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Andrew's bottle gentian, bottle or fringe bottle or prairie closed gentian, closed bottle gentian

Photo is of parent taxon

Dakota gentian

Habit Herbs perennial, 1–12 dm, glabrous or rarely puberulent.
Stems

1–20, terminal from caudex, decumbent to erect.

glabrous or rarely puberulent.

Leaves

cauline, ± evenly spaced;

blade elliptic-oblong to lanceolate or narrowly ovate, 3–16 cm × 10–50 mm, apex acuminate.

widths usually in narrower part of range for species.

Inflorescences

1–25-flowered heads, often with additional flowers at 1–6(–9) nodes or on short branches.

Flowers

calyx 9–29 mm, lobes lanceolate to ovate or occasionally oblanceolate, 2–15 mm, margins ciliate;

corolla blue, white, or rarely rose-violet, tubular, completely closed, 28–45 mm, lobes reduced to a mucro or ± triangular, 0.5–2(–3) mm, free portions of plicae oblong, shallowly and nearly symmetrically bifid, summit truncate, erose;

anthers connate.

Corolla

lobes triangular or ± rounded, usually 1–2(–3) mm but still exceeded by plicae.

Seeds

winged.

Gentiana andrewsii

Gentiana andrewsii var. dakotica

Phenology Flowering late summer–fall.
Habitat Mesic to wet prairies, savannas, calcareous soils.
Elevation 100–1200 m. (300–3900 ft.)
Distribution
from USDA
North America
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
IA; IL; MN; MO; ND; NE; SD; WI; MB; SK
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora).

Gentiana andrewsii is the only species of Gentiana in which the plicae of the corolla are distinctly longer than the lobes.

Gentiana andrewsii has often been reported outside its actual range. Although the epithets of some of the species that have been confused with or considered inseparable from G. andrewsii have priority, the familiar name G. andrewsii is often misapplied, sometimes because it is assumed that any “closed gentian” is G. andrewsii. As G. clausa was not distinguished from G. andrewsii in standard floras prior to 1950, reports from the northeastern United States based on specimens identified before 1950 should be considered doubtful if the specimens have not been reexamined. Old reports from the southern Appalachians are also questionable because G. austromontana was not recognized until 1964. Some reports from the southeastern and south-central United States and along the Atlantic seaboard have been based on specimens of G. saponaria. True G. andrewsii is distinguishable as the only Gentiana species in which the corolla plicae distinctly exceed the minute lobes. The fringed tip of the completely closed corolla, at first white, soon turning reddish brown, is an excellent field mark for distinguishing G. andrewsii from G. clausa. In G. clausa, the summit of the intact corolla appears completely blue (in the typical color form), and the plicae are concealed. Gentiana andrewsii grows in calcareous soils and G. clausa in noncalcareous soils.

Because of this ecological separation, there are only a few records of hybridization between Gentiana andrewsii and G. clausa. In the tall-grass prairies, G. andrewsii hybridizes with G. flavida, producing G. × pallidocyanea J. S. Pringle, and with G. puberulenta, producing G. × billingtonii Farwell (as species). Northward, it occasionally hybridizes with G. rubricaulis, producing G. × grandilacustris J. S. Pringle, and in the southeastern part of its range it hybridizes with G. saponaria.

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

Variety dakotica, which largely replaces var. andrewsii westward, may be derived from introgressive hybridization with Gentiana puberulenta. It differs from G. clausa in that the corolla lobes do not conceal the plicae in the intact corolla, as well as in the shape and orientation of the calyx lobes and in the length and shape of the free portions of the corolla plicae. Similar plants in the Ohio Valley are derived from G. andrewsii × G. saponaria. Other reports from outside the range given here are probably derived from various hybrid combinations (studies for this flora).

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

Key
1. Corolla lobes reduced to a mucro or at most minutely triangular, less than 1 mm.
var. andrewsii
1. Corolla lobes triangular or ± rounded, 1–2(–3) mm.
var. dakotica
Source FNA vol. 14. FNA vol. 14.
Parent taxa Gentianaceae > Gentiana Gentianaceae > Gentiana > Gentiana andrewsii
Sibling taxa
G. affinis, G. algida, G. austromontana, G. autumnalis, G. calycosa, G. catesbaei, G. clausa, G. decora, G. douglasiana, G. flavida, G. fremontii, G. glauca, G. latidens, G. linearis, G. newberryi, G. nivalis, G. parryi, G. pennelliana, G. platypetala, G. plurisetosa, G. prostrata, G. puberulenta, G. rubricaulis, G. saponaria, G. sceptrum, G. setigera, G. villosa
G. andrewsii var. andrewsii
Subordinate taxa
G. andrewsii var. andrewsii, G. andrewsii var. dakotica
Synonyms Dasystephana andrewsii, Pneumonanthe andrewsii
Name authority Grisebach in W. J. Hooker: Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 55. (1837) A. Nelson: Bot. GaZ. 56: 68. (1913)
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