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Transcript
Native Plants of Deer Canyon Preserve
Fragrant sand verbena: June 2010
Snowballs in Deer Canyon Preserve in June? You bet! Just wander
through our sandy-soiled open fields (for example along the trail leading east
from the Preserve Center) and you are likely to come across fragrant sand
verbena, oftentimes in great abundance. Abronia fragrans is also known as
sweet sand verbena, snowball sand verbena, and my personal favorite, heart’s
delight. The genus name comes from the Greek word abros meaning graceful
or delicate. This attribute can be applied to many aspects of fragrant sand
verbena such as the rounded, smooth leaves or the arching purplish stems
that bear the new, unopened flower buds (seen to the right of the opened
flower in the above photo), but it specifically refers to the whorl of paperthin bracts that surrounds each developing flower cluster. The species
epithet fragrans comes from the Latin word fragere, meaning sweet
smelling.
Fragrant sand verbena, despite its delicate appearance, is a very
hardy perennial that grows from a substantial taproot. Stems grow upright
or more commonly in a widely sprawling pattern that gives the overall plant
an open, somewhat unorganized look. Erect stem growth may produce a plant
as tall as 3 feet, but usually these rambling plants are about half that tall.
Both stems and leaves are covered with hairs that make the plant surfaces
somewhat sticky. Oval or egg-shaped leaves arise rather sparsely along the
stems in an opposite arrangement. Often the two leaves in each pair are
distinctly different sizes with the largest leaves getting about three inches
long. Each leaf is connected to the stem by a distinct stalk (or petiole) and
the leaf surfaces have a somewhat blue-green color.
Round clusters, each consisting of 25-80 individual white flowers,
adorn these plants from May to August. Some flowers may have a slight pink
tint and the clusters measure two to three inches across. Each individual
flower is a long trumpet-shaped funnel with both male and female parts
located inside the floral tube. The flowers typically open in the late
afternoon emitting a sweet fragrance and close sometime the next morning.
Hawkmoths are the most probable pollinators.
Despite its common name, fragrant sand verbena is not a member of
the verbena family; rather it is a member of the Nyctaginaceae, or four
o’clock family (desert four o’clock was our July 2009 plant of the month).
Tubular flowers that technically have no petals characterize members of the
four o’clock family. What appear to be petals are actually colored sepals
fused into a tube. The taproot of Abronia fragrans is edible and Native
Americans are known to have ground the roots and mixed it with corn meal.
The resulting food was thought to stimulate the appetite and keep one from
becoming greedy. Eating the fresh flowers was believed to be good for
stomachaches. And a cold infusion of the plant was used as a lotion to treat
sores, boils, and insect bites. Like an unexpected burst of fireworks, let
this distinctive wildflower delight your heart and stimulate all your senses.