Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Toxicoscordion fontanum

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Melanthiaceae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Liliales

Genus
  
Toxicoscordion

Similar
  
Toxicoscordion exaltatum, Toxicoscordion paniculatum, Toxicoscordion fremontii, Toxicoscordion, Toxicoscordion venenosum

Toxicoscordion fontanum,, common name small-flower death camas, is a rare plant species known only from serpentine marshes in California. It is found primarily in the Coast Ranges from Mendocino County to San Luis Obispo County, with an additional report of an isolated population in the Sierra Nevada foothills in Kern County east of Bakersfield.

Contents

Toxicoscordion fontanum is a bulb-forming perennial herb. Bulbs are egg-shaped, up to 40 mm (1.6 inches) long, not clumped together. Inflorescences are paniculate, sometimes with as many as 100 flowers. Tepals are cream-colored, up to 12 mm (0.5 inches) long; filaments shorter than the tepals.

Toxicity

As with many other species formerly included in Zigadenus, this species is highly toxic and potentially lethal to humans and to livestock. Some people have eaten it confusing it with wild onion, Allium spp. Zigadenus and Toxicoscordion do not, however, have the characteristic onion scent associated with Allium spp.

Ecology

It is not unusual to find species that specialize in growing on serpentine soil. There are scattered pocket of this soil in various parts of California, Oregon, and elsewhere. Metamorphic rocks such as serpentinite are formed well below the earth's surface then carried upward by geologic activity. Soils made from such rocks tend to be low in nutrients such as nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus but high in nickel and chromium. Such conditions are toxic to most plants, but some species such as T. fontanum have evolved with adaptations allowing them to tolerate serpentine soils.

References

Toxicoscordion fontanum Wikipedia