Corispermum villosum Rydb. (redirected from: Corispermum emarginatum)
Family: Amaranthaceae
[Corispermum emarginatum Rydb.,  more...]
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Plants usually branched from the base, (5-)10-30(-35) cm, densely or sparsely covered with dendroid or stellate hairs (rarely with scattered papillae at margins of bracts), occasionally becoming glabrous. Leaf blades linear-oblanceolate, linear, or rarely narrowly linear (usually rather abruptly narrowed into mucronulate apex), usually plane, (1-)1.5-3.5 × (0.1-)0.2-0.3 cm. Inflorescences rather compact, dense, condensed in distal 1/2, occasionally interrupted in proximal 1/2, usually clavate or clavate-linear (rarely ± ovate). Bracts ovate, ovate-lanceolate, or narrowly ovate-lanceolate, 0.5-1.5(-2.5) × (0.3-)0.5-1 cm. Perianth segment 1. Fruits yellowish brown, light brown, or dark brown, usually with reddish brown spots and occasionally whitish warts, strongly convex abaxially, plane or slightly convex (occasionally slightly concave) adaxially, elliptic or obovate-elliptic, usually broadest beyond middle, 1.8-3(-3.2) × 1.5-2 mm, dull; wing absent or to 0.1(-0.15) mm wide, margins entire, apex triangular.

Flowering late summer-fall. Sand dunes, sandy and gravely shores, waste places; elevation not known; Alta., Ont., Que., Sask.; Colo., Idaho, Ill., Minn., Mo., Mont., N.Dak., Oreg., Utah, Wash., Wis., Wyo.

Corispermum villosum may also occur in British Columbia, Manitoba, Nevada, South Dakota, and Utah. It is probably introduced rather than native in Ontario (where it is found mostly in Thunder Bay district, known for its grain elevators and mills), Quebec, and Wisconsin. Plants from Minnesota and North Dakota are transitional toward C. americanum.