Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T23:58:58.731Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Taxonomic Evaluation of Leaf and Latex Variability of Leafy Spurge (Euphorbia spp.) for Montana and European Accessions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2017

Stephen J. Harvey
Affiliation:
Entomol. Dep., Montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT 59715
Robert M. Nowierski
Affiliation:
Entomol. Dep., Montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT 59715
Paul G. Mahlberg
Affiliation:
Biol. Dep., Indiana Univ., Bloomington, IN 47405
Jim M. Story
Affiliation:
Western Agric. Res. Ctr., Corvallis, MT 59828

Abstract

Leafy spurge (Euphorbia spp.), an aggressive noxious perennial weed of North America, is a complex group that has been designated as several different species, including E. esula L. (# EPHES) and E. virgata Wald. & Kit. [E. waldsteinii (Sojak) Radcliffe-Smith]. Current classification keys are unsatisfactory in assigning plants in the field to specific taxa (or to a single taxon). These keys rely heavily upon morphological characteristics of leaves, but great variation in the leaves has been noted by us and previously reported by others. In this study we demonstrate qualitatively and quantitatively that the within-plant, within-clone, among-clone, and among-site variation in leaf morphology and triterpenoid content of the latex of leafy spurge is inherently high. Leaf characters were of little value in separating any of the accessions considered in our study. Latex triterpenoid profiles were useful in distinguishing E. lucida W. & K. × salicifolia Host. and E. salicifolia from European E. esula, E. waldsteinii, and E. sequieriana Neck. ssp. seguieriana, and all Montana accessions previously described from morphological studies. We concluded that Montana leafy spurge and the European E. esula, E. waldsteinii, and E. sequieriana belong to a single taxon: Euphorbia esula L.

Type
Weed Biology and Ecology
Copyright
Copyright © 1988 by the Weed Science Society of America 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Literature Cited

1. Alley, H. P. and Messersmith, C. G. 1985. Chemical control of leafy spurge. Pages 6579 in Watson, A. K., ed. Leafy Spurge. Weed Sci. Soc. Am., Champaign, IL.Google Scholar
2. Bakke, A. L. 1936. Leafy spurge, Euphorbia esula L. Iowa Agric. Exp. Stn. Res. Bull. 198:209245.Google Scholar
3. Croizat, L. 1945. Euphorbia esula L. in North America. Am. Midl. Nat. 33:231243.Google Scholar
4. Croizat, L. 1947. Euphorbia intercedens Podp., a homonym. Am. Midl. Nat. 37:801802.Google Scholar
5. Dunn, P. H. and Radcliffe-Smith, A. 1980. The variability of leafy spurge (Euphorbia spp.) in the United States. North Cent. Weed Control Conf. Res. Rep. 37:4853.Google Scholar
6. Ebke, D. H. and McCarty, M. K. 1983. A nursery study of leafy spurge (Euphorbia spp.) complex from North America. Weed Sci. 31:866873.Google Scholar
7. Galitz, D. G. 1980. A summary of the synonymy of leafy spurge. North Dakota Res. Rep. 77:26.Google Scholar
8. Groh, H. 1935. Leafy spurge – Euphorbia esula or virgata? Sci. Agric. 16:701703.Google Scholar
9. Hanson, H. C. and Rudd, V. E. 1933. Leafy spurge life history and habits. North Dakota Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 266., Fargo. 23 pp.Google Scholar
10. Harris, P. 1979. The biological control of leafy spurge. Page 2534 in Proc. Leafy Spurge Symp. North Dakota Coop. Ext. Serv., Fargo. 84 pp.Google Scholar
11. Hill, M. O. 1979. DECORANA – A FORTRAN program for detrended correspondence analysis and reciprocal averaging. Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY. 52 pp.Google Scholar
12. Mahlberg, P. G., Davis, D. G., Galitz, D. S., and Manners, G. D. 1987. Laticifers and the classification of Euphorbia: the chemotaxonomy of Euphorbia esula L. Bot. J. Linnean Soc. 94:165180.Google Scholar
13. Messersmith, C. G. 1979. Leafy spurge chemical control workshop. Page 78 in Proc. Leafy Spurge Symp. North Dakota Coop. Ext. Serv., Fargo. 84 pp.Google Scholar
14. Moore, R. J. 1958. Cytotaxonomy of Euphorbia esula in Canada and its hybrid with Euphorbia cyparissias . Can. J. Bot. 36:547559.Google Scholar
15. Morton, C. V. 1937. The correct name of leafy spurge. Rhodora 39:4950.Google Scholar
16. Noble, D. L., Dunn, P. H. and Andres, L. A. 1979. The leafy spurge problem. Page 815 in Proc. Leafy Spurge Symp. North Dakota Coop. Ext. Serv., Fargo. 84 pp.Google Scholar
17. Prokhanov, Ya. I. 1949. Flora of the USSR. Vol. 24. Shishkin, B. K., ed. 774 pp. (Translated from Russian by R. Lavoot, U. Plitman, ed. 1974. Israel Program for Scientific Translations. Keter Press, Jerusalem. 616 pp.).Google Scholar
18. Radcliffe-Smith, A. 1981. New combinations in the genus Euphorbia III. Kew Bull. 36:216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19. Radcliffe-Smith, A. 1985. Taxonomy of North American leafy spurge. Pages 1425 in Watson, A. K., ed. Leafy Spurge. Weed Sci. Soc. Am., Champaign, IL.Google Scholar
20. Richardson, J. W. 1968. The genus Euphorbia of the high plains and prairie plains of Kansas, Nebraska, South and North Dakota. Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull. 48:45112.Google Scholar
21. Schroeder, D. 1983. Biological Control of Weeds. Pages 4178 in Fletcher, W. E., ed. Recent Advances in Weed Research. Farnham Royal, UK. Commonwealth Agric. Bureaux.Google Scholar
22. Watson, A. K. 1985. Introduction – the leafy spurge problem. Pages 16 in Watson, A. K., ed. Leafy Spurge. Weed Sci. Soc. Am., Champaign, IL.Google Scholar
23. Wheeler, L. C. 1939. A miscellany of the new world Euphorbiacae-II. Contrib. Gray Herb. 127:4878.Google Scholar