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coyote gourd, coyote gourd or melon, coyote melon

field pumpkin, pumpkin, pumpkin/squash

Habit Plants perennial; roots tuberous.
Stems

prostrate, often rooting adventitiously at nodes, to 2 m, villous-hirsute to hispid-hirsute with deflexed hairs, glabrescent and muriculate on angles in age;

tendrils mostly 3(–5)-branched 1–1.5 cm above base, retrorsely hispid, gland-tipped.

Leaves

petiole (2–)3–7 cm, densely hispid-hirsute with short, deflexed hairs mixed with pustulate hairs;

blade suborbiculate to depressed-ovate, palmately 5-lobed, sinuses 1/2–2/3 to petiole, 3–7 × 4–10 cm, usually broader than long or equally so, base cordate, lobes lanceolate-acuminate to triangular or triangular-lanceolate, sometimes irregularly sublobed, margins remotely crenate to remotely serrate-crenate, surfaces appressed-hispid abaxially and muriculate, hirsute-strigillose to hispid-strigose adaxially, midvein and major veins whitish adaxially from densely hispidulous-strigillose with white hairs, eglandular.

Peduncles

in fruit shallowly 5-ribbed, not abruptly expanded at point of fruit attachment, 3–8 cm, spongy.

Flowers

hypanthium cupulate to campanulate, 2–7(–20) mm;

sepals linear-subulate, 2–10 mm;

corolla golden yellow to yellow, tubular-campanulate, 2.5–5 cm;

anther filaments glabrous;

ovary densely pubescent.

Seeds

dull white, ovate to oblong, 9–14 mm, margins thickened-raised, surfaces smooth or slightly rough.

Pepos

dull green, narrowly 10-striped and white-mottled, ellipsoid-globose to globose or depressed-globose, 7–10 cm, smooth.

2n

= 40.

Cucurbita palmata

Cucurbita pepo

Phenology Flowering (Feb–)Apr–Sep(–Oct).
Habitat Rocky lake shores, washes, stream beds and overflow channels, lava beds, roadsides, waste places, alkali plains, creosote bush scrub, saltbush scrub, grassland-saltbush scrub, annual grasslands, chaparral-desert scrub, upland desert scrub
Elevation (-30–)200–1000(–1300) m ((-100–)700–3300(–4300) ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CA; NV; UT; Mexico (Baja California, Sonora)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AL; CA; CT; KS; KY; LA; MA; MI; NC; NH; NM; NV; NY; OH; PA; SC; TN; UT; VA; Mexico; Central America (Guatemala) [Introduced also nearly worldwide]
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Some plants of Cucurbita palmata from Baja California and California have uniformly whitish gray, hirsute-strigillose adaxial leaf surfaces; these have been recognized as C. californica. Most plants from Arizona and eastern San Bernardino County, California, and some from elsewhere in Baja California and California, have the midrib and major veins whitish like those of C. digitata.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Subspecies 2 (1 in the flora).

Archaeological and molecular-genetic research, especially data from mitochondrial DNA and RAPD studies (O. I Sanjur et al. 2002; D. S. Decker et al. 2002b) and earlier isozymic and chloroplast DNA studies (for example, Decker et al. 1993), indicates that Cucurbita pepo in the broad sense includes two lineages: (1) C. pepo in the strict sense, a Mexican lineage of domesticates that differs from plants generally identified previously as C. pepo subsp. ovifera (here as C. melopepo) by a derived molecular feature (a difference in three adjacent base pairs) that occurs also in the C. moschata and C. sororia L. H. Bailey and C. argyrosperma Huber groups, and was shared presumably by the wild ancestor of C. pepo, which is unknown and possibly extinct; and (2) C. melopepo, a lineage of northeastern Mexico and the eastern Unites States in which the three wild varieties (var. fraterna, var. ozarkana, var. texana) and the domesticated variety (var. ovifera) share identical mitochondrial DNA sequences (Sanjur et al.) as well as similarities in isozymes and other kinds of DNA. Domesticates of C. pepo and C. melopepo are independently derived lineages.

Cucurbita pepo subsp. gumala Teppner comprises domesticates from Guatemala and adjacent southern Mexico and apparently is native there (H. Teppner 2000, 2004). The plants have depressed-globose pepos 13–20 cm in diameter with extremely thick rind, ripening orange-yellow, and with orange flesh. Teppner observed that the fruits of subsp. gumala are similar to the ancient ones from Guilá Naquitz cave in Oaxaca.

Cultivars of Cucurbita pepo with edible pepos have been divided into eight groups (H. S. Paris 1986, 1989; see also E. F. Castetter 1925), based mainly on pepo morphology. Pepos of cultivated forms differ from those of their wild ancestors in their larger size and more variable shape, less durable and more varicolored rinds, and less fibrous, nonbitter flesh.

Plants of Cucurbita pepo are likely to be found as non-persistent waifs all over the world, wherever they can be grown in temperate and upland tropical areas.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 6, p. 52. FNA vol. 6, p. 53.
Parent taxa Cucurbitaceae > Cucurbita Cucurbitaceae > Cucurbita
Sibling taxa
C. digitata, C. ficifolia, C. foetidissima, C. maxima, C. melopepo, C. moschata, C. okeechobeensis, C. pepo
C. digitata, C. ficifolia, C. foetidissima, C. maxima, C. melopepo, C. moschata, C. okeechobeensis, C. palmata
Subordinate taxa
C. pepo subsp. pepo
Synonyms C. californica
Name authority S. Watson: Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 11: 137. (1876) Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 1010. (1753)
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