|
Main |
Family List (MO) |
Family List (INBio) |
Cutting Edge
Draft Treatments |
Guidelines |
Checklist |
Citing |
Editors
The Cutting Edge
Volume XVI, Number 2, April 2009
News and Notes
| Germane Literature |
Season's Pick
Too often we take for granted plants that are right under our noses. Growing literally
underfoot, along the sidewalks of Santo Domingo de Heredia, in the administration/botany parking
lot of INBio and throughout at least the Pacific portion of the Costa Rican Valle Central, is
the bafflingly seldom-collected weedy herb Euphorbia prostrata Aiton (Euphorbiaceae).
Here we turn our gaze to this humble herb, and some of its kin among the chamaesyceous
Euphorbia. Known as Golondrinas (swallows, perhaps for the wing-shape of the
paired leaves), these plants have a long history of medicinal use.
|
Left to right, these are E. prostrata (Hammel 25153),
E. thymifolia L. (Hammel 25151), E. ophthalmica
Pers. (Hammel 25150) and E. hirta L. (Hammel 25152)
--ignoring, as we always do something, the grass!
|
Having recently informed ourselves on the taxonomy of Costa Rican Euphorbia, via
review of collaborator José González's Euphorbiaceae treatment
for the Manual, we turned and tuned our eyes down to discover untold diversity; four species
growing right here in the parking lot at INBio. The really odd and wonderful thing is that
these very species pairs (E. prostrata vs. E. thymifolia and E.
ophthalmica vs. E. hirta), the first of each pair rare in collections, the
second very common and widespread, are precisely the pairs that are easily confused.
It turns out that much of what had been identified as E.
(Chamaesyce) prostrata is actually E. thymifolia, and the
humble E. prostrata is restricted to streets and sidewalks of the Central
Valley area.
|
E. thymifolia, E. prostrata, E. thymifolia |
When growing together like this they are easily seen to be different entities, and
on closer look they are vastly different.
Euphorbia prostrata has fruits (often not visible from above) exerted from the cyathium and pubescent in lines |
Whereas in E. thymifolia the fruits (easily visible right on top) are ± sessile inside the cyathium and are pubescent overall |
Euphorbia ophthalmica and E. hirta |
The other two species, side by side seem different, but just how different
is not immediately obvious. At the level of cyathia and fruits, they are
virtually identical, both having more or less pedunculate, dense heads of
cyathia, and stipitate, pubescent fruits. It can take some time to convince
oneself that E. ophthalmica is not just trodden and depauperate
E. hirta.
Euphorbia hirta |
Euphorbia ophthalmica |
Euphorbia ophthalmica and E. hirta |
The red midrib spot, usually present in E. ophthalmica is not
definitive because it can also occur in E. hirta. The really constant
differences between these two species, other than the ghestalt of leaf shape,
color and reflective qualities, are that the former has only terminal
inflorescences while the latter has them axillary and terminal.
TOP
|
|