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smooth spreading four-o'clock

black-hair umbrellawort, four o'clock, mountain four-o'clock, Standley's four o'clock

Stems

decumbent to prostrate, often tangled in other vegetation, 2–12 dm, herbaceous, puberulent in lines or throughout, glandular or not.

erect or strongly ascending, leafy mostly in proximal 2/3 of plant, openly forked distally, 5–12 dm, pubescent basally with minute curved hairs in 2 lines, spreading glandular-pilose distally.

Leaves

spreading;

petiole 0.5–3.5 cm;

blade broadly deltate or ovate, 1.5–8 × 1–7.5 cm, fleshy, base cordate, apex usually acute or acuminate (rounded), surfaces glabrous or pubescent, and then often glandular.

ascending at 10–60°, progressively reduced toward infloresence;

petiole 0.8–3 cm;

blade bright green, narrowly triangular-ovate to ovate, 3–10 × 0.8–4 cm, ± thin, base acute, obtuse, truncate, or cordate, apex acute to attenuate, or obtuse, often rounded at tip, surfaces glabrous or rarely puberulent.

Inflorescences

loosely and narrowly cymose;

involucres solitary or clustered at ends of branches, or solitary in axils, 5–9 mm, lobes triangular, base 50–70% of height.

axillary and terminal, few branched, ± evenly forked and open;

peduncle 2–9 mm, spreading glandular-villous, crosswalls of hairs dark purple or black;

involucres blushed with dark violet or black, at least in median region, widely bell-shaped, 3–6 mm in flower, 4–7 mm in fruit, spreading viscid-villous, 40–50% connate, lobes oblong to ovate, apex broadly acute.

Flowers

3 per involucre;

perianth purplish to pale pink (white), 0.5–0.9 cm.

3 per involucre;

perianth bright purple-pink, 0.9–1.2 cm.

Fruits

olive, dark brown and black-mottled, or evenly black, sometimes faintly marked with 5 shallow grooves, broadly obovoid to nearly spheric, 2.5–3.5 mm, smooth or slightly rugose.

dark grayish to blackish brown, sometimes dark, dull, reddish brown, narrowly obovoid, 3–4 mm, spreading-pilose, hairs often apearing loosely shaggy and somewhat tufted, (0.1–)0.2–0.3 mm;

ribs ± same color as sulci, low and round, 0.7–1 times width of sulci, 0.5 times as wide as high, slightly rugose or warty;

sulci almost smooth to slightly rugose or with very low tubercules.

2n

= 60.

Mirabilis oxybaphoides

Mirabilis melanotricha

Phenology Flowering spring–fall. Flowering mid summer–early fall.
Habitat Brush or boulders, banks in woodlands, moist areas Conifer woodlands, mountain meadows, roadsides
Elevation 1400-2600 m (4600-8500 ft) 1900-3000 m (6200-9800 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CO; NM; NV; OK; TX; UT; Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AZ; CO; NM; TX; Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

The erect habit, bright green and usually glabrous foliage, and dark involucres of Mirabilis melanotricha are distinctive in combination. Once collected and pressed, M. melanotricha becomes yet another “difficult” Mirabilis. In 1911, P. C. Standley noted that this species (as Allionia melanotricha) was one of the most variable in the genus, and in 1918 he submerged it in A. comata, which in the field is a grayish green, clump-forming, glandular-pubescent plant with decumbent-ascending stems. Mirabilis melanotricha occurs in more mesic situations mostly at elevations above M. comata (here in synonymy in M. albida). It intergrades into M. linearis along its northern edge and lower elevations in New Mexico through M. linearis var. decipiens (Standley) S. L. Welsh. In the northeastern portion of its range, it may intergrade with M. nyctaginea; fruits in that region sometimes are slightly more reddish and more tuberculate than usual. Along the eastern portion of its range, it also intergrades into M. albida, as plants become more pubescent and fleshy. B. L. Turner (1993b) noted that M. comata (apparently in the sense of its common usage, as applied to plants here classified as M. melanotricha) might remain distinct from his concept of M. albida, which included C. F. Reed’s (1969) comprehensive M. oblongifolia.

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

Source FNA vol. 4, p. 47. FNA vol. 4, p. 52.
Parent taxa Nyctaginaceae > Mirabilis > sect. Oxybaphoides Nyctaginaceae > Mirabilis > sect. Oxybaphus
Sibling taxa
M. albida, 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. pudica, M. rotundifolia, M. tenuiloba, M. texensis
M. albida, 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. multiflora, M. nyctaginea, M. oxybaphoides, M. pudica, M. rotundifolia, M. tenuiloba, M. texensis
Synonyms Quamoclidion oxybaphoides, Allionia oxybaphoides Allionia melanotricha
Name authority (A. Gray) A. Gray: in W. H. Emory, Rep. U.S. Mex. Bound. 2(1): 173. (1859) (Standley) Spellenberg: Phytologia 85: 99. (1999)
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