Clarkia williamsonii |
Clarkia unguiculata |
|
---|---|---|
Fort miller clarkia, Fort miller clarkia or fairyfan |
elegant clarkia, mountain Garland, woodland clarkia |
|
Stems | erect, to 100 cm, puberulent. |
erect, 30–100 cm, glabrous, glaucous. |
Leaves | petiole 0–10 mm; blade linear to narrowly lanceolate, 2–7 cm. |
petiole 0–10 mm; blade lanceolate to elliptic or ovate, 1–6 cm. |
Inflorescences | open racemes, axis straight; buds erect, mucronate. |
open racemes, sometimes branched, axis erect; buds pendent. |
Flowers | floral tube 7–13 mm; sepals reflexed individually or in pairs, tips distinct in bud; corolla bowl-shaped, petals usually lavender, white near middle with purple spot distally, rarely uniformly wine-red, 10–30 mm; stamens 8, subequal; ovary 8-grooved, shorter than adjacent internode; stigma usually exserted beyond anthers. |
floral tube 2–5 mm; sepals reflexed together to 1 side, green to dark red, sparsely to densely puberulent abaxially, with longer, straight, spreading hairs to 3 mm; corolla rotate, petals lavender-pink to salmon or dark reddish purple, triangular or diamond-shaped to suborbiculate, 10–25 mm, claw slender, equal to or longer than blade, entire, rarely somewhat expanded at base; stamens 8, unequal, outer anthers red, inner smaller, paler; ovary with hairs as on sepals; stigma exserted beyond anthers. |
Capsules | 10–30 mm. |
15–30 mm. |
Seeds | brown or gray, 1–1.5 mm, scaly, crest 0.1 mm. |
brown, 1–1.5 mm, tuberculate, crest inconspicuous. |
2n | = 18. |
= 18. |
Clarkia williamsonii |
Clarkia unguiculata |
|
Phenology | Flowering Apr–Sep. | Flowering Apr–Sep. |
Habitat | Foothill woodlands, yellow-pine forests. | Woodlands. |
Elevation | 400–2000 m. (1300–6600 ft.) | 0–1500 m. (0–4900 ft.) |
Distribution |
CA
|
CA
|
Discussion | Clarkia williamsonii occurs widely along the western slope of the Sierra Nevada from Nevada to Kern counties, and the Tehachapi Mountains barely to Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties (one collection each). There are unverified reports from Riverside and Shasta counties. Clarkia williamsonii is similar to C. speciosa and some populations of the hexaploid C. purpurea but can be distinguished from the former by petal color pattern and from both by having sepals that have distinctly free tips in bud, a trait most obvious in pressed specimens when the tips tend to spread apart. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Clarkia unguiculata is a widely distributed species in California, and occurs throughout much of the southern two-thirds of the state in appropriate woodland habitats. Clarkia unguiculata is ancestral to C. exilis, C. springvillensis, and C. tembloriensis. It is one of the parents of the tetraploid species C. delicata and may have been involved in the origin of C. heterandra. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Godetia williamsonii | |
Name authority | (Durand & Hilgard) H. Lewis & M. E. Lewis: Madroño 12: 34. (1953) | Lindley: Edwards’s Bot. Reg. 23: sub plate 1981. (1837) |
Web links |