Amsonia |
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| blue-star |
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| Habit | Herbs, perennial; latex milky. | ||||||||
| Stems | usually erect and clumping, unarmed, glabrous or pubescent with eglandular hairs. |
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| Leaves | deciduous, alternate or subverticillate, petiolate or sessile, reduced in size toward stem base, usually at least slightly heteromorphic with branch leaves proportionately narrower than main stem leaves; stipular colleters absent; laminar colleters absent. |
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| Inflorescences | terminal, thyrsoid or corymbose cymes, distal branches occasionally terminated by small inflorescences that almost never set fruit, pedunculate. |
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| Flowers | calycine colleters absent; corolla blue to purplish, white, or lavender (pink), salverform, aestivation sinistrorse; corolline corona absent; androecium and gynoecium not united into a gynostegium; stamens inserted near top of corolla tube; anthers not connivent, not adherent to stigma, connectives not appendiculate, locules 4; pollen free, not massed into pollinia, translators absent; nectary absent or annular. |
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| Fruits | follicles, paired, brown, slender, terete or moniliform, smooth, glabrous or rarely with patchy indument. |
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| Seeds | cylindric, fusiform, or ± terete, not winged, not beaked, not comose, not arillate. |
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| x | = 11. |
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Amsonia |
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| Distribution |
United States; n Mexico; Europe (Greece, Turkey); e Asia |
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| Discussion | Species 17 (15 in the flora). Amsonia is taxonomically problematic. Species of the southeastern and south-central United States are highly variable with, in some cases, no definitive species or varietal boundaries and persistent nomenclatural issues. Southwestern species are often variable and sometimes very similar to other species. This treatment conservatively maintains the species circumscriptions that were favored by S. P. McLaughlin (1982), except as noted. Three subgenera are recognized in this treatment, reduced from four in some recent literature. The southwestern subg. Articularia and Sphinctosiphon are most distinguishable in fruit, at which time some species of subg. Sphinctosiphon are hard to distinguish from one another. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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| Key |
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| Name authority | Walter: Fl. Carol., 11, 98. (1788) | ||||||||
| Source | FNA vol. 14. | ||||||||
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