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Habit Herbs annual or perennial, acaulescent or caulescent; from a usually stout taproot, sometimes lateral roots producing adventitious shoots. Herbs (annual or perennial), [shrubs].
Stems

(when present) usually ascending, sometimes erect or decumbent, branched or unbranched.

Leaves

in a basal rosette, sometimes also cauline, (0.5–)1.7–26(–36) cm;

blade margins usually coarsely dentate to pinnatifid, sometimes serrate or subentire.

alternate or basal;

stipules absent.

Inflorescences

solitary flowers from rosette or in axils of distal leaves.

Flowers

opening near sunset with a sweet scent or nearly unscented;

buds erect or nodding by recurved floral tube, quadrangular, without free tips;

floral tube (2–)3–140(–165) mm;

sepals separating individually or in pairs;

petals white, fading rose purple to pink, obovate or obcordate;

pollen 90–100% fertile;

stigma deeply divided into 4 linear lobes.

usually actinomorphic, rarely slightly zygomorphic (in Oenothera), (3 or)4-merous;

stamens 2 times as many, or rarely as many, as sepals;

pollen usually shed in monads, rarely tetrads (Chylismia sect. Lignothera).

Fruit

a dry capsule, usually dehiscent, sometimes indehiscent.

Capsules

thick-walled and woody, straight to falcate or sigmoid, lanceoloid or ellipsoid-ovoid to cylindrical, or sometimes obtusely 4-angled, tapering to a sterile beak, valve margins with a row of tubercles or a thickened, undulate ridge, dehiscent 1/3–7/8 their length;

sessile or pedicellate.

Seeds

usually numerous, in (1 or) 2 rows per locule, obovoid to oblong, sometimes suborbicular or triangular, adaxial face with hollow chamber (seed collar) or, rarely (in O. brandegeei), filled with large, spongy cells, area above raphe a translucent membrane, surface papillose, reticulate, or irregularly roughened.

few to numerous, without hairs or wings, [very rarely with asymmetrical dry wing (Xylonagra)], or with dry (Oenothera), erose or smooth wing, or with thick, papillate wings (Chylismiella).

2n

= 14, 28.

Oenothera sect. Pachylophus

Onagraceae tribe Onagreae

Distribution
w North America; nw Mexico
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies
Discussion

Species 5 (4 in the flora).

Members of sect. Pachylophus occur from southern Canadian prairies through the western United States and northern Mexico (northern Chihuahua and Sonora); O. brandegeei (Munz) P. H. Raven is disjunct in central Baja California. The center of diversity of sect. Pachylophus is in the Great Basin region, especially in Colorado (five taxa) and Utah (six taxa). The section is characterized by white petals, capsule valve margins tuberculate or ridged, and seeds with an unusual hollow seed collar, and rarely (only O. psammophila) a stem epidermis that produces viscid exudates. Two species of the section were included in a molecular analysis showing 100% strong support for the section (R. A. Levin et al. 2004). The position of sect. Pachylophus was not supported as a member of the two main lineages within the genus; it was sister to sect. Calylophus at the base of the phylogenetic tree. Reproductive features include: self-incompatible (3 spp.) or self-compatible (2 spp.); flowers vespertine, fragrance sweet or like rubber; large-flowered species outcrossing and pollinated by hawkmoths (Hyles, Manduca, and Sphinx) or Noctuidae (noctuids), with pollen-gathering bees sometimes effecting pollination (E. G. Linsley et al. 1963b; D. P. Gregory 1964; W. L. Wagner et al. 1985; D. Artz et al. 2010), and small-flowered species (O. brandegeei and O. cavernae) largely autogamous. Wagner et al. reported that for O. psammophila noctuids were the primary pollinators and hawkmoths secondary; recent study of populations by R. Raguso (unpubl.) indicates predominant hawkmoth pollination.

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

Genera 13, species 265 (12 genera, 199 species in the flora).

Onagreae account for more than half the total genera in Onagraceae and diversified from a center in southwestern North America (L. Katinas et al. 2004). Delimitation of the tribe by W. L. Wagner et al. (2007) differs from previous ones by the exclusion of Gongylocarpus, now in its own tribe, by the segregation of eight genera (Camissoniopsis, Chylismia, Chylismiella, Eremothera, Eulobus, Neoholmgrenia, Taraxia, and Tetrapteron) from Camissonia, and by the inclusion of three previously separate genera (Calylophus, Gaura, and Stenosiphon) in Oenothera. Within the branch of the family that lacks stipules (Gongylocarpeae, Epilobieae, and Onagreae), the last two tribes form a clade that has very strong molecular support (R. A. Levin et al. 2003, 2004), but no obvious morphological synapomorphy. The clade may be defined by a cytogenetic change from the base chromosome number of x = 11 found in Circaeeae, Gongylocarpeae, and Lopezieae, to x = 18 in Epilobieae, and x = 7 in Onagreae; however, these changes could also have occurred independently. Other than the new chromosome number x = 7, the only apparent morphological synapomorphy for Onagreae alone is pollen with prominent apertural protrusions (J. Praglowski et al. 1987, 1989), a character state also found in Circaeeae (Praglowski et al. 1994). The monophyly of Onagreae has moderate (Levin et al. 2004) to strong support (V. S. Ford and L. D. Gottlieb 2007).

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

Key
1. Petals (6.5–)8–20(–25) mm; herbs winter or spring annuals, stems 2–4 cm; stigmas surrounded by anthers at anthesis.
O. cavernae
1. Petals (16–)20–50(–60) mm; herbs perennial or, sometimes, annual; stems 10–40 cm; stigmas exserted beyond anthers at anthesis.
→ 2
2. Plants glabrous, with resinous exudate, especially on younger leaves; capsules some-what curved and often somewhat twisted, valve margins with irregular, wavy ridges.
O. psammophila
2. Plants usually pubescent, sometimes glabrous, without resinous exudate; capsules not twisted, valve margins tuberculate or ridged.
→ 3
3. Herbs perennial, acaulescent or caulescent; stems, when present, usually ascending, sometimes decumbent; capsule valve margins with tubercles or ridges; flowers: 1–4(–6) per stem opening per day.
O. cespitosa
3. Herbs robust spring annuals, rarely overwintering for a 2nd year, caulescent; stems densely leafy, ascending to erect; capsule valve margins with conspicuous tubercles; flowers: usually 5–10 per stem opening per day.
O. harringtonii
Source FNA vol. 10. FNA vol. 10.
Parent taxa Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae > tribe Onagreae > Oenothera Onagraceae > subfam. Onagroideae
Subordinate taxa
O. cavernae, O. cespitosa, O. harringtonii, O. psammophila
Synonyms Pachylophus, O., O. subg. pachylophus
Name authority (Spach) Walpers: Repert. Bot. Syst. 2: 83. (1843) — (as Pachylophis) Dumortier: Fl. Belg., 89. (1827)
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