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Asclepias involucrata

Species of plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Asclepias involucrata
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Asclepias involucrata, synonym Asclepias macrosperma, (dwarf milkweed) is a perennial plant in the family Apocynaceae native from the west and south central United States to north Mexico.[2] In the southwestern United States, it is found in the Colorado Plateau and Canyonlands region.[3]:138

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
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Description

It is a perennial plant 2 to 10 inches (5.1 to 25.4 cm) long with stems lying on the ground. The leaves and stems are densely covered with hair. It blooms from April to June. The flowers are in clusters at the ends of stems, with five greenish-white downward bent petals and five greenish-white pouch-like sacs. The seedpods are shaped like spindles.[3]:138

Distribution and habitat

Asclepias involucrata is native to Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, and Utah in the United States and to Northeast and Northwest Mexico.[2] It can be found in mixed desert shrub and pinyon juniper woodland communities.[3]:138

Uses

The Zuni people mix the dry powdered root with saliva and use it for an unspecified illness.[4] The Zuni also note that this plant is favored by jackrabbits.[5]

References

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