Acalypha gracilens A. Gray (redirected from: Acalypha gracilens var. fraseri)
Family: Euphorbiaceae
[Acalypha gracilens var. delzii L. Mill.,  more...]
Acalypha gracilens image
USGS, Larry Allain  
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

In dry or moist, sandy soil. Our specimens are from pastures and from along railroads. This species and the preceding one [Acalypha virginica] are united in our manuals but they are very distinct. The habitats within the known distribution are quite different. The distribution of this species in Indiana offers an interesting problem.

 

Indiana Coefficient of Conservatism: C = 3

Wetland Indicator Status: FAC/FACU

Stem erect, simple or branched from near the base, 2-5 dm, pubescent with incurved hairs; petioles about a fourth as long as the blades and usually shorter than the bracts they subtend; blades nearly linear to oblong or narrowly elliptic, 2-5 cm, obscurely crenate to entire; pistillate bracts usually arcuate-recurved, 5-10 mm, shallowly lobed into 9-15 deltoid or ovate, usually glandular segments; staminate spike mostly 5-15 mm, usually conspicuously exceeding the bracts; seeds 3 (except in var. monococca), 1.5-2 mm; 2n=40. Moist or dry, sandy soil, open woods, fields, and meadows; Me. to Wis., s. to Fla. and Tex. Many southern plants (n. to s. Ill.) have more elongate staminate spikes, to 3 or 4 cm, and have been distinguished as var. fraseri (M