Cerastium brachypetalum
Gerald D. Carr

Flora of Oregon

Plants annual.

Stems erect, 5.5–30 cm, hairs long, silvery white, not glandular.

Leaves elliptic to ovate, 4–20 mm; axillary leaves absent.

Inflorescences open cymes; all bract margins green, not scarious; pedicels in fruit 2–3+ × length of sepals.

Flowers sepals 3–5 mm, hairs dense, non-glandular or with some glandular hairs, extending beyond sepal tip; petals shallowly 2-lobed, 2–3 mm, 0.6–0.8 × length of sepals; stamens 10.

Fruits somewhat curved, 5–8 mm.

Seeds 0.5 mm.

2n=72.

Road banks. Flowering Apr–Jun. 100–600 m. WV. WA; southeastern US; Asia, Europe. Exotic.

Cerastium brachypetalum has recently appeared in the Pacific Northwest but has been known in the southeastern United States since at least 1954.

Flora of North America

as described under Cerastium brachypetalum

Plants annual. Stems erect, simple or branched at base, 5.5-30 cm, shaggy, hairs silvery, spreading-ascending; small axillary tufts of leaves absent. Leaves not marces-cent; blade 4-15(-20) × 1.5-5(-7) mm, pubescence of long, glandular and/or eglandular hairs; basal ± crowded, blade oblanceolate, spatulate, apex obtuse; cauline sessile, blade lanceolate or elliptic, apex acute. Inflorescences lax, dichasiate, 3-30-flowered cymes; bracts herbaceous, lanceolate, densely pubescent, with long, ascending, glandular or eglandular hairs. Pedicels erect or ascending, bent distally in fruit, 6-15 mm, longer than capsule, shaggy, glandular or eglandular. Flowers: sepals lanceolate, 4-4.5 mm, foliaceous, with or without narrow margins, densely pubescent, hairs exceeding sepal tips; petals oblanceolate, 2-3 mm, ca. 0.5 times as long as sepals, apex 2-fid, sparsely ciliate proximally; stamens 10, with few long hairs near filament base; styles 5. Capsules cylindric, slightly curved near apex, 5-7 mm, ca. 1.5 times as long as sepals; teeth 10, erect, margins convolute. Seeds pale brown, 0.5 mm diam., acutely tuberculate; testa not inflated. 2n = 72 (Europe), 88, 90.Flowering spring. Dry, sandy places, roadsides, arable land, disturbed, open areas; 0-400 m; introduced; Ala., Ark., Fla., Ga., Idaho, Ill., Ind., Kans., Ky., Miss., Mo., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Oreg., Pa., S.C., Tenn., Tex., Va., W.Va.; Eurasia.The wholly herbaceous bracts of Cerastium brachypetalum distinguish it from C. fontanum subsp. vulgare, C. semidecandrum, and C. pumilum; the ciliate petal and filament bases distinguish it from C. diffusum and C. glomeratum. Cerastium brachypetalum differs from all those species in the long, silvery hairs that give it a grayish appearance. In Europe C. brachypetalum is more variable and eight subspecies have been recognized, two of which-subsp. brachypetalum and subsp. tauricum-occur in North America. However, they differ only in the absence or presence of glandular hairs, an insufficient distinction for recognition at the subspecific level.

Photo images

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Herbarium specimens

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