Chylismia claviformis subsp. claviformis |
Chylismia claviformis |
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browneyes |
brown-eyed primrose, browneyes, clavate fruit primrose |
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Habit | Herbs glabrous or strigillose proximally, sometimes also glandular puberulent, usually glabrous distally, rarely very sparsely strigillose or glandular puberulent. | Herbs annual, glabrous, strigillose, glandular puberulent, or, sometimes, villous. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | 6–55 cm. |
branched mostly from base, 3–70 cm. |
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Leaves | blade lateral lobes usually well developed, terminal lobe narrowly ovate, to 6 × 3.5 cm, margins irregularly sinuate-dentate. |
primarily in basal rosette, cauline reduced or absent, 1.5–20 × 0.3–3.5 cm; petiole 0.7–12 cm; blade usually pinnately lobed, sometimes lateral lobes poorly developed or absent, terminal lobe usually narrowly ovate to lanceolate, sometimes cordate or subcordate, 0.8–9 × 0.2–4.5 cm, margins dentate, sinuate-dentate, or serrate, brown oil cells conspicuously lining veins abaxially. |
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Racemes | nodding, elongating after anthesis. |
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Flowers | opening at sunset; buds with apical free tips less than 1 mm; floral tube orange-brown inside, 3–5.5 mm; petals usually white, very rarely pale yellow, sometimes purple-dotted near base, often fading purple, 3.5–8 mm. |
opening at sunset or sunrise; buds with or without subapical or apical free tips; floral tube 2–6.5 mm, villous inside proximally; sepals 2–8 mm; petals pale to bright yellow or white, sometimes red- or purple-dotted near base, fading purple, sometimes red or orange, or not changing color, 1.5–8 mm; stamens subequal, filaments 1.5–5.5 mm, anthers 1.5–6 mm, ciliate; style 5–16 mm, stigma exserted beyond anthers at anthesis. |
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Capsules | ascending to spreading, clavate, 8–40 mm; pedicel 4–40 mm. |
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Seeds | 0.6–1.5 mm. |
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2n | = 14. |
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Chylismia claviformis subsp. claviformis |
Chylismia claviformis |
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Phenology | Flowering Mar–May. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Alluvial slopes and flats, with Ambrosia dumosa and Larrea. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 800–1700 m. (2600–5600 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
CA |
w United States; nw Mexico
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Discussion | Subspecies claviformis is known from western Inyo, eastern Kern, northern Los Angeles, western San Bernardino, and northern Riverside counties, almost entirely in the Mojave Desert. It intergrades widely and gradually with subspp. aurantiaca and funerea, and hybridizes with Chylismia brevipes subsp. brevipes. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Subspecies 11 (10 in the flora). P. H. Raven (1962) subdivided this species into 12 subspecies and, subsequently (1969), he combined two of them. The latter approach is used here. Only subsp. wigginsii P. H. Raven does not occur in the United States; its narrow range is restricted to northern Baja California. Raven (1962, 1969) determined this species to be self-incompatible. Chylismia claviformis is the most complex and, along with C. scapoidea, the most widely distributed species of the genus. The central part of its geographical range is occupied by five closely related white-petaled subspecies (aurantiaca, claviformis, funerea, integrior, and peeblesii) that are very similar morphologically. South of this area four additional subspecies occur, all yellow-petaled (peirsonii, rubescens, wigginsii, and yumae). These four subspecies have sepals and petal color similar to those of C. brevipes, and P. H. Raven (1962, 1969) thought it likely that they were derived following hybridization between that species and one of the white-petaled populations of C. claviformis. North of the range of the white-petaled subspecies are found two additional yellow-petaled subspecies (cruciformis and lancifolia). Most populations of subsp. cruciformis consist of plants in which the flowers open in the early morning; in all other subspecies the flowers open in the late afternoon (Raven 1962, 1969). The following key will separate them, but there are many intergrades among the subspecies so that not all specimens will be easily identified. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Oenothera claviformis, Camissonia claviformis, C. scapoidea var. claviformis, O. scapoidea var. claviformis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | unknown | (Torrey & Frémont) A. Heller: Muhlenbergia 2: 105. (1906) — (as Chylisma clavaeformis) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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