Clarkia virgata |
Clarkia prostrata |
|
---|---|---|
clarkia, Sierra clarkia |
prostrate clarkia |
|
Stems | erect, to 100 cm, puberulent. |
prostrate or decumbent, to 50 cm, sparsely puberulent. |
Leaves | petiole 15–50 mm; blade elliptic to ovate, 2–5 cm. |
sessile or subsessile; blade oblanceolate to elliptic, 1–2.5 cm, apex usually obtuse. |
Inflorescences | open racemes, axis recurved only at tip in bud, straight 4+ nodes distal to open flowers; buds pendent, narrowly obovoid, tip obtuse. |
prostrate, dense racemes, axis straight; buds erect. |
Flowers | floral tube 2–4 mm; sepals reflexed individually; corolla rotate, petals lavender-purple, mottled or spotted with reddish purple, ± rhombic, unlobed, 7–14 × 3–7 mm, length 1.9–3 times width; stamens 8, subequal, subtended by ciliate scales, pollen blue-gray; ovary shallowly 4-grooved; stigma not or rarely exserted beyond anthers. |
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. |
Capsules | 10–20 mm; pedicel 1–4 mm. |
20–30 mm. |
Seeds | brown or gray, 1–1.5 mm, scaly-echinate, crest 0.1 mm. |
brown or gray, 1–1.5 mm, scaly, crest 0.2 mm. |
2n | = 10. |
= 52. |
Clarkia virgata |
Clarkia prostrata |
|
Phenology | Flowering Jun–Jul. | Flowering May–Jul. |
Habitat | Yellow-pine forests, foothill woodlands. | Coastal bluffs in grasslands and closed-cone pine forests. |
Elevation | 400–1100 m. (1300–3600 ft.) | 0–100 m. (0–300 ft.) |
Distribution |
CA |
CA |
Discussion | Clarkia virgata is known primarily from El Dorado to Tuolumne counties in the north-central Sierra Nevada range, with scattered collections to Mariposa and Yuba counties. Clarkia virgata is very similar to C. mosquinii and C. australis and is probably derived from the former through chromosome reduction in number and rearrangement and may be ancestral to the latter, which differs in chromosome arrangement. Experimental hybrids in all combinations have very low fertility. The three species are difficult to distinguish morphologically but replace one another ecogeographically with C. australis in the south and C. virgata in the middle with non-overlapping distributions. Other than geographical distribution, C. virgata is usually distinguishable from C. mosquinii by having narrower petal blades and from C. australis by having broader leaves. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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.) |
Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Name authority | Greene: Erythea 3: 123. (1895) | H. Lewis & M. E. Lewis: Madroño 12: 36. (1953) |
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