Oenothera sect. Megapterium |
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Habit | Herbs perennial, acaulescent or caulescent; from a stout, woody taproot, sometimes (O. brachycarpa, O. howardii) lateral roots producing adventitious shoots. | ||||||||||||
Stems | ascending or becoming decumbent, usually unbranched. |
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Leaves | in a basal rosette, often also cauline, (2.8–)5–21(–34) cm; blade margins entire, dentate, or pinnatifid. |
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Inflorescences | solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves. |
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Flowers | opening near sunset, with sweet scent or nearly unscented; buds erect, quadrangular, with free tips; floral tube (21–)35–210(–220) mm; sepals splitting along one suture, remaining coherent and reflexed as a unit at anthesis; petals yellow, fading yellow, orange, pink, or deep red, obovate to rhombic-obovate; stigma deeply divided into 4 linear lobes. |
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Capsules | papery, leathery, or corky in age, ovoid, narrowly lanceoloid to broadly ellipsoid, or globose, winged, wings 10–32 mm wide throughout, or capsule walls with corky thickening and wings not developed (sometimes in O. brachycarpa), then capsule appearing only 4-angled, apex truncate to cuneate, dehiscent 1/4–1/3 their length; pedicellate, sometimes disarticulating from plant at maturity. |
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Seeds | numerous, in 1 or 2 rows per locule, grayish to yellowish brown, brown, or dark purplish brown, obovoid or subcuboid, angled or rounded, usually with an erose wing distally, surface coarsely rugose and reticulate, thickened, especially at distal end, this area with an internal cavity adjacent to embryo. |
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2n | = 14, 28, 42, 56. |
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Oenothera sect. Megapterium |
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Distribution | w United States; c United States; n Mexico |
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Discussion | Species 4 (4 in the flora). Section Megapterium consists of four species (eight taxa); two (Oenothera brachycarpa,O. macrocarpa) are diploid (2n = 14), one (O. coryi) is hexaploid (2n = 42), and one (O. howardii) has tetraploid, hexaploid, and octoploid populations (2n = 28, 42, 56) (W. L. Wagner et al. 2007). The species usually occur on xeric rocky sites of limestone, sandstone, shale, or gypsum, rarely (O. brachycarpa) on volcanic soil, from eastern Nevada, Utah, and eastern Colorado east to the Mississippi River in Missouri, and south through northern Arkansas and Texas, to Coahuila, Durango, and Nuevo León, Mexico; there are only two isolated records (O. macrocarpa subsp. macrocarpa from St. Clair County, Illinois, and Rutherford County, Tennessee) from east of the Mississippi River, at 130–3000 m elevation. All species are self-incompatible and vespertine, the flowers fading the following morning, or sometimes remaining open for a second day in O. macrocarpa, pollinated by hawkmoths including Hyles, Manduca, and Sphinx (see Wagner et al. for summary). (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 | Megapterium, O., O. subg. megapterium | ||||||||||||
Name authority | (Spach) Walpers: Repert. Bot. Syst. 2: 82. (1843) | ||||||||||||
Web links |