Although many members of the genus
Dudleya are
rosette-forming plants with
evergreen leaves, this species belongs to the
subgenus Hasseanthus, which has diverged into
geophytic plants. Species within this subgenus are characterized by small, globose and
deciduous leaves similar in appearance and size to the
juvenile leaves of plants outside of the subgenus. The stem has evolved into a
corm-like unit buried under the surface of the soil, and plants utilize
starch reserves within the
tuberous root to survive the dry season. The reduced leaves and corm-like caudex are probably
paedomorphic adaptations as most
Dudleya seedlings have a tuberous caudex and small,
drought-deciduous leaves. This plant has distinctive, often paddle or spoon-shaped leaves with long
petioles. The inflorescences contain spreading bright yellow flowers. The stem is an oblong-shaped corm-like structure. Plants can survive the summer without any water, until moisture returns in mid-October, with the leaves finally re-emerging in November.
Morphology Plants of this species form 1 to 3 rosettes from the top of the subterranean stem, with each cluster of leaves around wide. The buried stem itself is long, and wide, with a more or less spherical to oblong shape. The leaves are deciduous in summer, and are generally not
glaucous, with an oblanceolate or spoon
shape. The leaves measure long by , with the base generally wide, the tip of the leaf shaped acute to obtuse. The
peduncle is tall and wide, with 2 to 3 simple, ascending branches. The branches are long, and have 3 to 11 flowers. The flowers are suspended on
pedicels long. The
sepals of the flower are long, and shaped deltate-ovate. The
petals are long by wide, and shaped elliptic. The petals are bright yellow, and have an acute tip. The fruit is spreading, inheriting the characteristic of the flowers. Plants flower from April to June. Chromosome
number is 2
n = 34 (
n = 17). == Taxonomy ==