Overview
Herbs, perennial, scapose, from fibrous-coated corms. Leaves 1-6, basal; blade linear, crescent-shaped in cross section. Scape solitary, cylindrical, usually slender, occasionally stout, rigid. Inflorescences umbellate, open, bracteate; bracts scarious, not enclosing flower buds. Flowers: perianth 6-tepaled, distinctly connate proximally into tube, shiny, abaxial perianth usually bluish purple, tube narrowly campanulate or funnelform, outer 3 lobes narrower than inner 3; stamens 3, epitepalous, opposite inner perianth lobes, alternating with 3 staminodia (staminodia absent in B. orcuttii) opposite outer p erianth lobes; filaments adnate to perianth tube, linear, base sometimes dilated to form triangular flap, or sometimes with abaxial wings or appendages; anthers basifixed, appressed to style; pistil 3-carpellate; ovary superior, green (purple in B. jolonensis), sessile, 3-locular, ovules several; style erect; stigma 3-lobed, lobes distinctly spreading and recurved; pedicel erect, articulate at base. Fruits capsular, ovoid, dehiscence loculicidal. Seeds black, rounded to flattened, coat with crust with longitudinal surface striations. x = 6, 8, 12, 16, 18, 20, or 24.
Species 14: w North America including Mexico (Baja California).
Two schools of thought have existed regarding generic limits within the complex of species recognized under Brodiaea, Tritele ia, and Dichelostemma: a single large genus (Brodiaea s.l.) with three subgenera (S. Watson 1879; W. L. Jepson 1923-1925; P. A. Munz 1959), or three separate genera (E. L. Greene 1886; R. F. Hoover 1939; G. Keator 1967, 1989, 1993; T. F. Niehaus 1971, 1980). Recent molecular, anatomical, and developmental evidence supports neither of these views. Bloomeria is related to Triteleia, and Brodiaea is closely related to Dichelostemma, with the only hexandrous species, D. capitatum, being sister to the rest of the three-staminate Brodiaea/Dichelostemma clade (R. Y. Berg 1978, 1996; J. C. Pires 2000). This recent evidence also suggests that the sections presently established within Brodiaea are in need of revision; thus a sectional classification is not utilized in this treatment (R. F. Hoover 1939b; T. F. Niehaus 1971; J. C. Pires 2000).
Polyploidy and ecological specialization to serpentine and other unique substrates is common in Brodiaea, resulting in several rare and endangered species. Eleven of the fourteen species are restricted to California, where the flowering date is highly dependent on the amount of moisture in the early spring. Several species are exceedingly variable. Corms of some species were eaten by native Americans. Among the most important diagnostic characters within Brodiaea are features of the androecium, particularly the size and shape of the staminodia and apical filament appendages. These characters are easily seen with a hand lens in the field. When collecting flowering specimens, one should make a point of mounting a few dissected flowers in a manner that displays these critical characters.[1]
Photos
Taxonomy
- Domain: Eukaryota
Whittaker & Margulis,1978 - eukaryotes
- Kingdom: Plantae
Haeckel, 1866
- Subkingdom: Viridaeplantae
Cavalier-Smith, 1981 - Green Plants
- Phylum: Tracheophyta
Sinnott, 1935 Ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998 - Vascular Plants
- Subphylum: Euphyllophytina
- Infraphylum: Radiatopses
Kenrick & Crane, 1997
- Class: Liliopsida
Scopoli, 1760 - Monocotyledons
- Subclass: Liliidae
Takhtajan, 1967
- Superorder: Lilianae
Takhtajan, 1967
- Order: Amaryllidales
Bromhead, 1840
- Family: Alliaceae
(AL-ee-um)
J. Agardh, 1858
- Subfamily: Nepetoideae
- Family: Alliaceae
(AL-ee-um)
J. Agardh, 1858
- Order: Amaryllidales
Bromhead, 1840
- Superorder: Lilianae
Takhtajan, 1967
- Subclass: Liliidae
Takhtajan, 1967
- Class: Liliopsida
Scopoli, 1760 - Monocotyledons
- Infraphylum: Radiatopses
Kenrick & Crane, 1997
- Subphylum: Euphyllophytina
- Phylum: Tracheophyta
Sinnott, 1935 Ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998 - Vascular Plants
- Subkingdom: Viridaeplantae
Cavalier-Smith, 1981 - Green Plants
- Kingdom: Plantae
Haeckel, 1866
The Genus Brodiaea is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 80 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in the Genus Brodiaea: B. 'Corrina' · B. 'Pink Diamond' · B. alliacea · B. ameghinoi · B. appendiculata (Appendage Clusterlily) · B. bicolor · B. bivalvis · B. breviflora · B. bridgesii · B. californica (California Clusterlily) · B. californica pink · B. californica subsp. leptandra · B. californica var. californica (California Brodiaea) · B. californica var. leptandra (California Brodiaea) · B. candida · B. capitata · B. capitata pauciflora · B. circinata · B. clevelandii · B. coccinea · B. coerulea · B. congesta · B. coronaria (Harvest Firecracker-Flower) · B. coronaria coronaria (Crown Brodiaea) · B. coronaria rosea (Indian Valley Brodiaea) · B. coronaria subsp. rosea (Indian Valley Brodiaea) · B. crocea · B. douglasii · B. elegans (Elegant Cluster-Lily) · B. elegans hooveri (Hoover's Brodiaea) · B. elegans subsp. hooveri (Hoover's Brodiaea) · B. felipponei · B. filifolia (Thread-Leaved Brodiaea) · B. gracilis · B. grandiflora · B. grandiflora minor · B. grandiflora var. grandiflora · B. howellii · B. hyacinthina · B. ida-maia · B. idamaia · B. insignis (Kaweah Brodiaea) · B. insularis · B. ixioides · B. jolonensis (Chaparral Cluster-Lily) · B. kinkiensis (San Clemente Island Brodiaea) · B. lactea · B. laxa · B. leachiae var. leachiae · B. lemmonae · B. leptandra · B. lilacina · B. lutea · B. mexicana · B. minor (Vernalpool Clusterlily) · B. modesta · B. multiflora · B. nana · B. orcuttii (Orcutt's Brodiaea) · B. pallida (Chinese Camp Brodiaea) · B. patagonica · B. paysonii · B. peduncularis · B. poeppigiana · B. porrifolia · B. pulchella · B. purdyi (Sierran Cluster-Lily) · B. rosea · B. santarosae · B. scabra · B. sierrae · B. stellaris (Star-Flower Cluster-Lily) · B. terrestris (Crown Brodiaea) · B. terrestris kernensis (Dwarf Brodiaea) · B. terrestris subsp. kernensis (Kern Brodiaea) · B. terrestris terrestris (Dwarf Clusterlily) · B. uniflora · B. venusta · B. vittata · B. volubilis
Bibliography
- Niehaus, T. F. 1971. A biosystematic study of the genus Brodiaea (Amaryllidaceae). Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. 60.
Footnotes
- J. Chris Pires "Brodiaea". in Flora of North America Vol. 26 Page 20, 53, 55, 321, 326, 328, 331, 332, 336, 3. Oxford University Press. Online at EFloras.org.
Sources
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