This species is most similar to two
Fouquieria native to south-central Mexico,
Fouquieria fasciculata and
Fouquieria purpusii, as they share a succulent xylem, widely spaced decurrent leaf bases, and small decandrous (ten-stamen) flowers. In the two species, they are initially woody, and their succulent xylem develops only in the lower portion of their main stem. In contrast, the Boojum tree has a succulent xylem from its initiation, with the primary thickening occurring from the meristem. The
chromosome number of this species is 36.
Taxonomic history This species was first described by
Albert Kellogg based on specimens that were collected by a J. A. Veatch in Baja California. The type description was published twice and nearly identically, in the
Proceedings of the California Academy of Natural Sciences and the
San Francisco monthly periodical
Hesperian in May 1860. Because the exact date of the publication in the
Proceedings is unknown, but is likely to be after 1862, the type description in the
Hesperian has the priority. The holotype specimen was destroyed in the
San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. This species was previously placed in the
monotypic genus Idria. However, this taxonomic classification was created before the vegetative and floral structures of
F. fasciculata and
F. purpursii were understood, as these two species share intermediate characteristics between the genera
Idria and
Fouquieria. As many other genera (
Pachypodium,
Euphorbia,
Jatropha and
Coreopsis) contain both
woody and
succulent species, and because there are few diagnostic characteristics to separate major groups within the family, the genus
Idria has been merged into
Fouquieria. == Distribution and habitat ==