FWS Focus

Overview

Characteristics
Overview

Wedge spurge is a wiry-stemmed, matting, perennial herb with tiny, grayish, triangular-to-oval-shaped leaves. The plant produces three-seeded fruits and exists only in the pine rocklands and roadsides on Big Pine Key and No Name Key (where it was successfully reintroduced) in Monroe County, Florida.

Threats

The primary threats to wedge spurge are habitat destruction, fragmentation, and modification due to development, fire suppression, invasive plants, and sea level rise. Its habitat of pine rocklands is a globally imperiled ecosystem.

Scientific Name

Chamaesyce deltoidea ssp. serpyllum
Common Name
wedge sandmat
Pineland sandmat
Wedge spurge
FWS Category
Flowering Plants
Kingdom

Location in Taxonomic Tree

Identification Numbers

TSN:

Characteristics

Characteristic category

Habitat

Characteristics
Habitat

Occurs in sunny gaps and edges in pine rockland, often on bare rock, and in cleared rockland areas such as firebreaks or roadsides.

Characteristic category

Physical Characteristics

Characteristics
Size & Shape

Wedge spurge forms a small (up to six inches), matted rosette of wiry stems with tiny, silver-green leaves.

Characteristic category

Life Cycle

Characteristics
Reproduction

Fruit production is year-round, with a peak in the fall. Little is known about wedge spurge’s reproduction; however, other congeneric species completely rely on insects for pollination and seed production while others are self-pollinating. Pollinators may include bees, flies, ants, and wasps. Ants have been observed visiting flowers of conspecific taxa, though it remains unclear whether they are effective pollinators.

Characteristic category

Similar Species

Characteristics
Similar Species

The deltoid spurge complex is distinguished from other similar Euphorbia species that may be found in pine rocklands by the small, triangular leaves. Wedge spurge can be separated from other deltoid spurges geographically (only being found in the Lower Keys) as well as by having shorter hairs and a silver-green color.

Geography

Characteristics
Range

Big Pine and No Name Key in Monroe County.

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