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four o'clock, four o'clock flower, four o'clock umbrella-wort, marvel of peru, wishbone bush

dwarf four o'clock, hairy four-o'clock, hairy umbrellawort, pale umbrella-wort, white four o'clock

Stems

1–many, erect to decumbent, few or highly branched, sparsely to densely leafy in basal 1/2 or throughout, 0.8–15 dm, glabrous to puberulent basally in 2 lines or throughout, hairs often awned, or stems villous and often viscid, or sometimes hirsute, hair types often mixed, spreading pubescent.

Leaves

ascending to spreading at 10–90°;

petiole 0–4 cm;

blade green to glaucous blue-gray, linear-lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, ovate, or deltate, 1–11 × 0.6–2.5 cm in lanceolate leaves, 2–9 × 1–6.5 cm in ovate leaves, thin and fleshy to thick and coriaceous, base cuneate to round, truncate, or cordate, apex acute, obtuse, or round, surfaces glabrous or viscid-puberulent, viscid-villous, or hirsute.

Inflorescences

axillary or terminal, few branched, ± evenly forked and open, or, when axillary, often consisting only of single involucres (and then flowers commonly cleistogamous);

peduncle 1–25 mm, puberulent with curled hairs, hispid, villous, or viscid-villous, crosswalls of hairs pale;

involucres pale green or sometimes blushed with purple when young, widely bell-shaped, 4–7 mm in flower, 5–15 mm in fruit, sparsely to densely pubescent with small curled hairs or long spreading hairs, often viscid, 50–80% connate, lobes ovate, triangular-ovate, broadly ovate, or occasionally round.

Flowers

(1–)3 per involucre;

perianth white, pink, or deep red-violet, 0.8–1.5 cm.

Fruits

brown to dark brown with pale tan, brown, or dark brown ribs, obovoid to narrowly obovate and tapering at both ends, 3.5–5.5 mm, pubescent with tufted spreading hairs 0.1–0.5 mm, with or without minute glandular hairs;

ribs round or round-angled, (0.3–)0.7–1.5 times width of sulci, 0.5–1 times as wide as high, with tall shelflike tubercles (eastern part of range), smooth or somewhat rugose or moderately tuberculate (western part of range);

sulci with prominent, pale, shelflike tubercles (eastern), minutely rugose or with small low warts (western).

2n

= 58.

Mirabilis jalapa

Mirabilis albida

Phenology Flowering late summer–early fall.
Habitat Dry meadows, sandy prairies, hillsides, rocky slopes
Elevation 0-2600 m (0-8500 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CA; CT; DC; FL; GA; IL; IN; KY; LA; MD; MS; NC; NJ; NM; NV; NY; OH; OK; PA; RI; SC; TX; UT; VA; VT; Mexico [Introduced in North America and elsewhere]
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CA; CO; CT; GA; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; ME; MI; MN; MO; MS; ND; NE; NJ; NM; NV; NY; OH; OK; PA; SC; SD; TN; TX; UT; WI; WY; AB; BC; MB; ON; QC; SK; Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Varieties 2 (1 in the flora).

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

In the eastern half of the continent, Mirabilis albida is reasonably uniform, usually erect, with lanceolate or narrowly oblong leaves, and fruits with large, wartlike tubercles on ribs and sulci. These fruits are very similar to those of M. nyctaginea, except they are usually yellowish brown rather than reddish brown. On the western plains, M. albida intergrades with M. linearis. R. Spellenberg (1998), in attempting to maintain a fairly uniform M. albida, provided a table distinguishing among it, M. oblongifolia, and M. melanotricha. Distinguishing leaf forms of M. oblongifolia as circumscribed by C. F. Reed (1969) from western races of M. albida becomes untenable, as proposed by B. L. Turner (1993b). Individual specimens are sometimes very different, but in a series of populations distinctions merge. The minute glandular hairs beneath the tufts of larger hairs and the presence of large, shelflike tubercles are fairly consistent throughout the eastern half of the continent. In the southwestern mountains, where M. oblongifolia in the broad sense occurs, and in the northern Rocky Mountains, where M. lanceolata occurs (as these phases in the complex have been named), both features are either inconsistent or absent, the fruits becoming much less warty and more like those of M. linearis. Some phases, such as M. comata, and Allionia pratensis, seem to form reasonably recognizable geographically and ecologically restricted populations and may be worthy of taxonomic recognition, perhaps at the infraspecific level. The type of M. hirsuta has the general form of broad-leaved plains races of M. albida is lightly hispid on basal parts. The exceedingly hispid, broad-leaved forms commonly identified as M. hirsuta from near the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains are here recognized as M. rotundifolia; the hispid narrow-leaved phases from the southwestern plains are included within M. linearis.

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

Source FNA vol. 4, p. 42. FNA vol. 4, p. 51.
Parent taxa Nyctaginaceae > Mirabilis > sect. Mirabilis Nyctaginaceae > Mirabilis > sect. Oxybaphus
Sibling taxa
M. albida, M. alipes, M. austrotexana, M. coccinea, M. gigantea, M. glabra, M. greenei, M. laevis, M. latifolia, M. linearis, M. longiflora, M. macfarlanei, M. melanotricha, M. multiflora, M. nyctaginea, M. oxybaphoides, M. pudica, M. rotundifolia, M. tenuiloba, M. texensis
M. alipes, M. austrotexana, M. coccinea, M. gigantea, M. glabra, M. greenei, M. jalapa, M. laevis, M. latifolia, M. linearis, M. longiflora, M. macfarlanei, M. melanotricha, M. multiflora, M. nyctaginea, M. oxybaphoides, M. pudica, M. rotundifolia, M. tenuiloba, M. texensis
Subordinate taxa
M. jalapa var. jalapa
Synonyms Allionia albida, Allionia coahuilensis, Allionia comata, Allionia divaricata, Allionia hirsuta, Allionia oblongifolia, Allionia pauciflora, Allionia pratensis, Allionia pseudaggregata, Allionia pumila, M. ciliata, M. coahuilensis, M. comata, M. eutricha, M. grayana, M. hirsuta, M. lanceolata, M. oblongifolia, M. pauciflora, M. pseudaggregata, M. pumila, Oxybaphus albidus, Oxybaphus coahuilensis, Oxybaphus comatus, Oxybaphus hirsutus, Oxybaphus pauciflorus, Oxybaphus pseudaggregatus, Oxybaphus pumilus
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 177. (1753) (Walter) Heimerl: Annuaire Conserv. Jard. Bot. Genève 5: 182. (1901)
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