Delphinium xantholeucum |
Delphinium newtonianum |
|
---|---|---|
yellow-white larkspur |
newton's larkspur, Ozark larkspur |
|
Stems | 40-60(-100) cm; base often reddish, glabrous, ± glaucous. |
40-90 cm; base often reddish, puberulent. |
Leaves | blade round, 2-6 × 4-10 cm, nearly glabrous; ultimate lobes 3-15, width 3-8 mm (basal), 1-5 mm (cauline). |
blade round to pentagonal, 4-7 × 5-15 cm, nearly glabrous; ultimate lobes 3-7, width 8-20 mm (basal), 5-15 mm (cauline), widest at middle or in proximal 1/2. |
Inflorescences | 10-20(-60)-flowered, narrowly pyramidal; pedicel spreading, yellowish, 1.5-3 cm, ± glandular-puberulent; bracteoles 6-12 mm from flowers, green to light brown, linear to lanceolate, 4-7 mm, nearly glabrous. |
8-20(-40)-flowered, as wide as long or nearly so; pedicel 1-4(-6) cm, pubescent; bracteoles 6-15 mm from flowers, green, linear, 1.5-5 mm, puberulent. |
Flowers | sepals yellow, glabrous, lateral sepals reflexed, 9-12 × 3-5 mm, spurs straight, ascending ca. 45° above horizontal, 11-15 mm; lower petal blades elevated, exposing stamens, 3-5 mm, clefts 1-2 mm; hairs centered mostly on inner lobes near base of cleft, white. |
sepals dark to light blue, rarely white, glabrous, lateral sepals spreading, 12-14 × 6-7 mm, spurs straight to decurved, within 30° of horizontal, 10-15 mm; lower petal blades slightly elevated, ± exposing stamens, 4-5 mm, clefts 2-3 mm; hairs mostly centered near base of cleft, yellow. |
Fruits | 15-22 mm, 3-4 times longer than wide, glabrous to glandular-puberulent. |
8-12 mm, 3-3.5 times longer than wide, nearly glabrous. |
Seeds | seed coat cells narrow, short, cell margins straight, surfaces smooth. |
unwinged; surface of each seed coat cell with swollen, blunt, hairlike structures, barely visible at 20x, otherwise smooth. |
2n | = 16. |
|
Delphinium xantholeucum |
Delphinium newtonianum |
|
Phenology | Flowering spring. | Flowering early summer. |
Habitat | Slopes in open yellow pine forests, grasslands, sage scrub | Slopes in deciduous forest |
Elevation | 150-600 m (500-2000 ft) | 500-700 m (1600-2300 ft) |
Distribution |
WA
|
AR |
Discussion | Of conservation concern. Delphinium xantholeucum is very local; much of the habitat of this species has been converted to orchards. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
No cases of hybridization are known. Delphinium newtonianum often occurs in mixed populations with D. tricorne. It normally does not begin flowering until 4-6 weeks after D. tricorne has finished. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 3. | FNA vol. 3. |
Parent taxa | Ranunculaceae > Delphinium > sect. Diedropetala > subsect. Subscaposa | Ranunculaceae > Delphinium > sect. Diedropetala > subsect. Grumosa |
Sibling taxa | ||
Name authority | Piper: Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 11: 280. (1906) | D. M. Moore: Rhodora 41: 196. (1939) |
Web links |