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Fremont
Geranium
Common
Name(s):
Fremont geranium
Scientific
Name:
Geranium
caespitosum James var. fremontii (Torr. ex Gray) Dorn
Scientific
Name Synonyms:
Geranium fremontii
Torr. ex Gray
Symbol:
GECAF
Description:
Life
Span: Perennial
Origin:
Native
Season: Cool
Growth Characteristics:
A
flowering forb, growing 4 to 36 inches tall. Stems are stout, forked,
and hairy. Reproduces by seed. It blooms from May to September.
Flowers/Inflorescence:
Usually
a deep rose-purple, with five petals.
Fruits/Seeds:Each
seed is tipped with an elongated tail, which coils spirally at maturity.
The tail assists the pointed seed in penetrating the soil.
Leaves: Palmately
lobed, petioles of basal and lower leaves are hairy, but not sticky.
Leaves give off a distinctive odor when crushed.
Ecological
Adaptations:
Fremont
geranium is common on foothills, in subalpine meadows, and ponderosa
pine forests, between 6500 and 11,500 feet.
Soils: Usually
grows in rich soils.
Associated Species:
Sagebrush,
rabbitbrush, tall
larkspur, lupine, brome grasses.
Uses and
Management:
Fremont
geranium provides good forage in the Southwest, especially for sheep,
and can decrease under heavy grazing. Cattle grazing may cause it
to increase. Deer graze both the flowers and leaves.
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