Suaeda moquinii
(Torrey) E. Greene
Bush
seepweed
Family:
Chenopodiaceae
Habit:
Shrub 2 to 15 dm., usually with slender, spreading branches;
glabrous or hairy, glaucous.
Distribution:
Alkaline and saline places in the interior deserts of
California
to western Canada, Texas and Mexico.
Seed unit:
Utricle; free seed.
Seed:
Free seed 0.5 to 1 mm., biconvex, shiny and black. Nearly
circular except for a slightly hooked projection and notch on
the margin. Often enclosed in a persistent calyx.
Embryo:
Spirally coiled embryo with a thin, firm, semi-transparent
endosperm on each side.
Purity
instructions:
Pure seed definition:
AOSA:
PSU #38 – Intact utricle with or without perianth, whether
or not a seed is present. Piece of broken utricle larger than
one-half the original size, unless no seed is present. Seed
with or without seed coat.
Lab notes:
Calyx may persist, covering the seed. Seed is often brittle and
empty. Samples often contain many empty floral parts, which can
be easily confused with pure seed units.
Average pure
seed units per gram:
2,069 seeds per gram (based on AOSA pure seed units only from
11 samples received for testing from 1999 to 2003).
Range of
percent pure seed:
6% to 63%
Range of
percent inert:
36% to 92%
Description
of inert:
Plant material, broken seed, dead insects.
Planting
instructions:
400 seeds, TB, 21 days @ 20°C; for fresh and dormant seed,
prechill recommended.
References:
(link
to main reference page)
Hickman, J.C., Ed. 1993. p. 515.
Martin, A.C. and W.D. Barkley. 1961. p. 152.
Munz, P.A. and D.D. Keck. 1968. p. 383.
Ransom Seed Laboratory