Dudleya abramsii subsp. abramsii

abramsii is a species of succulent plant in the family Crassulaceae known by the common name as Abrams' liveforever.

It is a small, delicate plant found growing among rocks, and is characterized by yellow flowers with a red tinge that emerge from May to July.

It is native to the southern Sierra Nevada of California and the Peninsular Ranges across both the United States and Mexico.

The shape of the leaves is somewhat variable, as they may be lance-oblong to lanceolate, or subcylindrical, with the tips acute to subacuminate.

The leaves are a dull gray-green to bluish-green or very rarely dull-red or white in color, and are somewhat glaucous.

[3] This species is one of the few in the genus Dudleya that can withstand freezing temperatures and lower, owing to its montane adaptations.

[3][4] This plant was described as part of Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose's treatment of the genus Dudleya in 1903.

The narrow rosette of a dormant plant
The flowers