Grayia spinosa (Hook.) Moq.
Family: Amaranthaceae
Spiny Hop-Sage,  more...
[Atriplex grayi Collotzi ex W.A. Weber,  more...]
Grayia spinosa image
Charles Webber  

Plants dioecious (rarely monoecious). Stems 3-10(-15) dm, becoming reddish brown with whitish ribs exfoliating in strips, older bark dark gray. Leaves of main stems 1-2.5(-4.2) cm × 1.5-6(-10) mm; blade green, apex often whitish. Staminate flowers: perianth segments ± enclosing stamens, 1.5-2 mm; filaments shorter than anthers. Pistillate flowers: stigma protruding through opening in covering formed by accrescent bracts. Fruiting bracts wholly connate, sessile, orbicular to broadly elliptic, 7.5-14 × 6-12 mm, base often abruptly cuneate and stipelike, margins entire, apex retuse, glabrous; wing somewhat thickened near margin, yellowish green, whitish, or pink to red-tinged, smooth, glabrous. Utricles brown, 1.5-2 mm. 2n = 36.

Flowering spring-summer. Valleys, foothills, dry, alkaline or scarcely alkaline soils, sagebrush, shadscale, and creosote bush communities; 500-2400 m; Ariz., Calif., Colo., Idaho, Mont., Nev., Oreg., Utah, Wash., Wyo.

Grayia spinosa is rarely a codominant. Its fruits are still present through July.

Grayia spinosa image
Charles Webber  
Grayia spinosa image
Grayia spinosa image
Charles Webber  
Grayia spinosa image
Grayia spinosa image
Grayia spinosa image
Grayia spinosa image
Steve Hurst