Click the number at the start of a key lead to highlight both that lead and its corresponding lead. Click again to show only the two highlighted leads. Click a third time to return to the full key with the selected leads still highlighted.
5 Leaf apices conspicuously mucronate; leaves elliptic to ovate or spatulate, 1-6 mm wide, 2-4× as long as wide; [Coastal Plain of NC, SC, GA, AL, and FL]
5 Leaf apices not conspicuously mucronate (if submucronate as in P. lindheimeri, then leaves also linear to filiform), but otherwise obtuse, acute, or minutely cuspidate; leaves linear or subulate, 0.3-1 mm wide, 10-20+× as long as wide; [west of the Mississippi River, or disjunct eastwards in the inland provinces of AL, GA, VA, WV, MD, and DC].
7 Stems glabrous to minutely puberulent; terminal flower clusters 0.5-1.5 mm wide, the calyces extending past the subtending bracts; [mainly of limestone soils on the Edwards Plateau and adjacent areas]
7 Stems strongly hispid or puberulent; terminal flower clusters 3-15 mm wide, the subtending bracts exceeding the calyces; [mainly of Coastal Plain sands in e., se., and s. TX].
8Sepallobemargins yellow and scarious; plants perennial; [s. TX (Brooks, Jim Hogg, Kenedy, Kleberg counties]
6 Stems woody, from a tough, dense caudex; plants strongly perennial and long-lived, with old stems apparent; [collectively more widespread, including TX].
9Calyx (not including the awn) 1-3-1.8 mm long, broadly rounded, with no apparent veins
10Sepals densely pubescent; calyx+awn (3.3-) avg. 4.2 (-5.4) long; sepalawns (0.4-) avg. 0.8 (-1.5) mm long, densely pubescent; sepalawns moderately to extremely back-curved; stems and leaves moderately to densely (and uniformly) pubescent; [sw. MO and AR south to e. and c. TX and COA]
10Sepalsglabrous; calyx+awn (3.0-) avg. 3.8 (-4.9) mm long; sepalawns (0.2-) avg. 0.6 (-1.1) mm long, glabrous; sepalawns with little or no back-curvature; stems and leaves glabrous to minutely pubescent, the stem hairiness (when present) mainly isolated to near-nodal portions of the stem; [disjunctly scattered east of the Mississippi River, in c. AL, ec. GA, w. VA, e. WV, DC, and sc. & w. MD]
11Sepalspetaloid, the tip, margins, or entiresepal whitish; perigynous zone very well developed (mostly equaling or somewhat longer than the sepals); [of the Coastal Plain, from SC southward and westward]; [subgenus Siphonychia].
12Sepalsglabrous to the base; plant a cespitose perennial with ascending annual stems; [gulf coastal plain dunes and coastal Pinus elliottii scrubby flatwoods]; flowers borne in distinctly geometric cymes
15 Plants diffuse annuals with slender taproots, the taproots of similar width or only slightly thicker than the primary stem; flowers 1-1.5 mm long; sepallobes widely obovate (due to broadly distinct apical dilation), flowers appearing more broadly rounded (and obscurely or not strongly 5-angled) due to lack of conspicuously raised marginalcostae; [south-central SC s. to FL, w. to AL]
15 Plants (often) mat-forming perennials with thick taproots, the taproots much thicker than the primary stem; flowers 1.4-2.2 mm long; sepallobesoblong; flower bases appearing 5-angled due to conspicuously raised marginalcosta; [endemic to eastern and central Florida]
16 Stem erect, the branching symmetrical and dichotomous, the flowers therefore in weirdly geometric, tight square cymes, flowers 2.3-3.5 mm long; glabrous portion of the sepal > 1.1 mm long, sepallobes long acuminate and slender, the apicesacute to narrowly rounded (besides the mucro)
11Sepals not petaloid, green, sometimes scarious-margined; perigynous zone somewhat shorter than the sepals; [of various provinces, collectively widespread in our area]; [subgenus Paronychia].
19 Flowers 3, 4, or 5-merous, 0.5-0.8 mm long; plants often exhibiting sexual dimorphism or polygamodioecy (male plants more openly branched and trailing; female or hermaphroditic plants more densely matted with shorter, somewhat erect branches); [endemic to sandy lake margins or scrub of Florida].
20 Leaves 0.5-1.5 mm wide; cymes 3-20 mm wide; stem base 1-4.2 mm wide; [endemic to c. FL scrub and similar xeric habitats]
20 Leaves 1.2-3 mm wide; cymes 1.5-4 mm wide; stem base 0.4-1.5 mm wide; [endemic to sandy draw-down zones of lake margins in Washington and Bay counties, FL]
19 Flowers 5-merous, 0.9-1.6 mm long; plants not sexually dimorphic, usually somewhat erect; [c. MS, AL, and GA north and westwards, habitats various].
21Style elongate, 0.6-0.75 mm long, often bent; anthers 0.25-0.3 mm in diameter; stipularbracts subtending the flowers narrowly lanceolate, ca. 0.5× as long as the flowers
21Style short, 0.3-0.35 mm long, straight; anthers ca. 0.15 mm in diameter; stipularbracts subtending the flowers lanceolate, from much shorter than to exceeding the flowers.