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white prairie or white or cream or yellowish or pale gentian

arctic gentian, whitish gentian

Habit Herbs perennial, 3–10 dm, glabrous. Herbs perennial, 0.4–2 dm, glabrous.
Stems

1–10, terminal from caudex, decumbent to erect.

1–few, arising laterally below rosettes or seemingly from center of rosettes because of large basal leaves, decumbent to erect.

Leaves

cauline, ± evenly spaced;

blade lanceolate to ovate, 5–15 cm × 15–50 mm, apex acuminate.

basal and cauline;

blades of basal and rosette leaves narrowly spatulate, 2–10(–14) cm × 1–7 mm, transitional to cauline leaves with blades oblanceolate to lanceolate or linear, 2–5 cm × 2–5 mm, blades of all leaves 6+ times as long as wide, apices obtuse to acute.

Inflorescences

dense 1–20-flowered cymes, often also with additional clusters at 1 or 2 nodes.

1–3-flowered.

Flowers

calyx 10–30 mm, lobes spreading, with bracketlike keels, lanceolate to ovate-triangular, 3–15 mm, margins not ciliate;

corolla white, sometimes with yellowish or greenish tinge (drying yellowish), with veins outlined in green, tubular, loosely closed or slightly open, 30–55 mm, lobes incurved to nearly erect, widely ovate-triangular, 4–6 mm, free portions of plicae obliquely triangular, erose to shallowly lacerate, with minute, deflexed second segment;

anthers connate or some sooner or later distinct.

calyx 15–28 mm, lobes linear to lanceolate, (5–)7–12 mm, margins not ciliate;

corolla abaxially suffused with blue-violet on and below lobes, adaxially white or yellowish white with dark purple and/or greenish spots and streaks, funnelform, open, 35–50 mm, lobes ascending to spreading, ovate-triangular, 2–5 mm, summit of plicae nearly truncate, erose;

anthers distinct.

Seeds

winged.

winged.

2n

 = 26.

 = 24.

Gentiana flavida

Gentiana algida

Phenology Flowering late summer–fall. Flowering summer–early fall.
Habitat Mesic prairies and savannas, calcareous soils. Arctic tundra, alpine meadows.
Elevation 100–800 m. (300–2600 ft.) 0–4000 m. (0–13100 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AR; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; MI; MN; MO; NE; OH; OK; PA; WI; WV; ON
from FNA
AK; CO; MT; NM; UT; WY; YT; restricted to high elevations south of the Arctic; Asia
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Discussion

The name Gentiana alba Muhlenberg has often been applied to this species. Uncertainty had long persisted, first as to whether the name G. alba was validly published by G. H. E. Muhlenberg in 1813, then, after that publication had been deemed invalid, whether it was validated by T. Nuttall in 1818. A group of nomenclatural authorities considered this issue on behalf of this flora and concluded that neither of those publications of the name G. alba had been valid, and that G. flavida A. Gray was the earliest validly published name for this species (K. N. Gandhi, pers. comm.).

Outlying eastern populations of Gentiana flavida in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia are no longer extant, and the continued existence of other peripheral populations in isolated prairie remnants is precarious. Reports from Manitoba have been based on misidentified G. rubricaulis. A report from Maryland was based on the misreading of a label of a specimen actually from Indiana (studies for this flora).

In contrast to those of the other species of Gentiana in the flora area, with the exceptions of G. clausa and G. latidens, the calyx lobes of G. flavida spread widely, with keels like shelf brackets decurrent on the tube.

Morphological variation in Gentiana flavida should be given further study. According to J. T. Curtis (1959), plants of this species from the northern part of its range, as seen in the field, appear distinctly different in inflorescence form from plants native farther south.

In the tall-grass prairies, Gentiana flavida hybridizes with G. andrewsii, producing G. × pallidocyanea J. S. Pringle, and G. puberulenta, producing G. × curtisii J. S. Pringle. Reports of G. flavida with the corollas distally lilac have been based on plants derived from such hybridization, probably through backcrossing.

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

Gentiana algida of North America and Asia is sometimes considered conspecific with G. frigida Haenke of Europe. Early reports of differing chromosome numbers have been superseded by more recent counts indicating that 2n = 24 prevails in both species. If these taxa are united, the North American plants can be called G. algida var. algida. This designation is also applicable if varieties are recognized among the Japanese or other Asiatic representatives of this species.

(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
G. affinis, G. algida, G. andrewsii, G. austromontana, G. autumnalis, G. calycosa, G. catesbaei, G. clausa, G. decora, G. douglasiana, 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. affinis, G. andrewsii, 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
Synonyms Dasystephana flavida G. romanzovii, Gentianodes algida
Name authority A. Gray: Amer. J. Sci. Arts, ser. 2, 1: 80. (1846) Pallas: Fl. Ross. 1(2): 107, plate 95. (1789)
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