium bourgati
- Eryngium bourgatii
- Eryngium bupleuroides
- Eryngium cabrerae
- Eryngium caeruleum
- Eryngium calaster
- Eryngium campestre
- Eryngium canaliculatum
- Eryngium carlinae
- Eryngium castrense
- Eryngium cervantesii
- Eryngium chamissonis
- Eryngium chubutense
- Eryngium ciliatum
- Eryngium columnare
- Eryngium comosum
- Eryngium constancei
- Eryngium coquimbanum
- Eryngium corniculatum
- Eryngium coronatum
- Eryngium crassisquamosum
- Eryngium creticum
- Eryngium cuneifolium
- Eryngium cymosum
- Eryngium deppeanum
- Eryngium depressum
- Eryngium dichotomum
- Eryngium diffusum
- Eryngium dilatatum
- Eryngium divaricatum
- Eryngium duriaei
- Eryngium dusenii
- Eryngium ebracteatum
- Eryngium eburneum
- Eryngium echinatum
- Eryngium ekmanii
- Eryngium elegans
- Eryngium eriophorum
- Eryngium expansum
- Eryngium falcatum
- Eryngium falcifolium
- Eryngium ferrisiae
- Eryngium floribundum
- Eryngium fluminense
- Eryngium foetidum
- Eryngium galeottii
- Eryngium galioides
- Eryngium gentryi
- Eryngium ghiesbreghtii
- Eryngium giganteum
- Eryngium glaciale
- Eryngium glaziovianum
- Eryngium globosum
- Eryngium glomeratum
- Eryngium gracile
- Eryngium gramineum
- Eryngium guatemalense
- Eryngium hainesii
- Eryngium hemsleyanum
- Eryngium heterophyllum
- Eryngium hookeri
- Eryngium horridum
- Eryngium humboldtii
- Eryngium humile
- Eryngium huteri
- Eryngium ilicifolium
- Eryngium inaccessum
- Eryngium incantatum
- Eryngium integrifolium
- Eryngium jaliscense
- Eryngium jepsonii
- Eryngium junceum
- Eryngium juncifolium
- Eryngium kotschyi
- Eryngium leavenworthii
- Eryngium lemmonii
- Eryngium longifolium
- Eryngium lorentzii
- Eryngium luzulaefolium
- Eryngium macrocalyx
- Eryngium madrense
- Eryngium maritimum
- Eryngium marocanum
- Eryngium mathiasiae
- Eryngium megapotamicum
- Eryngium mexiae
- Eryngium monocephalum
- Eryngium montanum
- Eryngium montereyense
- Eryngium nasturtiifolium
- Eryngium nudicaule
- Eryngium ombrophilum
- Eryngium ovinum
- Eryngium palmatum
- Eryngium palmeri
- Eryngium paludosum
- Eryngium pandanifolium
- Eryngium paniculatum
- Eryngium pectinatum
- Eryngium pendletonense
- Eryngium petiolatum
- Eryngium phyteumae
- Eryngium pilularioides
- Eryngium pinnatifidum
- Eryngium pinnatisectum
- Eryngium plantagineum
- Eryngium planum
- Eryngium pohlianum
- Eryngium pringlei
- Eryngium pristis
- Eryngium prostratum
- Eryngium proteiflorum
- Eryngium pseudothoriifolium
- Eryngium pugae
- Eryngium purpusii
- Eryngium pusillum
- Eryngium pyramidale
- Eryngium racemosum
- Eryngium rauhianum
- Eryngium raulinii
- Eryngium regnellii
- Eryngium rosei
- Eryngium rostratum
- Eryngium sanguisorba
- Eryngium scaposum
- Eryngium scirpinum
- Eryngium serbicum
- Eryngium serra
- Eryngium serratum
- Eryngium smithii
- Eryngium sparganophyllum
- Eryngium spiculosum
- Eryngium spinalba
- Eryngium spinosepalum
- Eryngium stenophyllum
- Eryngium strotheri
- Eryngium subacaule
- Eryngium supinum
- Eryngium tenue
- Eryngium ternatum
- Eryngium thorifolium
- Eryngium thyrsoideum
- Eryngium tricuspidatum
- Eryngium triquetrum
- Eryngium tzeltal
- Eryngium urbanianum
- Eryngium variifolium
- Eryngium vaseyi
- Eryngium venustum
- Eryngium vesiculosum
- Eryngium viviparum
- Eryngium weberbaueri
- Eryngium x zabelii
- Eryngium yuccifolium
- Eryngium zabelii
- Eryngium zosterifolium
- Eryngium × fernandezianum