Erodium moschatum (Musk Stork's-Bill)'s Journal

January 8, 2022

How to identify Erodium moschatum (Musk Stork's-Bill)

This project collects observations of Erodium moschatum (Musk Stork's-Bill) in California to facilitate identification and prevent misidentification of this species in iNaturalist. E. moschatum is one of the most frequently misidentified species in the Geraniaceae family.

Photo tips:

  • It’s important to get a picture of the entire plant.
  • It's also helpful to get close-up pictures of the face of the flowers, sepals, leaves, and fruits, if present.
  • If there are multiple plants in the picture, it’s helpful to crop your photo to focus on the plant of interest.

How to identify Erodium moschatum:

  • Height: The young plant starts with a flat rosette of compound leaves and grows to a maximum of about half a meter (20 in) in height.
  • Leaves & Stems: Each leaf is up to 15 cm (5.9 in) long with many oval-shaped, toothed leaflets along a central vein which is white and hairy. The stems are green with white hairs (hence the name white-stem filaree).
  • Flowers: Each inflorescence has a large number of flowers in an umbel structure. The small flowers have five sepals behind five petals in shades of purple, pink, and rarely white. Each petal is just over 1 cm (0.4 in) long. The sepal tips are smooth, not bristly.
  • Fruit: The filaree fruit has a small, glandular body with a long green style up to 4 cm in length.
  • Habitat: This plant can be found in open, disturbed areas.
  • Flowering Time: February through September.

E-mos-for-journal

Similar Species:

  • Erodium cicutarium (Redstem Stork's-Bill)

How to differentiate E. moschatum from E. cicutarium:

Compare-2

References:

Posted on January 8, 2022 11:33 AM by truthseqr truthseqr | 6 comments | Leave a comment

Archives