Gentiana clausa |
Gentiana linearis |
|
---|---|---|
bottle gentian, closed gentian, gentiane close, meadow bottle gentian |
gentiane à feuilles linéaires, narrow-leaf gentian |
|
Habit | Herbs perennial, 2–8 dm, glabrous. | Herbs perennial, 1–9 dm, glabrous. |
Stems | 1–10, terminal from caudex, erect or decumbent. |
1–30, terminal from caudex, erect. |
Leaves | cauline, ± evenly spaced; blade ovate, 3–15 cm × 10–45 mm, apex acuminate. |
cauline, nearly evenly spaced or somewhat more widely spaced distally; blade linear to lanceolate, 4–9 cm × 3–14 mm, apex acute. |
Inflorescences | 1–20-flowered heads, sometimes with additional flowers at 1–3 nodes, rarely on short branches. |
± dense 1–7-flowered cymes, sometimes with additional flowers at 1–4 nodes, sessile or on branches to 12 cm. |
Flowers | calyx 8–22 mm, lobes spreading nearly horizontally, widely obovate or elliptic to orbiculate, 2–6(–10) mm, margins ciliate; corolla blue or occasionally violet or white, tubular, completely closed, 23–40 mm, lobes incurved, ovate-triangular to semicircular, 0.7–2 mm, free portions of plicae ± as long and as wide as lobes, oblong, deeply and unequally bifid, summit erose; anthers connate. |
calyx 8–28 mm, lobes linear to oblong, 2–12(–15) mm, margins not ciliate; corolla blue or occasionally violet or white, tubular, loosely closed or slightly open, 25–50 mm, lobes ± incurved, semicircular, 2.5–5 mm, free portions of plicae obliquely triangular, margins entire or shallowly erose, with a minute, deflexed second segment; anthers connate. |
Seeds | winged. |
winged. |
2n | = 26. |
= 26. |
Gentiana clausa |
Gentiana linearis |
|
Phenology | Flowering late summer–fall. | Flowering late summer–fall. |
Habitat | Moist, open woods, stream banks, roadsides, acid soils. | Bogs, wet meadows, shores, generally strongly acid soils. |
Elevation | 0–800 m. (0–2600 ft.) | 0–2000 m. (0–6600 ft.) |
Distribution |
CT; DC; MA; MD; ME; NC; NH; NJ; NY; OH; PA; RI; TN; VA; VT; WV; QC; restricted to higher elevations southward
|
MA; MD; ME; MI; NH; NY; PA; TN; VA; VT; WI; WV; LB; NB; ON; QC
|
Discussion | The corollas of Gentiana andrewsii, G. austromontana, and G. clausa all remain completely and tightly closed but are pollinated by bumblebees, which force open the corollas. The fresh corollas of G. clausa are rounded at the summit, with the plicae concealed by the true lobes. In contrast, the fresh corollas of G. andrewsii and G. austromontana are more acute, with the plicae forming much or all of the visible summit. The corolla lobes of G. clausa are about as long and as wide as the free portions of the plicae, whereas those of G. andrewsii and G. austromontana are distinctly narrower than the plicae. Also, in contrast to those of other species of Gentiana in the flora area except for G. flavida and G. latidens, the calyx lobes of G. clausa when fresh spread almost horizontally rather than being nearly erect. Reports of Gentiana clausa from Indiana to Missouri and elsewhere west of the range given here have been based on specimens of G. andrewsii var. dakotica, second- or later-generation plants derived from G. andrewsii × G. puberulenta, or other hybrids and introgressants. In these plants, in contrast to G. clausa, the sepals are lanceolate and nearly erect, and the lobes of the intact corolla do not entirely conceal the plicae. Gentiana clausa is largely isolated ecologically and geographically, but a few hybrids with G. andrewsii, G. austromontana, G. decora, and G. saponaria are known. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Gentiana linearis is extirpated from New Jersey. Reports from Manitoba and Minnesota have been based on circumscriptions of G. linearis that included G. rubricaulis, mostly prior to the recognition of G. rubricaulis as a distinct species in standard floras. A report from North Carolina is incorrect, having been based on a misunderstanding as to where a photograph was taken (W. F. Hutson, pers. comm.). Narrow-leaved specimens of G. saponaria are occasionally misidentified as G. linearis but can be distinguished by their ciliate calyx lobes and by the shape of the calyx lobes and the free portions of the corolla plicae. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 14. | FNA vol. 14. |
Parent taxa | Gentianaceae > Gentiana | Gentianaceae > Gentiana |
Sibling taxa | ||
Name authority | Rafinesque: Med. Fl. 1: 210. (1828) | Froelich: Gentiana, 37. (1796) |
Web links |