Home Flora of Pakistan
Home
Name Search
Families
Genera
Species
District Map
Grid Map
Inventory Project
Salsola incanescens C.A. Mey. Search in The Plant ListSearch in IPNISearch in Australian Plant Name IndexSearch in NYBG Virtual HerbariumSearch in Muséum national d'Histoire naturelleSearch in Type Specimen Register of the U.S. National HerbariumSearch in Virtual Herbaria AustriaSearch in JSTOR Plant ScienceSearch in SEINetSearch in African Plants Database at Geneva Botanical GardenAfrican Plants, Senckenberg Photo GallerySearch in Flora do Brasil 2020Search in Reflora - Virtual HerbariumSearch in Living Collections Decrease font Increase font Restore font
 

Published In: Pl. Nov. 2: 35. 1833. (Pl. Nov.) Name publication detail
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/2/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 6/3/2011)
Synonym Text: S. volkensii Aschers. & Schweinf., Ill. Fl. Egypte 130. 1887; Greuter, Med-Checklist ed.2, 1: 312. 1984; S. autrani Post, Fl. Syria 690.1896.
Type: Lectotype: [Turkmenistan] Ad littora caspica prope Krasnowodsk, 1825, K.E. von Eichwald (LE!) Freitag, l.c. 1997.
Habitat: The species has not been collected in Pakistan, but as it occurs scattered through Afghanistan up to neighbouring Kalat prov., there is a good chance that it grows also in upper Baluchistan and in Waziristan.
Distribution: Distribution: Northern Caspian lowland, Anatolia and lower Egypt east to W. China, south to Yemen and Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan.
Comment/Acknowledgements: Because of rather many transitional forms, specific rank for S. incanescens is debatable (already Boiss., p. 954, listed S. incanescens in the synonymy of S. nitraria). Both taxa agree also ecologically and they are widely sympatric.

 

Export To PDF Export To Word
Much like and very closely related to S. nitraria, but differing in the following characters: branches and leaves with denser indumentum; bracts and bracteoles with persistent hairs; tepal back pilose with stiff ascending hairs - in fruit thickened along a dorsal line, with distinctly incurved margins beak-like bent together and forming a 5-arched open or closed dome.
 
 
© 2024 Missouri Botanical Garden - 4344 Shaw Boulevard - Saint Louis, Missouri 63110