Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness

Presented in Association with the
Western New Mexico University Department of Natural Sciences

Portulaca grandiflora Hooker
(Moss Rose, Purslane)

Family: Portulacaceae

Status: Native

Synonyms:
None

Portulaca grandiflora is an annual, introduced species from South America. Naturalized in the U.S., it is found in nearly every state. It has prostrate stems with characteristic trichomes (hairs) at the nodes and succulent, terete leaves. The flowers, subtended by two translucent sepals, have 40 or more stamens with unequal filaments. The fruit is a circumscissile capsule (opens longitudinally) with numerous gray to black seeds less than a millimeter in diameter. Unlike other portulacas, P. grandiflora is poisonous.

--Description and photos by Kevin Keith

Please click on an image for a larger file.



Portulaca grandiflora, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, succulent leaves, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, flower, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, detail of flower, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, sepals, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, flower buds and sepal, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, pubescent nodes, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021



Portulaca grandiflora, circumscissile capsule, photo Kevin Keith, Grant Cty., Cliff, summer 2021


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