Atriplex parishii S.Watson
Family: Amaranthaceae
Brittlescale
Atriplex parishii image
Dean Wm. Taylor  

Herbs, erect or spreading to prostrate, 0.5-3 dm; branches almost horizontal to ascending, fragile, white scurfy or villous (in var. parishii). Leaves numerous, all or nearly all opposite or almost all alternate, distal ones imbricate or widely separated, tending to recurve; blade lanceolate to ovate, (2-)4-10 × 3-8 mm, rigid, base mostly rounded to cordate, margin entire, gray to white, densely scurfy (or hairy). Staminate flowers mostly in distal axils pistillate in proximal axils, or mostly in terminal spike (var. persistens), or partly so (var. subtilis). Fruiting bracteoles sessile, ovate or rhombic, slightly compressed to thickened, 2-3.5(-4) mm and about as broad or sometimes broader, often subhastately lobed, united 1/2 of length, entire or with few teeth on each side, tuberculate on 1 or both faces. Seeds dark brown or almost black, 0.8-1.5 mm.

The Atriplex parishii complex consists of a series of microphyllous, low clump-forming annuals apparently disjunct from each other in the Central Valley of California and in near coastal southern California. Often they occupy vernal pools that dry as the season progresses; the substrates in all cases evidently are saline or alkaline, or both. For the most part, the bracteate distal leaves are cordate to rounded at the base, and spreading to spreading-ascending, and the fruiting bracteoles are mainly less than 3.5 mm in length.

Atriplex parishii image
Dean Wm. Taylor  
Atriplex parishii image
Zoya Akulova  
Atriplex parishii image
Zoya Akulova  
Atriplex parishii image
Zoya Akulova