Dudleya cochimiana

Dudleya cochimiana, commonly known as the Cedros liveforever, is a species of succulent plant in the family Crassulaceae endemic to Cedros Island, a large island off of the coast of Baja California, Mexico.[1][2][3][4] It is a rosette-forming leaf succulent characterized by broad, green to white leaves, and flowers with white to pink petals. It can be found on rocky slopes and canyons along the island.[5]

Cedros liveforever
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Crassulaceae
Genus: Dudleya
Species:
D. cochimiana
Binomial name
Dudleya cochimiana
S.McCabe, 2022

Taxonomy

This species was first known as Dudleya cedrosensis,[6] a name given to the plants by Reid Moran in his 1951 thesis on Dudleya.[7] The failure of the thesis to be published[8] meant that Dudleya cedrosensis was never a valid species,[6] as Moran had difficulty reconciling some morphological differences between plants on the island. Although distinct, it was often regarded as a synonym of Dudleya ingens, due to the type collection being later identified as D. ingens aff, and sometimes associated with Dudleya albiflora.[6]

In 2023, Stephen McCabe validly published and described Dudleya cochimiana in Madroño, which encompasses roughly the same plants Moran assigned to D. cedrosensis. McCabe named the new species in honor of the indigenous peoples of the central Baja California peninsula, the Cochimi.[9]

See also

References

  1. McCabe, Stephen Ward (11 January 2023). "Dudleya Delgadilloi And Dudleya Cochimiana, Two New, Rare Species From Isla Cedros, Baja California, México". Madroño. 69 (2). doi:10.3120/0024-9637-69.2.191. ISSN 0024-9637. S2CID 255596246.
  2. Oberbauer, Thomas A. (1987). Hochberg (ed.). "Floristic Analysis of Vegetation Communities on Isla de Cedros, Baja California, Mexico". Third California Islands Symposium: Recent Advances in Research on the California Islands. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara, CA.: 115–131. Dudleya cedrosensis Moran ined. Endemic and found in rocky slopes in the canyon near Pico Gill.
  3. Ratay, Sarah E.; Vanderplank, Sula E.; Wilder, Benjamin T. (2014). "Island Specialists: Shared Flora of the Alta and Baja California Pacific Islands". Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist. 7 (1): 161–220. doi:10.3398/042.007.0116. S2CID 85855995.
  4. Vanderplank, Sula; Rebman, Jon; Ezcurra, Exequiel (November 2018). "Checklist of the Plants of North Mexican Pacific Islands". Western North American Naturalist. 78: 674–698. doi:10.3398/064.078.0410. S2CID 91327690.
  5. Moran, Reid (25 June 1968). "Reid Moran 15154". CCH2 - Consortium of California Herbaria. San Diego Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  6. Eggli, Urs, ed. (2003). Illustrated Handbook of Succulent Plants: Crassulaceae. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 96. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-55874-0. ISBN 978-3-642-62629-6. S2CID 36280482.
  7. Moran, Reid V. (1951). "A Revision of Dudleya (Crassulaceae)". Dissertation (Unpublished). University of California: 231–233.
  8. Moran, Reid (1987). "Dudleya rigida Rose". Cactus and Succulent Journal of America. 1987 Sep-Oct: 187–194. Once upon a time I wrote a thesis about Dudleya (Moran 1951). This was in tended as an educational exercise, and it was; but most educational of all was finding out how much I still had to learn - which so impressed me that I never published the thesis.
  9. "UC Santa Cruz botanist names two rare succulent species". Santa Cruz Sentinel. 2 February 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
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