General: Introduced herbaceous annuals, stems sessile, 15-20 cm long, prostrate to ascending, branching from base, surfaces usually conspicuously papillate, glabrous. Leaves: Opposite or alternate, blades more or less terete, linear, 1-2 cm long, sessile or petiolate. Bracts absent. Flowers: White, aging yellow, 4-5 mm diameter, petals 20, connate into tubes, calyx lobes 5, equal, hypanthium obconic, aging red, stamens 10; flowers solitary, axillary, sessile or petiolate. Fruits: Capsules finely papillate. Seeds to 100, smooth to minutely tuberculate. Ecology: Found on coastal bluffs, margins of saline wetlands, from 0-350 ft (0-106 m); flowering spring-fall. Distribution: Introduced. Arizona, Oregon, California, New Jersey; Mexico. Notes: Look to the white to yellow flowers 4-5 mm in diameter and terete leaf blades to help distinguish this species from the similar M. crystallinum, which has flattened leaf blades and larger, white to pink flowers, these 7-10 mm in diameter. Ethnobotany: Unknown. Etymology: Mesembryanthemum is either; (1) derived from 2 words: mesos, “middle,” and embryon, “fruit,” indicating a flower with its fruit in the middle, and/or (2) afternoon-blooming. The original name was Mesembrianthemum, from mesembria or “mid-day” alluding to the belief that the species only bloomed in the sunlight. After night-blooming species were discovered, the spelling of the name was changed to its current form, while nodiflorum means with flowers borne from the nodes. Sources: FNA 2004
FNA 2004
Duration: Annual Nativity: Non-Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Introduced herbaceous annuals, stems sessile, 15-20 cm long, prostrate to ascending, branching from base, surfaces usually conspicuously papillate, glabrous. Leaves: Opposite or alternate, blades more or less terete, linear, 1-2 cm long, sessile or petiolate. Bracts absent. Flowers: White, aging yellow, 4-5 mm diameter, petals 20, connate into tubes, calyx lobes 5, equal, hypanthium obconic, aging red, stamens 10; flowers solitary, axillary, sessile or petiolate. Fruits: Capsules finely papillate. Seeds to 100, smooth to minutely tuberculate. Ecology: Found on coastal bluffs, margins of saline wetlands, from 0-350 ft (0-106 m); flowering spring-fall. Distribution: Introduced. Arizona, Oregon, California, New Jersey; Mexico. Notes: Look to the white to yellow flowers 4-5 mm in diameter and terete leaf blades to help distinguish this species from the similar M. crystallinum, which has flattened leaf blades and larger, white to pink flowers, these 7-10 mm in diameter. Ethnobotany: Unknown. Synonyms: Cryophytum nodoflorum, Gasoul nodiflorum Editor: LCrumbacher2012 Etymology: Mesembryanthemum is either; (1) derived from 2 words: mesos, "middle," and embryon, "fruit," indicating a flower with its fruit in the middle, and/or (2) afternoon-blooming. The original name was Mesembrianthemum, from mesembria or "mid-day" alluding to the belief that the species only bloomed in the sunlight. After night-blooming species were discovered, the spelling of the name was changed to its current form, while nodiflorum means with flowers borne from the nodes.
Este sitio es resultado de la colaboración entre los herbarios del noroeste de México y El Consorcio de SEINet. Está administrado por el Herbario de la Universidad de Sonora