Rupertia

Taxonomy

Rupertia J.W. Grimes Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 61: 52. 1990.

Subfamily: Faboideae.
Phylogenetic Number: 3.12.05.
Tribe: Psoraleeae.
Species Studied - Species in Genus: 2 studied; 3 in genus.

Description

Fruit: A legumelegume:
usually dry, dehiscent fruit derived from a single carpel that opens along two longitudinal sutures
; unilocular; 0.4–0.7 cm long; 0.3–0.5 cm wide; 0.27 cm thick; length less than twice as long as width; with deciduous androecial sheath; with deciduous corolla; with persistent calyx; with calyx equal in length to fruit; without orifice formed by curving of fruit or fruit segments; straight; not plicate; not twisted; symmetrical; elliptic; not inflated; compressed; without beak (R. physodes), or with beak; with solid beak the same color and texture as fruit (beak 1–3 mm long in R. hallii (P.A. Rydberg) J.W. Grimes and R. rigida (S.B. Parish) J.W. Grimes); short tapered at apex, or rounded at apex; aligned with longitudinal axis of fruit; rounded at base; aligned with longitudinal axis of fruit; with the apex and base uniform in texture; chartaceous; seed chambers externally visible; margin not constricted; margin without sulcus; margin plain; wing(s) absent; nonstipitate; indehiscent. Replum invisible. Epicarp dull; monochrome; tan; with surface texture uniform; pubescent and indurate; with hairs erect; with 1 type of pubescence; puberulent; with pubescence gray, or brown; with pubescence uniformly distributed; with simple hairs; pliable; with hair bases plain; glandular, or eglandular; with glandular dots (golden and fading with age); without spines; not smooth; with elevated features; veined, or not veined; obliquely veined relative to fruit length (at least lower one-half); not tuberculate; wrinkled; not exfoliating; without cracks; without embedded tissue, much thicker than epicarp, running from base to apex. Mesocarp absent. Endocarp present; visible; dull; opaque; monochrome; tan; spongy; without adhering pieces of testa; nonseptate; chartaceous; not exfoliating; remaining fused to epicarp; without wings. Seed(s) 1; length parallel with fruit length. Funiculus less than 1 mm long; thick; straight. Aril absent.

Seed: 4.5–7 mm long; 2.7–4 mm wide; 1.7 mm thick; not overgrown; not angular; asymmetrical; reniform; compressed; without visible radicle and cotyledon lobes; without hilar sinus; without umbo on seed faces; without medial ridge on each face. Cuticle not exfoliating; not inflated; not wrinkled. Testa present; without pieces of adhering epicarp; not adhering to endocarp; free from endocarp; dull; not modified by a bloom; colored; monochrome; brownish red; glabrous; smooth; coriaceous. Pleurogram absent. Pseudopleurogram absent. Fracture lines absent. Rim absent. Raphe not visible. Hilum present; visible; with faboid split; with the lips of the faboid split the same color as the rest of the hilum; larger than punctiform; 0.8 mm long; with curved outline; circular; marginal according to radicle tip; recessed; within corona; corona color darker than testa. Lens discernible; 0.5 mm long; with margins straight; wedge-shaped; not in groove of raphe; confluent with hilum; flush; dissimilar color from testa; darker than testa; black; within corona; corona color darker than testa. Endosperm absent. Cotyledons smooth; both outer faces convex; both the same thickness; both more or less of equal length; not folded; margin entire 180 degrees from base of radicle; similar at apex; not concealing radicle; entire over radicle; without lobes; with the interface division terminating in radicle tissue; green; inner face flat; glabrous on inner face. Embryonic axis deflexed; parallel to length of seed; without a joint evident between the radicle and the cotyledons. Radicle differentiated from cotyledon; linear; deflexed and parallel to cotyledon length; centered between cotyledons; less than 1/2 length of cotyledons. Plumule rudimentary; glabrous.

Distribution

Western Canada and United States to Mexico (Baja California).

New World; western Canada to United States to Mexico (Baja California).

Generic Notes

Grimes (1990) founded the genus.

Tribal Notes

Tribe Psoraleeae

Stirton (1981) illustrated seeds and fruits of Amorpheae and Psoraleeae. Since Isely (1962) monographed the tribe for north-central United States the spelling of the tribe name has changed as well as the genera recognized in the tribe. Amorpha (6.04), Dalea (6.08) and Petalostemon A. Michaux (now part of Dalea) are now in the Amphoreae (6), and species in the remaining genus, Psoralea (12.09), have been assigned to several genera treated here. Grimes (1990) noted that this tribe "has been described as having indehiscent fruits. However, in many North American species the fruit is secondarily dehiscent (that is, not along sutures) by transverse rupture of the pod." This technically is not dehiscence.

 Fruit and seed:  R. physodes  (D. Douglas ex W.J. Hooker) J.W. Grimes - left fruits with and without calyx and right seed.
Fruit and seed: R. physodes (D. Douglas ex W.J. Hooker) J.W. Grimes - left fruits with and without calyx and right seed.
 Cotyledon, embryo, and testa:  R. physodes  (D. Douglas ex W.J. Hooker) J.W. Grimes - embryo, cotyledons, and testa SEMs.
Cotyledon, embryo, and testa: R. physodes (D. Douglas ex W.J. Hooker) J.W. Grimes - embryo, cotyledons, and testa SEMs.