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Skip Navigation LinksLife Forms==> Plant - Plantae==> Seed Plants - Embryophyta==> Dicots - Dicotyledoneae ==> Buckwheat - Polygonales ==> Buckwheats - Polygonaceae ==> Eriogonum heracleoides Buckwheat - Desert
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Buckwheat - Desert
Eriogonum heracleoides
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Flower Head - - Salmon Meadows, Wa, USA, July 2001

Flowers - - Okanogan, Washington, USA

Habitat - - Okanogan, Washington, USA

Flowers - Back View - - Okanogan, Washington, USA

Habitat View - - Salmon Meadows, Wa, USA, July 2001

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Flower Head - - Salmon Meadows, Wa, USA, July 2001

Narrative

Desert buckwheat (Eriogonum heracleoides) is found from British Columbia south to California and east to Montana, Wyoming, and Utah. This 6 to 20 inch plant has a preference for dry areas. The white flowers are in heads and turn darker with age.

This lifeform is found in areas of low moisture such as deserts.

This lifeform is generally found west of the Continental Divide in North America

Buckwheat Family (Polygonaceae) is comprised of about 850 species divided into about thirty different genera. This family had 29 genera and 435 species growing in greater North America as of 1994.

Polygonales Order contains but one family.

Dicots (Dicotyledoneae Class) are the predominant group of vascular plants on earth. With the exception of the grasses (Monocots) and the Conifers (Gymnosperms), most of the larger plants that one encounters are Dicots. Dicots are characterized by having a seed with two outer shell coverings.

Some of the more primitive Dicots are the typical hardwood trees (oaks, birches, hickories, etc). The more advanced Dicots include many of the Composite (Aster) Family flowers like the Dandelion, Aster, Thistles, and Sunflowers. Although many Monocots reach a very high degree of specialization, most botanists feel that the Dicots represent the most advanced group of plants.

Seed plants (Phylum Embryophyta) are generally grouped into one large phylum containing three major classes: the Gymnosperms, the Monocots, and the Dicots. (Some scientists separate the Gymnosperms into a separate phylum and refer to the remaining plants as flowering plants or Angiospermae.)

For North American counts of the number of species in each genus and family, the primary reference has been John T. Kartesz, author of A Synonymized Checklist of the Vascular Flora of the United States, Canada, and Greenland (1994). The geographical scope of his lists include, as part of greater North America, Hawaii, Alaska, Greenland, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.

Kartesz lists 21,757 species of vascular plants comprising the ferns, gymnosperms and flowering plants as being found in greater North America (including Alaska, Hawaii, Greenland, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

There are estimates within the scientific world that about half of the listed North American seed plants were originally native with the balance being comprised of Eurasian and tropical plants that have become established.