Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Sidalcea stipularis

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Malvaceae

Scientific name
  
Sidalcea stipularis

Order
  
Malvales

Genus
  
Sidalcea

Rank
  
Species

Sidalcea stipularis

Similar
  
Sidalcea diploscypha, Sidalcea pedata, Sidalcea malachroides, Sidalcea glaucescens, Sidalcea keckii

Sidalcea stipularis is a rare species of flowering plant in the mallow family, known by the common name Scadden Flat checkerbloom.

Contents

The plant is endemic to Nevada County in eastern California. It is known from only two occurrences on Scadden Flat in the Sierra Nevada foothills, near Grass Valley. It grows in marshy habitats.

Description

Sidalcea stipularis is a rhizomatous perennial herb, producing a bristle-haired stem up to 65 centimeters tall.

The leaves have oval, unlobed blades on petioles and are evenly spaced along the stem. Each is accompanied by short stipules.

The inflorescence is a headlike cluster of flowers with a cuplike skirt of hairy bracts. Each flower has five pink petals about 1.5 centimeters long each.

Conservation

Threats to this rare species include the invasion of Himalayan blackberry (Rubus armeniacus) into its habitat. One of the two occurrences is next to a road where there is heavy CalTrans activity.

The plant has no federal protection but it is a state-listed endangered species in California, which means that killing or possessing this species is prohibited unless permitted by the California Department of Fish and Game (California Fish and Game Code Section 2080).

References

Sidalcea stipularis Wikipedia