4. Euphorbia L. (spurge, euphorbia)
Plants annual or
perennial herbs (shrubs or trees elsewhere), monoecious but the flowers densely
clustered into headlike units and appearing perfect, with milky sap, glabrous
or pubescent with unbranched, nonglandular hairs; stinging hairs absent. Stems
solitary to several, prostrate to erect, unbranched or more commonly branched,
the branches alternate, opposite, or whorled. Leaves alternate, opposite, or
whorled, sessile or short-petiolate, the petiole lacking glands, attached at
the base of the nonpeltate (but sometimes cordate-clasping) blade. Leaf blades
variously shaped, the margins entire, finely toothed, or pinnately few-lobed,
appearing pinnately veined or with only the midvein apparent. Stipules absent
or, if present, then either minute (less than 1 mm long), triangular scales
(these usually persistent at flowering) or small glandular dots. Inflorescences
with the basic unit a cyathium consisting of 1 central pistillate flower and
several to numerous staminate flowers in a small, cup-shaped involucre with 1–5
conspicuous glands along the rim, the cyathia terminal, axillary, and/or from
the stem branch points, appearing solitary or more commonly varying from small clusters
to relatively large panicles. Flowers lacking a nectar disc (but the cyathium
glands producing nectar), without a calyx and corolla. Staminate flowers
consisting of 1 small stamen, this with a minute, jointed stalk, usually
subtended by a minute bract at the base. Pistillate flowers consisting of 1
pistil, this with a short, jointed stalk (longer than those of the staminate
flowers); the ovary with 3 locules and 1 ovule per locule, the styles free or
fused at the very base, each shallowly to deeply 2(3)-lobed. Fruits somewhat
3-lobed (bluntly triangular in cross-section), often depressed-globose
(slightly wider than long), dehiscent. Seeds nearly circular to oblong or
oblong-ovate in outline, usually somewhat flattened in profile, sometimes
slightly wedge-shaped, the caruncle absent or a small, light-colored knob or
somewhat flattened bump at the end adjacent to the attachment point, the
surface variously smooth, wrinkled, pebbled, or with minute warts or tubercles,
reddish brown to dark brown, often all or partially covered with a thin, white
to light gray, glaucous coating. In the broad sense, 1,500–2,000 species,
worldwide.
The
inflorescence unit known as the cyathium is unique in the Missouri flora. In a
family noted for its small, inconspicuous flowers, the members of the tribe
Euphorbieae have achieved the most extreme floral reduction imaginable.
Staminate and pistillate flowers consist of a tiny solitary stamen and pistil
respectively, without any calyx or corolla. However, as in other families in
which individual flowers have become reduced to the point where they are
ineffective at attracting insect pollinators, the flowers of Euphorbieae have
become aggregated into dense clusters, each of which is associated with an
involucre and mimics the function of a larger, showier flower. In the cyathium,
the associated bracts are fused into a shallowly to deeply cup-shaped involucre
containing a single central pistillate flower that appears stalked and several
series of minutely stalked staminate flowers (each subtended by a very minute
bract) radiating outward from the center. The rim of the involucre has 1–5
conspicuous glands of varying color and shape, and in some groups each of the
glands has a white or pinkish-tinged petaloid appendage. The entire unit thus
mimics a single flower. Because most of the Missouri species have small
cyathia, care must be taken to recognize the nature of the floral assemblage to
avoid miskeying the group.
Generic limits
in the tribe Euphorbieae have remained controversial. Traditionally, the large
and morphologically variable genus Euphorbia was regarded as comprising
several well-marked subgenera but with a large number of residual unclassified
species groups (Steyermark, 1963; Gleason and Cronquist, 1991; see also discussion
in Webster [1967]). Over time, the trend became to recognize some of the most
easily recognized infrageneric groups as segregate genera, especially Chamaesyce
Gray (species 8–11, 13, 14, 16–18, 20 below; Webster, 1967, 1994; Yatskievych
and Turner, 1990). Recent phylogenetic studies involving morphological
characters (Park and Elisens, 2000) and molecular sequence data (Steinmann and
Porter, 2002; Wurdack et al. (2005) have resulted in the recognition that, on
the one hand, some of the segregate genera (like Poinsettia Graham) are
unnatural assemblages of species related to different groups within Euphorbia
in the broad sense, and, on the other hand, the removal of various segregate
genera results in an unnatural classification of those species remaining in Euphorbia,
with various species of Euphorbia in the strictest sense more closely
related to some of the segregates than to other species of Euphorbia.
The practical consequence of using a broad circumscription of Euphorbia
to include nearly all of the members of the family that produce cyathia is that
the genus becomes one of the largest genera of flowering plants in the world
and includes incredible morphological diversity. In the future, we may expect
further refinement of the classification within the tribe that will result in
the breakup of Euphorbia into smaller generic units, but these genera
will in most cases be circumscribed differently than the traditional
segregates.
In the broad
sense, Euphorbia includes plants ranging from tiny annuals to large
trees. In dry portions of the Old World, succulent members of the genus have
independently evolved growth forms convergent with those found in cacti (a
nearly entirely New World group), differing conspicuously in their milky latex,
paired (stipular) spines, and minute, imperfect flowers in cyathia. A large
number of succulent euphorbias are grown as specimen plants by succulent plant
enthusiasts, and some of the hardier woody and succulent species are cultivated
outdoors in the southern United States. The genus also includes the cultivated
poinsettia (E. pulcherrima Willd. ex Klotzsch), which is an economically
important ornamental in the United States during the Christmas season. Other
commercial uses include waxes removed by boiling from the stem surfaces of some
species, including candelilla (Euphorbia antisyphilitica Zucc.), a
native of the Chihuahuan Desert region. These waxes are used primarily in
cosmetics and skin care products, varnishes, and polishes for shining certain
kinds of leather. A number of species have been used variously for medicinal
purposes around the world. Among the negative economic impacts, some species of
Euphorbia are considered noxious weeds. In the northern and western
United States, the invasive exotic leafy spurge (the Eurasian E. esula
L.) aggressively outcompetes native grassland species, impacting the native
biodiversity of more than 2.5 million acres and also rendering these areas less
productive for grazing by cattle (Dunn, 1979, 1985). The spurges are notable
for containing abundant and diverse diterpenoid esters that result in the
plants potentially causing irritation to the skin, mucus membranes, and
digestive tract. However, as noted by Burrows and Tyrl (2001), reports of
severe poisoning by members of the genus are to some extent exaggerated.
Gleason and
Cronquist (1991) and Kartesz and Meacham (1999) included Missouri in the range
of E. hexagona Nutt. ex Spreng. (six-angled spurge). However, to date,
no voucher specimens to substantiate this claim have been discovered. The
source of confusion may be a report by Henry and Scott (1983) of an introduced
population of the species from Mercer County (but Illinois, not Missouri).
Although these authors included a statement in their discussion that E.
hexagona had not been reported from Missouri, later authors unfamiliar with
the local geography may have misinterpreted the report. Euphorbia hexagona
occurs from Montana to New Mexico east to South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, and Arkansas,
and thus may eventually be discovered in western Missouri. The species is not
particularly closely related to any of the Missouri spurges but resembles E.
corollata superficially. It differs from that species in its relatively
delicate annual habit, opposite leaves that are sharply pointed at the tip, and
seeds with the surface pebbled, roughened, or finely tuberculate. Plants of E.
hexagona would not key well to any of the Missouri species in the following
key.