Stephanomeria malheurensis Gottlieb
Family: Asteraceae
Malheur Wire-Lettuce
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Annuals, 10-60 cm. Stems single, branches ascending, glabrous. Leaves withered at flowering; basal blades oblanceolate to spatulate, 5-7 cm, margins entire to pinnately lobed (faces glabrous); cauline much reduced, bractlike. Heads borne singly along branches. Peduncles 5-10 mm (glabrous). Calyculi of appressed bractlets. Involucres 8-9.5 mm. Florets 5-6 (ligules usually pink, rarely white or orange-yellow). Cypselae tan to light brown, 3.3-3.8 mm, faces moderately tuberculate, grooved; pappi of 9-12(-15), light tan bristles (connate in groups of 2-4, bristles and/or bases persistent), plumose on distal 50-60%. 2n = 16.

Flowering Jul-Aug. Soils derived from volcanic tuff, high desert. of conservation concern; 1600 m; Oreg.

Stephanomeria malheurensis has been examined in a series of studies (L. D. Gottlieb 1973b, 1977, 1978b, 1979, 1991; Gottlieb and J. P. Bennett 1983; S. Brauner and Gottlieb 1987, 1989; B. A. Bohm and Gottlieb 1989) because it is one of the very few examples of the recent, natural origin of a diploid, annual plant species. At the type locality, it grows with a population of S. exigua subsp. coronaria that is thought to be its progenitor.

Stephanomeria malheurensis is known from a single locality in Harney County, Oregon, growing in soil derived from volcanic tuff in the high desert of eastern Oregon. It is a federally listed rare and endangered species, and is in the Center for Plant Conservation´s National Collection of Endangered Plants.