The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

Deschutes monkeyflower

Johnston's monkeyflower

Habit Herbs, annual. Herbs, annual.
Stems

erect to erect-ascending, 40–150 mm, distal internodes 1–2 mm, minutely glandular-puberulent.

erect, (10–)30–200(–300) mm, densely glandular-puberulent.

Leaves

usually cauline, relatively even-sized or gradually larger distally;

petiole absent, proximal base short petiole-like;

blade broadly ovate or obovate to elliptic-ovate or elliptic-oblanceolate, 10–15(–25) × 4–13 mm, margins entire, plane, apex acuminate or cuspidate, surfaces glabrous or sparsely glandular-puberulent.

basal and cauline, gradually reduced distally;

petiole absent, bases of larger leaves often with petiole-like extensions;

blade obovate or oblanceolate, sometimes elliptic, (4.5–)7–25(–32) × 2–12(–15) mm, margins entire, plane, apex rounded to acute, surfaces densely glandular-puberulent.

Pedicels

1–1.5 mm in fruit.

1–4(–5) mm in fruit.

Flowers

usually from proximalmost to distal nodes, 2 per node, or 1 or 2 per node on 1 plant, chasmogamous.

2 per node, or 1 or 2 per node on 1 plant, chasmogamous.

Styles

puberulent, at least on distal 1/2.

densely glandular-puberulent distally.

Corollas

light pink to magenta or rose purple, usually with a darker narrow line extending from throat onto each lobe midvein, throat yellow, palate ridges yellow, tube-throat 8–12 mm, limb 10–16 mm diam., bilabiate.

magenta, darker and more reddish in throat and, often, along narrow radiating lines extending from throat onto midveins of lobes, throat usually with a large dark spot on each side of mouth on lateral walls, palate ridges and throat floor yellow with reddish spots, tube-throat 9–15 mm, limb 10–15 mm diam., not bilabiate.

Calyces

symmetrically attached to pedicels, not inflated in fruit, 7–8 mm, glandular-puberulent, lobes subequal, apex linear-acuminate, ribs green distally, intercostal areas whitish.

symmetrically attached to pedicels, not inflated in fruit, (6–)7–11 mm, glandular-puberulent, lobes unequal, apex acute to acuminate, ribs inconspicuous, intercostal areas reddish.

Capsules

7–9 mm.

7–12 mm.

Anthers

included, glabrous or sparsely hispidulous.

included, glabrous.

Stigmas

exserted, lobes subequal, abaxial slightly longer.

exserted or at opening of corolla tube-throat, lobes equal.

2n

= 16.

= 16.

Diplacus deschutesensis

Diplacus johnstonii

Phenology Flowering Jun–Aug. Flowering May–Aug.
Habitat Sandy and ashy soils, pumice sand and gravel, red clay slopes, hillsides, roadsides, bare areas, sagebrush, sagebrush-juniper, juniper, yellow pine and lodgepole pine forests. Steep, unstable scree slides, talus slopes, gravel slides, cracks in granite cliffs, ridges, washes, steep sand and gravel slopes, canyon bottoms, gravelly road banks, recent burns, desert scrub, chaparral, juniper, pinyon-juniper, lodgepole pine, yellow pine, Jeffrey pine, and Jeffrey pine-western white pine-fir woodlands.
Elevation 700–1500 m. (2300–4900 ft.) (1000–)1300–2900 m. ((3300–)4300–9500 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
OR
[WildflowerSearch map]
from FNA
CA
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Diplacus deschutesensis is endemic to Crook, Deschutes, Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, and Wheeler counties of central Oregon. D. M. Thompson (2005) regarded these plants as a zone of stabilized hybrids, intermediate between Mimulus cusickii and typical M. nanus, the range just outside and west of the wider range of typical M. cusickii. In an earlier study that included both of the latter species, W. L. Ezell (1971, and by annotation in 1987) identified the same set of plants simply as M. cusickii, not associating them at all with M. nanus. A. L. Grant (1924, and by annotation of MO collections) identified them variously as either M. cusickii or M. ovatus. Thompson did not say what features of intermediacy he observed in the putative hybrids, but he did note that they produced leaves with acuminate-cuspidate apices and that they would key to M. cusickii.

Leaves of Diplacus deschutesensis are broad with abruptly and sharply acuminate apices like those of D. cusickii, and the corolla coloration also is similar. The flowers (calyx length, corolla tube-throat length, limb width) and capsules of D. deschutesensis are considerably smaller, and the distal leaves are smaller with glabrous surfaces.

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

Populations of Diplacus johnstonii occur in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties. The populations in northwestern Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties were noted by D. M. Thompson (2005) to be intermediate between D. constrictus and D. johnstonii.

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

Source FNA vol. 17, p. 440. FNA vol. 17, p. 433.
Parent taxa Phrymaceae > Diplacus Phrymaceae > Diplacus
Sibling taxa
D. angustatus, D. aridus, D. aurantiacus, D. bicolor, D. bigelovii, D. bolanderi, D. brandegeei, D. brevipes, D. calycinus, D. cascadensis, D. clevelandii, D. clivicola, D. compactus, D. congdonii, D. constrictus, D. cusickii, D. cusickioides, D. douglasii, D. fremontii, D. grandiflorus, D. graniticola, D. jepsonii, D. johnstonii, D. kelloggii, D. layneae, D. leptaleus, D. linearis, D. longiflorus, D. mephiticus, D. mohavensis, D. nanus, D. ovatus, D. parryi, D. parviflorus, D. pictus, D. pulchellus, D. puniceus, D. pygmaeus, D. rattanii, D. rupicola, D. rutilus, D. thompsonii, D. torreyi, D. traskiae, D. tricolor, D. vandenbergensis, D. viscidus
D. angustatus, D. aridus, D. aurantiacus, D. bicolor, D. bigelovii, D. bolanderi, D. brandegeei, D. brevipes, D. calycinus, D. cascadensis, D. clevelandii, D. clivicola, D. compactus, D. congdonii, D. constrictus, D. cusickii, D. cusickioides, D. deschutesensis, D. douglasii, D. fremontii, D. grandiflorus, D. graniticola, D. jepsonii, D. kelloggii, D. layneae, D. leptaleus, D. linearis, D. longiflorus, D. mephiticus, D. mohavensis, D. nanus, D. ovatus, D. parryi, D. parviflorus, D. pictus, D. pulchellus, D. puniceus, D. pygmaeus, D. rattanii, D. rupicola, D. rutilus, D. thompsonii, D. torreyi, D. traskiae, D. tricolor, D. vandenbergensis, D. viscidus
Synonyms Mimulus johnstonii
Name authority G. L. Nesom: Phytoneuron 2013-65: 8, fig. 5. (2013) (A. L. Grant) G. L. Nesom: Phytoneuron 2012-39: 29. (2012)
Web links