This
Dudleya is one of numerous species in the genus that form a corm out of their caudex, an underground storage organ that helps them survive. This means that plants can persist even when their above-ground features have gone.
Vegetative morphology The plants may have anywhere from one to 10
rosettes, branching at the base. The
caudex is shaped cylindrically or irregularly, and is 1 to 5.5 cm long, 2 to 20 mm thick, with a persistent, conspicuous dried leaf base from previous seasons. This is in contrast to the leaves of other deciduous
Dudleya that disappear and typically do not persist after. There are 3 to 21 leaves in a rosette. The
leaf shape of mature plants is oblanceolate. The tip of the leaf is acuminate to acute. The leaves are 6 to 35 mm long, 3 to 11 mm wide, 1.5 to 7.5 mm thick, with the
petioles 0.9 to 12.4 mm long, and 1 to 8 mm wide. The leaf blade is only slightly wider than the petiole. The leaves are
drought deciduous, but the dried leaf base is persistent. Juvenile plants may have globose leaves with rounded tips, and narrower petioles.
Reproductive morphology The
inflorescence is 6 to 17 cm tall, with the
peduncle 1.5 to 3.5 mm thick at the base. The
bracts start within 1 to 2 cm of the base, with 7 to 19 lower bracts, shaped ovate to widely ovate, with an acute tip. The lowermost bracts are 9 to 20 mm long, 6 to 11 mm wide, and 3 to 7 mm thick. There are 2 to 3 ascending branches on the inflorescence that may rebranch once. The terminal branches are 1 to 4 cm long, and have 2 to 10 flowers. The
pedicels are ascending, 1 to 3.5 mm long. The flowers have a characteristic "musky" odor. The
sepals are shaped narrowly triangular to ovate, with acute to acuminate tips. The
petals are white, fused at the base 1 to 2 mm (connation), with the keel and the base of the corolla colored maroon. Plants flower from late May to June. Chromosome number is n = 34. Seed dispersal is via wind or rain, with the seeds moving along with grains of sand on a windy day. In optimal conditions,
germination may occur in less than 72 hours. == Distribution and habitat ==