词条 | Abutilon incanum |
释义 |
| image = Starr 021209-0009 Abutilon incanum.jpg | genus = Abutilon | species = incanum | authority = (Link) Sweet[1] }}Abutilon icanum, also known as hoary abutilon, pelotazo, pelotazo chico, tronadora, and ma{{okina}}o (Hawai{{okina}}i), is a shrub widespread throughout the arid, warm regions of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico as well as Hawai{{okina}}i.[2] It grows to between {{convert|0.5|-|2|m|ft}} in height; the leaves are ovate to lance-ovate in shape, with crenate margins, and sizes ranging from {{convert|0.5|-|3|cm|in}} in width and {{convert|1.5|-|6|cm|in}} in length. The solitary 5-petaled flowers are generally orange; in ssp. incanum they are {{convert|6|-|10|mm|in}} long and orange-yellow, while in ssp. pringlei they are just {{convert|4|-|6|mm|in}} and a deep orange with maroon spots. The {{convert|5|-|8|mm|in|adj=on}} fruits are capsules with 4–6 cells. It favors rocky slopes and gravelly flats, and occurs in arroyos, at elevations up to {{convert|1370|m|ft}}. Requiring warm-season rain and mild winters, it is found in the Sonoran Desert, but not the Mojave Desert. In Hawai{{okina}}i, ma{{okina}}o can be found growing in dry forests and low shrublands at elevations from sea level to {{convert|220|m|ft}}.[2] References1. ^{{GRIN | accessdate=2009-03-13}} 2. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www2.bishopmuseum.org/ethnobotanydb/resultsdetailed.asp?search=mao_A |title=mao |publisher=Bernice P. Bishop Museum |work=Hawaii Ethnobotany Online Database |accessdate=2009-03-13 }}{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} External links
7 : Abutilon|Flora of Arizona|Flora of Baja California|Flora of Hawaii|Flora of Sinaloa|Flora of Sonora|Plants described in 1822 |
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