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blue waxweed, clammy cuphea, clammy waxweed

cigar flower, Mexican heather, waxweed

Habit Herbs annual, 1–6 dm, with fibrous roots. Herbs, annual or perennial, [subshrubs], terrestrial [amphibious], 1–10 dm, [glaucous], often glandular-viscid with 1+ types of glandular/eglandular indument, trichomes colorless, white, or red-purple [glabrous]; with fibrous roots or woody xylopodium.
Stems

erect to decumbent, often reddish, much-branched, purple-red glandular-setose, glandular-viscid.

erect, decumbent, or spreading, branched or unbranched.

Leaves

usually opposite, rarely 3- or 4-whorled, when whorled, opposite at proximal nodes;

sessile, subsessile, or petiolate;

blade ovate to lanceolate, oblong, elliptic, or linear, base attenuate or rounded [cuneate, cordate], surfaces finely scabrous.

Racemes

leafy.

Inflorescences

indeterminate, terminal or axillary, leafy or bracteate racemes [thyrses], 1 flower emerging between petioles at a node, others, when present, on axillary branchlets.

Pedicels

1–5 mm.

Flowers

alternate, solitary, interpetiolar, sometimes with 1 axillary;

floral tube pale abaxially, deep purple-red adaxially, 8–12 × 1–2 mm, purple-red glandular-setose;

base rounded or a descending spur, 0.5–1 mm;

inner surface glabrous proximally, densely villous distal to stamens;

epicalyx segments thick, 2 flanking the adaxialmost sepal terminated by a bristle;

sepals unequal, adaxialmost longer;

petals 6, purple, oblanceolate, unequal, 4 abaxial petals 2–5 × 0.4–0.6 mm, 2 upper petals 3–6 × 1.5–2.5 mm;

stamens (5–)11, reaching or surpassing sinus of sepals.

sessile or pedicellate, zygomorphic, monostylous;

floral tube perigynous, cylindrical, rounded, or spurred basally, conspicuously 12-ribbed, inner surface villous or glabrous;

epicalyx segments shorter than sepals [to longer than sepals];

sepals 6, to 1/4 floral tube length;

petals caducous [persistent], [0 or](2–)6, purple, rose purple, rose, or pink, subequal or unequal, sometimes 2 upper petals larger or of different color than others;

nectary present at base of ovary;

stamens (5–)11, deeply included or equal to surpassing sinus of sepals, 2 stamens usually shorter, more deeply inserted than others;

ovary 2-locular;

placenta elongate;

septa reduced to thin threads, 1 locule reduced;

style slender;

stigma capitate to punctiform.

Fruits

capsules, walls thin and dry, dehiscence by longitudinal complementary slits in wall and floral tube, placenta and seeds ultimately exserted.

Seeds

7–10, oblong-elliptic in outline, 2.3–2.8 × 1.8–2.3 mm, margin rounded.

3–13(–20)[–100+], orbiculate, suborbiculate, oblong, or elliptic in outline;

cotyledons ± complanate.

Leavesopposite

, petiolate;

petiole (2–)5–15(–20) mm;

blade narrowly lanceolate to narrowly ovate, 20–50 × 6–20 mm, base attenuate.

2n

= 12.

Cuphea viscosissima

Cuphea

Phenology Flowering summer–fall.
Habitat Weedy in pastures, road­sides, ditches, grassy borders, disturbed moist woods along trails.
Elevation 0–900 m. (0–3000 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; CT; DC; DE; FL; GA; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; MD; MO; MS; NC; NE; NH; NJ; NY; OH; OK; PA; SC; TN; TX; VA; VT; WV; ON
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Pacific Islands; Australia
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Cuphea viscosissima of the eastern and central United States is the most common and widespread species of Cuphea in the flora area; it is naturalized in Ontario. It is closely related to C. lanceolata W. T. Aiton of eastern and central Mexico, with which it shares the lowest known chromosome number in the genus, 2n = 12. The stamen number is typically 11, but varies in some populations (W. H. Duncan 1950).

Cuphea petiolata (Linnaeus) Koehne is an illegitimate name that pertains here.

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

Species ca. 240 (6 in the flora).

The seeds of Cuphea store oils composed of medium-chain fatty acids that are widely used in the manufacture of soaps and detergents, in specialized food products, and in medicine. The endemic C. viscosissima is under development as a domestic source of the fatty acids that traditionally have been obtained from imported palm oils. Other species are cultivated as annual garden plants, and new hybrids and cultivars appear yearly in the nursery trade. Among the most popular cultivated species are: C. calophylla Chamisso & Schlechtendal and C. hyssopifolia Kunth, both sold under the name Mexican heather and identified by their small, tubular flowers with six purple petals; C. ignea A. de Candolle, the cigar flower or firecracker plant, a species with trailing stems and elongate, red flowers with black and white tips; and C. llavea Lexarza, marketed as ‘Tiny Mice’ or ‘Bat-Faced Cuphea,’ which has two large, red petals often with a black spot at the base, and purple trichomes filling the opening of the floral tube. The purple-petalled C. procumbens Ortega (firefly cuphea) and hybrids of C. procumbens with C. llavea are also popular flowering annuals. Garden escapes of C. procumbens account for reports in Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, North Carolina, and South Carolina; the species does not appear to be naturalized anywhere in the flora area. All the cultivated species named above are native to Mexico.

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

Key
1. Leaves 3- or 4-whorled mid stem; flowers opposite or 3- or 4-whorled; pedicels 4–25 mm.
C. aspera
1. Leaves opposite; flowers alternate; pedicels 0–6 mm.
→ 2
2. Stamens deeply included, extending 2/3 distance to sinus of sepals; floral tube 4–6 mm.
C. carthagenensis
2. Stamens reaching or surpassing sinus of sepals; floral tube 5–12 mm.
→ 3
3. Sepals equal; leaves sessile or subsessile, petiole 0–2 mm; seeds 1.5–2 mm.
→ 4
4. Floral tube bases rounded; seed margins rounded.
C. glutinosa
4. Floral tube bases descending spurs; seed margins flattened, thin.
C. strigulosa
3. Sepals unequal, adaxialmost longer; leaves petiolate (at least proximally), petiole (1–)2–15(–20) mm; seeds 2–2.8 mm.
→ 5
5. Leaf blade bases attenuate; seeds 7–10; upper petals 3–6 mm.
C. viscosissima
5. Leaf blade bases rounded to cuneate; seeds 3–6; upper petals 1–2 mm.
C. wrightii
Source FNA vol. 10. FNA vol. 10. Author: Shirley A. Graham.
Parent taxa Lythraceae > Cuphea Lythraceae
Sibling taxa
C. aspera, C. carthagenensis, C. glutinosa, C. strigulosa, C. wrightii
Subordinate taxa
C. aspera, C. carthagenensis, C. glutinosa, C. strigulosa, C. viscosissima, C. wrightii
Synonyms Lythrum petiolatum, Parsonsia petiolata Parsonsia
Name authority Jacquin: Hort. Bot. Vindob. 2: 83, plate 177. (1772) P. Browne: Civ. Nat. Hist. Jamaica, 216. (1756)
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