The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links
Photo is of parent taxon

high-plains beeblossom

biennial bee-blossom

Habit Herbs densely soft-villous, hairs mostly appressed, also strigillose, rarely glandular puberulent, branches of inflorescences glabrous or sparsely glandular puberulent. Herbs annual, biennial, or perennial, caulescent; from a taproot, sometimes woody or producing rhizomes.
Stems

usually erect or ascending, sometimes decumbent, branched or unbranched.

Leaves

blade narrowly lanceolate to very narrowly elliptic or linear, sometimes narrowly elliptic to lanceolate or narrowly oblanceolate proximally, margins subentire or shallowly sinuate-dentate, sometimes markedly so.

in a basal rosette and cauline (sometimes not present at flowering), (0.5–)2–8(–13) cm;

blade margins sinuate-dentate to denticulate, serrate, lobed, or entire.

Inflorescences

solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves, forming a spike, erect or nodding.

Flowers

floral tube 2–5 mm;

petals 8.5–13 mm;

style 10–19 mm.

opening near sunset or sunrise;

buds erect, terete, without free tips;

floral tube 1.5–20[–42] mm, usually lanate in distal 1/2 within;

sepals splitting along one suture, remaining coherent and reflexed as a unit at anthesis, or separating in pairs or sometimes individually;

petals white [rarely yellow], fading pink to red, purple, or off-white, spatulate to elliptic, rhombic, or, sometimes, oblanceolate, usually clawed;

filaments with basal scale 0.3–0.5 mm, these nearly closing mouth of floral tube, or sometimes reduced or absent;

stigma deeply divided into (3 or) 4 linear lobes.

Capsules

woody and nutlike, ovoid, fusiform, lanceoloid, ellipsoid, obovoid, or pyramidal, (3- or)4-angled, sometimes weakly so, or (3- or)4-winged, apex acute to attenuate or, sometimes, rounded, indehiscent, septa fragile, not evident at maturity;

sessile, sometimes disarticulating from plant at maturity.

Seeds

reduced to 1–4(–8), usually ovoid, rarely oblanceoloid (O. glaucifolia), surface smooth.

2n

= 14.

= 14, 28, 42, 56.

Oenothera cinerea subsp. cinerea

Oenothera sect. Gaura

Phenology Flowering May–Aug.
Habitat Sandy flats and dunes on high plains and rolling plains.
Elevation 700–1700 m. (2300–5600 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
CO; KS; NJ; NM; OK; TX
[BONAP county map]
North America; Mexico; Central America (Guatemala) [Introduced in South America, Europe, Asia, s Africa, Australia]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Subspecies cinerea is locally escaped in New Jersey. It occurs in northwestern Texas, eastern New Mexico, southeastern-most Colorado, southwestern Kansas(one station farther north, in Ellis County), and the western half of Oklahoma.

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

Species 25 (23 in the flora).

Section Gaura consists of 25 species (26 taxa) that are subdivided into eight subsections [seven in the flora area; subsect. Gauridium (Spach) W. L. Wagner & Hoch is is found only in Mexico]. All species have indehiscent capsules, a feature otherwise found in Oenothera only in O. canescens (sect. Gauropsis). Oenothera havardii (sect. Paradoxus) and O. linifolia (sect. Peniophyllum) have tardily and only partially dehiscent capsules. Twenty-one species in four subsections (Campogaura, Gaura, Stipogaura, and Xenogaura) have zygomorphic flowers; the other four subsections (Gauridium, Schizocarya, Stenosiphon, and Xerogaura), each with a single species, have actinomorphic, or nearly actinomorphic, flowers. Since Linnaeus described Gaura, it has been maintained as distinct at the generic level and, at various times, even at the tribal level. Its distinct status rested on several characteristic features including a scale at the base of the filaments; a peltate indusium at the base of the stigma; indehiscent, nutlike capsules; and seeds reduced to 1–4(–8) (P. H. Raven and D. P. Gregory 1972[1973]; W. L. Wagner et al. 2007). The most recent molecular studies (G. D. Hoggard et al. 2004; R. A. Levin et al. 2004) place Gaura strongly within the Oenothera clade and equally strongly in a clade with other sections possessing winged/angled capsules that are sometimes indehiscent or nearly so. Hoggard et al. found strong support for the inclusion of the monotypic Stenosiphon within Gaura; Levin et al. concurred, finding strong support for the monophyly of the Gaura lineage, but placed it unequivocally within Oenothera. Reconsidering the distinctive features of Gaura, Wagner et al. found that the indusium characterizes the whole genus Oenothera, and the indehiscent fruits seem to characterize a larger clade in the genus. The reduction in seed number appears to be a strong synapomorphy for the reconstituted Oenothera sect. Gaura. Wagner et al. recognized eight subsections within sect. Gaura that also includes Stenosiphon. The subsections are arranged according to the synthesis of morphological characters, crossing analyses, and molecular data (Raven and Gregory; Wagner et al.). Oenothera anomala Curtis and O. hexandra (Ortega) W. L. Wagner & Hoch are Mexican species that occur well south of the flora area.

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

Key
1. Filaments without basal scales or with minute scale; flowers nearly actinomorphic.
→ 2
2. Floral tubes 6–17 mm; herbs probably biennial, glaucous at least in proximal part 17k.
O. subsect. Stenosiphon
2. Floral tubes 1.5–5 mm; herbs annual, not glaucous 17k.
O. subsect. Schizocarya
1. Filaments with basal scales; flowers zygomorphic or sometimes nearly actinomorphic.
→ 3
3. Capsules with a slender stipe (0.5–)2–10 mm 17k.
O. subsect. Stipogaura
3. Capsules usually with a stipe 0.2–2.2 mm.
→ 4
4. Capsules pyramidal in distal 1/2, abruptly constricted to a cylindrical proximal part.
→ 5
5. Capsules not conspicuously bulging at base of distal pyramidal 1/2; plants not rhizomatous 17k.
O. subsect. Campogaura
5. Capsule conspicuously bulging at base of the distal pyramidal 1/2; plants rhizomatous 17k.
O. subsect. Xenogaura
4. Capsules fusiform, ellipsoid, ovoid, or obovoid and then abruptly constricted or cuneate to base.
→ 6
6. Capsules ellipsoid, ovoid, or obovoid 17k.
O. subsect. Gaura
6. Capsules fusiform.
→ 7
7. Floral tubes 9–13 mm; flowers nearly actinomorphic 17k.
O. subsect. Xerogaura
7. Floral tubes 3–11(–13) mm; flowers zygomorphic 17k.
O. subsect. Campogaura
Source FNA vol. 10. FNA vol. 10.
Parent taxa Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae > tribe Onagreae > Oenothera > sect. Gaura > subsect. Stipogaura > Oenothera cinerea Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae > tribe Onagreae > Oenothera
Sibling taxa
O. cinerea subsp. parksii
Subordinate taxa
O. subsect. Campogaura, O. subsect. Gaura, O. subsect. Schizocarya, O. subsect. Stenosiphon, O. subsect. Stipogaura, O. subsect. Xenogaura, O. subsect. Xerogaura
Synonyms Gaura villosa, G. villosa var. arenicola Gaura
Name authority unknown (Linnaeus) W. L. Wagner & Hoch: Syst. Bot. Monogr. 83: 165. (2007)
Web links