Cuscuta pacifica

Cuscuta pacifica
Cuscuta pacifica
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Solanales
Family: Convolvulaceae
Genus: Cuscuta
Species: C. pacifica
Binomial name
Cuscuta pacifica
Costea & M.A.R. Wright

Cuscuta pacifica is a species of dodder. Native to the coast of western North America from British Columbia to Baja California, it lives in coastal salt marsh habitats. It is a slender annual vine with yellowish thread-like stems that wrap tightly around other plants. The leaves are reduced to tiny scales, and it possesses no roots because it is a parasitic plant, like all Cuscuta, and taps nutrients from host plants with its haustoria. The salt marsh dodder produces flowers with bell-shaped, white glandular corollas with five pointed triangular lobes. It tends to parasitize Salicornia, but also may be found on other species such as Jaumea carnosa and Grindelia stricta.

The species includes two varieties. Cuscuta pacifica var. pacifica is significantly more common, occurring throughout the species range. Cuscuta pacifica var. papillata is a very rare endemic of sand-dune habitats in Mendocino County. Previous treatments included this species as two varieties of a more broadly defined Cuscuta salina, but they were recently recognized to be distinct species with clear habitat and host affinities and reproductively isolated from Cuscuta salina var. salina.[1]

References

  1. ^ Costea, M., et al. (2009). Untangling the systematics of salt marsh dodders: Cuscuta pacifica, a new segregate species from Cuscuta salina (Convolvulaceae). Systematic Botany 34(4) 787-795.