Mucronea californica is a rare species of annual plant in the family Polygonaceae known by the common names California spineflower or California mucronea. An ephemeral plant found growing in the sandy microhabitats of coastal sage scrub, chaparral and dunes, this plant is threatened by the urbanization and development of its viable habitat and has been locally extirpated over much of its range. It has small, white to pink flowers that top inflorescences spined with awns.[1]
An ephemeral annual plant, this species grows narrow leaves from a rosette, and develops a spiny, awn-covered inflorescence with white to pink flowers on the top.
This species grows 5to by 10to in diameter. The leaves form a basal rosette, attached to the plant via a petiole 0.5to long. The leaves are shaped narrowly spatulate to obovate, measuring 1to long by 2to.[2]
The inflorescence is cyme-like. There are 3 bracts, which are spreading to nearly erect, and are connate for half of their length, shaped triangular to ovate or oblong. The bracts become acerose at the terminal nodes, and then linear to linear-lanceolate, 0.5to long, with the apex acute to obtuse. The inflorescence is covered in awns, which are 1to long.
The involucres are 3-angled and obscurely ribbed, with 3 teeth. Their surface is glandular to slightly hirsute, with awns 1to long. Flowering is from March to August. The singular flowers have a perianth 1.5to large, pubescent near the base on the lower surface. The tepals are oblong, with an entire apex. There are 6 to 9 stamens. The fruits are achenes 2to.
This species is endemic to California, and is found mostly on the Pacific Coast ranging from San Luis Obispo south to San Diego County, along with a number of locations inland from Monterey County to western Riverside County. It is found along sandy openings in a variety of habitats, from coastal sage scrub, chaparral communities, and dunes to sandy substrates in grasslands and pine-oak woodlands. It is threatened and in substantial decline from the extensive urbanization in southern California, which has made it locally extirpated over much of its historical range.