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
Habit Herbs usually annual, sometimes perennial, strigillose throughout and villous distally, especially on flower parts; from a taproot, when perennial sometimes lateral roots producing adventitious shoots. Herbs winter-annual or perennial, caulescent; from a taproot, sometimes lateral roots producing adventitious shoots.
Stems

single to several from base, usually unbranched.

decumbent to ascending or erect, unbranched or with short, lateral branches, epidermis white or pink, exfoliating proximally.

Leaves

basal rosette usually present at anthesis, 3–5(–7.8) × 0.4–0.8(–1.2) cm;

blade narrowly lanceolate to oblong, margins pinnatifid or dentate.

basal and cauline, sometimes forming conspicuous basal rosette, sometimes this weakly developed or absent (at least during flowering), 1–13(–26) cm;

blade margins sinuate-dentate to pinnatifid, denticulate, subentire, or entire.

Inflorescences

solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves.

Flowers

buds with free tips 0–0.2 mm;

floral tube 20–30 mm;

sepals 10–18 mm;

petals 10–20 mm.

opening near sunset, with a sweet scent or nearly unscented;

buds nodding by recurved floral tube, usually sharply or bluntly quadrangular in cross section (sometimes fluted in distal 1/2 in O. deltoides), without free tips or free tips short (sometimes to 9 mm in O. deltoides);

floral tube 15–40(–50) mm;

sepals separatingin pairs or individually;

petals white, fading pink, obcordate to obovate;

stigma deeply divided into 4 linear lobes.

Capsules

spreading to reflexed, straight or contorted.

straight, curved upward, spreading, or contorted, sometimes woody in age, cylindrical, obtusely 4-angled, gradually tapering from base to apex, dehiscent 1/2 to nearly throughout;

sessile.

Seeds

numerous, in 1 row per locule, obovoid, surface minutely alveolate, but appearing smooth.

2n

= 14.

= 14, 28.

Oenothera pallida subsp. trichocalyx

Oenothera sect. Anogra

Phenology Flowering (Apr–)May–Jun.
Habitat Sandy, silty, or rocky soil in pinyon-juniper woodlands or shrublands, with Artemisia and Ericameria.
Elevation 1100–2500 m. (3600–8200 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CO; NM; UT; WY
[BONAP county map]
w North America; n Mexico; c North America
Discussion

Subspecies trichocalyx occurs across central to southern Wyoming, eastern Utah, western Colorado, northeastern Arizona, and northwestern New Mexico. Within its range it has slight overlap with subspp. pallida and runcinata. In its purest form, subsp. trichocalyx is the most distinctive phase of Oenothera pallida, but many of the populations have characteristics that approach other subspecies with perennial habit (versus annual) appearing occasionally. Plants that are glabrous, or nearly so, like subsp. pallida, but with apparent short-duration habit and divided leaves like subsp. trichocalyx, occur in southern Wyoming and in the Uinta Basin region of Utah; only more typical plants of subsp. trichocalyx otherwise occur in the region without any current evidence of the presence of subsp. pallida.

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

Species 8 (7 in the flora).

Section Anogra consists of eight species (17 taxa) native to western North America including Mexico, found usually in dry, sandy soil in a wide variety of habitats in the Chihuahuan, Great Basin, Mojave, and Sonoran deserts, to grasslands and open sites in montane forest, -50 to 3300 m. Only one species, Oenothera wigginsii Klein, occurs entirely outside the United States, while four others occur within the flora area but extend into northern Mexico. Section Anogra is included within a strongly supported clade with the two species of sect. Kleinia in recent molecular studies (R. A. Levin et al. 2004; M. E. K. Evans et al. 2005, 2009). The support levels for the topology within this clade are generally very weak, with only a few taxa grouping into moderately to strongly supported groups (for example, members of O. pallida complex, O. deltoides + O. wigginsii, O. californica + O. arizonica and O. neomexicana).

Species of sect. Anogra have vespertine flowers that are outcrossed and pollinated by hawkmoths or have flowers that are partly autogamous (D. P. Gregory 1964; W. M. Klein 1964, 1970). In Oenothera deltoides the capsule valves split open widely and disperse seeds, while the entire plant forms a so-called tumbleweed. Other species in the section appear to have more passive seed dispersal; the capsules dehisce while the plant remains rooted. The basal rosette may not be evident at time of flowering or not developed. When this is the case, or when the dimensions of the basal leaves are very similar to the cauline ones, only one range for leaf dimensions is given.

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

Key
1. Herbs winter-annual or short-lived perennial from a taproot.
→ 2
2. Sepals conspicuously maroon-spotted.
O. arizonica
2. Sepals without maroon spots.
→ 3
3. Plants villous throughout, also strigillose on leaves and distal parts; leaf blade margins coarsely repand-dentate or -pinnatifid.
O. engelmannii
3. Plants villous, strigillose, or glabrous, sometimes more densely villous or strigillose distally; leaf blade margins subentire to sinuate-dentate or remotely denticulate, sometimes pinnatifid.
→ 4
4. Capsules 2.5–5 mm diam.; sepals (13–)15–35 mm.
O. deltoides
4. Capsules 1.5–2.5 mm diam.; sepals 10–18 mm.
O. pallida
1. Herbs perennial, from a taproot, also with lateral roots producing adventitious shoots or with long, fleshy roots.
→ 5
5. Buds fluted in distal 1/2, with free tips 1–9 mm; plants from relatively long, fleshy roots.
O. deltoides
5. Buds quadrangular in distal 1/2, with free tips 0–4 mm; plants from a taproot and with lateral roots producing adventitious shoots.
→ 6
6. Plants glabrous, sometimes strigillose on leaves and/or glandular puberulent distally, at least on floral tube; leaf blades 0.3–0.6(–1) cm wide, narrowly oblong to oblong- lanceolate, margins usually entire.
O. nuttallii
6. Plants villous, strigillose, glabrate, or glabrous, not glandular puberulent; leaf blades (0.3–)1–2.5 cm wide, usually ovate, oblong to lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, oblanceolate, or spatulate, rarely rhombic-ovate, margins usually sinuate-dentate to pinnatifid or subentire, rarely entire.
→ 7
7. Capsules erect or strongly ascending.
O. neomexicana
7. Capsules spreading to reflexed.
→ 8
8. Capsules 2–3.5 mm diam.; stems decumbent or ascending.
O. californica
8. Capsules 1.5–2.5 mm diam.; stems erect or ascending.
O. pallida
Source FNA vol. 10. FNA vol. 10.
Parent taxa Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae > tribe Onagreae > Oenothera > sect. Anogra > Oenothera pallida Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae > tribe Onagreae > Oenothera
Sibling taxa
O. pallida subsp. latifolia, O. pallida subsp. pallida, O. pallida subsp. runcinata
Subordinate taxa
O. arizonica, O. californica, O. deltoides, O. engelmannii, O. neomexicana, O. nuttallii, O. pallida
Synonyms O. trichocalyx, Anogra rhizomata, A. trichocalyx, A. violacea, A. vreelandii, O. albicaulis var. trichocalyx, O. pallida var. trichocalyx Anogra, O., O. subg. anogra
Name authority (Nuttall) Munz & W. M. Klein in N. L. Britton et al.: N. Amer. Fl., ser. 2, 5: 119. (1965) (Spach) W. L. Wagner & Hoch: Syst. Bot. Monogr. 83: 179. (2007)
Web links