Penstemon ovatus |
Penstemon laevis |
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egg-leaf beardtongue, broad-leaved penstemon |
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Habit | Robust perennial from a woody base, the clustered stems 3-10 dm. tall, with stiff, spreading hairs below the inflorescence | |
Leaves | Basal leaves opposite, clustered, petiolate, with ovate to sub-cordate blade up to 10 cm. long and half as wide, about equaling the petiole, serrate, hairy like the stem, especially along the mid-vein beneath; cauline leaves sessile and clasping, more sharply serrate, nearly as large, but more broadly oblong, the upper ovate. |
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Flowers | Inflorescence large and open, strongly glandular-hairy; calyx 3-5 mm. long, broadly lanceolate, with parallel veins; corolla blue, 15-22 mm. long, glandular-hairy on the outside, the raised portion of the lower petal pale blue and hairy; corolla strongly bilabiate, the lower lip much the longer; pollen sacs 0.8-1.1 mm. long, fully dehiscent and becoming opposite, nearly glabrous; staminode bearded toward the recurved tip. |
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Fruits | Capsule 4-6 mm. long. |
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Penstemon ovatus |
Penstemon laevis |
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Flowering time | May-August | |
Habitat | Open woods below 3000 feet in elevation. | |
Distribution | Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington; southern British Columbia to Oregon.
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Origin | Native | |
Conservation status | Not of concern | |
Sibling taxa | ||
Web links |