Clarkia prostrata |
Clarkia heterandra |
|
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prostrate clarkia |
California gaura, heterogaura, mountain clarkia |
|
Stems | prostrate or decumbent, to 50 cm, sparsely puberulent. |
erect, to 60 cm, glandular puberulent. |
Leaves | sessile or subsessile; blade oblanceolate to elliptic, 1–2.5 cm, apex usually obtuse. |
petiole 5–20 mm; blade lanceolate to ovate, 2–8 cm. |
Inflorescences | prostrate, dense racemes, axis straight; buds erect. |
open racemes or panicles, axis straight; buds erect. |
Flowers | floral tube 4–7 mm; sepals usually reflexed in pairs; corolla bowl-shaped, petals lavender-pink shading pale yellow basally, with reddish purple spot above base, 10–15 mm; stamens 8, subequal; ovary 8-grooved; stigma not exserted beyond anthers. |
sometimes autogamous; floral tube 1–2 mm; sepals reflexed together to 1 side; corolla rotate, petals elliptic to obovate, tapered to claw; stamens 8, unequal, anthers cream or light pink, inner ones smaller, sterile; ovary subglobose, grooves obscure; stigma not exserted beyond anthers. |
Capsules | 20–30 mm. |
2–3 mm, indehiscent, nutlike; sessile or pedicellate (to 2 mm). |
Seeds | brown or gray, 1–1.5 mm, scaly, crest 0.2 mm. |
1 or 2. |
2n | = 52. |
= 18. |
Clarkia prostrata |
Clarkia heterandra |
|
Phenology | Flowering May–Jul. | Flowering May–Jul. |
Habitat | Coastal bluffs in grasslands and closed-cone pine forests. | Shady sites, woodlands, yellow-pine forests. |
Elevation | 0–100 m. (0–300 ft.) | 500–2000 m. (1600–6600 ft.) |
Distribution |
CA |
CA; OR
|
Discussion | Clarkia prostrata, like C. davyi, occurs only on coastal bluffs and adjacent low elevation pine forests along the Pacific coast, and in this case only in the California Central Coast Subregion in Monterey, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, and San Luis Obispo counties. Clarkia prostrata is a hexaploid that combines the tetraploid genome of C. davyi and the diploid genome of C. speciosa. Clarkia prostrata is morphologically and ecologically very similar to C. davyi but can usually be distinguished by its larger flowers with a spot on each petal. It differs from C. speciosa by having smaller flowers with the stigma not exserted beyond the anthers. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Clarkia heterandra occurs in southern Oregon and California, where it is known from the Klamath Ranges in Trinity County, widely in the Sierra Nevada and Tehachapi Mountain area from Nevada to Kern counties, and in the South Coast and Transverse Ranges from San Luis Obispo to Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Prior to 1986, Clarkia heterandra was treated as the monotypic genus Heterogaura, thought to be possibly related to the genus Gaura (now a section of Oenothera) due to its similar indehiscent fruits. However, molecular data indicate that C. heterandra is clearly within Clarkia, most closely related to C. dudleyana and C. unguiculata, which suggests a possible hybrid origin at the diploid level (K. J. Sytsma and L. D. Gottlieb 1986, 1986b; W. L. Wagner et al. 2007). Clarkia dudleyana and C. unguiculata produce spontaneous hybrids when grown adjacent to each other if they come from allopatric populations. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Gaura heterandra, Heterogaura heterandra | |
Name authority | H. Lewis & M. E. Lewis: Madroño 12: 36. (1953) | (Torrey) H. Lewis & P. H. Raven: Madroño 39: 163. (1992) |
Web links |