Oenothera sect. Kneiffia |
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Habit | Herbs annual or perennial, caulescent; from fibrous roots or a taproot, sometimes somewhat fleshy, or sometimes producing rhizomes. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | usually erect or ascending, sometimes decumbent, branched or unbranched. |
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Leaves | in a basal rosette and cauline, cauline 3–10(–13) cm; blade margins entire, subentire, denticulate, or coarsely dentate. |
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Inflorescences | solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves. |
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Flowers | opening near sunrise, faintly scented; buds erect, terete, with free tips; floral tube 3–25 mm; sepals splitting along one suture, remaining coherent and reflexed as a unit at anthesis, or separating in pairs, or all separating individually; petals yellow, fading pale pink or lavender, or orangish pink or yellow, or not changing color, obcordate to obovate; stigma deeply divided into 4 linear lobes. |
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Capsules | leathery, straight, usually clavate or oblong, sometimes ellipsoid, angled or winged, apex rounded to truncate or weakly emarginate, tapering to a sterile, pedicel-like base (stipe), valve midrib raised, initially apically dehiscent, eventually dehiscent nearly throughout; sessile. |
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Seeds | usually numerous, clustered in each locule, ovoid, surface minutely papillose. |
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2n | = 14, 28, 42, 56. |
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Oenothera sect. Kneiffia |
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Distribution | North America |
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Discussion | Species 6 (6 in the flora). Section Kneiffia consists of six species (seven taxa) widely distributed in the eastern half of the United States and adjacent Canada, at 0–1900 m elevation (G. B. Straley 1977). Oenothera spachiana is the only annual species and occurs in open fields, prairies, rocky or sandy sites, and along roadsides; the remaining species are all perennial and occupy diverse habitats, including fresh and brackish swampy areas, wood margins, meadows, prairies, and sandy sites. Three species are self-incompatible (O. fruticosa, O. pilosella, and O. riparia) and the other three are self-compatible (O. perennis, O. sessilis, and O. spachiana). The flowers are diurnal, opening near sunrise and closing near sunset; in some populations of outcrossing species they may reopen for several days. In the outcrossing taxa, the flowers are pollinated by bees (Halictidae and Bombus). Oenothera spachiana and O. perennis are autogamous, the former often cleistogamous and the latter a PTH species. Taxonomy of the section here differs somewhat from Straley in that molecular data (K. N. Krakos et al. 2014) indicate that O. sessilis should be recognized at the species level since the closest relative is O. fruticosa, not O. pilosella as previously thought. Similarly, O. riparia is separated from O. fruticosa since it apparently is most closely related to O. perennis despite the morphological resemblance to O. fruticosa. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 10. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Synonyms | Kneiffia, Blennoderma, O., O. section blennoderma, O. subg. blennoderma, O., O. subg. kneiffia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (Spach) Walpers: Repert. Bot. Syst. 2: 84. (1843) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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